All three of them looked up.
At the top of the sweeping staircase stood Margot Morel, Adrian’s mother, one hand gripping the banister, the other pressed to her chest. She had not been seen downstairs in weeks. Celeste had told everyone the grief had made her too fragile to leave her room.
Now she was standing there in a silk robe, pale with fury.
Celeste’s face emptied.
“Margot, you shouldn’t be out of bed—”
“Oh, be quiet,” Margot said, and her voice cracked like a whip through the foyer.
She descended slowly, one step at a time, never taking her eyes off Celeste.
Adrian stood frozen beneath her.
“Mother,” he said, but even he did not know which part of the moment he was reacting to first.
Margot reached the last stair and looked straight at Lucie.
The child stood beside the mop bucket, frightened but still upright, her small wrist bare now where the bracelet had been opened.
Margot’s mouth trembled.
Then she whispered, “She has Elena’s eyes.”
Adrian felt the name like a blade.
Elena.
A woman from his father’s old estate office. Kind, quiet, long gone by the time Adrian returned from years abroad. Celeste had once dismissed her as nothing important. A passing scandal. A servant girl who disappeared after asking for money.
Now Adrian understood why the subject had always died so quickly in his house.
He turned to Lucie. “Elena was your mother?”
Lucie nodded.
“She died when I came out,” she said, using the language of a child who had never been taught gentler words for cruel things. “Grandpa said she loved you before she got sick.”
Adrian shut his eyes.
For one horrible second he saw the entire missing life at once — the years, the lies, the child hidden in the shadow of his own name.
Margot stepped closer to Lucie, then glared at Celeste with naked hatred.
“You told me the baby didn’t survive the winter,” she said. “You brought me a death certificate.”
Celeste lifted her chin, but her hands had started to shake.
“I did what was necessary.”
Adrian looked at her slowly.
“For what?”
Now she snapped.
“For this house!” she said, gesturing wildly around the foyer. “For your name, your inheritance, your future! Do you think your father wanted some illegitimate village child taking everything?”
Margot’s slap landed so hard it echoed off the marble.
Celeste staggered sideways.
Lucie flinched.
Adrian did not.
He only stared.
Because the slap had not shocked him nearly as much as Celeste’s answer.
She had not denied it.
She had just justified it.
Margot turned to Adrian, breathing hard.
“Your father changed the will six months before he died,” she said. “He told me he would tell you himself. He said if anything happened, the proof was inside the bracelet and inside the blue file in his study safe.”
Celeste moved at that.
Too fast.
Toward the dining room.
Toward the back corridor.
Toward escape.
Adrian caught her wrist before she made it three steps.
She gasped.
His voice, when it came, was terrifyingly calm.
“Where is the file?”
Celeste looked at him with the final desperation of a person whose mask had no skin left to cling to.
“You don’t understand what you’re doing,” she said. “If this comes out, your father’s name is dragged through mud, the papers tear this family apart, everyone asks who the mother was, where the child came from—”
“My daughter,” Adrian said, “was already on her knees scrubbing my floor.”
That ended the argument.
Lucie had not cried again yet.
That somehow made everything worse.
She was standing very still, clutching the wet wooden mop as if she still wasn’t sure whether she was allowed to let it go.
Adrian released Celeste’s wrist and crossed the foyer to Lucie.
He knelt in front of her.
Really looked at her.
There was fear in her face, yes. But also something more dangerous in children than fear: caution learned too early.
“Did she hurt you?” he asked softly.
Lucie’s lower lip trembled.
“Only when I called you Daddy.”
Adrian broke.
Not loudly.
Not dramatically.
Just in the eyes first, then the mouth, then the way his shoulders lowered as if the full weight of his own blindness had finally found him.
He reached out slowly.
“Lucie,” he said, voice shaking, “you never have to clean this floor again.”
For a second she didn’t move.
Then, with the smallest possible motion, she let go of the mop.
It hit the tile with a soft clatter.
And threw herself into his arms.
He caught her like a man trying to hold the last surviving piece of his own soul.
Behind them, Margot pressed one hand to her mouth and cried silently.
In the distance, somewhere deeper in the house, staff had begun to gather — drawn by the shattering glass, the raised voices, the impossible reversal of power.
Celeste stood alone now in the middle of the foyer she had ruled so carefully, looking suddenly smaller than the child she had tried to bury inside it.
Adrian rose with Lucie in his arms.
He did not look at Celeste for a long time.
When he finally did, there was nothing left in his face that belonged to marriage.
“Call my lawyer,” he said to the nearest servant.
No one hesitated.
Celeste’s voice cracked. “Adrian, please—”
He turned away from her before she finished.
Margot stepped beside him and rested one trembling hand on Lucie’s hair.
Then she looked at Celeste and said, with cold satisfaction:
“The heir is home.”
And for the first time since walking through that door, Lucie stopped trembling.