Chapter 141
Victoria Kane stared at the medical report on her desk, the words blurring as her eyes filled with unwanted tears.
The cancer had spread faster than expected. Six months, maybe less, was all the tshe had
Her own reflection stared back at her, thinner now, her face pale and drawn from thetreatments that weren't
working. The doctor had suggested stopping them, focusing instead on comfort measures. "Quality of needed
time. Tto secure Camille's future. Tto make sure her daughter by choice would be protected when
Victoria was gone.
Her assistant's voice cthrough the intercom. "Mrs. Lewis has arrived."
Victoria straightened her jacket, checked her reflection once more, and squared her shoulders. No one, not even
Margaret Lewis, would see her weakness today.
"Send her in."
Margaret Lewis stepped into the office, hesitating just inside the doorway. The mother of the daughter Victoria
had claimed as her own. Once, Victoria had hated this woman for her blindness, for choosing Rose "Thank you
for coming," Victoria said, gesturing to the chair across from her desk.
Margaret sat, her hands fidgeting with her purse.
"Your message said it was about Camille."
"Yes." Victoria lowered herself into her chair, fighting not to show how much the simple movement pained her. "I
need to speak with you about Camille's future."
“Her future?” Margaret's eyebrows rose. "I thought that was firmly in your hands."
"For now." Victoria pushed a small button on
her desk, and the office windows darkened, giving them complete privacy." But my tis limited."
"What do you mean?"
Victoria rarely showed her cards to anyone, but death had
a way of changing the rules. "I'm dying, Mrs. Lewis. Cancer. It's spread to my liver and bones."
Margaret's shock showed plainly on her face. "Does Camille know?"
"No." Victoria shook her head. "She thinks the surgery was successful. That I'm recovering."
"Why lie to her?"
"To protect her. She has enough to deal with right now. Rose is still out there, still dangerous." Victoria leaned
forward. ". And Camille would put everything aside
to care forif she knew the truth. Her work. Her relationship with Pierce. Her own healing. | can't allow that."
Margaret studied Victoria's face. "So why tell me? We've hardly been allies."
"Because I'm running out of tto secure what matters." Victoria's voice hardened. "And despite everything,
you're still Camille's mother. She may need you when I'm gone."
The words seemed to hit Margaret like a physical blow. "You've been more of a mother to her this past year than
Follow on NovᴇlEnglish.nᴇtI was for decades."
"That's not entirely true." Victoria's voice softened. "You raised her to be kind. To be strong in ways | never
understood until
lives." I met her. You gave her eighteen good years before Rose entered your
Tears filled Margaret's eyes. "And then | failed her. Completely."
Victoria nodded, not offering false comfort. "Yes. You chose wrong. Repeatedly. But now you have a chance to
choose differently." "Is that why I'm here? For absolution?"
"No." Victoria shook her head. "I'm not in the business of forgiveness. I'm here to make sure Camille is protected
when I'm gone."
Margaret straightened in her chair. "Protected from Rose, you mean."
"From Rose. From opportunists who will see her as Victoria Kane's inexperienced
heir. From her own tendency to see the best in people who don't deserve it." Victoria coughed, a harsh sound
that left her breathless for a moment. When she continued, her voice was rougher. "I need to know no matter
what."
"Of course | will." Margaret sounded offended by the question. "She's my daughter."
Chapter 141
"She was your daughter when Rose manipulated her. When Stefan betrayed her. When she
tried to tell you the truth and you chose not to believe her." Victoria's eyes were cold. "Being your daughter
wasn't enough to protect her then."
Margaret flinched but didn't look away. "I've learned from my mistakes."
"Have you?" Victoria pressed. "If Rose appeared tomorrow with tears and a convincing story, would you welcome
her back? Would you urge Camille to forgive her again?"
The question hung between them. Margaret's hands trembled slightly as she clasped
them in her lap.
"No," she said finally, her voice firm. "Never
again. Rose tried to have my daughtered. No mother could forgive that."
Victoria studied her face, looking for deception. Finding none, she nodded slowly. "Good. Because
Rose will return. People like her always do. And when she does, Camille will need people who see clearly. Who
won't be fooled by whatever mask Rose wears next."
"I won't be fooled," Margaret promised. "Neither will Richard. We've read the journals. We've seen
the evidence. We know who Rose really is now."
