That realization sent a chill through me deeper than the winter air. What had my father known? And why had he been so certain I should tell no one—not even Ryan?

The light changed. I drove on.

By the time I pulled into an all-night parking lot near a row of dark storefronts, I had made one decision. I didn’t know what the card was, and I didn’t know whether it would do anything at all. But in the morning, I was going to find out.

I leaned back in the driver’s seat and closed my eyes, exhausted beyond thought. Somewhere between grief and numbness, a new feeling began to stir—small, sharp, and unfamiliar. Not hope exactly. Something harder than that.

My husband had thrown me out believing I had nowhere to go. He had looked at me and seen weakness, dependence, the easy ruin of a woman who had built her life around him.

But sitting there in the cold car with my father’s secret card in my purse, I had the strange, trembling sense that the story Ryan thought he had ended was only just beginning.