Chapter Ten: The Final Line
The envelope came on a Saturday.
No return address. Just a postmark from Nevada.
Randall opened it on his front porch. The morning sun was warm. Maya was still asleep upstairs. The birds were loud and the neighbors were mowing their lawn and the world was ordinary and beautiful and good.
Inside was a check for six thousand dollars.
And a letter.
Randall,
This is the last payment. I’ve paid back everything I owe you, plus interest. I know money doesn’t fix what I did. But I wanted you to know I kept my word. Every single month, even when it was hard, I made the payment.
I’m getting remarried. His name is Tom. He’s a history teacher. We’ve been in therapy together and separately. He knows everything about what I did. He’s chosen to love me anyway.
I don’t deserve him. But I’m going to spend the rest of my life trying to deserve him.
I wanted you to hear it from me first. I don’t expect forgiveness. I don’t expect friendship. I just wanted you to know that the therapy helped. The work I did on myself helped.
And in some strange way, what you did—exposing Jesse, holding me accountable, refusing to let me get away with fraud—that helped, too.
You could have destroyed me. You didn’t.
You gave me the chance to become someone better.
I hope you’re happy, Randall. I hope you found whatever you were looking for when you went to Dubai. And I hope someday you can think of me without anger.
With genuine gratitude,
Annie
P.S. I lost the baby. Miscarriage at four months. Maybe it was for the best. Jesse never asked about it after I told him. That should have told me everything.
Randall read the letter three times.
Then he folded it carefully and put it in the drawer with all the other documents from that chapter of his life. The divorce papers. The settlement agreement. The news articles about Jesse’s sentencing.
He sat down on the porch steps and watched the sun climb higher.
Maya appeared in the doorway. Sleepy. Beautiful. Wearing his shirt.
“Everything okay?”
“Yeah.”
He stood up.
“Everything’s fine.”
She didn’t ask what was in the envelope. She just held out her hand.
“Come back to bed.”
He took her hand.
And for the first time in eleven years, Randall O’Neal stopped running.
He stopped building futures in other countries.
He stopped sending money instead of showing up.
He stopped believing that love could be measured in wire transfers and video calls and promises made from halfway around the world.
He just came home.
And that was enough.