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e right lines. It’s clear you’re not in this for love, but for what you can gain.”

“Actually, sir,” Ethan said, standing firm, “I don’t care about your money.

Or your status. I care about Anna.”

My father’s face turned red with fury. “You expect me to believe that?” he hissed.

“You’re just a janitor—a nobody.”

Ethan didn’t flinch. He looked my father right in the eye. “I may be a janitor,” he replied, “but I know honesty.

And respect. I know that Anna deserves more than being treated like a pawn.”

My father’s expression changed, a mix of anger and disbelief. “And what gives you the right to lecture me about respect?”

Ethan took a deep breath.

“My last name doesn’t mean anything to you, does it? What if I told you my father’s name was Andrew?” he asked, his voice calm but edged with something sharper.

My father frowned, a flicker of confusion crossing his face. “Andrew?”

“You knew him once,” Ethan continued.

“He was a business partner of yours until you forced him out. Took everything he had. He went from owning a company to scrubbing floors.

And that’s how I grew up.”

I felt the shock ripple through the room as my father’s face paled. “That can’t be… that was years ago,” he stammered, searching Ethan’s face. “You’re his son?”

Ethan nodded.

“He never recovered. But he raised me to be better than bitterness. And here I am.”

My father looked away, his shoulders sagging as if he’d aged in seconds.

Then, he suddenly dropped to his knees. “Andrew… he was my friend. I was desperate.

It was either him or me, and I had a family. I was doing what I thought I had to. I’m sorry.”

The silence stretched.

Finally, my father turned to me, his eyes full of something I’d never seen before. It was regret. “Anna, I never meant for you to get tangled up in this.

I thought I was doing the right thing, building a future for you.”

“A future you chose for me,” I replied softly. “But I’m choosing my own now.”

Without another word, my father turned and left, his figure slumped as he walked down the stairs. I watched him go, a strange mixture of sadness and relief settling in my chest.

Days passed.

I didn’t hear from my father, but I felt his absence as a weight lifting. Then one evening, there was a knock at the door. To my surprise, it was him, standing awkwardly, looking almost uncertain.

“Ethan,” he said, his voice softer than I’d ever heard it.

“I… owe you an apology. Not just for the past, but for now. For everything.

I can’t undo what I did to your family, but I can do better for my daughter. I see that now.”

Ethan nodded, accepting the words with quiet dignity. “That’s all anyone can do, sir.

We all make mistakes. What matters is what we do after.”

A week later, we all gathered in a small park. Ethan’s father, Andrew, had come to town.

My father was nervous, wringing his hands as Andrew approached. The two men stood in silence for a long moment before my father reached out.

“Andrew, I’m sorry. I did things back then that I can’t take back, but I never meant to hurt you.”

Andrew nodded slowly, his face softened by years.

“We were both different men then. But it’s never too late to be better.”

They shook hands, a small bridge over years of loss and resentment. I watched as my father and Andrew turned toward us, the past falling away as they embraced a future together as two families, united by the strength it took to forgive.