“So was I.”
He looked up then.
Really looked at you.
“I know.”
You wanted to hate him cleanly.
But love makes anger complicated.
He pressed his hand to the glass.
“I called Damian because I finally understood I had become the kind of father I used to despise.”
You didn’t touch the glass back.
But you listened.
“I can’t undo it,” he said. “I can only tell the truth now.”
“What truth?”
His face changed.
“The Harringtons didn’t just threaten me. They paid me.”
Your blood went cold.
“What?”
He pulled an envelope from his coat.
“Not for the marriage. Not exactly. They called it a business rescue. A loan. Five hundred thousand dollars wired into the company account after I agreed not to interfere.”
You stared at him.
The hallway seemed to narrow.
“You sold me?”
“No,” he whispered, breaking. “God help me, that’s what it became. But I told myself it wasn’t. I told myself I was saving the employees, saving your mother’s insurance, saving the house.”
Your hand went to your stomach.
You thought you might be sick.
He pushed the envelope through the slot beneath the door.
“Bank records. Emails. Everything. Give them to your lawyer.”
You did not pick it up.
He stepped back.
“I don’t expect forgiveness.”
“Good.”