My mother divorced him in December 2024. She got half of everything and bought herself a small apartment fifteen minutes from us. We have lunch every Sunday, just the two of us, rebuilding a relationship that’s been buried under my father’s control for three decades.
Derek started therapy after the wedding. He’s trying. That’s all I can ask.
The $47,000 plus interest—$58,000 total—was returned to me over twenty-four months through a court-ordered settlement. I used it to pay off my student loans completely, eleven years ahead of schedule.
And Marcus? Marcus became my husband, my partner, my person. The man who saw me being hurt and decided to do something about it.
We’re talking about starting a family now. Having children. Building something new.
And I know with absolute certainty that I will never speak to my children the way my father spoke to me.
I don’t hate him. That surprised me at first. But hatred takes energy, and I’ve decided to spend mine on better things.
What I feel now is clarity.
My father needed to diminish others to feel important. That’s his burden to carry.
Not mine.
You can’t control how people treat you. But you can decide what you’re willing to accept.
It took me twenty-nine years to learn that lesson.
I hope it doesn’t take you as long.
THE END







