From Ruin: The Photographer's Comeback
img img From Ruin: The Photographer's Comeback img Chapter 3
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Chapter 6 img
Chapter 7 img
Chapter 8 img
Chapter 9 img
Chapter 10 img
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Chapter 3

The silence in the car after my confession about Conrad and my father was thick and heavy, like a suffocating blanket. Corey kept his eyes on the road, but I could feel his discomfort. His slight shifts in the seat, the way his fingers fidgeted on the steering wheel. He was processing. He was kind, always had been.

"Elise, I... I'm so sorry. I didn't know." His voice was low, filled with genuine regret. "I shouldn't have pried."

I shook my head. "It's fine, Corey. You didn't know. Most people don't."

I truly wasn't sad. Not anymore. The raw grief, the shock, the betrayal-those sharp edges had long since dulled. What remained was a familiar ache, a phantom limb of a past life.

"It happened a long time ago," I said, almost to myself. "It feels like someone else's story now. A story I read in a book."

Corey didn't press. He just drove, carefully navigating the city traffic. The air in the car remained charged, despite my attempt at nonchalance. He clearly felt the weight of my past.

His eyes flickered to the legal file still clutched in my hand. It was the only thing I hadn't let go of.

"So," he said, clearing his throat, his attempt to change the subject almost comically transparent. "This file. Was that why you were at the federal building? Settling something for your dad?"

I traced the embossed federal seal on the cover. It felt cold under my thumb. "Yes. His will. And a few other things."

"Ah." Corey nodded slowly. "I see."

He didn't ask what else. He knew.

"My father died last month," I said, the words coming out flat. "In prison."

Corey' s head snapped towards me, his eyes wide with surprise again. "Oh, El... I'm so sorry."

"He had a stroke. It was sudden. They found him in his cell. He'd been sick for a while, I guess. Some aggressive form of cancer they only discovered a few months ago." My voice was monotone, reciting facts, not feelings. "He applied for compassionate release, but it was too late. He didn't make it through the paperwork."

I looked out the window. The city lights blurred into streaks of color.

"His last words to me, over the phone, were 'Live well, Elise. Live free. And don't ever let that bastard win.'" A small, humorless smile touched my lips. "He never did forgive Conrad for what he did."

My father. A criminal, yes. A con artist who built an empire on lies. But to me, he was always just 'Dad.' The man who read me bedtime stories, who taught me how to ride a bike, who always told me I could achieve anything. He never blamed me for anything. He always tried to shield me from his world, even as he pulled me into it. He refused visitors for years, he said, because he didn't want me to see him like that. He didn't want me to carry that burden.

A pang, sharp and sudden, pierced through the numbness. A fleeting sadness, quickly suppressed.

"It's... complicated," I said, running a hand through my hair. "My story, I mean. It's not a simple one. It's not black and white."

Corey reached over and gently squeezed my arm. "I'm here to listen, El. Whenever you're ready."

I took a deep breath. "Maybe I am ready. It's a long story, though. About how a notorious white-collar criminal's daughter, who was once married to the FBI agent who put him away, ended up here. With a young, rising model acting as her fake husband."

Corey grinned, a flash of his usual playful self. "I can handle a long story. Especially one with such juicy plot twists."

I managed a faint smile back. I was ready. Ready to finally tell the story, not as a victim, but as someone who survived.

            
            

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