Emma’s heart leaped at the sound of her father’s voice, a mixture of profound relief and cold terror. Seeing her kneeling there, exhausted, tears tracing paths through the dirt on her face, and holding the crying baby Mason, Richard Carter’s handsome face was a mask of cold fury.
“What have you done?” Richard’s voice was low, dangerous. He didn’t look at Linda; his eyes were fixed on the raw skin of Emma’s hands. He strode over, not to Linda, but to Emma. Gently, he took the whimpering baby from her arms and then helped his daughter to her feet.
Linda, regaining her composure, adopted a posture of wounded innocence. “Richard, darling, she’s exaggerating! She’s always so dramatic. I just asked her to help tidy up a little. She doesn’t mind, do you, Emma?” She shot Emma a menacing glare that promised retribution.
But Emma was past caring about threats. She leaned against the cold marble wall for support, unable to speak, her breathing ragged.
Richard didn’t even turn his head toward Linda. He looked at the chaos around them: the spilled wine, the discarded cleaning supplies, the general air of drunken neglect. Then he turned his gaze on his wife, and the coldness in his eyes made Linda finally take a step back.
“The housekeeper quit months ago. My daughter is scrubbing floors at midnight, caring for your son, while you sit there, drunk, demanding she clean until her hands bleed,” he stated, his voice building into a roar that shook the grand hall. “I didn’t bring you here to be a tyrant! I brought you here to be a mother! To be a wife! You have done neither!”
He held Mason tighter, who, sensing the tension, had stopped crying and was now staring at his father.
“Get out of my house, right now!” Richard roared, pointing a shaking finger toward the front door. “Pack a bag. You have thirty minutes. Everything else will be sent to your mother’s address. You will never set foot on this property again, Linda. Never.”
Linda’s façade finally cracked. “You can’t do this! I’m your wife! I’ll take half! I’ll tell everyone you—”
“You’ll take nothing,” Richard cut her off, his voice lethal. “Before I left, I received an anonymous tip—a package of evidence. Pictures of you at casinos, draining the accounts I set aside for Mason’s college fund. You signed a prenuptial agreement that allows for immediate severance without division of assets in the event of proven marital misconduct or neglect of a dependent. You are leaving with the clothes on your back and the debts you’ve accrued.”
Linda stood motionless, her face pale, the realization of her utter defeat sinking in. She looked from Richard, who now held his infant son like a shield, to Emma, who was quietly weeping with relief. With a final, venomous look at her stepdaughter, Linda spun around and disappeared up the grand staircase.
Richard lowered his gaze to Emma. He placed the baby gently in his daughter’s arms. “I am so sorry, Emma,” he whispered, his voice thick with guilt. “I was blind. I will make this right. Starting now, you are safe, darling. You are safe.” Emma held Mason close, feeling the solid comfort of her father’s presence for the first time in months. The nightmare was finally over.