His eyes filled. “She said Colin agreed. She said the papers were for the grandchildren. For their futures.”
“Were you signing control over to her?”
He hesitated.
“Ed.”
“Some of it,” he admitted. “Only what was mine.”
I stood, folder in hand.
“Then all four children are coming here.”
“Marilyn, please. It will destroy Colin.”
“No,” I said. “Megan did that. You helped. Now everyone gets the truth.”
By noon, Susan, Caroline, Timothy, Colin, and Megan were in the family waiting area. Megan stood beside Colin as though she were the one who needed protection.
I placed the folder on the table.
“Your father is stable,” I said. “But this family isn’t.”
Susan crossed her arms. “Mom, what happened?”
I looked at Megan. “Tell them why you had Ed’s apartment key.”
Megan swallowed. “Colin called me.”
Colin frowned. “No, I didn’t.”
“Then tell them why you had this folder,” I said.
Timothy opened it and went still. “These are account notes.”
“And emergency contact drafts,” Caroline said, pulling out a page.
Megan reached for it. “That is private.”
“No,” I said. “My marriage was private. Until you decided to ruin it.”
Her face hardened. “I was trying to protect what belongs to my family.”
Susan stepped closer. “You mean what belongs to Mom and Dad.”
“It would have gone to waste,” Megan snapped.
The room went silent.
“On what?” I asked.
“Doctors. Care. Guilt. You would have let him drain everything because you couldn’t let go, Marilyn!”
Colin let go of her hand.
“Megan,” he said quietly. “Tell me you didn’t use my father’s fear to get near his money.”
“I did it for us. For the boys.”
He stepped back. “Then there’s no us until I know who I married.”
Her face went white.
“Colin, please.”
“Leave,” he said. “I can’t look at you.”
Then Colin turned to me, his face crumpling.
“Mom,” he said, “I’m sorry. I should’ve listened when you said something felt wrong.”
I nodded once. I loved him too much to punish him for being deceived. But I loved myself too much to pretend it had not hurt.
—
Two weeks later, Ed stood at our door.
“Can I come in?” he asked.
“You can recover here,” I said. “But that’s all I can do right now. I don’t trust you.”
His eyes filled. “I’ll earn your trust back.”
“You’ll try,” I said. “And I’ll decide whether trying is enough.”
—
That night, I placed the divorce papers in a folder and wrote three words across the front.
“Things I survived.”
Then I turned on the porch light.
Not because Ed deserved an easy road home, but because I did.