
Escaping the Hamilton Mansion
Chapter 3
The crystal chandelier cast prismatic rainbows across the mahogany dining table as I moved between the guests with practiced silence. Mrs. Hamilton had invited three business associates and their wives—important people whose approval mattered more than my bleeding temple from two nights ago, which had finally stopped throbbing.
I placed Aidan's favorite dish before him—herb-crusted chicken with roasted vegetables, the recipe I'd perfected over countless evenings when he'd been fussy about eating. His small face scrunched in disgust as he pushed the plate away with both hands, the porcelain scraping against the polished wood.
"I don't want food she made," he announced, his voice carrying clearly through the sudden hush that fell over the table. "I want Renata to be my mother instead."
My hands froze on the serving platter. The weight of eight pairs of eyes pressed against my skin like physical touches—some uncomfortable, others curious, Mrs. Hamilton's coldly satisfied. I felt my cheeks burn as I stood there, invisible and humiliated, holding the rejected meal I'd spent hours preparing.
Renata leaned forward with theatrical grace, her manicured hand covering Aidan's small one. "Oh, sweet boy," she murmured, loud enough for everyone to hear. "You're so precious." She smiled at the guests, her expression radiating maternal warmth that made my chest ache with its falseness.
Bryson continued cutting his steak as if his son hadn't just publicly rejected the woman who'd raised him from infancy. "As I was saying, Richardson, the quarterly projections show—"
"Such a darling child," one of the wives whispered to her companion. "And Miss Silva is so natural with him."
I forced my trembling hands steady as I served the next course, my face carefully blank despite the tears threatening behind my eyes. Mrs. Hamilton's approving nod toward Renata felt like a blade between my ribs. Six years of midnight fevers, scraped knees, bedtime stories—erased by a child's cruel words and a room full of witnesses who would never see me as anything more than the help.
That night, I pressed my mother's pendant against my chest and wept until my pillow was soaked, mourning the little boy who used to reach for me when thunder scared him.
* * *
Saturday afternoon brought the usual list of errands—Aidan's school supplies for the coming week and his prescription allergy medication that needed refilling. I found Renata in the sunroom, filing her nails with languid precision while Aidan napped upstairs.
"I need to run to the store," I said quietly. "Aidan should wake within the hour. He'll probably want his afternoon snack—the apple slices are already cut in the refrigerator."
Renata didn't look up from her manicure. "Fine, fine. Whatever." She waved her hand dismissively, as if shooing away an insect. "I'm perfectly capable of watching one small child."
The casual cruelty in her tone made my stomach clench, but I had no choice. Aidan needed his medication, and the pharmacy closed early on weekends. I grabbed my purse and keys, pausing at the door.
"If he seems upset or asks for me—"
"He won't." Renata's smile was sharp as cut glass. "Run along now."
The errands took longer than expected—the pharmacy was busy, and finding the specific notebooks on Aidan's supply list required visits to three different stores. When I finally returned, the house felt wrong. Too quiet. Too still.
"Aidan?" I called, setting the bags on the kitchen counter. No answer. "Aidan, I'm home!"
Silence pressed against my eardrums like cotton. I took the stairs two at a time, my heart beginning to hammer. His bedroom was empty, the covers thrown back from his nap. I checked the playroom, the library, even Bryson's study.
"Renata!" I shouted, panic climbing my throat. "Where is Aidan?"
I found her in the garden, lounging with a magazine and a glass of wine. She glanced up with bored irritation. "He was being noisy. Disturbing my peace."
"Where is he?" My voice cracked with fear.
"Cooling off somewhere. Children need to learn consequences."
A faint sound drifted up from below—so soft I almost missed it. Muffled thumping. Desperate and rhythmic. My blood turned to ice as I recognized the direction.
The basement.
I ran through the house, my feet sliding on the marble as I reached the basement stairs. The sound grew clearer—weak pounding, like small fists against thick walls. The cold storage room. My hands shook as I grabbed the heavy handle and pulled.
The door opened to reveal Aidan's small form crumpled against the far wall, his lips blue-tinged, his entire body shaking with violent shivers. His fists were bloodied from beating against the insulated door, his light indoor clothes offering no protection against the near-freezing temperature.
"Mama," he whispered through chattering teeth, the word he hadn't called me in months falling from his purple lips like a prayer.
I pulled off my coat and wrapped his ice-cold body against mine, his skin so cold it burned my hands. "I've got you," I whispered, carrying him toward the stairs. "I've got you, sweetheart. You're safe now."
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