She couldn’t bear the thought of losing someone a second time.
“Gwyn, sweetheart, none of us—not me, not anyone—have ever blamed you, do you understand? You can’t keep blaming yourself. None of this was your fault.”
If anyone was to blame, it was herself—for not seeing Violet’s schemes in time, for letting things with McNeil get so out of hand that even Gwyn couldn’t stand her back then.
Gwyn had never just been a child; it was unfair to lay the burden of childish ignorance and being misled all on her shoulders. Gwyn didn’t deserve that sort of guilt.
“Mom—”
Gwyn was trembling head to toe, lost, completely unsure what to do next. She didn’t want to go home. She couldn’t face everyone.
She wanted to run, to hide—anything but go back to pretending life could be normal again.
“Stop pushing her,” someone said quietly. “She’s not a little girl anymore. She can think for herself. Let her decide what to do with her future.”
Gwyneth was too distraught to reply, and Victoria’s heart was already breaking.
Years had passed. Victoria herself had made peace with it all, but her daughter was still trapped, unable to move beyond her own private hell.
Hawthorne stepped forward, pulling Gwyneth gently into his arms—almost stealing her away from Victoria’s embrace.
Only then did Victoria notice the man standing in the corner of her father’s hospital room. She had no idea when he’d arrived, and it unsettled her that she hadn’t noticed sooner.
She stared at him, momentarily taken aback. But Gwyneth seemed to melt into the man’s arms, her breathing finally slowing, her panic ebbing away.
“And you are…?”
She’d never seen him before, but his cool, commanding presence left no doubt—he wasn’t someone to be taken lightly.
Hawthorne’s reply was measured, almost dismissive. “No one important. You don’t need to remember me.”
Victoria frowned. If there was someone of his caliber in Starfall City, she would have known—but his face was completely unfamiliar.
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