“You can lean back, you know,” Mrs. Whitmore said once.
“The cushions will not bite.”
“Old habits, ma’am.”
I nodded, but I knew I’d never call her that.
She talked about Arthur, the lonely house, and her four grown children, who only showed up when there were papers to sign.
Referencing her oldest son, she said one afternoon while stirring her tea slowly, “Bradley called this morning. He wants me to meet with the estate lawyer.
Again.”
“That sounds important, ma’am,” I replied.
“It sounds like vultures circling, Stan. But you didn’t hear me say that.”
I pretended I hadn’t. But I had, and I felt sorry for her, a woman with everything, surrounded by people who looked at her like a signature instead of a person.
Maybe that was my mistake.
One afternoon after lunch downtown, Mrs.
Whitmore accidentally left her wallet in the back seat.
I noticed it only after I’d dropped her off and was pulling out of her driveway. I parked the car and carried it inside untouched.
When my employer opened it, she glanced at the thick stack of cash still inside, then looked at me differently after that.
As if she’d decided something.
Last Tuesday started like any other day.
I pulled up to the Whitmore estate at exactly 9 a.m., my hands still smelling like the cheap soap from my cracked bathroom sink.
The moment I stepped inside and picked up the car keys by the front door, I knew something was wrong.
All four of Mrs. Whitmore’s children were there.
Bradley stood near the fireplace with his arms crossed.
Vivian, the second-oldest child, sat on the sofa sipping coffee as if she owned the room. The younger two, Marcus and Claire, lingered near the windows. My boss had shown me photos of them all.
Mrs.
Whitmore stood in the middle of the living room, pale and trembling.
“Ma’am?” I asked carefully. “Are you alright?”
Her eyes flickered toward Bradley, then to the floor.
“My diamond brooch is missing,” she said quietly.
The room went still.
“I can’t account for it,” my employer continued. “And you were the only person outside the family in the house this week.”
The words hit me like a punch to the chest.
“Ma’am…” I stared at her.
Then Mrs.
Whitmore looked straight at me.
“Of course he did,” Bradley muttered, smirking.
“Mother, we warned you,” Vivian added, folding her arms. “You let these people get too comfortable.”
These people.
That hurt worse than the accusation!
I felt my face burn.
“Mrs. Whitmore, I would never — “
For half a second, her eyes met mine.
Something there felt wrong.
Fear maybe. Or a warning.
“That’s enough, Stan,” she said sharply.
I froze. I’d never heard Mrs.
Whitmore raise her voice before.
“Take the car to my mechanic,” she continued. “Leave it there. The paperwork is in the glove compartment.
He knows what to do. And after that, your employment here is finished.”
Bradley exhaled slowly through his nose, almost satisfied. Vivian looked as if she’d just won an argument months in the making.
My hands shook!
I wanted to throw the keys across the marble floor and walk out!
To tell all of them exactly what I thought about people who treated others the way they’d treated me!
But then I thought about my children, about Lily, my oldest, whose glasses had been taped together for three weeks.
I thought about the overdue electric bill under the sugar jar.
Pride doesn’t pay bills, and I needed that week’s pay.
“Yes, ma’am,” I said quietly.
As I turned to leave, I glanced back once.
Mrs. Whitmore was staring at the floor, her hand trembling against her chest. She couldn’t look at me.
I walked out of that mansion feeling smaller than I had in years.
The black Mercedes waited in the driveway like a joke at my expense.
I climbed inside, gripped the steering wheel, and let out a breath that burned all the way out of my lungs.
Then I drove away.
Every red light felt personal.
Every driver besides me looked like somebody judging me without knowing the story.
I kept hearing my employer’s voice in my head.
“And you were the only person outside the family in the house this week.”
I felt sick.
How could I have been so stupid?
All those coffees. All those conversations about my children. Maybe I had just been entertainment for a lonely rich woman before she threw me away.
Twenty minutes later, I pulled into the garage across town.
An older man in a navy work shirt waved from the open bay.
“You must be Stan,” he called.
I froze.
“I’m Harold.
Mrs. Whitmore called this morning,” he said calmly. “She said you would give me the paperwork.”
I felt my stomach tighten.
I opened the compartment and pulled out the papers, but a folded white note slipped onto the passenger seat.
My name was written across the front in my former boss’s handwriting.
I handed Harold the paperwork and was stepping away to a quiet corner when the garage owner spoke.
“Hey, don’t leave yet.
We have some business to discuss.”
That confused me, but I nodded.
Harold gave me a thumbs-up and walked away.
My hands shook as I unfolded the letter.
“Dear Stan,
Please forgive what happened this morning.
Bradley has become convinced that anyone I trust and bring close is trying to influence me financially. He’s already threatened legal action against former employees and monitors nearly every decision I make. If he believed we remained in contact after today, he would drag you and your family into something ugly and public.”
I couldn’t believe what I was reading, but I continued.
“I needed him to believe I’d dismissed you completely.
The brooch wasn’t stolen. It’s wrapped in a handkerchief in the glove compartment. Please keep it safe for now and return it when the time is right.”
The note continued.
“Also enclosed is a cashier’s check.
Harold is an old friend of Arthur’s. He needs an honest driver, and I told him there’s no man more honest than you.
Thank you for treating a lonely old woman like a human being.
Eleanor.”
I rushed to the car before it was taken away and slid into the passenger seat. I quickly lifted the folded handkerchief from the glove compartment.
Inside, the diamond brooch sparkled in the morning light.
Underneath it sat a cashier’s check for $3,000.
I covered my mouth with one hand and cried right there in the seat.
Not from shame, but from relief.
A soft knock came at the window.
“You alright, son?
Can we talk?” Harold asked gently.
I nodded, trying to steady myself as I stepped out.
Harold poured two coffees from a stained metal pot and slid one toward me as I sat in the garage office.
