His voice was different.
Not smug now.
Frayed.
“What do you want, Adrian?”
“You need to call off your father.”
“No.”
“You don’t understand what you’re doing.”
“You said that already.”
“This isn’t just divorce anymore.”
“No,” I said. “It became fraud when you forged my signature.”
A pause.
Then his voice lowered. “I didn’t forge anything.”
“Then your mistress did.”
“Don’t call her that.”
I almost smiled. “That is the part that bothers you?”
He breathed hard into the phone. “You have no idea what kind of people your parents are.”
I looked through the glass doors of the study.
My father stood in the hall, holding Samuel against his shoulder. Samuel’s tiny fist was curled against his suit jacket.
“I know exactly who they are,” I said.
“No,” Adrian snapped. “You know what they let you know.”
Mara leaned closer, listening.
“What did Celeste tell you?” I asked.
His silence answered too much.
I continued, “Did she tell you she loved you? That you deserved more? That my family looked down on you? That she could help you take what should have been yours?”
“Shut up.”
“She played you.”
“She gave me the truth.”
“No,” I said quietly. “She gave you a mirror, and you fell in love with it.”
His breath hitched.
For one second, I thought I had reached the part of him that used to bring me coffee in bed. The part that cried when our first pregnancy ended at ten weeks. The part that kissed my forehead and said we would try again when I was ready.
Then he said, “Those children are still mine.”
Every trace of softness vanished.
“My sons,” I said, “are not bargaining chips.”
“They’re heirs, Evelyn.”
I froze.
Mara’s eyes sharpened.
“What did you say?”
Adrian seemed to realize his mistake. “I mean they’re my sons.”
“No. You said heirs.”
He hung up.
For a while, no one spoke.
Then my mother said, “He knows about the Ashford succession structure.”
My father handed Samuel to the nurse and entered the study.
“That information is sealed,” he said.
Mara was already typing. “Celeste again.”