Not confusion.
Recognition.
Preston noticed it too.
“You knew,” he said.
Conrad adjusted his cuff as if the conversation were an inconvenience.
“I suspected,” he replied.
My arms tightened around Grace.
Preston took one step toward his father.
“What does that mean?”
Conrad’s gaze remained calm.
“It means I did what was necessary to protect this family from a mistake made during an emotional period.”
The room seemed to tilt.
A mistake.
He meant my daughter.
He meant my marriage.
He meant the months I spent alone, afraid, and carrying a child his son had never been allowed to know.
Preston’s voice dropped.
“What did you do?”
Conrad sighed, almost bored.
“I redirected certain correspondence. Your wife was becoming a distraction during a critical acquisition. You were finally returning to discipline. I was not going to let sentiment destroy decades of work.”
For a moment, Preston did not move.
Then his face changed into something I had never seen before.
Not anger.
Not exactly.
Something colder.
“You blocked her messages?”
“I managed a situation,” Conrad said.
“You kept me from my daughter.”
Conrad’s eyes flicked toward Grace.
“You have no idea how complicated legacy can become when handled carelessly.”
I stepped back, holding Grace close.
“She is not a complication,” I said.
Conrad looked at me for the first time as if I had become a problem he could not simply remove.
“Hannah, you were overwhelmed and emotional. I did what was necessary.”
I raised my chin.
“No. You did what powerful people do when they think no one will ever make them answer for it.”
Preston turned toward me, his face pale with shock and shame.
“Hannah, I didn’t know.”
I believed him.
But belief did not erase the nights.
It did not erase the fear.
It did not erase the first time Grace smiled and there was no father there to see it.
I looked from Preston to his father, then down at my daughter.
“Maybe you didn’t know,” I said softly. “But I was still alone.”
Grace shifted in my arms and gave a tiny sound.
Preston looked at her as if that small noise had broken something open inside him.
Then, for the first time since I had walked into that room, his voice trembled.
“Please don’t leave yet.”
I looked at him for a long moment.
Then I said, “I came here for the truth, Preston. Not for promises.”
And behind him, Conrad Waverly’s calm expression finally began to crack.