Part 2
By morning, the pain had settled into my bones.
Not the sharp kind anymore. Not the kind that made my breath catch every time I shifted against the hospital sheets. This was colder. Deeper. A quiet ache that lived behind my ribs and watched everything with clear eyes.

The boys were sleeping.
Three tiny faces. Three soft mouths. Three futures Adrian had tried to use as leverage before they had even learned how to cry properly.
I named them before Adrian could object.
Leo. Noah. Samuel.
Their names felt like anchors. Like promises.
My mother arrived just after sunrise.
She did not rush into the room with tears. She did not collapse over me or curse Adrian’s name. She walked in wearing a cream wool coat, pearl earrings, and the same expression she used when entering boardrooms full of men who thought she was decorative.
Controlled.
Immaculate.
Dangerous.
Behind her came my father.
Jonathan Ashford was not a loud man. He had never needed to be. In my childhood, I had watched bankers, judges, ambassadors, and ministers lower their voices when he entered a room. Not out of fear exactly.
Out of recognition.
Some people carried power like a weapon.
My father carried it like weather.
He approached the bassinets first.
For one moment, his face softened completely.
“My grandsons,” he murmured.
My mother touched my hair gently. “Evelyn.”
That one word almost broke me.
I swallowed the sob that rose in my throat. “He came here with her.”
“I know,” she said.
“He tried to make me sign everything.”
“I know.”
“He said no one would want me now.”
My mother’s fingers stilled in my hair.
My father turned slowly from the bassinets.
The room changed.
It was subtle, but I felt it. The air tightened. Even the morning light seemed to pale against the windows.
“What exactly did he bring you?” my father asked.
I pointed to the folder on the bedside table.
He picked it up and read through the pages in silence.
My mother stood beside him, reading over his shoulder. Neither of them reacted at first. Then my mother gave a small laugh.
It was not amused.
It was almost pitying.
“Oh, Adrian,” she whispered. “You foolish little man.”
I wiped my eyes. “He said the house is already being transferred to Celeste.”
My father looked at me over the papers.
“Did you sign anything?”
“No.”
“Good.”
My mother picked up the property waiver. “This is sloppy.”
“Sloppy?” I repeated.
“Insultingly so.” She turned a page. “He assumed fear would do the legal work for him.”
My father took out his phone and made one call.
That was all.
He said, “Mara, activate the family office team. Full review. Adrian Vale. Celeste Monroe. Vale Capital Holdings. Personal accounts. Property transfers. Hospital surveillance. I want everything by noon.”