The Billionaire Thought He Needed A Wife—Until His Daughter Revealed The Locked Room-Cherry

The handle turned so slowly that the brass made a soft grinding sound against the old wood.

Everett did not move toward the door. He moved toward Lily.

One step. Then another. Controlled, careful, like any sudden motion might make his daughter vanish back into whatever fear had taught her to whisper instead of speak.

Image

Mrs. Bell stood in the doorway with one hand still on the handle. Her gray uniform was pressed flat at the collar, her silver hair pinned so tightly it pulled the skin at her temples. The hallway light behind her made her face look clean and empty.

“Miss Lily,” she said. “Your father asked you to go upstairs.”

Lily’s fingers tightened around the rabbit until its cotton ear twisted.

Everett’s voice was quiet. “Do not speak to her.”

Mrs. Bell blinked once. Nothing else changed.

The room smelled of cedar, old coffee, and the sharp bite of fire smoke. My phone lay on the desk between us, the child’s drawing glowing on the screen. Three figures. One scratched out. One behind a locked door. The words beneath it looked worse the longer they sat there.

DON’T TELL NANNY.

I slid my purse strap off my shoulder and placed the purse on the rug beside my chair. My hand came back empty except for my own phone, still unlocked, still ready.

“Mr. Hawthorne,” I said, “call your attorney. Then call the police. In that order.”

Mrs. Bell’s mouth softened at the corners. Not quite a smile. Something smaller and colder.

“This is a misunderstanding,” she said. “The child has had a difficult year. Dr. Reeves warned us she might invent things for attention.”

Lily flinched at the doctor’s name.

Everett saw it.

His face changed by a fraction. Not anger first. Calculation. A man used to reading contracts had just noticed the clause nobody wanted him to see.

He reached for the silver bell on his desk and pressed it once.

The sound was delicate. Almost pretty.

Thirty seconds later, a man in a navy suit appeared at the library door behind Mrs. Bell. Security, not staff. His eyes went first to Everett, then to Lily, then to the nanny’s pocket.

“Mr. Cale,” Everett said, “lock the exterior gates. No one leaves the property.”

Mrs. Bell’s posture stiffened.

“Sir,” she said, “that is unnecessary.”

Everett did not look at her. “My daughter said you have a key.”

Read More