“I’ll stop once you’ve done what I asked,” I said. “And after that, I’ll move on. That’s more mercy than you showed me.”
He didn’t answer right away.
Then, low and shaken: “You really don’t forgive me.”
It wasn’t even a question.
I pressed my forehead lightly to the cool glass.
“No.”
The honesty of it changed the air.
On the other end, I heard him breathing, and for once it didn’t sound like anger. It sounded like someone realizing the bridge behind him had actually burned.
That night, just after ten, Camille emailed me.
Not texted. Emailed. Subject line: For your records.
Inside were PDFs. More than a dozen. Audio transcripts from conversations she’d recorded after the wedding. One with Ethan, one with my mother, one partial call with Camille’s own father.
I opened the first transcript and felt my pulse kick.
ETHAN: She’ll calm down once she gets attention out of it.
DIANE: Then don’t feed it. Alyssa has always confused sacrifice with status.
ETHAN: She owes me some grace.
DIANE: She owes this family discretion.
I read that last line three times.
She owes this family discretion.
No, I thought.
Not anymore.