The Janitor Played Three Notes, Then The Billionaire’s Wife Recognized The Song-thuyhien

The man in the dark suit crossed the ballroom before the last note landed.

Nobody blocked him.

Guests who had been laughing five minutes earlier opened a path without being asked. Silk gowns shifted. Patent leather shoes scraped the marble. Champagne glasses hung near mouths that had forgotten how to drink.

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I kept my hands above the keys.

The final chord was still trembling inside the Steinway when the man stopped beside Graham Vale and raised the sealed folder.

“Mr. Marlowe,” he said.

That name traveled through the room faster than the music had.

A woman near the front pressed both hands against her necklace. The hired pianist took one step back. Graham’s wife, Celia Vale, stood from her chair so quickly that her champagne flute tipped against a plate and rolled across the tablecloth.

Graham turned toward her.

“Celia?”

She did not answer him.

Her eyes were fixed on me.

Not on the uniform. Not on the mop leaning against the service cart. Not on the wet crescent I had left on the marble.

On my hands.

The man in the dark suit opened the folder. Paper rasped against paper, crisp and loud in the room where two hundred people had gone still.

“My name is Aaron Bell,” he said. “I represent the Boston Conservatory Trust and the Marlowe estate.”

Graham gave a short laugh that did not reach his face.

“Estate?” he said. “The man is mopping my event.”

Aaron looked at him once.

Then he turned back to me.

“Sir, before we proceed, may I confirm you are Everett Marlowe, formerly of Marlborough Hall, winner of the 1979 Whitcomb Medal, registered composer of ‘Red Scarf in Winter’?”

The title struck Celia like a hand to the chest.

Her fingers closed around the back of her chair.

I lowered my hands to my lap.

“Yes.”

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