З життя
Daddy! Leo shielded Eleanor, looking at Julian with fierce child anger
“Daddy!” Leo shielded Eleanor, looking at Julian with fierce child anger. “Why is everyone being mean to Mommy?”
A collective gasp rippled through the high-society crowd. Julian stepped forward, his boots heavy against the floor. He stared at the maid kneeling in the spilled champagne.
“Take off the headscarf,” Julian commanded, his voice trembling.
Eleanor’s hands shook as she untied the cloth, revealing her face and the faint, jagged scar running across her temple. The room went dead silent. It was Eleanor. His wife. The woman he had buried an empty casket for two years ago.
“This is an absurd trick!” Victoria hissed, her composure fracturing. “She’s a fraud trying to ruin our engagement!”
Eleanor reached into her apron pocket and pulled out a small, antique onyx hairpin. “I kept this, Julian. It was in my hair the night my brakes mysteriously failed on the bridge.” She turned her gaze to Victoria. “I remember the call I received right before I lost control. I remember your voice telling me that Julian would never choose a middle-class girl over your family’s billions.”
Before Victoria could speak, Arthur, the estate’s head butler for thirty years, stepped out from the crowd. He was trembling, holding a tablet.
“Sir,” Arthur whispered, refusing to look at Victoria. “The night of the accident, I saw Miss Victoria near Mrs. Vance’s car with a toolset. I was paid a massive sum to delete the garage security footage. I… I cannot live with this guilt anymore.”
“Paid,” Julian repeated, his voice dangerously low. He looked at Victoria, seeing the monster beneath the designer dress. “Get out of my house. The police are already on their way.”
Victoria was instantly surrounded by security and marched out into the humid night, her screams fading down the driveway.
Julian crossed the remaining distance and fell to his knees, wrapping his arms around Eleanor and Leo. The guests stood in stunned awe before a slow, tearful applause broke out.
Under the moonlight on the veranda, Julian slid Eleanor’s original diamond band back onto her finger. Leo smiled, looking up from his mother’s lap. “I knew it was you, Mommy. You always smell like sweet magnolia.”
Eleanor smiled, finally home, holding the future that had been stolen from her.
