Baby Girl Vance.
My last name.
Not his.
“Sure,” I said, my voice steady now. “I’ll be there.”
Julian paused. He had expected tears. Begging. Maybe silence.
“Good,” he said. “Wear something modest. Don’t embarrass yourself.”
“I never do.”
His laugh sharpened. “Still pretending you have pride?”
I smiled at the sleeping child beside me. “No, Julian. I have proof.”
“What?”
“Nothing. Send the address.”
After he hung up, I lay back against the pillow, every ache in my body turning into something colder and stronger.
On the chair near my bed sat a leather folder. Inside were bank records, emails, notarized statements, and the paternity test my lawyer had ordered before I gave birth. Julian had signed away nothing. He had only abandoned me before I could tell him the truth.
And Fiona?
Fiona had made one mistake.
She had used the company account to help steal my inheritance.
My phone buzzed with the wedding address.
I kissed my daughter’s forehead.
“Your father invited us,” I murmured. “Let’s not be rude.”…
Part 2
The church was an architectural monument to old money and carefully curated pretense. White orchids draped from every mahogany pew, their scent heavy and sweet, suffocating the crisp autumn air. I stood in the stone vestibule, looking through the frosted glass doors at the gathering crowd. It was the exact same circle of high-society vultures who had smiled at me across dinner tables for seven years, the same people who had whispered behind my back the moment my second miscarriage became public knowledge.
My body still hummed with a deep, systemic exhaustion, but beneath the fatigue was a core of pure, tempered steel. I had chosen my armor carefully: a silk midi dress in a striking, rich emerald green that complemented the silver pins holding my hair up in a sharp, elegant twist. It was a direct, silent violation of Julian’s command to wear something “modest.” I didn’t look like a grieving, broken ex-wife. I looked like an executioner.