After Six Years, He Met the Son His Family Buried With a Lie-olive

The roasted chicken came out of the oven at exactly six-thirty, its skin blistered gold and crackling at the edges.

Isabella Del Valle stood over it with a dish towel folded over one hand, breathing in garlic, lemon, rosemary, and the buttered rice steaming beside it.

She had made caramel flan too, because Grace Del Valle once mentioned that Alejandro liked it served cold, with the sugar dark enough to taste almost bitter.

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That was how Isabella had learned to survive in that family.

She listened.

She remembered.

She offered softness where they gave her marble.

The Del Valle mansion in Beverly Hills looked flawless that evening, as it always did when Grace expected witnesses.

The floors were cold white stone polished so deeply the chandeliers seemed to float beneath them.

The dining room had crystal glasses, silver flatware, and portraits of men with severe eyes who looked as though they had spent generations deciding who belonged and who did not.

Isabella had been married to Alejandro for four years, but she still entered that room like a guest waiting to be corrected.

She had worn a cream dress because Grace hated bright colors on her.

She had pinned her hair low because one aunt once said loose hair looked careless at dinner.

She had cooked because cooking was the only language in which she still knew how to ask for mercy.

No one came to help her carry the dishes.

That did not surprise her.

What surprised her was the silence.

It waited behind the closed dining room doors, thick and polished, the kind of silence rich families use when they are about to destroy someone politely.

Isabella pushed the door open with her hip.

For one second, she saw the table before she saw the woman.

The wine had already been poured.

The candles were already lit.

Every chair was filled except the one where Isabella should have been sitting.

A strange woman occupied it.

She wore an emerald green dress that shone softly under the chandelier, and her dark hair fell over one shoulder in a way that looked rehearsed.

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