My father had not left me a cage.
He had left me a net.
And because of that net, I was alive.
Months later, I returned to the house.
I stood outside for a long time, looking at the white walls, the garden, the bougainvillea moving in the wind. Derek had wanted the estate for its money, name, and power. He never understood what it really was.
Memory.
Roots.
History.
Rosa met me at the door, crying.
“You came back, little girl.”
“Yes,” I said, holding her. “And this time, I’m staying.”
I went to the office. The painting was gone. The safe had been removed. Only a pale rectangle remained on the wall.
I touched it and closed my eyes.
The metallic tea.
The tablet under my pillow.
The envelope behind the painting.
Derek whispering love while preparing my death.
My father, dead but still refusing to abandon me.
Rosa’s loyalty.
The cup I spilled just in time.
Then I called the press.
Not because I wanted spectacle. Not because I wanted sympathy. I did it because men like Derek depend on silence. They trust private settlements, polished reputations, and families too ashamed to say ugly things out loud.
I was not going to become a rumor.