“What’s your son’s name?” Martin asks, softer now.
You look down at the small face tucked against you.
Daniel wanted to name him after his father, Richard. Elaine wanted something “strong, traditional, respectable.” Melissa had suggested names like she was branding a company.
But you had chosen a name months ago in your heart.
“Elliot,” you say.
There is a pause.
Then Martin says, “Your father will like that.”
Your throat tightens.
Your father.
The man Daniel believed was dead because you once said, “My family isn’t in my life much,” and he never cared enough to ask why.
The man Elaine called “probably nobody important.”
The man whose private office Daniel ignored because he thought your maiden name, Whitaker, was just another quiet little detail from a quiet little wife.
Charles Whitaker is not nobody.
He is the founder and majority owner of Whitaker Holdings, a private investment firm with assets spread across banking, logistics, commercial real estate, and technology. His money helped build the startup Daniel claimed was “his empire.” His attorneys structured the trust that bought your house. His family office paid the down payment on the Mercedes Daniel drove to dinner tonight.
Daniel does not know that because you let him believe what made him feel taller.
You let him think you were just an accountant.