Chapter Thirteen: The Daughter Who Did Not Kneel
Victor asked to see her after the hearing.
Mara almost refused.
Then she remembered the knife at her throat.
The contract.
The slap.
The little girl she had been before she learned silence had a cost.
She entered the holding room alone.
Victor sat behind thick glass with shackles around his wrists. He looked older than he had three days ago. Not sorry. Not yet.
Just smaller.
Mara sat across from him.
A guard stood near the door.
Victor picked up the phone first.
She let it ring once before lifting hers.
“Mara.”
“Victor.”
His face tightened.
Not Dad.
Good.
“You have to understand.”
“No.”
His mouth opened.
She continued.
“I do not.”
He swallowed.
“I wanted to protect this family.”
“You sold it.”
“I made hard choices.”
“You made profitable ones.”
His eyes reddened.
“Cross would have destroyed us.”
“So you handed me over?”
“I thought Julian wanted marriage.”
Mara leaned closer.
“You saw the contract.”
Victor looked away.
That was the answer.
A quiet one.
A filthy one.
Mara nodded once.
“I was your daughter.”
His face twisted.
“You still are.”
“No.”
The word did not shake.
“I was your daughter when you slapped me for refusing a cage. I was your daughter when you opened the gate for men who took my mother. I was your daughter when you signed my name away.”
Victor gripped the phone.
“Mara.”
“No.”
Her voice remained soft.
That made him cry.
“You do not get to use my name like an apology.”
He broke then.
Not beautifully.
Not nobly.
His shoulders folded, and tears fell down a face she had once feared more than any blade.
“I failed you.”
Mara looked at him through the glass.
“Yes.”
The honesty struck harder than comfort.
Victor covered his mouth.
“I did not know how to love you.”
Mara stood.
“That is not love.”
She placed the phone back on the hook.
Victor banged his fist against the glass.
“Mara, wait.”
She walked to the door.
His voice followed through the room, muffled and desperate.
“I am sorry.”
She stopped.
Not because forgiveness came.
It did not.
She stopped because the girl inside her had waited years to hear those words and deserved to know they had finally arrived.
Mara looked back.
Victor was standing now, one hand pressed to the glass.
She gave him one small nod.
Not absolution.
Acknowledgment.
Then she left.
Outside the holding room, Roman waited against the wall.
Of course.
His coat hung open. Sweat dampened his temple. Pain had stripped the arrogance from his posture, leaving only stubborn devotion and terrible timing.
Mara stared at him.
“You should be in bed.”
“You keep saying that.”
“You keep ignoring it.”
“I am consistent.”
The corner of her mouth almost moved.
Almost.
He noticed.
Of course he did.
Then the moment passed.
Mara folded her arms.
“Do you want gratitude?”
“No.”
“Forgiveness?”
“No.”
“What, then?”
Roman looked down the courthouse hall.
Lawyers moved around them.
Reporters shouted outside.
Life continued its rude little march.
He reached into his coat and took out a small velvet box.
Mara’s expression went cold.
“Roman.”
He opened it.
Inside was not a ring.
It was a key.
Plain. Brass. Familiar.
Mara frowned.
“What is that?”
“Your old apartment.”
She went still.
“I bought the building after you left.”
Her eyes lifted.
He spoke carefully.
“I kept your lease in your name.”
“Why?”
“In case you needed a door no one could lock.”
Mara looked at the key.
The smallness of it hurt more than diamonds would have.
Roman held it out.
His hand trembled.
Not from fear.
From weakness.
She took the key.
Their fingers did not touch.
“Do not mistake this,” she said.
“I won’t.”
“I have not forgiven you.”
“I know.”
“I may never.”
“I know.”
Mara closed her fist around the key.
Roman stepped aside, giving her the hallway.
The choice.
The exit.
For once, he did not follow.
And that was the first thing he had done right.