Now, they' ve dragged me back into their glittering world, using my son' s 18th birthday as the stage for their own engagement party-a final, public spectacle to humiliate me.
They see a broken cleaner, a ghost they can easily dismiss.
They're wrong.
Tonight, I' m going live. And I' m bringing seven years of digital receipts that will burn their entire world to the ground.
Chapter 1
"Elise? Is that really you, Elise?"
My name, half-whispered, half-gasped, hit me harder than the bucket of dirty water I was lugging. The sudden sound made me stumble, the cold, gritty liquid sloshing over my worn-out shoes. Seven years. Seven years of scrubbing floors, toilets, and the grit of other people's lives had taught me to be invisible. But here, in the sterile hallway of a high-end office building, my carefully constructed anonymity shattered.
My hands, rough and calloused, tightened around the bucket handle. My heart, a muscle I thought had forgotten how to feel, gave a violent thump against my ribs. I kept my back to the voice, pretended the slight tremor in my fingers was just from the heavy workload.
"Elise?" The voice came closer, thicker now, laced with a strange mix of disbelief and something fragile.
I didn't turn. I couldn't. Not yet. I just kept my eyes fixed on the grimy mop head, willing myself to be no one. Just a cleaner. Just a shadow.
A hand, light and tentative, reached out. It brushed my arm, and I flinched as if burned. The touch sent a jolt through me, a raw nerve exposed. I pulled away sharply, my body automatically creating distance.
"I thought... I thought you were gone." Her voice cracked. "For seven years, Elise, we thought you were dead."
The words floated in the antiseptic air, heavy and accusing. Dead. It was a word I' d lived with. A convenient fiction that had allowed me to disappear, to survive.
Finally, I turned. The fluorescent lights of the corridor seemed to amplify the stark reality of the moment. My eyes, still adjusting from staring at the polished floor, squinted. My vision swam for a second, a bright haze obscuring her face.
When it cleared, she stood there, a ghost from a past I had buried alive. Katherine Hull. Her usually sharp features were softened by a veil of shock, her perfectly made-up eyes wide and glistening. A thin, almost imperceptible tremor ran through her.
Beside her, a tall, slender boy stood silently. His eyes, dark and guarded, stared at me with an intensity that made my stomach clench. He looked familiar, yet foreign.
"Annamarie was only ten when... when you left us," Katherine said, her voice barely above a whisper, pulling the boy slightly forward. "She's eighteen now. An adult."
I looked at Annamarie. Ten. That fragile, trusting child who used to trace patterns on my hand while I read her bedtime stories. Now, he was a young man, his shoulders broader, his jawline sharper. The boy who had called me 'Mom'.
"We went to the site every year," Katherine continued, her voice rising, a raw edge of accusation now. "Every single year, Elise. For seven years. Do you know how many flowers I laid for you? How many prayers I said?" Her control wavered, and a single tear traced a path through her foundation. "Why didn't you come back? Why did you make us believe you were dead?"
I said nothing. Just watched her, my face a carefully constructed mask of indifference. I picked up my lunchbox from the utility cart. It was a cheap plastic container, filled with cold leftovers. I opened it and started eating, each bite a deliberate act, a barrier between us.
My gaze drifted down to Katherine's midsection, a slight, almost imperceptible swell beneath the expensive fabric of her dress. The curve was subtle, but unmistakable. Another life. A new beginning for her. Seven years. It was enough time for everything to change. For old lives to be erased, and new ones to begin.
Seven years. A chasm.
I finished my bland meal, the taste of betrayal far stronger than the food. Our paths were separated now, by more than just time.
Katherine, still tearful, took a step closer, her eyes scanning my uniform, the weary lines around my eyes. The scrutiny made my skin crawl. "What happened to you, Elise? Look at you. You're a cleaner." Her voice was laced with a pity that grated on my nerves. "Are you still so angry? Are you punishing us by living like this?"
I stood, the empty lunchbox a feather-light weight in my hand. I walked to the industrial trash bin, the squeak of my rubber soles the only sound in the tense silence. With a deliberate motion, I dropped the box inside.
"You have the wrong person," I said, my voice flat, devoid of any emotion. It was a practiced lie, one I had perfected over years.
Katherine's face froze, a mask of shock replacing her tears. Her jaw tightened, and her hands clenched at her sides. She looked at Annamarie, then back at me, her eyes glinting with a sudden, fierce anger.
"Even Annamarie? You'd deny your own son?" Her voice was sharp now, cutting through the silence. "He's your son, Elise!"
Annamarie, who had been silent all this time, flinched. His head dropped, and a barely audible whisper escaped his lips. "Mom?"
My fingers, hanging loosely at my sides, curled into tight fists, the nails digging into my palms. The air grew thick, heavy with unspoken words. Only the distant hum of the building's ventilation system broke the oppressive quiet.