One Week Later...
A week after my night with Valentinaâseven days of stolen glances in hallways, sex in the infirmary, and text messages that vanished faster than a Kardashian marriageâEdward Sterling decided to crash into our lives like a B-movie villain with a trust fund.
Edward Sterling. Biological father of my twin sisters. Walking lawsuit in loafers. The human embodiment of "do you know who my father is?" energy.
It was my first time seeing the bastard in person.
Sure, Iâd Googled him beforeâlate-night masochism sessions where I stared at the smug face of the man whoâd tried to ship me to child services but couldnât be bothered to send Mom a check.
The kind of guy whose LinkedIn profile probably reads like a parody of late-stage capitalism.
I was in my room when the shouting startedâMomâs voice, taut and professional, the same one she probably used to talk down schizophrenics in the ER. Then a manâs voice, smooth with entitlement, like melted caviar.
When I came downstairs, there he was: tall, silver hair that definitely wasnât natural, suit that screamed "mortgage payment," standing in our living room like he was gracing us with his presence.
Exactly like his corporate headshotsâgeneric power pose, fake confidence, a jawline sculpted by generational wealth and zero actual effort.
So this is the legendary asshole. The sperm donor who bailed because Mom wasnât up to his yacht-club standards. Imagine being so allergic to responsibility you ghost your own kids.
But what really stuck out? The way he looked at me. Not like I was background noise. Not like I was just some punk in his exâs house. Noâthis guyâs stare had intent. He was studying me like I was a math problem heâd been avoiding for years but couldnât stop checking.
Oh, fantastic. The deadbeat he was: Here was a man whoâd contributed nothing to Sarah and Emmaâs livesâno financial support, no birthday cards, no awkward father-daughter dinners. Because why raise your daughters when you can obsess over the bastard stepson you tried to erase?
Irony so thick it deserved its own Netflix special: The man who gave zero shits about his actual children had apparently devoted energy to tracking me like I was a stock portfolio.
And, of course, he hadnât come alone. Cowards never do. He brought backupâa security gorilla with shoulders so wide they needed planning permission. Guy looked like he ate dumbbells for breakfast and shat out smaller security guards by noon.
Mom stood her ground, arms crossed, her tone pure Nurse-from-Hell. "Edward. You have sixty seconds to explain why youâre in my home."
Edward sneered, his lips curling like heâd just tasted something beneath his tax bracket. "Your son"âhe spat the word like it was a racial slurâ"assaulted a faculty member. Heâs violent, unstable, and now heâs endangering my daughters by association."
Ah, there it is. The Sterling Hypocrisy Special. The guy who abandoned his daughters now suddenly cares about their safety... from me. Itâs like watching a vegetarian write Yelp reviews for steakhouses.
"Youâve turned that boy into a violent, mentally unstable criminal," Edward ranted, jabbing a finger at me like I was a rabid dog heâd caught pissing on his Persian rug. "Heâs a danger to everyone around him, especially my daughters!"
âMy daughters.â Right. The same daughters he hasnât spoken to in twelve years but suddenly remembers exist when it fits his courtroom drama audition.
I leaned against the wall, arms crossed, watching the spectacle like bad community theater. Mom sat on our couchâthe secondhand one with a spring that jabbed you if you werenât carefulâlistening, enduring, because she knew yelling would only make things worse for Sarah and Emma.
"Mr. Sterling," I said, deliberately casual. "Interesting interpretation of events. How exactly am I endangering your daughters by defending mine? Where was this protective energy when Holloway was terrorizing students?" I tilted my head. "Oh right, you were probably on the golf course."
His face went through a time-lapse of humiliationâpink to crimson to full-on eggplant. "Youâ" He actually flinched, then glanced at his insurance policy.
Because of course Edward hadnât come with just one. Heâd brought another muscle. This one was like some HGH experiment by the door, arms bulging like he did bicep curls with car batteries.
Human meat shield in an Armani knockoff.
Brought a two bodyguards to argue with a barely seventeen-year-old?
The small dick energy could power a city block.
"Youâre a menace," Edward hissed, puffing himself back up. "A violent thug who should be in juvenile detention, not walking free."
"Your concern is touching," I said, voice steady even as rage coiled in my chest. "But againâthis paternal crusade was nowhere when Holloway was harassing her in his office or when Emma couldnât sleep without nightmares. Oh, right. Eighteenth hole. My bad."
"How dare youâ"
"No." Momâs voice cracked like a whip. She stood, shoulders squared, dignity radiating so hard it made his thousand-dollar suit look like polyester.
"How dare you come into my home and lecture me about protecting children. Where were you when Emma needed protection? When Sarah was breaking under the pressure? When any of them needed anything? When Peter wasâ" She stopped herself, but the silence said more than words.
Edward didnât care. He was pacing again, monologuing about "proper child-rearing" and the dangers of "enabling violent behavior," a TED Talk on hypocrisy. Not once did he ask about Emmaâs therapy, Sarahâs stress migraines, or the wreckage heâd left behind.
Fourteen years of silence, and now he shows upânot to help, not to heal, but to protect the one thing heâs always cared about: his reputation.
Then his eyes landed on the keys by the counter. The silver Mercedes logo might as well have been glowing neon.
"New car?" His voice sharpened, cruel. He drifted toward the window, spotting Momâs GLE parked outside like heâd found evidence of a crime. "Thatâs quite an upgrade for someone on a nurseâs salary. Unless youâve found... alternative income sources?"
The implication hung in the air, poisonous and heavy.
And there it was. The mask slipping. The rich manâs nuclear option: when you canât win the argument, slut-shame the woman who raised your kids without a dime from you.
"Spreading your legs for the right doctors, perhaps? Following in your adopted sonâs motherâs footsteps?"