The Maid Found The Signed Medical Petition Before The Bride Could Steal The Groom’s Empire-thuyhien

Thomas took the folded receipt from my palm without unfolding it in front of the guests.

That was the first thing that saved me.

His thumb pressed once against the brass hotel key, and his eyes moved across the tiny handwriting on the receipt. Suite 312. Bridal wing. 9:18 p.m. One month ago. The paper had been creased so many times the ink had bled into the fold.

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August Alden recovered his smile too fast.

“Sebastian,” he said, smoothing one cuff under his navy jacket, “you are under tremendous emotional stress. Let us not allow a domestic employee to turn a private family embarrassment into a legal circus.”

Camila did not flinch at domestic employee.

The microphones were still live.

The officiant stood with his Bible open and one finger frozen between two pages. The string quartet held their bows in the air like a flock of trapped birds. Behind the white chairs, guests had stopped pretending to whisper. Phones glittered under the Palm Beach sun.

Thomas bent close to me.

“Do I have permission to act as your attorney right now?” he asked.

“You already have it,” I said.

He straightened.

“Mr. Alden, no one leaves with documents from the bridal suite. Security will lock Suite 312 and preserve the room until we determine what was removed.”

August’s jaw shifted once.

“You have no authority over my daughter’s belongings.”

“I have authority over Mr. Vega’s property,” Thomas said. “This estate is under his event contract. The suite is listed under his corporate account. And if the words medical petition mean what I think they mean, I suggest you stop speaking into a microphone.”

A soft crackle ran through the speakers.

August looked toward the sound booth.

Too late.

Every word had rolled across the lawn.

Camila’s hand stayed on mine. Her palm was damp now, but her grip did not loosen. The brass key had left a small half-moon mark in my skin.

“Camila,” I said quietly, “tell him what you found.”

She looked at Thomas first, then at me.

“Not here,” she said.

August gave a small laugh.

“Listen to the maid, Sebastian. Even she understands shame.”

Camila turned her head toward him slowly.

“No,” she said. “I understand evidence.”

The laugh died in his throat.

At 12:31 p.m., Thomas made one call. His voice stayed low, but the words carried because no one on that lawn was breathing normally anymore.

“Lock the bridal wing. Pull camera footage from 8:45 to 9:40 p.m. on the twenty-second of last month. Send Maria from housekeeping to Suite 312 with security. No one touches the desk, the garment bags, or the safe.”

August stepped between Thomas and the aisle.

“You are embarrassing yourself.”

Thomas pocketed the key.

“I’m billing for it.”

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