"Time for yourself? Patricia, your entire life is time for yourself. You don’t work that much. You don’t have responsibilities—"
There it was. The core rot. The thing that had hollowed them out for years.
She walked to the window instead of to him. The lawn outside was perfect, manicured within an inch of its life. A postcard of a life she didn’t want anymore.
"You really don’t see me at all, do you?"
"What are you talking about now?"
"My middle name," she said. "What is it?"
He blinked. "This is— Patricia, come on."
"Try."
Silence. His mouth opened. Closed. Nothing.
"It’s Mercy," she said. "Patricia Mercy Sullivan. You’ve signed that name a hundred times and you don’t even know it."
"These are trivial details—"
"What did I major in at college?"
His silence this time felt like a confession.
"What was my mother’s name? What did she die from? How old was I? What am I allergic to? What medication do I take every morning? What nightmare have I had since I was eight?"
Richard’s jaw flexed so hard it looked painful. "Patricia, this isn’t—"
"Who was my best friend in college?" she cut in. "The one I used to get coffee with every month until you—" She stopped. Breathed. "Never mind. You don’t remember her either."
He rolled his eyes — his favorite defense mechanism. "If you’re trying to make some point—"
"The point is you don’t know me, even the simplest things like those." Her words were soft, but they hit like steel. "You know a role. A function. A wife. A mother. A hostess on your arm at events. But me? The actual person? You never looked."
She stepped closer but stayed just out of reach — the emotional no-man’s-land they’d lived in for years.
"You don’t know that I wanted to be a teacher. That I volunteer at the literacy center twice a week and have for twelve years. That I donated half my grandma inheritance to women’s shelters. That I speak French. That I write poetry. That I have endometriosis and you called it ’normal female overreacting.’"
Each sentence landed. He actually stepped back, like he was being physically hit.
"These aren’t trivia, Richard. This is who I am."
He swallowed, throat tight. "Patricia—"
"And then there’s Linda Carter."
His face drained instantly. Like she’d pulled the plug on him.
"Let’s talk about the threats," Patricia said, voice shaking but steady at the same time. "Every time I tried to help her. Every time I wanted to be human, you dangled my own shares at Morrison Constructions and your control in my own hospital over my head."
"That was—"
"’If you talk to her, you’ll lose your inheritance.’" Her imitation of him was scarily accurate. "’If you help her, I’ll make sure there are consequences.’"
She let that settle.
"Linda adopted a baby, Richard. A child. And you punished her for it. You punished me for caring."
His hands gripped the desk like he needed it to stay upright.
"She was connected to that woman," he muttered.
"Morrison Constructions."


"Don’t touch me!" Patricia jerked back so hard the heel of her shoe scraped against the floor. "Don’t you fucking dare."
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