The Maid Opened Olivia’s Letter, and the Billionaire Finally Learned Who Had Been Watching Him-thuyhien

The cufflink hit the hardwood floor with a small silver click.

No one moved.

Richard Lancaster stared at the envelope in my hand as if the blue wax seal had reached across the library and caught him by the throat. Rain slid down the windows behind him. The desk lamp painted a hard line across his cheek. His phone was still in his palm, the screen glowing with the security menu he had used to erase my access from the only rooms Amelia still slept in without waking up crying.

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Amelia’s fingers were wrapped around mine.

Her stuffed rabbit hung from her other hand by one stitched ear, the fabric worn thin at the nose from years of being pressed against her mouth. She stood in her socks on the edge of the Persian rug, not hiding behind me, not hiding behind Mr. Harlan, just watching her father with the flat stillness children get when adults have finally said the thing they were always trying not to say.

Richard looked at Mr. Harlan first.

“What is this?”

The attorney stepped inside without asking permission. Water darkened the shoulders of his coat. His gray hair was combed neatly, but one side had lifted from the rain. In his left hand, he held a leather briefcase. In his right, the notarized copy he had raised at the doorway.

“Your wife’s supplemental guardianship instruction,” he said.

Richard gave one short laugh.

“My wife has been dead for three years.”

“Yes,” Mr. Harlan said. “Which is why I followed her instructions exactly.”

The white severance envelope remained on the desk between us. Twenty-five thousand dollars to disappear. Six months of silence. A clean little number for a dirty little problem.

Mrs. Bell stood near the door, hands folded so tightly her knuckles had turned pale. Her eyes did not leave Amelia.

Richard set his phone down very carefully.

“Clara,” he said, not looking at me. “Give me that envelope.”

Amelia stepped closer to my side.

I held the blue-sealed envelope against my apron.

“No, sir.”

The room changed around those two words. Not loudly. Not dramatically. The clock kept ticking. Rain kept tapping. But Richard’s face hardened in a way I had only seen once before, the night Amelia had spilled cranberry juice on a visiting senator’s wife and he smiled through dinner with one hand gripping the back of his chair.

Mr. Harlan moved between Richard and the desk.

“Mr. Lancaster, the original was left with me. Clara’s copy was given to her by Olivia herself. The seal is not decorative. It indicates activation only under a specified condition.”

Richard’s eyes cut to me.

“What condition?”

Mr. Harlan opened his briefcase and removed a thin folder tied with black ribbon.

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