The city glittered back at her, immense and indifferent and alive. Somewhere in it her father was learning humility late. Her mother was probably setting a table too carefully for people she feared losing. Noel was waking before dawn to do work that left his hands blistered and his pride usefully altered. Grace, she assumed, had already found another story in which she was the misunderstood heroine and someone else had ruined the ending. Kyle would be locking up Ledger & Steam, wiping down the counter, perhaps thinking about whether to send her the joke he’d almost texted earlier. Her team would be sleeping or coding or drunk in good company. The oceanfront building hummed quietly under software she had written. Tenants paid rent, requested maintenance, scanned into lobbies, and probably had no idea their seamless experience existed because one woman had once been told she should surrender what she earned for the comfort of a man who had earned nothing.

Victoria rested her forehead lightly against the glass.

She thought of the reception hall. The crack of the slap. The ring of silence afterward. The smile that had risen to her face like a verdict.

In another life, perhaps, she might have apologized. Might have come back inside at her mother’s demand. Might have handed over the keys and told herself sacrifice was love. Might have spent the next decade shrinking carefully to keep peace in a house built around Noel’s appetites.

Instead she had walked out.

Everything that followed came from that step.

No one—not her father, not her brother, not the old fear of disappointing people who only loved her when she was useful—would ever take that from her again.

And because she knew that now, fully and without remainder, the city no longer looked like something she had escaped into.

It looked like hers.

« Prev