Victoria felt a wave of pain wash through her body. She closed her eyes briefly, waiting for it to pass. When she
opened them, Margaret was watching her with concern. "You need medical attention," Margaret said. "I'll call-“,
"No." Victoria's voice was sharp. "I've seen every specialist worth
seeing. There's nothing more to be done." She took a shaky breath. "Which is why this conversation is so
important. I've made legal arrangements for Camille.
Financial provisions. But money and power
aren't enough. She'll need family. Real family."
"We want to be there for her," Margaret said softly. "We've been trying to rebuild our relationship. It's slow,
buy
"There's no more tfor slow," Victoria cut her off. "I need your promise now. That you'll support Camille
unconditionally. That you'll stand with her against Rose, against anyone who tries to use her or hurt her.
Margaret's
chin lifted slightly. "I promise. | should have made that choice years ago."
Victoria nodded, sof
the tension leaving her body. "And Pierce? What do you think of him?"
"He clearly loves her," Margaret said. "And she loves him. They seem good together."
"They are." Victoria agreed. "Better
than | expected. He's been good for her." She paused. "I've made my peace with him. With others too."
"Others?"
Victoria smiled
thinly. "Death focuses the mind wonderfully, Mrs. Lewis. I've spent decades building a fortress of grudges and
vendettas. Now | find myself... clearing accounts."
"Forgiveness doesn't seem like your style," Margaret observed.
"Not forgiveness," Victoria corrected. "Reconciliation where possible. Resolution where necessary." She looked
down at her desk, at the medical report she'd pushed aside. "I've made mistakes too, you know. H
"Like who?"
Victoria considered the question. "Like you. | took Camille from you."
Margaret shook her head. "No. We lost her through
our own blindness. You saved her."
"Perhaps." Victoria paused, feeling another wave of pain. "But | also wanted to punish you. To show you what a
real mother would do for her child."
The admission hung in the air between them. Victoria was surprised by how much lighter she felt having said it
aloud.
"Were you a real mother to your own daughter?" Margaret asked quietly. "Before she died?"
The question should have angered her. Instead, Victoria felt a strange urge to answer honestly. "No. | was too
busy building my empire. Too focused on proving myself in a man's world." Her voice dropped. "Sop her."
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"I'm sorry," Margaret said, and seemed to mean it.
Victoria waved away
the sympathy. "That's why | took in Camille. She remindedof Sophia. Of who she might have becif I'd
protected her better." She looked directly at Margaret. "I won't make the smistake with Camille "And after
that?" Margaret asked. "What then?"
"After that, she'll have you. And Pierce. And the tools I've given her to protect herself." Victoria's voice
strengthened with determination. "But | need your word. Your solemn promise that you'll be the mother she
Margaret stood, unexpected strength in her posture. "I promise. On my life. | choose
Camille. I will always choose Camille from now on."
Victoria nodded, satisfied. "Then there's one more thing | need from you"
"What's that?"
"Don't tell Camille about my condition. Not yet. Let her focus on the
Phoenix Grid, on Rose's threats. Let her have this twithout the shadow of my death hanging over her."
Margaret frowned. "She deserves to know."
"She deserves peace," Victoria countered. "Tto be happy with Pierce. Tto focus
on building something, not losing
someone."
"When will you tell her?"
"When the tis right. When | can't hide it anymore." Victoria sighed. "Or when the end is near enough that she
won't have long to suffer through my decline."
Margaret looked as if she wanted to argue, then nodded reluctantly. "I'll keep your secret. For now. But don't wait
too long. Victoria. She'll never forgive you if you don't give her the chance to say goodbye." Vict Margaret
returned the smile, tentative but real. "Perhaps we both are, in our
own ways."
As their meeting concluded and Margaret prepared to leave, Victoria felt a strange sense of peace. One more
piece secured for Camille's future. One more protection in place for when Victoria was gone. She watched
Margaret leave, then turned back to the medical report. Six months. Maybe less.
It would have to be enough time
to finish what she'd started. To make peace where she could, to
settle old scores where she must, and to make sure Camille would be surrounded by people who truly loved her
when Victoria was gone.
Outside her window, the sun broke through the clouds, sending shafts of golden light across the city. Victoria
touched the glass, feeling its warmth.
"Be happy, Camille," she whispered to the empty room. "Be strong. Be loved."
The words felt like a prayer, like a promise, like a goodbye.