For months, Ryan had been shaping that narrative—telling family that Grace had been impossible, ungrateful, draining. That she never supported his ambition. That motherhood had become her excuse to stop trying.
He told them he sold the house because she mismanaged everything. Because the financial pressure had become unbearable. Because he had been forced to make “adult decisions” she was too emotional to understand.
He never told them the real reason.
He never told them how urgently he needed that money.
Or why.
Leaning back in his seat, Ryan opened his phone.
Grace’s name appeared at the top of the screen.
For a moment, he hesitated.
Then he typed:
Grace, you should come to Madison’s wedding. It’ll be good for the boys to see my side of the family.
He frowned.
Too soft.
Too easy to ignore.
He erased it.
Started again.
Grace, you need to come to Madison’s wedding. I want you to see how well I’m doing without you.
He read it twice, a quiet satisfaction settling in his chest.
Then added one more line:
Bring the boys. It’ll be good for them to see what success looks like.
Perfect.
Sharp. Intentional. Meant to sting.
He pressed send.
The message disappeared into a small blue bubble—and Ryan smiled.
In that moment, he believed he had set everything in motion.
He believed Grace would come.
Because hurt people are curious.
And pride is easier to provoke than silence.
He believed she would step directly into the role he had written for her—the defeated ex-wife, the contrast that would make him look stronger.
Lo que Ryan Mercer no entendía...
¿Era que algunas invitaciones se convierten en trampas—
Cuando la persona equivocada las lee.
Y él acababa de enviar la suya.