I looked at Grant and smiled politely. “Congratulations,” I said. “Tomorrow sounds important.” He mistook my calm for approval and raised his wineglass. Then the doorbell rang. Grant opened the door with a smug expression that disappeared instantly. Standing on the porch were three members of Mercer Dynamics’ board of directors, the police commissioner, and Dr. Patel. Behind them stood two detectives.
The room fell silent as the board chairman stepped inside. “Mr. Mercer,” he said, “your promotion has been suspended effective immediately.” Grant’s face turned white. Dr. Patel gently asked Claire if he could examine her arm and neck. Within minutes, he confirmed that her injuries were not consistent with a simple fall. The police commissioner nodded to the detectives, who began taking photographs of her bruises.
Evelyn tried to protest, but the chairman raised a hand. “There is one more matter,” he said. He turned toward me. “As trustee of the Whitmore Family Trust and owner of thirty-eight percent of this company, would you like to address the board?” Grant stared at me in disbelief. He had spent years treating my daughter as if she were trapped and powerless, never realizing that the woman he mocked at his table represented the largest voting block in the company.
That night, Grant was taken in for questioning, and his promotion vanished before it ever began. Claire moved home with me and filed for divorce a week later. Months afterward, she returned to Mercer Dynamics—not as Grant’s wife, but as the company’s new director of community programs. One evening, while we shared tea on my porch, she looked at me and whispered, “I thought no one could save me.” I squeezed her hand and smiled. “You didn’t need someone to save you, sweetheart. You only needed someone to remind you that you were never alone