Chapter 4

The doorbell chimed through the penthouse, its cheerful sound a jarring contrast to the tension that had become my constant companion. I was dusting the living room shelves when Harrison appeared, his expression unreadable.

"Your mother is here," he said flatly. "Bring us tea."

My hands trembled as I prepared the tea service. Through the kitchen doorway, I watched Harrison greet Mrs. Stevens with the same cordial politeness he might show any business associate. She entered like royalty, her emerald silk dress a stark reminder of the life I once lived.

"Clara," she acknowledged with a slight nod, her eyes sliding over my gray uniform without lingering.

I carried the tea tray in, setting it down with practiced subservience. "Would you like me to pour?" I asked, hating the tremor in my voice.

"That won't be necessary," Harrison replied coldly. "You may stand there."

I remained by the wall as they sipped their tea, discussing me as if I weren't present.

"I'm sorry for the trouble she's caused you, Harrison," my mother said, her voice dripping with false concern. "I never expected her to reappear after all this time."

"Clearly," Harrison replied, his tone clipped. "What do you suggest we do about her... situation?"

My mother's perfectly manicured fingers tapped against her teacup. "Well, I've been thinking. Perhaps it's time to consider institutionalization."

The words hit me like a physical blow. I pressed myself against the wall, trying to remain invisible as they bartered my freedom.

"She's clearly unstable," my mother continued. "The family reputation can't withstand another public incident like the gala."

"I agree," Harrison said, his eyes flicking briefly to me before returning to my mother. "What facility did you have in mind?"

I couldn't breathe. The room seemed to shrink around me as they discussed my future as if planning a business transaction. My own mother—the woman who had carried me, raised me—was selling me into captivity to protect her social standing.

---

Hours later, after Harrison walked my mother to her waiting car, I found myself alone in the penthouse. My legs carried me to Harrison's study without conscious thought. I needed my ID—needed some small piece of my identity back.

The study smelled of leather and sandalwood, unchanged from the days when I would bring him coffee during late-night work sessions. I moved silently to his desk, searching drawers until I found my confiscated wallet.

As I pulled it free, a folder slipped from beneath it, scattering papers across the floor. I knelt to gather them, freezing when I saw the title: "Lillie Wagner—Case File."

My heart pounded as I gathered the scattered documents. A photograph caught my eye—Lillie at her birthday party, laughing as she raised a champagne glass. But it was the bracelet on her wrist that made my blood run cold.

An emerald bracelet with a distinctive gold clasp, set with diamonds in a pattern I would never forget.

Yesterday, Valeria had been wearing that exact bracelet.

I stared at the photo, memories flooding back. Lillie had been buried wearing that bracelet—her father's gift to her on her twenty-first birthday. The police had noted it in their report as personal effects.

Valeria had taken it from her body.

Hands shaking, I slipped the photo into my pocket and continued gathering the papers. There had to be more—something that would prove what I'd just discovered.

---

"Harrison!" I called out, rushing toward his bedroom where he'd retreated after showing my mother out. "I need to show you something!"

He emerged, irritation etched across his features. "What is it now?"

I pulled out the photograph, my voice urgent. "Look at this—Lillie's bracelet. The one she was buried with. I saw Valeria wearing it yesterday!"

Something flickered in his eyes—surprise, perhaps even doubt. For one heartbreaking moment, I thought he might listen.

Then his expression hardened. "Valeria already told me about the bracelet."

The words knocked the breath from my lungs. "What?"

"Lillie gave it to her as a friendship gift days before she died." His voice was cold, certain. "Valeria was devastated when she realized you might try to use it against her."

"That's not—" I began, but he cut me off.

"Enough, Clara." He snatched the photo from my hand. "Do you think I wouldn't investigate every possibility? That I wouldn't move heaven and earth to find who really hurt Lillie?"

He pulled a silver lighter from his pocket and flicked it open. The flame caught the edge of the photograph, consuming Lillie's image as I watched in horror.

"You're a pathological liar," he said, dropping the burning photo into a crystal ashtray where it curled into ash. "And I'm done playing your games."

As the last fragment of evidence turned to dust before my eyes, I realized with crushing clarity that truth meant nothing to him anymore.

