“Well, son. If you want honesty, let’s have it. Tonight you’ve revealed exactly who you are — a complete fool. A coward. A man willing to humiliate his wife, his children, and this entire family for selfish reasons.”
Marcus’ smile flickered. It wavered just slightly.
His mother, who had been sitting frozen, slowly rose. Her face had drained of color, but her voice was controlled in a way I had never heard before — cold and deliberate.
“How could you?” she said quietly, staring at him. “How could you bring another woman — and display her pregnancy — into this house, to this table, in front of Claire and your children? Claire has given you everything. And you stand there flaunting Camille as though betrayal deserves applause?”
Marcus’ jaw tightened. His hand gripped Camille’s so tightly his knuckles whitened.
“I told you, I can’t live a lie anymore,” he insisted. “I love her.”
His father slammed his wine glass onto the table. The crack of glass against wood made everyone jump.
“Love?” he spat. “Don’t speak to me about love when you’ve crushed loyalty, decency, and respect. If this is who you choose to be, you are no son of mine. We did not raise you to disgrace your family like this.”
Camille stiffened. The smugness drained from her expression.
Then came the words none of us expected — not even Marcus.
“As of this moment,” his father declared, “you are removed from my will. Removed from the family trust. Everything will go to Claire and the children. They are the ones who carry our name with honor. Not you.”
Gasps rippled around the table. My chest tightened. I instinctively squeezed Emma’s hand. Marcus’ face went pale, his eyes darting between his parents and me, searching for something — anything.
Camille looked up at him, her expression no longer confident.
Still, Marcus forced himself upright. His voice dropped, almost mechanical.
“Do whatever you want,” he said. “I don’t care about money. I care about Camille. That’s what matters.”
He looked at her for reassurance. She offered a faint smile and held onto him.
But I saw it — the shift in her eyes. It wasn’t affection. It wasn’t devotion. It was calculation. A brief flicker, but unmistakable.