“So you’re the man who believed my daughter was nothing.”
Ethan tried to recover.
“With all due respect, this is private.”
Alexander gave a faint smile.
“It stopped being private the moment you humiliated her.”
Vanessa stammered.
“We didn’t know—”
“Exactly,” Alexander replied. “You didn’t.”
Ethan swallowed hard.
“If this is about money, we can renegotiate—”
Alexander let out a quiet laugh.
“Money?”
He pulled out his phone.
“Cancel all meetings with his company. Immediately. And withdraw all financial support.”
Ethan shot to his feet.
“You can’t do that!”
“Can’t I?”
“My company is about to go public!”
“I know,” Alexander said calmly. “And I also know most of your investors are tied to my network.”
Silence filled the room.
The realization hit.
Everything Ethan had built was crumbling.
“You’d destroy my company over this?”
Alexander looked at him steadily.
“No. You did that yourself.”
He placed the papers down.
“I’m simply removing support you never deserved.”
Vanessa’s voice trembled.
“Ethan… what does that mean?”
He didn’t answer.
Because he already knew.
No investors.
No funding.
No IPO.
It was over.
Emily exhaled quietly.
“Dad…”
Alexander softened.
“I’m sorry. I know you wanted to handle this alone.”
She shook her head.
“You were right.”
She looked at Ethan one last time.
No anger. No pain.
Just clarity.
“I never wanted your money.”
She picked up the card and slid it back to him.
“And I never needed your pity.”
Alexander wrapped an arm around her.
“Let’s go.”
They walked out together.
At the door, he paused.
“Oh—and Ethan?”
Ethan looked up slowly.
“The building your office is in…”
His stomach dropped.
Alexander smiled.
“That belongs to me too.”
Then they were gone.
A week later, the city had moved on—but in business circles, the story spread fast.