
Betrayal Cost a Child's Life
Chapter 2
I was arranging fresh flowers in the living room when I heard it—a sickening crash that made my heart stutter. The sound of something precious shattering against hardwood floors.
"No!" The word escaped my lips before I could stop it.
I rushed into the hallway to find Keyla standing over the remains of my grandmother's antique vase. The delicate porcelain lay in fragments at her feet, the pale blue forget-me-nots my grandmother had hand-painted now broken beyond repair.
"I'm so sorry," Keyla whispered, her eyes wide with what looked like genuine distress. Her hands trembled as she reached down to touch one of the larger pieces. "I was just trying to help clean, and I... I'm so clumsy."
My throat tightened. That vase had been in my family for generations. It was one of the few things I'd brought with me from the East Coast, a tangible connection to my roots.
"Esmeralda," Austin's voice came from behind me. He must have been in his study. "What happened?"
Before I could speak, Keyla's eyes filled with tears. "I broke something precious," she said, her voice breaking. "I'm always making messes. Ever since Seattle, I've been so jumpy, and now I've ruined something irreplaceable."
I opened my mouth to say... what? That it was okay? That things happen? But the words wouldn't come. That vase was irreplaceable.
Austin was already moving past me, his hand on Keyla's shoulder. "Hey, hey, it's okay," he said, his voice gentle in a way it hadn't been with me in weeks. "It was just an object."
"Just an object?" I repeated, my voice barely audible.
He looked up at me, his expression a mixture of impatience and confusion. "Yes, Esmeralda. It's just an object. Keyla feels terrible already."
"But it was my grandmother's," I said, kneeling to pick up a shard of porcelain. "It was all I had left of her."
Keyla's tears spilled over. "I'll replace it somehow," she promised. "I'll save every penny until I can buy you something just as beautiful."
Austin's arm went around her shoulders. "Don't worry about it," he told her. Then to me: "Can you just... calm down? It's not the end of the world."
I stared at him, at this man who had once known how much family heirlooms meant to me. The man who had spent months tracking down my great-grandmother's tea set for our first anniversary.
* * *
The next day, I came home early from my charity meeting to find Austin and Keyla in the kitchen. The strawberry tart I'd ordered specially from my favorite bakery sat on the counter between them.
My stomach clenched. I'd been looking forward to that tart all day—strawberries had been my small comfort during these difficult weeks.
"Austin?" I said, my voice steadier than I felt.
He looked up, fork halfway to his mouth. "Oh, hi. Keyla mentioned she'd never had a fresh strawberry tart before."
I blinked. "Never?"
She shook her head, her expression so earnest it would have been convincing if I hadn't caught the slight gleam in her eyes. "Where I grew up, fresh strawberries were... well, they were for rich people."
Austin's face softened with sympathy. "I thought it was time she tried some of the good things in life."
"But..." I swallowed hard. "That was my order. From Bellini's."
"Esmeralda," Austin sighed, setting down his fork. "Keyla has had so little sweetness in her life. These small pleasures mean the world to her."
"And they don't mean anything to me?" I asked quietly.
"Don't be ridiculous," he said, but he didn't meet my eyes.
I watched as Keyla took another bite of my tart, her eyes closing in exaggerated ecstasy. "This is heaven," she murmured.
Austin smiled at her, a smile that used to be reserved for me.
* * *
"Mrs. Black," Marie's voice was low as she approached me in the library later that week. "I need to speak with you."
Something in her expression made me set down my book. "What is it?"
"I saw Ms. Tucker in your private study this morning," she said. "Going through your desk drawers. And your personal mail."
My blood ran cold. "Are you sure?"
Marie nodded firmly. "She was looking through your correspondence. When I asked what she was doing, she said Mr. Black had asked her to find some papers for him."
I rushed to Austin's study, my heart pounding. "Austin, Keyla was going through my things today."
He looked up from his computer, frowning. "And?"
"And that's inappropriate," I said. "Those are my private papers, my personal letters."
Austin leaned back in his chair. "Keyla was looking for the charity gala invitations. I asked her to find them because you were out."
"But why would she need to go through my desk for that?"
"Because that's where you keep them," he said flatly. "This isn't a big deal, Esmeralda."
As I turned to leave, I caught sight of Keyla watching from the hallway, a small smile playing at the corners of her mouth. And in that moment, I knew with bone-deep certainty that nothing about this situation was what it seemed.
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