I asked Ethan, before anyone led him away, “Did she touch anything else in my room?”
He looked at me, confused, then nodded. “Your photo tin.”
Cold went through me.
That tin held letters from Adam’s mother. In them was an old family matter. Years ago, Adam had made a serious mistake in the business. His father fixed it quietly and buried the damage. His mother wrote to me about it after, trusting me to keep those papers safe if anything happened to her.
After a break had been called, Adam asked to speak to me privately.
I had never told a soul.
Now I understood. Vanessa had searched my room before. She knew where I kept sentimental things. She found the letters and decided I was dangerous. A servant who knew too much. A woman Adam trusted. The person Ethan ran to first.
After a break had been called, Adam asked to speak to me privately.
He looked wrecked. “Clara, I am so sorry.”
I said, “Don’t insult me with quick remorse.”
He looked like I had struck him.
He shut his mouth.
“I protected your dignity for decades,” I told him. “When you were young, when you were foolish, when your parents needed someone loyal. I never used what I knew. Not once. And when I needed you, you let your wife hand me to the police.”
He whispered, “I know.”
“No. You feel ashamed. That is not the same as knowing.”
He looked like I had struck him.
And once the rest of the records were pulled, another piece surfaced.
Then I told him what I wanted.
“Bring every camera record. Every staff schedule. Every household key log. Every visitor note. Everything that proves who moved through that hall and when. Ethan will not carry this truth alone.”
“I’ll get it,” he said.
He did.
And once the rest of the records were pulled, another piece surfaced.
That was why she moved when she did.
A few weeks earlier, Ethan had asked me to help him write a letter to his father. He said he could not speak plainly in the house anymore. In that letter, he admitted he felt emotionally unsafe around Vanessa. He asked if he could spend the school term in my cottage rooms instead of the main house.
I never delivered it. He wanted time. He was scared.
Vanessa found the draft.
That was why she moved when she did.
Inside were packed suitcases.
It was not only jealousy. It was panic.
When I was released, I returned to the house with Ethan.
“Show me every place she told you not to enter,” I said.
He took me upstairs to a locked guest room closet in the east wing. Adam opened it.
Inside were packed suitcases, Ethan’s school files, and transfer papers for a distant academy. There was a travel folder too. Timetables. Lists. Notes.
That was the end of Vanessa in that house.
Ethan stared at them and said, “She was sending me away.”
“Yes,” I said.
Adam sat down on the edge of the bed like his legs had failed him.
That was the end of Vanessa in that house.
Later, Adam asked me to stay.
Not in my old room beside the laundry. He offered me the sunny guest room next to Ethan’s suite.
That first night, I had barely set my brushes on the dresser when I heard the knock.
I looked at Ethan. He looked exhausted. Relieved. Young.
So I said yes.
Not because I wanted luxury. Because healing is easier when a frightened child does not have to cross a dark hall to find the one person who makes him feel safe.
That first night, I had barely set my brushes on the dresser when I heard the knock.
Soft. Familiar.
I pulled him into my arms.
I opened the door.
Ethan stood there in his pajamas, eyes bright with the effort of not crying.
“Clara,” he whispered, “are you really staying?”
I pulled him into my arms.
“This time, sweetheart,” I said, “nobody gets to send me away.”