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From the high balcony, a stately woman’s voice drifted down like frost on glass

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From the high balcony, a stately woman’s voice drifted down like frost on glass: “She did not steal it. That osprey belongs to her because she is the rightful owner of every acre this manor stands upon.”

The half-eaten apple slipped from the manager’s hand, thudding onto the stone and rolling into the pool of ink. Grace stayed on her knees, her small fingers frozen over the burlap rag, too shell-shocked to understand the sudden chill that had gripped the room. Descending the grand staircase was Lady Eleanor Waverly. Her gloved hand was clamped tightly over the brass cane, her spine perfectly straight. Her face was calm, but her eyes held a lethal glare.

“Stand up, Grace,” Eleanor said as she reached the bottom landing.
The little girl looked around the massive hall, completely disoriented. “Me, ma’am?”
The old matriarch’s voice broke into soft, aching warmth. “Yes, my sweet child. You.”

Grace tried to stand, but her wet soles slipped on the wet limestone. Before the manager could even move to assist or make an excuse, Lady Eleanor closed the distance with a speed that defied her age. She grabbed the rough burlap rag from Grace’s hands and tossed it straight into the grand hearth. The damp cloth hissed as it hit the glowing embers.

“My Lady, I am deeply embarrassed, I truly believed she was just a troublesome ward sent by the parish handlers…” the manager stammered, her voice shaking as she backed away.
“You didn’t believe anything,” Eleanor replied, her voice dropping to a deadly hum. “You simply took pleasure in breaking a child because you thought no one was watching.”

Grace looked up at the lady through a heavy veil of tears. “Am I being punished? Am I bad?”
The grandmother’s stern composure shattered completely. Without a thought for her tailored silk dress, she knelt right into the black ink and dirty water on the limestone, pulling the little girl toward her. The dark liquid ruined her expensive clothes, but she didn’t look down once. “You have never been bad, my darling angel.”
“But… they told me my mother gave me away because I was an ugly, expensive mistake,” Grace whispered, her voice breaking.

Lady Eleanor closed her eyes, a lifetime of suppressed grief cutting deep lines into her face. “Your mother never gave you away, Grace. She died in the winter hills trying to bring you back to my arms. She loved you until the very moment her heart stopped beating.”

The entire hall fell into a suffocating, dead silence. The manager looked frantically toward the drawing-room corridor as two of Eleanor’s adult relatives stepped out—a man and a woman in pristine, bespoke clothing, their faces completely drained of color. They realized their years of deception had run out.

The matriarch didn’t even look in their direction. She simply pointed her brass cane toward the hidden camera lens tucked into the ceiling oak. “I had the entire security grid updated by an outside firm yesterday morning. I have recorded every hour of your malice. Every single day you treated my granddaughter like a dog while pocketing her trust fund.”

The relatives stood frozen, completely stripped of their masks. Grace looked from her trembling aunt and uncle back to her grandmother. “They kept telling me I was nobody…”
Eleanor pulled her into a crushing, desperate hug, burying the child in an embrace that smelled of old books and lavender. “Your name is Grace Waverly. You are the last child of this house.”

The little girl buried her face into the old woman’s shoulder and finally let go. She cried out loud—not the silent, terrified whimper of a servant trying to avoid a blow, but the deep, soul-shaking sob of a child who had finally been brought home.

Lady Eleanor held her tighter, her eyes boring into her relatives over the girl’s shaking shoulders. “You made her crawl on the stone to clean up your engineered mess,” she said, her words dropping like iron weights. “Now you will leave this valley on foot. You will take nothing but the clothes on your backs and the utter disgrace you left in this hall. You are written out of my testament and my life. Get out.”

As the manor security led the relatives and the weeping house manager out into the cold English fog, the old woman took Grace by the hand, leading her toward the warm, roaring fire of the main library. The grandfather clock in the corner chimed the hour, but for the first time in nine long years, light had finally broken through the shadows of Waverly Manor.”

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