LOGINThe man in the doorway held the envelope like it weighed nothing.
It was the kind of envelope people used when they wanted to look calm while they pulled the floor out from under you.
He stepped inside without asking, because my father’s office had always been treated like a place where rules bent for visitors with money.
“Mr. Hector Morel,” he said, voice even. “Ms. Yselle Morel.”
My father’s smile warmed, as if we’d been joined by an old friend. “You found us. Please...come in.”
The man didn’t sit. He didn’t glance at the framed photo on the wall of our family in front of the factory sign, either. His eyes stayed on business.
He offered the envelope across my father’s desk. “Service confirmed.”
My father took it with two fingers, careful not to crease it. “And you are?”
“Julien Caron,” the man said. “Counsel for Valois Capital.”
The name landed wrong. Not the words themselves. The way my father’s eyes blinked once, then smoothed over.
Valois.
Luc had said my father had a meeting. He hadn’t said with who.
My father slid a thumb beneath the seal. He didn’t open it.
“Mr. Caron,” he said, tone gentle. “I assume there’s been a misunderstanding.”
“There’s been a timeline,” Caron replied. “It ended.”
I moved closer to the desk. “What is it?”
My father didn’t look at me. That was the first crack.
Caron answered anyway. “Default notice. Demand for immediate remedy.”
“Remedy,” I repeated. “Meaning…?”
“Meaning funds,” Caron said. “Today.”
My father lifted his gaze to mine at last. His eyes were warm, steady, almost proud—like I was overreacting to a small inconvenience.
“Yselle,” he said softly, “let me handle it.”
I didn’t take my eyes off Caron. “Which account is in default?”
Caron’s mouth twitched, almost sympathetic, then went neutral again. “All relevant facilities. Including payroll-related restrictions.”
My throat tightened. So the bank call wasn’t a bank problem. It was a bigger problem wearing a bank’s face.
“You knew payroll would fail,” I said to my father.
He set the envelope down precisely at the edge of his desk, as if placement could control consequences. “I knew we had a gap.”
“A gap?” I echoed.
My father’s smile held. “Don’t make it dramatic.”
Caron cleared his throat, not impatient, but firm. “Mr. Morel, the notice explains the next steps. Appointment of an external administrator is one option. Seizure of secured assets is another.”
My father’s posture stayed relaxed, but his jaw tightened for a heartbeat. “That won’t be necessary.”
“If you meet the demand,” Caron said. “Yes.”
“And if we don’t?” I asked.
Caron looked at me then. Straight. Professional. Not unkind.
“Then operations will be constrained,” he said. “And public filings will follow.”
Public filings meant headlines. Headlines meant panic. Panic meant the factory floor outside this office would become a storm.
My father lifted a hand toward me, palm down, the old signal from childhood that meant lower your voice. I wasn’t raising it.
“Ms. Morel,” Caron said, “I was instructed to deliver this in person because Mr. Valois prefers clarity.”
My father’s smile flickered again. Just enough.
“Mr. Valois,” I said.
“Yes,” Caron replied. “He will arrive shortly.”
Luc’s warning echoed in my head. That calm one.
I turned my face toward my father, searching for the truth in the soft parts of him. “You arranged this.”
He looked offended, which would have worked better if his hands weren’t so still.
“I arranged a solution,” he said. “We are past the point where pride helps anyone.”
“Pride?” I repeated, then laughed once, sharp. “You drained the reserve account and called it pride?”
My father’s eyes cooled. The warmth stayed in his voice, though. That was always the trick.
“Mind your tone,” he said quietly.
I held his gaze. “Mind your workers.”
Caron spoke again, like he was stepping between two people who might break something valuable. “Mr. Valois requested that you be available. He asked for a meeting room. Coffee. And access to your most current ledgers.”
My father nodded, still composed. “Of course.”
Then he looked at me as if we were alone.
“Go back to the floor,” he said gently. “Tell them payroll is delayed, not canceled.”
I didn’t move. “Don’t make me lie for you.”
“It’s not a lie if you believe we will fix it,” he answered.
“That’s not how truth works,” I said.
His smile returned, smooth and practiced. “You always had a talent for speeches.”
Caron checked his watch. “Mr. Valois is punctual.”
My father’s eyes slid to the door, then back to me. “Yselle. Please.”
The word please sounded like a request, but it carried weight. It carried childhood. It carried all the times I had been the one expected to smooth things over.
I picked up the envelope from the desk before my father could stop me.
His hand twitched.
I tore it open.
Paper slid out…clean print, legal language, dates, numbers, signatures. My eyes found one line and stuck.
DEMAND FOR IMMEDIATE PAYMENT.
Below it: a figure that felt unreal, the kind of number you read in news articles and never expect to see beside your family name.
I swallowed, forced my voice steady. “You can’t pay this today.”
My father took the paper from my hand like I was a child handing back scissors. “I didn’t ask you to solve it.”
