Finally, Madeline’s husband turned away.
“You were sick,” he said coldly, too quickly. “You couldn’t handle both. The doctors said—”
“The doctors?” Madeline snapped. “Or you?”
He didn’t respond.
That was enough.
The maid slowly reached up and touched the emerald at her throat, like she was afraid it might disappear if she let go.
“My whole life,” she whispered, “I was told I was found. That I had no name.”
Madeline stepped forward, voice breaking.
“You do have a name.”
Her hand trembled as she reached into the jewelry box again—this time pulling out an old folded document hidden beneath velvet.
A birth record.
Two names written in elegant ink.
Her eyes filled instantly.
“One was never supposed to be erased,” she said. “They told me she died… but they never showed me a body.”
The maid stared at the paper as if it was burning.
“So I was… hidden?”
Madeline nodded slowly.
“No. You were taken.”
The chandelier flickered slightly, as if even the house itself was reacting.
The maid’s voice cracked.
“Why?”
Madeline looked at her husband.
He finally spoke, barely audible.
“Because only one heir was allowed.”
A pause.
Then Madeline whispered:
“But there were always two.”
The maid took a shaky step forward.
“And now?”
Madeline looked at her—really looked at her—for the first time without distance, without control, without ice.
Now there was only truth.
Now there was only a twin she was never allowed to know.
And the room, once perfect and golden, felt like it had finally shattered.
