Independence.
And that, more than anything, completed my transformation.
Not because I defeated my son, but because I finally stopped abandoning myself in order to keep other people comfortable.
Today I manage six warehouses, an animal rescue center, and a portfolio I understand better than Richard ever imagined. I speak enough Italian to order dinner and flirt mildly with my teacher. I invest. I travel occasionally. I sleep well.
Richard and Susan never truly came back into my life. Martin once told me they made a brief, pathetic attempt to file something against me, hoping to paint me as neglectful and unstable, but it went nowhere. A judge dismissed it almost immediately.
Now they are little more than a faded mark on the edge of a chapter I no longer live inside.
When I think back to that night—the pink dress, the pearls, the string music drifting through the trees, my own son telling me I did not belong—I no longer feel shame.
I feel gratitude.
Because the moment I was turned away from the wedding I paid for was the same moment I was finally invited back into my own life.
And this is one celebration no one will ever be allowed to keep me out of again.
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