A nurse helped me into a wheelchair. Liam in my arms, a small bag of our things at my feet.
We descended to the main entrance. The evening air of New York was cool, a shock after the climate controlled hospital.
The doorman helped me into the backseat of a yellow cab that smelled of stale air freshener and old leather. I gave the driver the address to our building on Central Park West.
As the cab pulled away from the curb, my phone buzzed. A photo from Tristan.
A beautifully plated dish of scallops. The lights of the restaurant soft and glamorous in the background.
The caption, “Wish you were here. The scallops are incredible. Exo.”
A sob caught in my throat. I opened the Find My app on my phone.
A little pulsing dot showed the location of my phone. Another dot labeled Bentley was stationary. I zoomed in on the map.
There it was right on West 51st Street. Lou Bernardine.
I watched that dot for the entire agonizingly slow ride up town through the traffic clogged streets. It never moved.
He was there sipping expensive wine, laughing with his parents while I sat in a dirty cab, clutching our son.
Each block taking me further away from the life I thought I had. When the cab finally stopped in front of our building, our doorman, Carlos, rushed out, his face a mask of confusion and concern.
“Mrs. Blackwood, I we weren’t expecting you. Let me help you.”
He took Liam’s carrier and offered me an arm. I walked into the marble lobby.
The silence of the penthouse apartment looming above me like a judgment. It was supposed to be a homecoming.
It felt like a sentence. Carlos brought us upstairs.
The apartment was spotless, dark, and utterly empty. I took Liam out of his carrier, sank onto the huge, cold leather sofa in the living room, and finally let the tears fall.
They were silent tears, not of sadness, but of a fury so pure and cold it felt like ice in my veins. I looked at my phone.
The dot was still at the restaurant. I thought of Tristan’s words. “After everything I’ve given up.”
I scrolled through my contacts, my thumb hovering over one name. Dad.
I took a deep shaky breath and pressed call. It rang twice.
“Amelia.” My father’s voice boomed, warm and familiar. “How’s my beautiful daughter and my new grandson? Are you home? Did everything go smoothly?”
The concern in his voice was my undoing.
“Daddy,” I said, my voice low and steady, despite the tremor inside. “I’m home alone with your grandson.”
“Tristan took my car to have a fine dining experience with his family.” I paused, letting the horror of the statement hang in the transcontinental silence. “Daddy, make him bankrupt.”
By tonight, the silence of the penthouse was a physical presence, thick and heavy. It was a stark contrast to the constant low-level hum of the hospital here.
The only sounds were the faint were of the climate control and the tiny snuffling breaths coming from Liam, who was finally asleep in the bassinet I’d painstakingly positioned next to the master bed.
My body achd with a deep, pervasive exhaustion, but my mind was a raging storm. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw it.
The photo of the perfect scallops, the soft lighting of the restaurant, the casual cruelty of that text. “Wish you were here.”
He was probably on the dessert course by now. A postmeal cognac, perhaps, laughing with his father.
While my mother’s carefully prepared meal from Daniel sat uneaten in our Subzero refrigerator, I pushed myself off the bed, wincing at the throb of stitches.
I couldn’t just lie here. The helplessness was suffocating.
I walked a slow, shuffling gate that made me feel 80 years old into the vast minimalist living room. The floor to-seeiling windows offered a breathtaking postcard perfect view of Central Park, now twinkling with lights.
It was a view synonymous with success, with having made it. Right now, it felt like a beautifully framed picture of my own gilded cage.
My phone buzzed on the coffee table. Another message from Tristan.
This time, a selfie. He was grinning. A glass of amber liquid in his hand. His parents flanking him, their faces flushed with happiness.
The message below red, “Mom and dad say hi. Can’t wait to see you and Liam. Almost done here. Exo.”
The hypocrisy was so vast, so absolute. It shortcircuited something in my brain.
The anger that had been simmering, cold and hard, suddenly boiled over. It wasn’t just about tonight.
It was about every off-hand comment he’d made about my father’s influence. Every time he’d referred to my company as my little tech startup, the way he’d insisted on being added to investment accounts to feel more involved.
The way he’d said, “You and your son in the hospital room.”
This wasn’t a misunderstanding. This was the reveal.
This was who Tristan Blackwood truly was.
I picked up my phone, my hands trembling, not with weakness, but with a focused white hot rage. I didn’t call my best friend, Sophie.
She would offer sympathy. And right now, sympathy would dilute the fury I needed to survive this.
I needed action. I needed a scalpel, not a band-aid.
I scrolled past her name, past my mother’s, and found the number labeled dad direct line. It was a number that bypassed all assistance, all buffers.
It rang only on the phone he kept within arms reach 24 hours of the day. It was picked up on the second ring.
“Amelia.” Robert Sinclair’s voice was a familiar anchor. Deep and steady with the faintest trace of a Boston accent he’d never lost.
He sounded wide awake, though it was past midnight in Gushtad, where he and my mother were staying.
“To what do I owe this pleasure? Shouldn’t you be resting? How’s my grandson? Let me see him.”
There was a Russell and I knew he was fumbling to switch to a video call.
“Don’t, Dad,” I said, my voice surprisingly flat. “Not video.”
The line went quiet for a beat. I could picture him instantly, the casual warmth vanishing from his expression, replaced by the razor sharp focus of a predator sensing a threat.
That was my father. He could switch from doing grandfather to corporate titan in a nancond.
“Amelia.” His tone was different now. All business. “What’s wrong? Are you hurt? Is the baby ill?”
“Liam is fine. I’m physically fine.” I took a sharp breath. The words lining up in my mind like soldiers.
“Daddy, I’m home alone with your grandson.”
“Where is Tristan?” The question was a demand.
“He was supposed to drive you home. I spoke with him this morning.”
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