
Betrayal and a Second Chance
Chapter 2
The arrivals terminal at JFK buzzed with its usual chaos—reunions, farewells, the constant stream of humanity flowing in and out of New York. I stood apart from it all, a statue among the moving crowd, scanning faces until I spotted him. My father, Robert Morgan, looked older than when I'd seen him last Christmas. The lines around his eyes had deepened, his salt-and-pepper hair now more salt than pepper.
When his eyes met mine, I felt something crack inside me. Ten days had passed since Arthur Vance's call had shattered my world. Ten days of pretending to James that I was processing, accepting, trying to understand. Ten days of sleeping in the guest room, of avoiding the black swans, of questioning every memory we'd ever shared.
I hadn't told my father anything specific on the phone—just that there was a 'legal issue' with my marriage that required his advice. But fathers know. They always know.
"Claire-bear," he called, using the childhood nickname that normally made me cringe. Today, it nearly broke me.
I walked toward him, maintaining the careful composure I'd perfected over the past week and a half. But when his arms wrapped around me, strong and secure as they had been throughout my childhood, the facade crumbled.
"It's all a lie," I whispered into his shoulder, my voice so quiet I wasn't sure he'd heard until his arms tightened around me.
"I'm here now," he said simply, and for that moment, it was enough.
---
The penthouse gleamed in the late morning sun as I set out the brunch I'd prepared—poached eggs, smoked salmon, fresh fruit, and the sourdough bread my father loved. Everything perfect, controlled. Just like the expression I'd fixed on my face.
"This spread is wonderful, Claire," my father said, settling into one of the dining chairs. His eyes, however, never left my face. "But you seem off. Are you sleeping?"
"I'm fine," I replied automatically, pouring him coffee. "Just tired. It's been a busy week."
He didn't believe me—I could tell by the way his brow furrowed—but he let it pass, taking a sip of his coffee instead. "This is good. Still buying from that place in the Village?"
"James gets it imported from Colombia now," I said, then immediately regretted mentioning his name. It hung in the air between us, heavy with unspoken questions.
My father set down his cup. "Speaking of James, where is he?"
"Work emergency." Another lie to add to the collection. The truth was I'd asked him to give me time alone with my father. He'd agreed readily, perhaps relieved to escape the confrontation he knew was coming.
We ate in silence for a while, the clink of silverware against china the only sound. Outside, the city continued its relentless pace, oblivious to the fact that my world had stopped turning ten days ago.
"Claire," my father finally said, his voice gentle but firm. "Tell me about this lawsuit you mentioned on the phone."
I set down my fork, food untouched. Part of me—the part still clinging to the illusion of my perfect life—wanted to brush it off, to tell him James would handle it, that it was nothing to worry about. The same part that had been in denial for days, that still woke up each morning expecting to find that this had all been a terrible dream.
"It's complicated," I began, echoing James's words from that fateful day. But as I met my father's concerned gaze, I couldn't continue the charade. My throat tightened, words failing me.
"James will sort it out," I managed finally, hating how weak I sounded, how desperate to believe my own words. "It's just a misunderstanding."
My father reached across the table and took my hand. His palm was rough, calloused from years of building his business from nothing. Hands that had always protected me, even when I thought I didn't need protection.
"Claire," he said quietly, "whatever it is, you don't have to face it alone."
I nodded, blinking back tears. Not yet. I wasn't ready to say the words aloud, to admit that the life I'd built was founded on sand, that the man I loved had never truly been mine. That my own sister had orchestrated my decade of deception.
Not yet.
But soon, the truth would have to come out. And when it did, nothing would ever be the same again.
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