I filed for divorce before the week ended.
During mediation, Grant tried one last performance—navy suit, wedding ring, the face of a man rehearsing sympathy. He said I had humiliated him. He said I had destroyed our family. He said a child needed both parents under one roof.
I looked at him across the polished table and saw a man who had confused access with ownership.
“You destroyed this family,” I said. “I just refused to help you hide it.”
He lost the house, the board seat, and any path to my family trust. What he kept was supervised visitation after our daughter was born—because the court valued stability over drama, and I valued my daughter’s well-being over revenge.
Her name is Eleanor James Brooks.
I gave her my father’s middle name and my family name. When they placed her on my chest—red-faced, furious at the world—I laughed and cried at the same time. She was healthy. She was perfect. She was no one’s leverage.
Six months later, I stood in another ballroom—smaller this time—at the opening dinner for the Brooks Foundation’s maternal health grant. No crystal chandeliers. No staged glamour. Just doctors, nurses, local donors, and women from shelters now receiving prenatal care because the program existed.
I held Eleanor on one hip and took the microphone with my free hand.
This time, no one tried to take it from me.
I thanked the room, spoke for three minutes, and stepped down to applause that felt warm instead of sharp. Eleanor grabbed my necklace and yawned against my shoulder. Across the room, Naomi raised her glass. Rachel smiled beside the stage.
For the first time in years, I wasn’t performing a life.
I was living one.
And when my daughter blinked up at me with my father’s gray eyes, I kissed her forehead and walked forward without looking back.