Roger came.

Of course he did.

He walked into my ranch house with two armed men, still trying to act like the charming friend I once trusted.

But the moment he saw Valerie sitting on the couch — alive, holding our son — his face turned gray.

“Julian… let’s talk about this like businessmen.”

I stepped forward, voice calm but lethal.

“You took three years from my son. Three years from my wife. You beat her. You broke her. You made me bury an innocent woman.”

Roger’s hand moved toward his gun.

My ranch hands — loyal men who had worked for me for decades — already had him surrounded.

Valerie stood slowly, still weak but standing tall for the first time in years.

“You told me you’d kill my son if I ever spoke,” she said, voice trembling but clear. “I’m speaking now.”

Roger sneered. “You have no proof.”

I smiled — cold and terrible.

“I recorded every word you just said outside. And I have the names Valerie gave me. The politicians. The judges. The sheriffs involved in your little empire.”

For the first time, real fear flashed in Roger’s eyes.

“What do you want?” he whispered.

I walked up until we were face to face.