The Maid With The Tea Tray Owned The Mansion Damian Tried To Steal-Cherry

The diamond hit the bottom of the empty wine glass at 8:07 p.m.

One clean clink.

Small sound. Sharp enough to cut through a room full of people who had spent the evening pretending not to see what Damian Cross really was.

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Elena’s hand stayed suspended over the glass, her fingers bare for the first time in six months. The three-carat ring rested crooked at the bottom, catching chandelier light like a trapped piece of ice. Her lips parted, but no sound came out. Across the table, Damian still had one hand half-raised toward her wrist.

My head of security, Marcus Reed, stepped between them.

“Do not touch her,” Marcus said.

He did not raise his voice. He did not need to.

Damian looked from Marcus to me, then to the four guards positioned along the dining room walls. His face tried to rebuild itself into charm. It failed around the mouth first.

“Victor,” he said carefully, “everyone is emotional. Elena misunderstood. You misunderstood. This is a family matter.”

Celeste Cross made a tiny sound beside him, the kind people make when they realize the floor beneath them was never floor at all. Her diamond necklace sat tight against her throat. One manicured hand rested on the tablecloth, the fingers trembling just enough to make her bracelet tick against a spoon.

Elena lowered her hand and looked at Damian.

“You reached for me,” she said.

Damian blinked. “I was trying to comfort you.”

“No,” she said. Her voice shook once, then steadied. “You reached because I took off the ring.”

The room held its breath in pieces. A cousin near the fireplace stopped filming but did not lower her phone. One of Damian’s business partners stared into his plate. The smell of spilled Bordeaux mixed with roasted beef and hot wax from the long white candles. Under my servant shoes, the marble still held the damp warmth of tea.

I turned my phone screen toward Damian.

The recording file was still open.

“Would you like me to play the rest?” I asked.

His eyes flicked to the guests.

“There is no rest.”

“There is,” I said. “At 7:51 p.m., beside the library, you discussed Elena signing a revised marital trust. At 7:53, your mother asked whether my daughter would be kept quiet after the transfer. At 7:54, you laughed.”

Celeste stood too fast. Her chair scraped backward.

“This is illegal,” she snapped. “You can’t record private conversations in your home and use them like theater.”

I looked at her.

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