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Caleb had refused to eat his vegetables at dinner. Vivian smiled with that icy, sculpted expression I had once mistaken for composure. She waited until I left the dining room to take a business call. The instant I was gone, she seized him by the wrist, her manicured nails digging into his skin, and pulled him down that same hallway.
The closet door closed.
Seven minutes later, Maya came back with trembling hands and opened it.
She pulled him to her chest, but even while comforting him, her eyes kept darting toward the staircase, terrified someone would see her.
I clicked another clip.
Then another.
This was not an isolated bad moment.
This was not a mistake.
This was a pattern.
The gates. The cameras. The private drivers. The household staff. The flawless mansion.
I had believed wealth could keep them safe.
And somehow, I had failed to see it in my own sons.
I was enraged at her.
But I was disgusted with myself.
The office door clicked open behind me.
Vivian stepped inside wearing a silk blouse, diamond earrings, and the effortless elegance of a woman whose day had only been mildly inconvenienced. In one hand, she held a glass of chilled white wine.
“There you are,” she said softly. “I’ve been looking for you.”
I did not turn around.
I could not.
If I looked at her too quickly, I was not sure what I might do.
On the monitor, Maya remained frozen on the screen, kneeling beside Ethan outside the closet, one hand against his tear-stained cheek, the other wrapped around his tiny shaking fingers.
Vivian’s heels stopped tapping against the floor.
The silence in the room shifted.
“What are you watching?” she asked.
When I answered, my voice sounded low and strange, almost like it belonged to someone else.
“The truth.”
She said nothing.
Slowly, I pushed my chair back and turned around.
For the first time since I had married her, I watched genuine fear crack through the perfect surface of her face.
But it was not guilt.
It was panic.
The panic of someone who had just been caught.
“You put your grandmother’s antique bracelet in Maya’s backpack,” I said.
Vivian’s lips parted.
Then she recovered.
Too fast.
“Nathan, listen to me,” she said, her voice softening into that polished, calming tone she used when she wanted control. “You’re upset. You don’t understand what happened.”
“I watched you take it from your closet.”
Her eyes flicked to the monitor behind me.
“I was testing her.”
“You called the police.”
“She needed to learn her place.”
“You had her handcuffed and dragged out of this house in front of my sons.”
“Our sons,” she snapped.
Something inside me turned ice-cold.
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