The ballroom no longer felt real.
Everything had fractured too completely.
The wedding.
The lies.
My mother.
The accident.
And now Evelyn standing beside me, trembling slightly after confessing the one thing that changed everything.
“My mother tried to take you with her the night she died?”
My voice barely sounded human.
Evelyn nodded slowly.
Daniel looked sick.
Richard Hart looked furious.
But neither of them denied it.
That terrified me more than the answer itself.
The reporters were screaming questions again now, but security had finally started forcing people backward.
Cameras still flashed nonstop.
Nobody wanted to leave.
Because this wasn’t celebrity gossip anymore.
This was murder.
Or something dangerously close to it.
Evelyn kept her eyes on me carefully.
“She found something,” she said quietly.
“What?”
Evelyn hesitated.
Daniel immediately stepped forward.
“Not here.”
I looked at him sharply.
“You lost the right to decide that.”
His jaw tightened.
Good.
I wanted him uncomfortable.
I wanted him destroyed the same way my entire reality had just been destroyed.
Richard suddenly interrupted coldly.
“This conversation is over.”
Evelyn ignored him completely.
Interesting.
Nobody ignored Richard Hart.
Nobody except her.
“She called me two days before the accident,” Evelyn continued softly. “She sounded terrified.”
My breathing became uneven again.
Terrified.
My mother was never scared.
Not outwardly.
Even after my father died, she carried herself like someone who refused to break in front of me.
So imagining her afraid…
truly afraid…
made my chest ache violently.
“What did she say?”
Evelyn looked at Daniel briefly before answering.
“She said your father’s company was hiding something illegal.”
Richard’s face hardened instantly.
Daniel closed his eyes.
And suddenly I understood something horrifying.
This wasn’t new information to him.
He already knew.
The realization made me physically ill.
“You knew all of this.”
Daniel looked at me carefully.
“Yes.”
The word shattered whatever remained between us.
No defense.
No excuse.
Just yes.
I laughed once under my breath.
Small.
Broken.
“Three years.”
Daniel stepped closer instinctively.
“Sophia—”
“Don’t.”
My voice cracked sharply enough to stop him immediately.
“You watched me mourn her for three years.”
Pain flashed across his face instantly.
Real pain.
But I no longer trusted pain from men like Daniel Hart.
Because maybe guilt and manipulation looked identical in his world.
Evelyn suddenly spoke again.
“She left something behind.”
The entire room seemed to freeze.
Even Richard looked alarmed now.
Not angry.
Alarmed.
That distinction mattered.
“What do you mean?” I asked quietly.
Evelyn swallowed carefully.
“A file.”
Daniel looked toward Evelyn immediately.
“You said it was gone.”
“I thought it was.”
Richard’s voice became dangerously calm.
“Evelyn.”
Warning again.
Always warnings.
Evelyn ignored him anyway.
“She gave it to me the night before she died.”
The ballroom disappeared around me again.
My mother knew.
She knew she was in danger.
And somehow…
she knew enough to prepare for something happening to her.
I suddenly couldn’t breathe properly.
Daniel noticed immediately.
Instinctively he reached toward me again before stopping himself halfway.
That hesitation hurt more than if he’d touched me.
Because it reminded me he still knew me.
Even after all the lies.
Evelyn lowered her voice carefully.
“She told me if anything happened to her… I had to protect you.”
The words broke something inside me completely.
Not loudly.
Not dramatically.
Quietly.
Like grief finally finding the exact place to land.
Tears blurred my vision instantly.
My mother knew.
Some part of her knew she might never come home.
And she spent her final night trying to protect me anyway.
Daniel looked devastated now.
Actually devastated.
But I couldn’t care.
Not anymore.
“What’s in the file?”
Nobody answered immediately.
Which meant it was bad.
Very bad.
Finally Evelyn spoke.
“Financial records. Internal communications. Payments.”
I stared at her blankly.
“Payments for what?”
This time Daniel answered.
“To keep people silent.”
The reporters exploded again instantly.
Questions everywhere.
Security pushing harder.
Someone yelling for police.
But my focus stayed entirely on Daniel.
Because suddenly his voice sounded different.
Not protective.
Resigned.
Like he finally understood there was no way back anymore.
I looked at him carefully.
“Did my mother die because of that file?”
Silence.
Daniel looked away first.
That was enough.
Oh my God.
Oh my God.
Clara covered her mouth beside us, visibly horrified now.
Even she hadn’t expected this.
Nobody had.
Richard suddenly stepped forward again, fury finally cracking through his perfect composure.
“You have no idea what you’re doing.”
Daniel looked directly at his father.
And for the first time all night…
he looked fearless.
“No,” he said quietly.
“You’re the one losing control.”
The temperature in the room seemed to drop instantly.
Because suddenly this wasn’t just about me anymore.
It was father against son.
And somehow…
I realized Daniel had been afraid of Richard long before he was afraid of losing me.
Evelyn reached into her purse slowly.
Richard moved instantly.
“Stop her.”
Security hesitated.
Nobody wanted to be the person caught in the middle anymore.
Evelyn pulled out a small silver key.
My pulse accelerated immediately.
“She told me never to trust the police,” Evelyn whispered.
Then she placed the key carefully into my hand.
“And never trust the Hart family.”