His Secret Son, Her Public Shame
img img His Secret Son, Her Public Shame img Chapter 3
3
Chapter 6 img
Chapter 7 img
Chapter 8 img
Chapter 9 img
Chapter 10 img
img
  /  1
img

Chapter 3

Kiera' s message was a declaration of war. She thought she was untouchable, hidden away in her gilded cage. She didn' t know I had the key.

I needed to get inside that house one more time, not just for evidence, but to see the truth with my own eyes, to hear it from their own mouths, unfiltered. The flash drive had the what, but I needed the why.

Bribing a servant was the obvious choice. I reviewed the financial records I' d copied. Kiera' s household staff was paid through the shell corporation, but one name stood out-a cleaning service that was paid a surprisingly low, flat monthly fee. A company that likely underpaid its workers. I found their website and the name of the manager. A few thousand dollars, transferred from a burner account, was all it took to get me a uniform and a spot on the next day' s cleaning crew for the mansion.

The next afternoon, I pulled up to the service entrance in a nondescript van with three other women. I wore a plain blue uniform, a baseball cap pulled low, and a disposable face mask. I kept my head down and my mouth shut.

The housekeeper, a tired-looking woman named Maria, let us in. She barely glanced at me. "Upstairs bedrooms and the master suite. Be quick. Mrs. Reese doesn' t like to be disturbed."

I was assigned to the master suite. The room was enormous, with a stunning view of the city. But I wasn't interested in the view. I was interested in the life they had built here. On the bedside table was a silver frame. It held a picture of Ivan and Kiera on their wedding day. They weren' t officially married, of course-Ivan was engaged to me. This was a lie within a lie, a ceremony just for them, a fantasy they lived out in secret.

I moved through the house, cleaning mechanically, my eyes scanning everything. The walls were covered in family portraits. Leo on a pony. Kiera and Ivan laughing on a boat. My father, Richard Donovan, a renowned architect, had designed this house. My mother, Eleanor Donovan, a high-society philanthropist, had decorated it. Her signature taste was everywhere.

I found Maria in the kitchen, wiping down the counters. I kept my voice low and disguised. "It' s a beautiful home. They seem like a very happy family."

Maria sighed, not looking at me. "They are. Mr. Hughes adores that boy. And Mr. Donovan... he' s here more than he' s at his own home. Taught little Leo how to draw. Says the boy has his talent."

The words were a physical blow. My father had never offered to teach me anything. I had begged him to teach me calligraphy, his passion, but he always said he was too busy. He wasn' t too busy for Leo.

"And Mrs. Donovan?" I asked, my voice tight.

"Oh, she spoils Kiera rotten," Maria said, shaking her head. "Brings her new jewelry every week. Says Kiera is the daughter she always wanted, so spirited and strong."

The daughter she always wanted. Not me. Not the real daughter who had spent years dreaming of a mother' s love.

My stomach churned. I had to get out of there. As I turned to leave the kitchen, I heard the sound of a car in the driveway. A sleek black sedan. Ivan' s car.

"They' re home early!" Maria hissed, her eyes wide with panic. "Quick, hide! In the pantry! They can' t see you here after hours."

She shoved me into the dark, narrow pantry just as the back door opened. I pressed myself against the shelves, my heart pounding against my ribs. Through the slatted door, I could see them. Ivan, Kiera, and Leo.

Leo was crying. "But I wanted the blue one!"

"I know, sweetie, I know," Kiera cooed, stroking his hair. "Daddy will get you the blue one tomorrow, won' t you, Daddy?"

"Of course," Ivan said. He knelt down and looked at Kiera, his face etched with concern. "Are you okay, though? You looked pale at the store."

"I' m fine," Kiera said, but her voice was weary. "Just tired. It' s hard, Ivan. Pretending all the time. Waiting for you to finally get rid of her."

My breath caught in my throat.

Ivan stood up and pulled Kiera into his arms. He kissed her forehead. "I know, my love. I know it' s not fair to you. But we have to be careful. Just a little longer. Once the new merger is complete, I won' t need her family' s connections anymore. I' ll end it. I promise. Then we can be a real family, out in the open."

"You promise?" she whispered.

"I promise," he said, his voice a low, intimate vow. "You and Leo are my entire world. Aliana... she' s just a means to an end. A placeholder."

A placeholder.

The word echoed in the silent pantry. That' s all I was. A tool he was using. A temporary fix until he got what he wanted. The love, the engagement, our entire life together-it was a business transaction.

I squeezed my eyes shut, fighting the bile that rose in my throat. I had all the proof I needed. I had the photos, the bank statements, and now, the raw, undeniable truth from his own lips.

I waited until they moved into the living room, their laughter echoing down the hall. I slipped out of the pantry, nodded a silent thank you to a terrified-looking Maria, and walked out the service door without a backward glance.

As I was rounding the corner of the house, heading for the street, Kiera stepped out onto the patio for a phone call. She saw me. Her eyes narrowed, a flicker of recognition in them even with my disguise. She didn' t know who I was, but she knew I didn' t belong.

"Hey, you!" she called out. "What are you still doing here?"

I didn' t answer. I just picked up my pace, my heart hammering. I couldn' t let her see my face. Not yet. The game wasn' t over. It had just begun.

            
            

COPYRIGHT(©) 2022