Daniel’s eyes flicked to the door and back to me. “Where is this coming from?”
I placed the flash drive on his desk. “From the hospital’s footage of that day.”
He went silent.
“What did you see?” he asked.
“All of it,” I said.
For a moment, it looked like he might crack.
Then his expression hardened.
“I was trying to protect you.”
“By lying?” I asked. “By signing away our daughter’s truth? By hiding money in your name?”
“You were falling apart,” he snapped. “You weren’t thinking clearly at all.”
“And you were thinking about the money,” I said.
He leaned forward, voice low. “If this goes to court, they’ll drag your therapy records into it. They’ll call you unstable. And I signed an NDA.”
“So you helped them,” I said.
He didn’t respond.
“Explain the settlement,” I said. “Start to finish.”
He admitted everything. The medication error. The check. The confidentiality agreement. The promise not to sue. The decision to keep me in the dark because, as he put it, “You couldn’t handle knowing it was someone’s fault.”
When he finished, I pulled my phone from my pocket, stopped the recording, and set it on the desk.
Daniel stared at it like it might explode.
“You recorded me,” he whispered.
“I did,” I said. “Because you already chose them over me once.”
The next day, I met with a malpractice attorney named Renee.