May be an image of child

The silence in the kitchen was unbearable.

Veronica was the first to speak.

—Marcus… it’s not what it seems.

Marcus did not respond.

His eyes were fixed on Lily.

—Come here —he whispered.

The girl hesitated for a second.

Then she ran towards him and hugged his waist.

Marcus lifted Noah off the ground.

The little boy kept crying.

—Shhh… it’s okay… Dad’s here.

His hands were trembling.

Not out of fear.

Out of anger.

He looked at Veronica again.

—Explain yourself.

She took a deep breath.

—The children were making a mess… I was just trying to discipline them.

Marcus felt his blood boil.

-Discipline?

Lily clutched her jacket.

—Dad… don’t tell him anything…

Marcus looked down at her.

-Because?

The girl whispered something that pierced his soul.

—Because then she gets even angrier…

The silence fell like a stone.

Marcus looked at Veronica again.

This time, without a doubt.

-How long?

Veronica frowned.

-What are you taking about?

Marcus pointed to the bruise on Lily’s arm.

—How long have you been doing this?

She raised her hands.

—Marcus, you’re exaggerating.

Then Lily spoke.

—When you leave… she changes.

Marcus felt the world tilting.

-What do you mean?

Lily looked at the ground.

—He says we’re a nuisance… that we’re ruining his life.

Veronica shouted:

—That’s not true!

But Lily continued.

—She says Mom died because of us.

Marcus froze.

That sentence was too cruel even to imagine.

—Lily… —he whispered.

The girl started to cry.

—We didn’t want him to die…

Marcus hugged his children tightly.

And for the first time in years, he understood something terrible.

While he was building an empire…

His home had become a place of fear.

He took a deep breath.

Then he spoke with a dangerous calmness.

—Pack your things.

Veronica blinked.

-That?

—You’re leaving.

—Marcus, you can’t just fire me like this.

Marcus took out his phone.

—I can do it in less than ten minutes.

Veronica looked at him in disbelief.

—You wouldn’t do that to me.

Marcus responded with a single sentence.

—You touched my children.

And that was enough.

That same night the lawyers were called.

The next day Veronica was no longer in the house.

But what marked Marcus the most was not the legal scandal.

Not even divorce.

Not even betrayal.

It was something much simpler.

Three days later, while reading Lily a bedtime story, the little girl looked at him with tired eyes and said:

—Dad… are you finally going to stay?

Marcus slowly closed the book.

He sat down next to her.

And for the first time in many years, he understood something that no business had ever taught him.

An empire can wait.

But a child’s childhood… no.