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My daughter Jodie died in my arms. The doctor' s words were a death sentence: "Severe neglect. Malnutrition. Multiple internal injuries."
But my husband, the famous life coach Julian Maynard, didn't mourn. He issued a public statement.
He called Jodie a "challenging child" and twisted her death into a tragedy about mental health, all to enhance his compassionate image.
He even publicly forgave the boy who had tormented her, the same boy he brought into our home to teach Jodie "resilience."
My own life ended in a fire, a final, violent release from a world of his making.
As the flames consumed me, I couldn't understand. How could the man I loved build his legacy on the grave of our daughter and the ruins of my life?
Then, I opened my eyes. The divorce papers sat on the table, his signature a stark black stain. It was years earlier. Before the fire. Before Jodie died.
Chapter 1
Kylie POV:
The clerk slid the divorce papers across the mahogany table, my ex-husband' s signature already a stark, black stain against the crisp white. It wasn' t a painful echo. It was just a fact.
My hand didn't tremble when I picked up the pen.
"Ms. Gutierrez, are you sure about the terms?" my lawyer, Mr. Harrison, asked, his voice a low rumble. "Mr. Maynard is offering a very generous settlement. Alimony, the house, a significant portion of his assets… he' s even willing to discuss future investments."
I didn't look up. "The only thing I want from Julian Maynard is my daughter."
Mr. Harrison paused. He was used to women fighting over money, not for a child when a fortune was on the table.
"Are you absolutely certain?" he pressed, his brow furrowed. "No financial compensation at all? Just full custody of Jodie?"
I finally met his gaze, my eyes cold. "Absolutely. I don' t want a single penny of his blood money. Just Jodie."
He cleared his throat, a sound that seemed to carry the weight of his surprise. "Very well, then." He pushed the papers closer. "Sign here."
My signature was firm, a testament to a resolve forged in fire and tears. It wasn't a choice; it was a reclamation.
"It's done," I stated, pushing the signed documents back.
Mr. Harrison' s assistant, a young woman with wide, curious eyes, quickly composed herself. Her initial shock, however, was clearly visible. People didn't just walk away from millions. Not in their world.
"Such a brave woman," I heard her murmur to Mr. Harrison as I stood to leave. "Giving up everything for her child."
Brave? No. Desperate.
The cool air outside the law office hit me like a slap. The bustling city streets, the blare of car horns, the indifferent faces rushing past-it all felt too loud, too bright. I shielded my eyes against the harsh afternoon sun, a dizziness washing over me. The dates blurred, the faces were wrong, but the feeling was achingly familiar.
My stomach churned. I needed to know.
I spotted a newspaper stand on the corner. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage. Please, let it be real. Please, let it be true.
I grabbed a paper, my fingers fumbling with the coins. The date. That's all I needed.
My breath hitched. It was just as I remembered. Years before. Before the fire. Before Jodie…
A headline screamed from the front page: "Julian Maynard: The Compassionate Guru Forgives All." Underneath, a photo of Julian, his perfect smile radiating false benevolence, next to a blurry image of the boy who had set the fire.
I scoffed, a bitter, hollow sound. Forgive all? He had orchestrated all.
I remembered his grand speech, the carefully rehearsed words about empathy and healing, all while my ashes were still cooling. A public spectacle designed to enhance his image, built on the smoldering ruins of my life and the grave of our daughter.
"Compassionate," I muttered, crumpling the paper. What a joke. His love was a performance, a meticulously crafted illusion. It was always about him, his image, his ego. And I, like an idiot, had bought into it.
"Mommy!"
Jodie. Her voice, so sweet and clear, cut through my dark thoughts. I looked up, and there she was, standing in the doorway of the house-our house, for now. She was wearing the faded blue dress, the one I had tried to mend so many times. It was too short, a painful reminder of how quickly she was growing, how much I had missed, how much I would almost lose.
Next to her, Darryl Taylor, Fanny' s son, swaggered in a brand-new tracksuit, a gaudy superhero logo emblazoned across it. He was a few years older than Jodie, taller, broader. He held a brightly colored, expensive-looking toy in his hand, flaunting it.
Jodie' s eyes, wide and innocent, followed his movements. A flicker of longing, quickly masked by resignation, crossed her face. My heart ached, a sharp, physical pain.
"Darryl, stop showing off," Fanny' s voice cooed from inside. She emerged, dressed in a silk robe, a satisfied smirk playing on her lips. She caught my eye, and her smile widened, a silent challenge.
Darryl, emboldened, just snickered, then deliberately dropped his toy, letting it clatter loudly before kicking it. Jodie flinched.
My fists clenched. The image of Jodie' s hollow eyes in the future, her small body bruised and broken, flashed through my mind. It was a wound that would never heal.
Julian. He had brought them here. Fanny, his ex-girlfriend, and her monstrous son. Under the guise of "building a blended family," of teaching Jodie "resilience." It was all a twisted game, a cruel experiment fueled by his narcissistic need for control and validation.
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