I came home just in time to see my injured father crawling across the marble floor while my stepmother laughed above him. AD part2

Behind Vivian stood her son, Marcus, wearing my father’s watch. My father’s watch.
“Isabella,” Dad rasped. “You shouldn’t have come.”
Marcus laughed. “Listen to him. Even broken, he knows you can’t help.”
Vivian crossed the room and kissed the air beside my cheek. Her perfume was expensive and rotten. “Your father signed everything over. The house. The company shares. The accounts. He understood who actually takes care of him.”
My father looked at me, shame drowning his eyes.
I set down my suitcase.
“Did he?” I asked.
Vivian’s smile thinned. “Careful, girl.”
“Or did you make him sign while he was drugged?”
For one second, silence cracked the room.
Then Marcus stepped forward. “You better watch your mouth.”
I looked at his hand on my father’s watch, then at Vivian’s heel still touching Dad’s shoulder.
“Take your foot off him.”
Vivian chuckled. “And if I don’t?”
I walked past her, helped my father sit upright, and wiped tea from his trembling hand.
Vivian hissed, “This is my house now.”
I looked around the mansion my mother helped design before cancer stole her, the walls filled with stolen warmth and fake gold.
“No,” I said quietly. “It’s a crime scene.”
Marcus laughed again.
That was his first mistake.
Because I had not come home to beg.
I had come home with court filings in my bag, recordings on my phone, and my father’s original trust documents already copied to three different lawyers.
Vivian thought she had trapped a wounded man.
She had not realized his daughter had become the kind of woman who buried predators legally, publicly, and permanently.

 

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