Caron watched us both. “Mr. Morel, will you be providing access to the ledgers?”
“Yes,” my father said. “My daughter manages operations. She will assist.”
I snapped my head up. “Excuse me?”
My father gave me that calm look again. “We need to cooperate.”
“You need to be honest,” I shot back.
His smile thinned. “And you need to be helpful.”
Caron gathered his briefcase with one smooth motion. “I will wait in the main office area. Please notify me when the room is ready.”
He turned to leave. At the threshold he paused and looked at me again, just long enough to tell me something without saying it.
This isn’t just money.
Then he was gone.
My father exhaled like he’d been holding his breath the whole time. “There. We are making progress.”
“Progress toward what?” I asked. “Selling the factory out from under the people who built it?”
He walked around the desk, slow, controlled, stopping close enough that his cologne hit my nose…clean, expensive, and familiar.
“I am keeping this family afloat,” he said softly. “And I am keeping you safe.”
I stared at him. “Safe from what?”
He looked past me, toward the window, toward the factory floor beyond. “From consequences.”
That answer didn’t fit the question. That was the problem.
I stepped back. “I’m going to the floor.”
My father’s voice followed me. “Tell Mireille to keep them working.”
I didn’t answer.
Outside the office, the corridor felt narrower than it had ten minutes ago. Luc leaned against the wall like he’d been waiting, trying to look casual, failing.
“You saw the suit,” he said.
“I saw the name,” I replied.
Luc blew out a breath. “Okay. Bad. That’s bad.”
“You knew,” I said.
His eyes darted away. “I knew Dad had a meeting. I didn’t know it was that.”
“Don’t defend him,” I said, and started walking.
“I’m not,” Luc said, trailing me. “I’m just saying… he’s scared.”
“Good,” I snapped. “Maybe fear will make him tell the truth.”
Luc made a sound that was half laugh, half pain. “You really go for the throat when you’re stressed.”
“I go for the facts,” I said. “You should try it.”
We entered the main floor, and the factory swallowed us in heat and motion. The moment people saw me, the noise softened. Not silence…worse. That polite…waiting quiet.
Mireille was already moving toward me, her boots sure, her face set.
“Well?” she asked.
I opened my mouth. Closed it. Tried again.
“Payroll is delayed,” I said.
Mireille didn’t blink. “Delayed how long?”
“Today,” I said. “We’re working it.”
“Who’s ‘we’?” Mireille asked, voice low, sharp. “You and the man in the suit?”
A few workers edged closer, pretending they weren’t listening.
I lowered my voice, because panic spreads faster than fire. “There’s a meeting. I’m pushing for a solution that keeps the doors open.”
Mireille’s eyes searched my face. “And wages?”
My tongue felt too big for my mouth. “As soon as we can.”
That wasn’t an answer. We both knew it.
Henri’s voice came from behind Mireille. “My wife’s on maternity leave,” he said, not accusing, just tired. “We can’t do ‘as soon as you can.’”
I turned toward him. “I know.”
Another voice, younger. “If we walk out, what happens?”
Mireille lifted a hand, cutting off the murmurs. “We’re not walking out today.”
Someone scoffed. Someone else muttered a curse.
Mireille leaned closer to me, so only I could hear. “If your father sold us, tell me now.”
I held her stare. “If he did, I’ll be the first to drag it into daylight.”
Mireille watched me for a beat longer. Then she nodded once…small, sharp.
“Twenty minutes,” she said. “That’s what you bought yourself.”
Then she turned back to the floor, clapping her hands once. “Back to stations. No mistakes. No broken pieces. You break it, you pay for it.”
A few people laughed..thin laughter, but it was something.
I walked back toward the office, Luc still hovering.
“You just promised daylight,” he said, eyes wide. “Are you planning to fight Dad?”
“I’m planning to stop him,” I replied.
Luc swallowed. “Yeah. Same thing.”
Through the glass of the front office, I saw Caron standing by the reception desk, phone in hand, posture straight as a fence post. He ended the call and looked up.
His eyes flicked past me.
Not to my father.
To the front entrance.
I turned.
The main doors opened, and cold air swept in like a sharp slap. A man stepped inside, tall and still, wearing a dark coat like it had been cut for him alone. His hair was black, neat. His face held no hurry, no apology. A faint scar rode the edge of his jaw like a signature.
He didn’t scan the room the way visitors do.
He claimed it with one quiet look.
Caron moved instantly. “Mr. Valois.”
Renaud Valois’s gaze slid over Caron, then landed on me…steady, unreadable, as if he’d been expecting me to be standing right there.
His mouth didn’t smile.
But his eyes did something worse.
They recognized.
