“Not to us,” Tyler admitted. “When we got back to the hotel, he tried at first, but when I pressed him, he trailed off, shaking his head. He said I didn’t understand the pressures of the financial crisis. That sometimes difficult decisions had to be made to protect the majority of clients.”
“Classic rationalization,” I noted.
“He’s afraid you’re going to go public with this,” my mother said, “or take legal action.”
“I meant what I said last night,” I replied. “I didn’t collect that information to expose or blackmail him. I needed to understand why he was the way he was, why our family functioned the way it did.”
“But you could,” Tyler pointed out. “Go public. I mean, you have the evidence.”
I sighed, stirring my untouched coffee. “What would that accomplish now? The statute of limitations has passed on most of it. The settlements ensured the affected families can’t speak out. It would destroy his career and reputation, affect the firm’s other employees and clients, and for what? Justice? That’s a decade too late.”
My mother looked relieved, but Tyler seemed troubled.
“So he just gets away with it,” he said quietly, “with all of it. What he did to those families. How he’s treated you. Last night’s public humiliation.”
“I didn’t say that,” I clarified. “I said I’m not planning to expose him publicly or legally. But our relationship has fundamentally changed. I won’t pretend it didn’t happen, and I won’t accept being treated the way he’s treated me my entire life.”
My mother reached for my hand. “He does love you, Natalie, in his way.”
“His way isn’t good enough anymore,” I said gently but firmly. “Love doesn’t come with conditions or ultimatums.”
We talked for nearly three hours. My mother revealed more details about their marriage than I’d ever known: how she’d slowly surrendered pieces of herself to maintain peace, how she convinced herself that protecting our family’s image was protecting us. Tyler shared his own struggles with our father’s expectations and his growing disillusionment with his job at the firm.
“I don’t even know if I want to go back,” he admitted. “Everything feels tainted now.”
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