When Claire finally spoke, her voice had lost its sharpness. “I just needed Dad to delay tomorrow’s meeting. That’s all.”
I looked at Walter. “What meeting?”
He rubbed his face. “I was restructuring the trust. I planned to make Robert and Elena co-trustees if something happened to me. Claire would still receive her share, but she wouldn’t control distributions.”
There it was.
Not jealousy.
Money.
Then we heard soft footsteps in the hallway. Sophie stood near the doorway in her socks, clutching her tablet. Her eyes were wet.
“Mom?” she whispered. “Is Daddy my dad?”
Everything inside me shattered.
I moved toward her, but Robert got there first. He dropped to one knee and opened his arms. She ran straight into him.
“Yes,” he said, holding her tightly. “I am. I always will be. Nothing anyone says changes that.”
She buried her face against him. “Then why did Aunt Claire say it?”
No one at the table answered.
Robert did. “Because she said something cruel and untrue. And grown-ups have to answer for that.”
Sophie turned toward Claire. For the first time that night, Claire looked like she understood the weight of what she had done.
And for the first time, regret crossed her face.
After Sophie spoke, the room shifted.
Until then, it had been a vicious family conflict—public, humiliating, even legally dangerous—but still something people might later try to call a misunderstanding. The moment Sophie stood there with tear-streaked cheeks, the lie lost all cover. It wasn’t strategy anymore. It wasn’t emotion. It was what it had always been: cruelty directed at a child.
Robert carried Sophie back to the den. I followed, but he glanced over his shoulder and said quietly, “Give me one minute.”
So I waited in the hallway and listened.