Behind the desk hung portraits of Sterling men going back five generations. All of them looked down at me with the same cold, assessing eyes.

Julian followed us into the study, but he did not sit. He leaned against a bookshelf filled with first editions, eyes already glued back to his phone.

“Look up,” Arthur snapped at me.

I raised my head, meeting his gaze directly. There was no attempt to hide his contempt.

“Nora, it has been three years since you married into this family.”

“Yes, sir,” I whispered, my voice barely audible in that cavernous room.

“You know how Julian has treated you. You know your place here. You were a lapse in judgment, a phase he has finally grown out of.”

He opened a drawer in his desk and pulled out a check already written, already signed.

He flicked it onto the desk. It slid toward me, light as a feather, heavy as a mountain.

One hundred twenty million dollars.

“You do not belong in his world,” Arthur said, each word precisely enunciated. “Take this, sign the papers, and disappear. This is enough to keep you and your pathetic family in luxury for the rest of your lives.”

The insult stung like a needle pressed directly into my heart.

My pathetic family.