
After His Daughter Pushed Me Down the Stairs
Chapter 4
Lacey chose the small sitting room off the main hall. Not the formal living room — that would have been too obvious. This was intimate. A low table, two chairs angled toward each other, a pot of tea she'd had Martha prepare before I even knew we were having this conversation.
She poured for both of us and smiled like we were old friends catching up.
'I've been worried about you,' she said. 'We all have.'
I wrapped both hands around the cup. 'I'm fine.'
'Of course you are.' She tilted her head. 'But adjusting to a new life — a new home, a new family — it takes more out of a person than they realize. Especially someone as sensitive as you.'
There it was. Sensitive. Filed away like a diagnosis.
'Cassius mentioned you've been having some trouble with Raya,' she continued. Her voice was warm. Genuinely warm, the kind that costs something to produce. 'He's worried. He doesn't say it the way other men would, but I know my brother. He's worried about your state of mind.'
'My state of mind,' I repeated.
'The accusations, darling.' She said it gently, like she was sorry to bring it up. 'Against a child. You have to understand how that looks. To him. To anyone who might be paying attention.'
I looked at her over the rim of my cup.
'There are doctors,' she said. 'Good ones. Discreet ones. The kind Cassius has access to. Men who understand that the pressure of a new marriage can manifest in — ' she paused, choosing the word carefully — 'distorted perceptions. It's nothing to be ashamed of. It happens.'
She reached across and patted my hand.
'I'm telling you this because I care about you. Because I want this to work. But if you keep pushing this narrative about Raya, you need to understand — ' another pause, another careful smile — 'Cassius will do what he has to do to protect his family. And you will be the one who looks unstable. Not her.'
The room was very quiet.
I smiled. 'I understand,' I said. 'Thank you for being honest with me.'
She looked relieved. That was the tell — the small exhale, the way her shoulders dropped a fraction. She had expected more resistance. She had come prepared for a fight and I had given her nothing to push against.
Under the table, my thumbnail pressed into my palm until I felt the sting.
I understood perfectly. I just wasn't going to let her know what I understood.
---
After she left, I went to the library.
I didn't have a plan. I just needed walls that weren't the bedroom, and the library was the one room in the penthouse that felt like it had been assembled by someone who actually read. Floor-to-ceiling shelves, a rolling ladder, two leather chairs by the window. It smelled like paper and something older underneath. I pulled a book at random and sat with it open in my lap and didn't read a single word.
Martha came in around four to dust the upper shelves. She worked the way she always did — methodical, unhurried, moving along the rows with a cloth. She didn't acknowledge me and I didn't acknowledge her and for a while the only sound was the soft drag of the cloth across the spines.
Then, without looking at me, she said: 'The previous Mrs. Morgan kept things in unusual places.'
I didn't move.
'Some things in this house,' she said, moving to the next shelf, 'are older than they look.'
She finished the row. She folded the cloth. She left.
I sat there for another ten minutes, the book still open in my lap, my heart doing something slow and deliberate in my chest.
That night, I retrieved the journal.
---
I read it in the bathroom, door locked, sitting on the tile floor with my back against the tub. The green ink was faded in places but the handwriting was steady — careful, the kind of careful that means someone was trying to hold themselves together while they wrote.
The early entries were almost painful to read. Adelaide cataloguing her new life the way I had catalogued mine. The penthouse. The parties. The man she'd married, who was magnetic and controlled and made her feel chosen. She wrote about the floor-to-ceiling windows and the way the city looked at night and how she kept thinking she'd wake up and it would be over.
I knew that feeling. I had written it in my own head a hundred times.
Then the entries shifted.
Raya's strange maturity. The way she watched Cassius. The way Cassius watched her back — not the way a father watches a child, Adelaide wrote, but something else. Something she didn't have a word for yet.
An entry from what looked like three months in: Found her in his study at two in the morning. She was wearing his shirt. Just his shirt. She looked at me and didn't move. Didn't explain. Cassius came in behind me and said she'd had a nightmare and he'd let her sit with him. He said it so easily. Like it was nothing. I smiled and went back to bed and lay there until morning.
Another entry, shorter: I heard them talking through the study door. I couldn't make out all of it. But she called him by his name. Not Daddy. His name. And his voice when he answered her — I've never heard him use that voice with me.
The entries got shorter after that. The handwriting changed — still controlled, but tighter. Like she was pressing harder.
The last one was three lines.
I know what she is. He knows I know. I don't think I'm going to leave this house.
Something fell from between the pages when I turned to the next — blank — leaf. I caught it before it hit the floor.
A pressed flower. Small, pale, dried to translucence. A violet, maybe. She had pressed it carefully, the stem still intact.
I sat with it in my open palm for a long time.
Adelaide had known. She had written it down, hidden it, and it hadn't saved her. She had left this behind — not as evidence, not as a plan. Just as proof that she had been real. That she had seen what she saw. That she had not been crazy.
Lacey's voice came back to me. Distorted perceptions.
I closed my fingers around the flower.
No. I was not going to end up a pressed flower in someone else's journal.
I put the violet back between the pages and slid the journal under the loose tile behind the radiator — a hiding place Adelaide hadn't thought of, or hadn't had time to find.
Then I turned off the light and lay in the dark and thought about what it meant to be smarter than a dead woman.
I thought about it for a long time.
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