The Janitor Son Who Secretly Owned The House They Threw Him Out Of-yumihong

The upstairs dining room smelled like lilies, buttercream, and money.

That was the first thing Matthew noticed when he stepped out of the service hallway with the anniversary cake balanced in both hands.

Not love.

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Not family.

Money.

The chandelier was throwing warm light over crystal glasses, imported plates, and flowers that looked too perfect to have ever grown in dirt.

Rain ticked against the tall windows.

Somebody laughed near the bar cart.

Somebody else said the name of a stock like it was a prayer.

Matthew stood there in his gray maintenance uniform, with his work radio still clipped to his belt and a smear of frosting already softening under his thumb.

For three years, he had learned how to disappear in rooms like that.

He knew how to step around rich people without making them uncomfortable.

He knew how to hold a door without being thanked.

He knew how to carry a ladder past executives discussing salaries larger than his old yearly pay and still be treated like part of the wall.

The problem was that this was not supposed to be just another room.

This was his parents’ house.

His mother had planned the thirtieth anniversary banquet like a social event, not a marriage celebration.

There were too many flowers.

Too many candles.

Too many people who measured importance by watches, cars, and who got invited to whose table.

His father, a regional director at Altavera Group, stood near the head of the room in a dark suit, laughing with two men Matthew had seen on the executive floor.

Matthew had changed a light fixture in one of their offices six days earlier.

Neither man recognized him.

His father did.

That was worse.

The laughter around him thinned the second his father saw the cake.

His father’s face tightened, not with surprise, but with embarrassment.

Matthew had seen that look for years.

It was the look that said his father wished his son had entered through the back.

‘I am just dropping this off,’ Matthew said quietly.

He kept his voice even because he had become very good at that.

‘Then I will go back downstairs.’

His father’s eyes flicked past him to see who was watching.

That was always where his attention went first.

Not to Matthew.

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