I sent the children near the Christmas tree, though Caleb kept watching Marcus. David opened the binder. Inside were old bank transfers, reports, letters, and photographs. One picture slid onto the table. It was me, younger and pregnant, standing outside the small apartment Marcus and I once shared. I remembered the day: carrying groceries, swollen and tired, wearing his old gray sweater because none of my coats fit. I had not known anyone was watching.
David turned more pages. Me leaving a clinic. Me walking Caleb to school. Me holding baby Noah on a bus. The dates stretched across years.
“They were watching us,” I whispered.
Marcus said nothing.
I turned to him.
“You knew where we were.”
“Kesha, listen—”
“You knew where your children were.”
He looked toward the hallway, toward his mother, like a boy still waiting for permission.
David’s jaw tightened.
“There were payments to a private investigator. Reports were sent to Patricia Reynolds.”
Ashley stared at Marcus.
“Your mother had them followed?”
Marcus whispered, “She said it was necessary.”
Necessary. My children’s hunger had been necessary. Their questions, my fear, my humiliation in clinics and grocery stores, all of it had been necessary so the Reynolds name could stay polished.
Then Ashley found another page.
“What is the Bennett Settlement Account?”
Patricia froze. Bennett was my maiden name, the name my children carried because Marcus had not earned the right to give them his.
David read quickly.
“Kesha, this appears to be an account created in your name. Initial deposit: two million dollars. Additional deposits over six years.”
I stared at Patricia.
“There was money?”
“It was set aside,” she said.
“For who?”
“For the situation.”
“The situation? You mean my children?”
David explained that the money had never been released to me. It had been locked behind layered authorization. Ashley looked sick.
“So while she raised his children alone, you hid money meant for them?”
Patricia snapped.
“I kept her from using those children to destroy this family.”
That was when I finally understood. Marcus had abandoned us, but Patricia had managed the abandonment. She funded it, watched it, organized it, and called it protection.
“David,” I said quietly, “add it to the case.”
Patricia laughed.
“You think a judge will simply hand you Reynolds money?”
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