Chapter Seven: The Letter And The Choice
They found out the rest of the truth by accident.
A letter. Delivered to the estate two weeks after Natalie left.
It was from the former assistant. The one who had screened Ethan’s calls four years ago. The one who had been fired for reasons that had never been fully explained.
She was dying. Pancreatic cancer. Six months to live, maybe less.
She had written to confess.
“Your messages never reached him because I deleted them. All of them. He was about to become something huge, and I didn’t think a catering server and an unplanned pregnancy fit the image we were building. I made a decision that wasn’t mine to make. I’m sorry. I’ve carried this guilt for four years. I’ll carry it to my grave.”
Rosa read the letter three times.
Ethan read it once. Then he walked outside. Then he didn’t come back in for an hour.
When he returned, his eyes were red.
“She stole four years from me,” he said.
“She stole them from both of us.”
“No. She stole them from Lily.”
Rosa had no answer for that.
Because he was right.
Three months later, Ethan asked Rosa a question.
Not the question. Not yet. Something smaller. Something that felt bigger.
“Come to work for me.”
“I already work for you.”
“No. I mean really work for me. My personal assistant. Same hours. Triple the pay. Benefits. A desk that isn’t in the kitchen.”
Rosa stared at him.
“Why?”
“Because I need someone I trust. And because you deserve to not be invisible anymore.”
“That’s not a job qualification.”
“It’s the only qualification that matters.”
She thought about it for three days.
She said yes on the fourth.
Not because she needed the money—though she did. Not because she wanted to be close to him—though she did.
Because he had seen her.
After four years of walking through rooms without being noticed, someone had finally looked at her and said: I see you.
And that, she was learning, was the most dangerous thing in the world.
Because once someone sees you, you can’t go back to being invisible.
Once someone sees you, you start to want things.
Once someone sees you, you start to believe you deserve to be seen.