The Blue Notebook My Mother Hid Became the Weapon a Billionaire Family Never Expected-Cherry

I took Thomas with me, but I made him sit in the lobby.

At 9:11 a.m., the elevator opened onto the thirty-fourth floor of a glass tower in downtown Los Angeles, and my cheap flats sank into carpet so thick it swallowed the sound of my steps. The air smelled like lemon polish, expensive coffee, and printer toner. Behind the reception desk, a woman in a cream blazer looked at my clearance-rack blouse, then at the manila envelope under my arm.

“Do you have an appointment?”

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I placed Rodrigo Del Valle’s business card on the marble counter.

“My mother said he would see me.”

The receptionist’s face changed before she could hide it. Her hand moved to the phone, but she didn’t dial. She just pressed one button and said, “She’s here.”

No name.

Just she.

That was the first time I understood my mother had arranged more than a note.

Rodrigo Del Valle opened his office door himself. He was in his early sixties, with silver hair combed straight back, rimless glasses, and the kind of stillness people get when they have spent decades listening to rich men lie. His suit probably cost more than my car, but his eyes went straight to the brass key in my hand.

He didn’t ask who I was.

He said, “Your mother waited longer than I hoped.”

My throat tightened. I held up the blue notebook.

“She told me to put this on the table first.”

Rodrigo stepped aside.

His office was quiet except for the muted traffic below and the soft click of a clock on the wall. There were framed degrees, dark shelves, a locked cabinet, and one photograph on his desk: a younger Rodrigo standing beside my mother outside a courthouse. She was wearing a brown coat I still had in our hall closet.

My knees nearly bent.

“You knew her.”

“I represented her,” he said. “And then, when the law failed her, I followed her instructions.”

He gestured to the chair across from his desk.

I didn’t sit.

“What instructions?”

Rodrigo looked past me toward the frosted glass wall, where Thomas sat in the lobby with his cap twisted between both hands.

“Before we begin, you need to know something about the man who raised you. Thomas Reyes had every chance to take that money and disappear. He never did.”

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