‘We need to talk,’ he said, loosening his silk tie. ‘I’m ending this. Bianca and I are engaged. She’s the kind of woman who can match my ambition—cultured, connected, financially sound. You’re… ordinary. You were a suitable wife when I needed comfort, but now I need a true partner.’
I stared at him, my arms tightening around my daughter. Henry made a soft mewling sound in the bassinet.
‘I’m keeping Henry,’ Charles continued, as if discussing stock options. ‘He’s the male heir. Bianca is willing to raise him as her own. You can keep the girl. It’s fair—two children would be a burden for an unemployed woman. I’ll be generous and not demand alimony.’
He actually said that. To a mother who had just barely survived childbirth. A mother who, in her forties, had risked her life to give him children he once begged for.
‘You think I’m going to let you take my son?’ My voice came out a rasp.
He shrugged. ‘What can you do? You have no money, no house, no prospects. Bianca owns Thornfield Hall—she paid cash. The deed is in her name. If you fight me in court, you’ll lose. I have resources. You have nothing.’ He tapped the envelope. ‘Sign the papers, Margaret. Make it easy on yourself. I’ll have a courier pick them up tonight.’
I looked at the divorce papers, then back at him. I could have told him the truth right then. I could have shattered his arrogance with a few words. But something ancient and wise inside me counseled silence. Let him dig his grave.
I smiled. It was the first genuine smile I’d felt in years.
‘All right, Charles. Leave the papers. I’ll review them.’
He blinked, surprised by my calm. Then he snorted. ‘Good. I’m glad you’re being reasonable. And, Margaret? Don’t embarrass yourself by trying to fight this. You’re not in my league anymore.’
After he left, I called Mr. Harrison Sterling, my grandfather’s attorney. He was eighty-three years old, with a mind like a steel trap and a profound hatred for injustice.
‘Is it done?’ I asked.
‘Yes, Mrs. Thornton. The title search is complete. You hold the deed free and clear under the Sterling Trust, a wholly owned entity with you as sole beneficiary. Bianca Devereaux’s claim is fraudulent. She may have passed off some funds to look like a purchase, but the bank records confirm the true buyer. In fact, given the discrepancies, there’s potential for a criminal investigation into wire fraud.’
‘Do it,’ I said quietly. ‘I want the sheriff there tomorrow morning at eight a.m. sharp. And Mr. Harrison? I want to be there. With my children.’
He was silent a moment. ‘Are you well enough to travel, my dear?’
‘I’ve never been stronger.’
The next morning, the Georgia sun rose pale gold over the live oaks lining the driveway of Thornfield Hall. I dressed carefully, despite the lingering pain. A crisp navy suit that had been my mother’s, the one she wore when she finally left her own unfaithful husband. I placed Henry in a soft blue onesie and Lily in a delicate white gown, then we rode in Mr. Harrison’s vintage Rolls Royce through the gates of my home.
Inside, Charles and Bianca were having breakfast in the sunroom. Scrambled eggs, fresh-squeezed juice, a bouquet of white roses—likely bought with a credit card I’d paid off. When the doorbell rang, I heard Bianca’s musical laugh. ‘Darling, who could be calling at this hour?’
Then the heavy oak front door swung open, and Sheriff Coleman walked in with two deputies. I followed a few paces behind, pushing a double stroller.
‘Charles Thornton?’ the sheriff asked, his voice filling the hall.
Charles rose from his chair, napkin falling to the floor. ‘What is this? Officers, there must be some mistake—’
‘No mistake, sir. I have a court order to serve you with a notice of illegal occupancy. This property, Hawthorne County Parcel 782, is legally owned by Margaret Louise Thornton, via the Sterling Trust. Any claim by Bianca Devereaux is false and has been investigated.’ He held up the paper.
Bianca turned the color of ash. ‘That’s impossible! I paid one-point-two million dollars! The bank accepted my transfer!’