At twelve-fifteen, the wrought-iron gates opened and Julian’s black car rolled up the drive. Brielle stood, smoothing her silk dress, beaming like a lighthouse. He stepped out, kissed his mother’s cheek, shook hands with my father, and then his eyes found mine across the terrace. He froze. “Elena?” The whole table turned. Brielle laughed nervously. “Babe, that’s just the housegirl. Come sit.” Julian didn’t move. “Elena Marsh? From the night shift at St. Catherine’s free clinic?” I nodded once. For two years, I’d volunteered there after my bakery shifts, sitting with patients who had no one. Julian had spent six months as a resident before joining his father’s foundation. He’d watched me hold a dying woman’s hand at 3 a.m. when no family came. He’d told me then I was the kindest person he’d ever met. He turned slowly to Brielle. “You told me your stepsister was a drug addict who stole from your family. You told me she was the reason you couldn’t sponsor the clinic.” Silence cracked across the terrace like glass. Marguerite stood up too fast. “Julian, sweetheart, there’s been a misunderstanding —” “There hasn’t.” He walked past Brielle without looking at her, crossed the marble, and stopped in front of me. “The Vance Foundation board meets Monday. I was going to announce a two-million-dollar partnership with whichever charity my fiancée chose. She chose a yacht renovation fund.” He took the engagement ring box from his jacket and set it gently on my pastry tray instead of her hand. “Elena, will you let me drive you home? And then, maybe, let me take you to dinner where nobody calls you the help.” I untied my apron. Folded it. Laid it across Brielle’s empty chair. “I’d like that, Julian.” As we walked toward his car, I heard Marguerite hiss at Brielle, “What did you DO?” I didn’t turn around. For the first time in eleven years, I wasn’t carrying anyone’s tray.
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