I said nothing.
Silence makes arrogant people careless.
By noon, Marcus Lee arrived at my hotel with a folder. His buyer was a private medical group that had wanted the property months earlier.
Back then, I had refused.
Now, I accepted.
“All cash,” Marcus said. “Fast closing. They’ll take it furnished.”
“Good,” I replied.
He looked at my sleeping baby. “Are you sure?”
I looked at my daughter’s tiny hand curled against her blanket.
“Daniel locked a postpartum mother and a newborn outside in the rain,” I said. “His family is wearing my jewelry on vacation. Yes, Marcus. I’m sure.”
Over the next few days, everything moved quickly.
I signed papers. Approved wires. Hired movers.
I sent my personal belongings, nursery furniture, legal files, family photos, and my grandmother’s piano to a townhouse I had quietly bought months earlier.
Everything else stayed behind.
The sofas his mother loved.
The dining table Daniel bragged about.
The guest room his sister treated like a free hotel.
Let them think they still had their castle.
On the sixth day, Marcus called.
“Funds cleared,” he said. “Closing is complete.”
I closed my eyes.
“The house is sold?”
“The house is sold.”
That night, Daniel called.
“Claire,” he said coldly, “when I get home, we’re going to have a serious conversation.”