The words, so utterly out of character for the stoic Harold Mcneil, shattered the last of my composure. With a raw, primal cry, I launched myself into his arms, clinging to him as if he were the last anchor in a world utterly adrift. My tears, which I thought had run dry, flowed anew, hot and endless, soaking his expensive suit. I buried my face in his chest, clutching at his jacket, desperate to pour out every ounce of pain, every shattered dream, every horrifying memory into his strong, unyielding presence.
He held me tight, his large hand gently stroking my hair. His voice, usually a booming command, was now a low, rumbling growl of grief. "It's okay, baby girl," he murmured, his own tears tracing paths down his weathered cheeks. "Daddy's here. I'm so, so sorry I wasn't here sooner." He pulled back slightly, his eyes still burning with an inferno of rage as he looked at the scene of the tragedy, then back at me. "They will pay. I promise you, darling. Every single one of them. They will rue the day they ever touched my daughter or her child."
My sobs, loud and unrestrained, echoed through the suddenly quiet room, drawing Clarabelle and Kenton, who had paused, shocked by my father's abrupt entrance, back into view. They stood awkwardly in the doorway, their expressions shifting from smug triumph to dawning confusion.
My father turned his back to them, shielding me from their sight, his broad shoulders a bulwark against their cruelty. He didn't want them to see his face, not yet.
"Oh, look who it is," Clarabelle sneered, her voice dripping with artificial sweetness, "Kaylene's daddy is here to wipe her tears. How quaint. Still running to daddy, Kaylene? I thought you were supposed to be a big girl now. You're just a nobody from a humble background, always clinging to men for survival." She glanced at Kenton, her lips twisting into a triumphant smile. "What kind of person would have a child in such a chaotic way? Honestly, it's a testament to your poor choices."
A tremor ran through my father's body. His fists clenched, his knuckles turning white, and I felt the powerful tension in his frame. He tensed, ready to turn, ready to rip them apart.
But I gripped his arm, my fingers digging into his bicep. Not yet. Not like this. Not for them to see us break.
He glanced down at me, his brow furrowed with confusion, a silent question in his eyes. I shook my head, my gaze meeting his. The tears that had streamed down my face moments ago had now dried, leaving behind a cold, desolate mask. In their place, a chilling, unwavering resolve hardened my features.
My grief hadn't vanished. It had transmuted, transforming into a cold, hollow vengeance. I wanted more than just their destruction. I wanted them to suffer. To witness their world crumble, piece by agonizing piece. I wanted them to experience the profound, suffocating emptiness that now resided within me. I wanted them to understand the sheer, unadulterated cruelty of what they had done. I wanted to orchestrate their downfall, every meticulous detail, every public humiliation, every gut-wrenching moment.
My son. Kenton called him an "obstacle." Clarabelle called him an "inconvenience." They had stripped him of his humanity, reduced him to a problem. They would learn, slowly and painfully, what it meant to dehumanize a life. My revenge would be a slow, agonizing burn, a public spectacle mirroring the one they had inflicted upon me. The stage they had so gleefully set for my humiliation? I would turn it into their very own scaffold.
"Wait," I whispered, my voice barely audible, but firm.
My father looked at me, a flash of recognition in his fierce eyes. He saw the new me, the cold, calculating woman rising from the ashes of her shattered self. He relaxed his posture by a fraction, but the raw power radiating from him remained.
Clarabelle, mistaking his restraint for weakness or indifference, puffed out her chest, her confidence returning. "See, Kenton?" she cooed, tightening her grip on his arm. "Even her own family knows she's not worth the fuss. Now, about our wedding plans..." She turned back to my father, a simpering smile on her face. "Mr. Mcneil, I'm sure you understand. Some people just aren't cut out for success. Your daughter, well, she just needs to learn her place. And to stop trying to claim things that don't belong to her."
My eyes, dry and burning, fixed on her. I wanted to see her face, twisted in agony, when her carefully constructed world imploded. When every lie unraveled, every carefully curated image shattered.
Clarabelle, basking in what she perceived as her victory, held her head high. She was about to continue her venomous monologue when her eyes, casually sweeping over the room, landed on my father's face.
Her triumphant smirk faltered. Her eyes widened, a dawning horror stealing over her features. The color drained from her face, leaving it ashen. The words caught in her throat.
Suddenly, Clarabelle released Kenton's arm and curtsied clumsily, her eyes fixed on my father. Her voice, moments ago loud and mocking, was now a breathless whisper. "Mr. Mcneil?" she stammered, her smile forced and trembling. "I... I didn't realize it was you. My apologies. We would have rolled out the red carpet if we'd known."