Catherine’s face went white. I’ll kill him. I’ll actually kill him. What grounds could he possibly unstable living situation inappropriate relationship Whatever lies he told them. Catherine grabbed her keys. I’m going to end this. Marcus caught her arm. Cat, wait. If you go in there angry, I should go in there angry.
He’s attacking a child to punish me. Danny didn’t do anything except exist in a house I care about. Her eyes burned with fury Marcus had never seen. I’ve spent my entire life avoiding the confrontation with my father. Doing what he wanted, being who he demanded, that ends today. She drove downtown in the used Civic she’d bought after selling the Aston Martin.
The Monroe Technologies tower gleamed against gray Portland sky, 40 floors of glass and steel, monument to a man who’d built an empire and destroyed his family. The lobby security knew her, of course. Waved her through despite her changed circumstances. The elevator to the executive floor felt like ascending to a battlefield.
Her father’s assistant tried to intercept. Ms. Monroe, he’s in a meeting. Catherine walked past without slowing. The office door opened under her hand, expensive wood giving way to reveal Richard Monroe behind a desk that cost more than most people’s annual salaries. Two men in suits sat across from him, interrupted mid-conversation, whatever deal temporarily suspended by the intrusion.
Gentlemen, give us the room. The command in her voice surprised even her. The suits glanced at Richard, who nodded tersely. They gathered papers and left, door closing behind them. Father and daughter faced each other across territory he’d owned for decades. This is unexpected. Richard leaned back, projecting calm.
I thought you’d given up pretending to be part of this world. Call off the CPS investigation. His expression didn’t change. I don’t know what you’re referring to. Don’t. Catherine’s voice went sharp. Don’t insult us both by lying. You filed a complaint about Danny’s living situation.
Anonymous, of course, but we both know where it came from. Richard studied her with the cold assessment she remembered from childhood. That child deserves a stable environment. Not exposure to your experiments and playing house with unsuitable men. Unsuitable? Catherine laughed bitter. Because he works with his hands? Because he can’t be bought or intimidated? Because he treats me like a person instead of an asset? Because he’s nothing.
Richard’s mask slipped, contempt showing through. A blue-collar nobody who got lucky enough to catch your attention during a breakdown. He’ll bore you within a year. They always do. You don’t know anything about him. Catherine stepped closer to the desk. He’s more of a man than anyone you’ve ever approved for me.
He stands up when things get hard. He protects the people he loves. He’s teaching his son that kindness matters more than conquest. Her voice steadied, something settling into certainty. He’s everything you’re not, and that’s why you can’t stand it. Richard’s jaw tightened. You’re throwing away everything I built for you, everything I sacrificed.
You sacrificed nothing for me. Catherine cut him off. You sacrificed me for the company, for the empire, for the image. I was never your daughter. I was your product. And I’m done being sold. She leaned forward, palms flat on his desk. Call off CPS or I go nuclear. Every bribe you’ve paid, every regulation you’ve skirted, every politician in your pocket.
I have documentation going back 15 years, emails, recordings, financial records. I’ve been collecting them since I was 17, ever since I realized who you really were. Richard’s composure cracked slightly. You’re bluffing. Test me. Catherine’s voice went cold. You taught me to always have leverage, to never enter a negotiation without an exit strategy. Congratulations.
You taught me well. Silence stretched between them. “What do you want?” Richard finally asked. “I want you to leave us alone. Marcus, Danny, me. No more attacks on his business. No more CPS complaints. No more whatever else you’re planning. You pretend I don’t exist and I pretend the same about you. “And if I refuse?” “Then I become the biggest scandal this company has ever faced.
I’ll give interviews, write memoirs, testify before any committee that wants to hear what I know.” Katherine straightened. “I’ll burn it all down and smile while I do it. Your choice.” Richard studied her for a long moment. This stranger wearing his daughter’s face, speaking with authority she’d never shown before. “If you do this, you’re no longer my daughter. No reconciliation.
No inheritance. Nothing.” Katherine felt the weight of the words, the finality of closing a door that could never reopen. “I haven’t been your daughter since I was 12 and you made me give away the only thing I loved because it wasn’t productive.” She moved toward the door. “Goodbye, Richard.” She walked out without looking back.
The elevator down felt like descent from a world she’d never belonged in anyway. The CPS investigation closed within the week. “No evidence of unsafe environment,” the report concluded. “Anonymous complainant’s concerns unfounded.” Marcus held her that night while she shook, the enormity of what she’d done finally hitting.
“You didn’t have to burn everything down for us.” Katherine pressed closer. “Yes, I did. You’re my family now, the only family that counts.” Outside rain fell on Portland in the way it always did, steady and cleansing, washing away what needed to go. The months following Katherine’s confrontation with her father settled into something Marcus hadn’t experienced in since before Sarah’s diagnosis, ordinary life, mundane and precious.
Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.