Chapter 5

The vibration of my burner phone against my ankle jolted me from fitful sleep. I sat up in the darkness of my locked room, heart hammering against my ribs as I carefully extracted the phone from my boot. The screen illuminated my face with a ghostly blue glow—a text from an unknown number.

"I saw what happened to Lillie Wagner. I have proof Valeria did it. Meet me tomorrow night if you want the truth."

My fingers trembled as I read the message. Proof? After four years of silence, someone finally came forward? I scrolled up to see if there was more—a name, perhaps, or some indication of who this person might be.

"Come alone to the old warehouse on Pier 17. 11 PM. I'll give you a flash drive with audio evidence."

I pressed my hand against my stomach, feeling the familiar ache of the cancer that was slowly killing me. Could this be real? Or was it another trap?

"What if it's Valeria?" whispered a voice in my head.

But what choice did I have? Without medication, I would die in weeks anyway. With this evidence, maybe—just maybe—I could clear my name before the end.

I deleted the message and slid the phone back into my boot, my mind racing with possibilities.

---

The door swung open without warning. Harrison stood in the doorway, his silhouette backlit by the hallway light. Even in darkness, I could feel the coldness radiating from him.

"Get up," he commanded. "We need to talk."

I rose shakily, pulling my thin nightgown tighter around my body. The November air bit through the fabric, raising goosebumps along my arms.

"I've made arrangements," Harrison said, his voice devoid of emotion. "Tomorrow morning, you'll be transferred to Lakeside Psychiatric Facility upstate."

The words hit me like a physical blow. "What?"

"It's a private institution," he continued, as if explaining a business transaction. "High security. The staff is excellent—they specialize in delusional patients with violent tendencies."

I stepped back, bumping against the dresser. "You can't do that."

"I can and I am." His eyes glittered in the darkness. "You'll never bother me or society again, Clara."

Lakeside. I'd heard rumors about that place—patients who went in never came out the same. Some didn't come out at all.

"Please," I whispered, hating the tremor in my voice. "Harrison, don't do this."

He turned to leave, pausing at the doorway. "Pack whatever you want to take. Not that you have much choice in that dress."

The door closed behind him with a decisive click.

---

I waited until 2 AM, when the penthouse fell silent except for the gentle hum of the heating system. My hands shook as I bent a hairpin into the shape I needed, thanks to skills I'd learned during my four years on the streets.

The lock was simple—nothing like the complex security systems Harrison used in his office or study. I worked carefully, listening for any sound that might indicate I'd been discovered.

Click.

The door swung open silently on well-oiled hinges. I slipped into the hallway, barefoot to muffle my steps on the marble floor.

Harrison's bedroom door stood ajar, a sliver of light spilling into the corridor. I approached cautiously, drawn by some masochistic need to see him one last time.

He lay on his back, one arm thrown above his head. Even in sleep, his face held that same hardness that had become so familiar over the past days. But in the soft lamplight, I could almost see traces of the man I had once loved—the man who had held me through nightmares and whispered promises of forever.

"Goodbye, Harrison," I whispered, my voice barely audible.

I moved to his study next, remembering where he kept his wallet in the top drawer of his desk. Five hundred dollars—enough for a taxi to the warehouse and perhaps a cheap motel afterward.

As I crept toward the elevator, rain began to fall outside, pattering against the windows of the penthouse. Perfect timing—the rain would help mask my escape.

The elevator descended silently. I pressed myself against the wall as the doors opened, half-expecting to find security waiting.

But the lobby was empty, the night guard dozing at his post.

I slipped past him, through the revolving doors, and out into the rainy night.

The cold rain soaked through my thin dress immediately, but I welcomed the sensation. It meant I was free—if only for a few hours.

A yellow cab idled at the corner, its driver taking shelter from the downpour. I ran toward it, clutching the stolen cash in my hand.

"Where to?" he asked as I slid into the backseat.

"Pier 17," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "And hurry, please."

As the cab pulled away from the curb, I didn't look back at the towering glass building that had once been my home. My only thought was forward—to the warehouse, to the truth, to whatever fate awaited me there.

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