
Unmasking the False Daughter
Chapter 3
The room fell silent as Emerie's accusation hung in the air. Her eyes darted frantically around the room, searching for an escape route that didn't exist. I could see the calculation behind her fear—she knew her lies were beginning to unravel.
William's grip on my wrist tightened, his knuckles white with rage. "You've gone too far this time," he hissed, his voice trembling with barely contained fury.
I met his gaze steadily. "No, William. I haven't gone far enough."
Something in my tone must have triggered him. His face contorted with rage as he released my wrist and reached inside his jacket. The crowd gasped as he pulled out a silver letter opener—an antique Hart family heirloom with a finely sharpened point.
"William, don't!" Alexander warned, but his voice lacked conviction.
"Stay out of this," William snarled, his eyes never leaving mine. "She needs to learn her place."
The crowd pressed back, whispers of excitement rippling through the onlookers. They weren't leaving—they were getting a better view. High society at its finest.
"William, please!" Emerie cried out, her voice trembling with what sounded like genuine fear. But I recognized the calculation behind it—she was positioning herself as the innocent victim again.
"It's okay, Emerie," William said, his voice softening as he looked at her. "I'll take care of this."
He lunged forward, the letter opener aimed at my chest. I didn't flinch. I didn't step back. I stood perfectly still as he thrust the blade forward.
A metallic clang echoed through the suddenly silent room.
William's eyes widened in shock as the letter opener bounced off my chest, leaving me unharmed. He stumbled back, his face a mask of confusion.
"What the—?" he stammered, staring at the letter opener in his hand.
I smiled, a cold curve of my lips that didn't reach my eyes. "Did you really think I'd come unprepared?"
With deliberate slowness, I reached beneath the neckline of my dress and pulled out the edge of a bulletproof vest. The black fabric was clearly visible against my skin.
"A bulletproof vest?" William's voice was hollow with disbelief. "Why would you—"
"Senator Hart gave it to me," I interrupted, my voice carrying across the stunned silence. "He thought I might need protection."
The brothers exchanged glances, uncertainty creeping into their expressions for the first time.
"Uncle Robert gave you a bulletproof vest?" Marcus echoed incredulously.
"To a servant?" David added, his brow furrowed in confusion.
I laughed, the sound sharp and cutting. "That's the question, isn't it? Why would a United States Senator protect someone he believed to be nothing but a servant?"
Alexander's eyes narrowed as he studied me more carefully. "What are you saying?"
"I'm saying I came prepared," I replied, meeting his gaze steadily. "I knew exactly how you'd react when your perfect little world started crumbling."
William recovered his composure, his face hardening as he tossed the letter opener aside. "This is ridiculous. You're just trying to delay the inevitable."
"Am I?" I countered, taking a step toward him. "Or am I finally ready to tell the truth?"
I turned to address the crowd, my voice clear and steady. "The real Amoura Hart knows where the secret hiding place is behind the library bookshelf in the east wing."
A murmur rippled through the crowd. Emerie's face drained of color.
"She knows that Mother used to hide chocolate truffles in the hollow of the old oak tree by the garden wall," I continued, watching Emerie's expression carefully.
"She knows that Father's first edition of 'Great Expectations' has a dedication from Charles Dickens himself," I added, my eyes never leaving Emerie's face.
With each statement, I could see her confidence crumbling. The brothers' expressions shifted from certainty to uncertainty as they looked between us.
"And she knows," I said, my voice dropping to ensure every word was heard, "that the diary she kept as a child is still hidden in the false bottom of the antique jewelry box in the attic."
Emerie's gasp was audible even from across the room. Her eyes darted to the floor, unable to meet mine.
"The real Amoura Hart also knows," I continued relentlessly, "that her grandmother's locket with the sapphire clasp is buried under the third rosebush from the left in the western garden."
The crowd was utterly silent now, hanging on every word. Even the waiters had stopped their duties to listen.
"Does anyone want to check if these things are true?" I challenged, looking directly at my brothers.
William's face had gone pale, his earlier confidence evaporating as doubt crept in. Alexander's calculating expression had given way to something that looked almost like fear.
And Emerie—Emerie looked like a cornered animal, her eyes wild with panic as she realized her carefully constructed house of lies was about to come crashing down around her.
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