Paper scatters differently when everyone in the room knows at least one sheet can ruin a bloodline.The briefcase hit the stone hard enough for the latch to split. Pages burst across the pantry floor in a messy white fan—typed statements, old copies, notary forms, insurance extracts, one church transfer slip, and the counter-file Hector had come there to protect.Gabriel kicked the case away first.I got to the counter file second.Hector got a hand on my sleeve.I shook him off.He came again.Gabriel blocked him this time with a shoulder hard enough to send him into the shelving.Glass jars rattled.One cracked.Brine smell opened sharply into the cold room.Luc moved to Yselle’s side instead of his father’s.That mattered more than the shove.Hector saw it.Of course he did.And because men like him do not believe in losing rooms cleanly, he said the filthiest thing availa
The morning split three ways at once.That was the trouble with truth once it finally came out of hiding. It never walked into one room politely and waited to be understood. It moved through bodies, phones, roads, old grudges, bank records, chapel locks, and frightened men who had spent years being useful to the wrong person.Claire stood in the rose house with one hand on the table and the other pressed briefly against her ribs as if the effort of standing inside her own history had become physical. Yselle had already folded the witness page and tucked it inside her coat. I had Julien on one line, Gabriel on another, and the whole day trying to split under us.“Hector moved before dawn,” I said. “Sabine’s line is still inside the house, Luc is gone, and if Benoît runs, this becomes another week where the dead stay expensive and the living do the apologizing.”Claire looked at Yselle, not me. “Then stop letting me
For half a second, dawn stopped being dawn.The rose house, the packet, Adrien’s unentered name, Claire sitting upright and alive across from us, the witness page…everything narrowed into one brutal line:Luc gone.Yselle’s head snapped toward me at once.“What do you mean gone?”Gabriel’s voice came back in my ear, steady because panic in men like him is always a private act.“Bed unused after zero-four-thirty. Window latched from inside. Guest door opened once at zero-five-oh-seven on internal service override. No visual after that.”Service override.Not random. Not Luc climbing stupidly into the dark.Chosen access.House knowledge.Again.Claire closed her eyes once.“Sabine,” she said.Yselle turned. “You know that?”“I know the difference between frightened improvisation and a clean pull.”
The rose house looked smaller in winter.Not delicate. Exposed.Glass panels frosted at the lower corners. Stone base holding old cold. The summer vines stripped down to thorn and memory against the frame. It sat at the edge of the lower garden where the terrace path gave up pretending it belonged to company and became something quieter.Yselle walked beside me, not behind, not ahead, coat buttoned high and gloves on. Her breath rose pale in the dawn air.She saw the light before I said anything.“So we’re not first.”“No.”“Do you find that irritating?”“Yes.”“Good.”The path had been cleared recently. That was the first thing I noticed on approach. Fresh shovel lines. Too neat for wind. Too early for ordinary staff rounds.I put one hand out lightly across her path before the last three steps.She looked down at it.Then at me.
Renaud’s POVI did not sleep.That was not unusual. Sleep and I had never been loyal to each other. But that night there was no even pretense of rest, no shallow drift, and no clean break between one thought and the next. The house had changed after Claire’s note, and old houses resent change the way men like Hector resent exposure. They settle differently. They listen harder. They remember too much.I stood in the war room with my jacket off, tie discarded somewhere sensible, and looked again at the card Colette had brought.If she wants the whole truth about the father line, bring her to the rose house at dawn. Alone if she is still angry. With Renaud if she is finally wise.Claire always had a talent for insult folded into instruction.
The house sounded different after the truth.Not cleaner. Not lighter.Just honest in the ugliest places.Pipes clicked in the walls. Floorboards gave under old weight. Somewhere in the far service wing, a door shut with the careful firmness of staff who had learned, finally, that the family they served could no longer pretend to be ordinary.Snow rested along the terrace rails outside the library windows. The river beyond the trees had gone black-blue under the evening, cold and watchful. It no longer felt like an enemy. It felt like a witness that had seen too much and chosen silence only because no one had asked it correctly.I stood by the fire in the library with a glass of water I had not touched and watched the reflection of the room in the dark window.No war maps anymore.No pinned photos. No string. No furious handwriting. No names circled like targets.The war room door behind the shelves stood open no
The townhouse went quiet in the wrong way after the call.Not peaceful. Not thoughtful. Quiet the way a room goes when everyone understands a line has been crossed and no one wants to be the first to say what it means.Julien gathered the scattered printouts into one neat stack, whi
We did not drive straight back to the estate.That was Gabriel’s decision, which meant it was the correct one and therefore immediately irritating.He took the first l
The lower market station bank looked like the sort of place secrets would choose if they had grown tired of romance.No grandeur. No stained glass. No elegant old stone pretending history made corruption noble. Just a n
I wore grey because it looked cooperative.Not weak. Not dramatic. Not the color of a woman about to throw a glass or confess to nerves in front of people who collected those things like stamps. Just soft enough to suggest I had thought carefully about tone. Sabine would notice. That was t







