“Henry, wait!”
Kemy’s voice cut through the dining room like thunder.
Henry froze with the glass halfway to his lips.
Jane spun around so violently her chair nearly tipped over.
For one second, nobody moved.
Then Jane’s face twisted with rage.
“How dare you interrupt us?” she snapped at the old maid. “Do you know how rude that is?”
But Kemy wasn’t looking at Jane.
She was staring at the glass.
At the tiny white powder still clinging to the bottom.
Henry frowned.
“Iyaabo… what’s wrong?”
Kemy walked forward slowly.
Her hands trembled—not from fear, but from the unbearable weight of what she was about to do.
“Don’t drink that.”
Jane immediately laughed.
A sharp, nervous laugh.
“This woman is crazy,” she said quickly. “Henry, she’s old and confused.”
But Henry noticed something.
Jane wasn’t angry.
She was panicking.
And Henry had built a billion-dollar company by recognizing panic in people who were hiding something.
He lowered the glass slowly.
“Jane,” he said carefully, “what’s in this?”
Jane crossed her arms.
“Vitamin powder. I told you I added supplements because you’ve been stressed.”
Kemy’s eyes darkened.
“Then drink it yourself.”
Silence.
Jane’s face lost color instantly.
Henry looked between the two women.
Then, very calmly, he placed the glass on the table.
“Drink it.”
Jane stepped back.
“Don’t be ridiculous.”
“Drink it,” Henry repeated.
Her breathing changed.
Fast.
Uneven.
And suddenly Kemy remembered another face from long ago.
Fey.
The same nervous eyes.
The same selfish cowardice moments before betrayal.
Jane slammed her hand against the table.
“This is insane! You’re listening to a maid over your fiancée?”
But Henry’s voice had already turned cold.
“What’s in the drink?”
Jane looked trapped now.
Cornered.
Then she made her mistake.
She looked toward her purse.
Just for a second.
But Kemy saw it.
And so did Henry.
Kemy grabbed the purse before Jane could move.
“Give that back!” Jane screamed.
Henry stood up instantly.
Inside the purse was a small prescription bottle with no label.
Henry took it with shaking hands.
“What is this?”
Jane’s mouth opened.
Closed.
Opened again.
Finally:
“It’s not what you think—”
Kemy cut her off.
“I heard your phone call.”
The room went dead silent.
Jane’s entire body froze.
Henry looked at his mother—still dressed in old clothes, still pretending to be the maid.
“What phone call?”
Kemy swallowed hard.
“The baby is not yours.”
Henry stopped breathing.
Jane let out a desperate laugh.
“She’s lying!”
But Kemy kept going.
“You and your friend planned to drug him so he would believe he got you pregnant.”
Henry staggered backward like someone had punched him.
Jane rushed toward him immediately.
“Baby, listen to me—”
“Don’t touch me.”
His voice came out low.
Broken.
Dangerous.
Jane burst into tears instantly.
The performance was flawless.
But Kemy had spent her whole life watching people survive by lying beautifully.
She wasn’t fooled anymore.
“Henry,” Jane sobbed, “she hates me! She’s been against me since the beginning!”
Henry turned slowly toward the old maid.
Toward the woman who had spent months scrubbing floors in silence while enduring humiliation inside her own son’s mansion.
And suddenly…
he noticed something.
Something small.
Something impossible.
Around Kemy’s neck hung a thin gold chain with a tiny cross pendant.
Henry’s eyes widened.
He knew that necklace.
When he was nine years old and terrified during a thunderstorm, his mother used to let him hold that exact cross until he fell asleep.
He stared at her.
Then at Jane.