
Wife Fights Family Plot
Chapter 3
The Shaw Hotel's marble lobby stretched before me like a gleaming battlefield, its crystal chandeliers casting fractured rainbows across polished floors that probably cost more than my annual grocery budget. I smoothed my navy blazer—the most professional outfit I owned—and approached the front desk where a woman with perfectly coiffed silver hair was training two other new hires.
"You must be Pearl Bennett," she said, extending a manicured hand. "I'm Dorothy Chen, Front Desk Manager. Mr. Shaw said you'd be joining us today."
Mr. Shaw. Neil had made it clear this wasn't charity—it was a test. "Prove you're not just another desperate housewife looking for handouts," he'd said in that wheelchair of his, steel-gray eyes boring into mine. "Show me you can handle real work, real pressure, and maybe we'll talk about real partnership."
The irony wasn't lost on me. A week ago, I'd been Pearl Bennett, devoted wife and mother, worrying about organic vegetables and soccer carpool schedules. Now I was Pearl Bennett, woman whose husband was slowly poisoning her while his secret mother plotted to steal her child. The transition felt surreal, like stepping through Alice's looking glass into a world where nothing was as it seemed.
"Mrs. Bennett will be starting at the front desk," Dorothy continued, addressing the other trainees. "I expect you all to support each other as you learn our systems."
The morning rushed by in a blur of reservation software, guest complaints, and phone transfers. My fingers flew across the keyboard—muscle memory from my college job at a small-town inn serving me well. When an elderly guest became agitated about a missing reservation, I found myself naturally de-escalating the situation, my voice calm and reassuring even as my heart hammered with residual fear from yesterday's discoveries.
"Let me check our system one more time, Mr. Hartwell," I said, scrolling through screens. "Sometimes reservations get filed under different confirmation numbers." Within minutes, I'd located his booking—filed under his wife's maiden name—and upgraded him to a suite as an apology for the confusion.
From the corner of my eye, I caught movement near the executive elevators. Neil Shaw, watching from his wheelchair with that unreadable expression he wore like armor. Our eyes met briefly across the bustling lobby, and something flickered in his gaze—surprise, maybe, or approval. Then he was gone, disappearing behind closing elevator doors.
By lunch, I'd handled three billing disputes, coordinated with housekeeping for early check-ins, and helped a lost tourist find her way to Pike Place Market. The work felt good—purposeful in a way that organizing charity luncheons never had. Each solved problem was a small victory, proof that I was more than the confused, unstable woman Adrian and Margaret were trying to create.
"You're a natural at this," Dorothy observed during our break. "Most new hires take weeks to handle difficult guests with your level of composure."
I sipped my coffee, watching Seattle's gray afternoon through the hotel's floor-to-ceiling windows. "I've had practice dealing with challenging situations lately."
The afternoon brought its own tests. A wedding party arrived early for their reception, demanding immediate access to the ballroom that was still being set up. A business traveler's laptop was stolen from the bar, and he threatened to sue the hotel. Each crisis felt manageable compared to the psychological warfare being waged in my own home.
As closing time approached, I was updating guest folios when Dorothy appeared beside me. "Mr. Shaw would like to see you in his office before you leave."
The executive floor felt different from the bustling lobby—quieter, more serious, with the weight of real power hanging in the air. Neil's office door stood open, revealing him behind a massive desk that somehow made his wheelchair less noticeable. The space was sparse but elegant, with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves and a chess set positioned near the window.
"Sit," he said without looking up from the papers he was reviewing.
I took the chair across from his desk, studying his profile. There was something almost predatory in the way he held himself, despite his physical limitations. His fingers were long and elegant as they moved across documents, and I found myself wondering what had happened to put him in that chair.
"Dorothy says you handled the Hartwell situation well," he said finally, setting down his pen. "And the Morrison wedding disaster. And the laptop theft."
"I did my job."
"You did more than your job." His gray eyes fixed on mine, searching for something I couldn't identify. "Most people in your situation would have been distracted, unfocused. Personal crises tend to affect work performance."
The words hung between us, heavy with implication. How much did he know about my "personal crisis"? How much had he guessed?
"I find work helps," I said carefully. "It's good to have something concrete to focus on."
Something shifted in his expression—a crack in that carefully maintained armor. "Yes," he said quietly. "It is."
He reached into his desk drawer and pulled out a key card. "Executive assistant position just opened up. Interested?"
My breath caught. From front desk clerk to executive assistant in one day? It was either incredibly generous or incredibly suspicious. "That's quite a leap."
"I don't believe in wasting talent." He slid the key card across the desk. "The question is: are you ready for the real work to begin?"
As I reached for the card, our fingers brushed briefly. His skin was warm, human—a stark contrast to the cold calculation I'd seen in his eyes. For just a moment, I wondered if I was trading one dangerous game for another.
But as I pocketed the key card and met his steady gaze, I realized it didn't matter. Margaret and Adrian had already declared war on my life. If Neil Shaw was offering me weapons to fight back, I'd be a fool not to take them.
The real question was: what would he expect in return?
You may also like





