“Look at Her Cheap Clothes!” the Fiancée Mocked the Maid’s Daughter — What the Billionaire Did Next – Part 2

Daniel did not make a scene. That was not his way. He took a slow breath, set his glass down on the tray of a passing waiter, and walked calmly toward the kitchen door. He pushed it open gently. Maria was inside setting Sophia down on a small chair near the corner and handing her a bread roll from the staff tray to keep her occupied.

Sophia grabbed it with both hands and began gnawing on it happily. Maria looked up and saw Daniel. Her face immediately shifted into quiet apology. “Mr. Mercer, I’m so sorry.” She said quickly, her voice low. “My neighbor canceled last minute. I should have called you but I didn’t want to bother you tonight of all nights.

She was in the back the whole time. I don’t know how she got out. I’m sorry. I’ll keep her here. It won’t happen again.” “Maria.” Daniel’s voice was soft. “Stop.” He stopped. He looked at her for a moment. Then he looked at Sophia who had bits of bread roll on her cheeks and was examining the buttons on the chair with great scientific interest.

He pulled up a stool and sat down in the kitchen in his tuxedo at his own engagement party. And he asked Maria a question that she was not expecting. “How long have you been working here?” She blinked. “Seven years, Mr. Mercer.” “Seven years?” He repeated quietly. “And in seven years, have I ever made you feel like you and your daughter were not welcome in this home? Maria’s eyes filled.

She shook her head. No. Never. You’ve always been Good, he said. He looked at Sophia again. The little girl had now noticed Daniel and was staring at him with a full unfiltered curiosity that only three-year-olds are capable of. What’s her name again? Sophia. Daniel smiled at the little girl. Hi, Sophia.

Sophia stared at him for a very long and serious moment. Then she held out her bread roll toward him, offering him a bite, the way a three-year-old offers the person in front of them the most valuable thing they currently possess. Daniel’s expression did something quiet and complicated. He leaned forward and pretended to take a small bite.

Thank you, he told her very seriously. That’s the best thing I’ve eaten all night. Sophia giggled and pulled her bread roll back protectively. He stood. He told Maria that Sophia could stay right there as long as she wanted, that there was food for her in the staff kitchen, and that Maria should stop apologizing.

Then he walked back out into the ballroom. Victoria caught his eye as he crossed the room and smiled at him. That perfect practiced smile that he had once found irresistible. She began to move toward him, probably to rejoin their guests, to play the beautiful engaged couple, to be photographed and admired. Daniel looked at her and felt something that he had been quietly ignoring for months.

Coldness. Distance. Not the comfortable distance of two people who know each other so well they don’t need to perform for each other. A different kind of distance. The kind that lives between who a person really is and who you believe them to be. He thought about what she had said. The lightness in her voice, the easy cruelty of it, the way her friends had laughed, uncertain but willing.

He thought about a little girl in a $4 yellow dress staring at a chandelier like it was the most beautiful thing she had ever seen, and he made a decision. Not impulsively, not dramatically, but quietly and completely. What do you think Daniel decided to do? Before you keep watching, what would you have done if you had been standing there hearing those words about a child spoken by the person you were about to marry? The truth does not always arrive loudly.

Sometimes it walks in quietly wearing a pale yellow dress. Daniel did not end his engagement that night. He was not a man who made permanent decisions in emotional moments. That discipline was part of what had made him successful, and it was part of what made him fair. He gave people the benefit of the doubt.

He believed in conversations before conclusions. So, after the guests had thinned and the jazz band had packed up and the catering staff were quietly clearing tables, Daniel asked Victoria to stay behind. They sat across from each other in the living room of his penthouse, the Chicago skyline glittering behind them through the floor-to-ceiling windows.

Victoria had a glass of wine. Daniel had nothing. He sat with his elbows on his knees and his hands folded, and he told her quietly and clearly exactly what he had heard her say about Sophia. Victoria’s face did a complicated series of things. Surprise, then a flash of something defensive, then a carefully arranged expression of remorse.

“Daniel, I didn’t mean anything by it,” she said smoothly. “It was just a passing comment. I was caught off guard seeing a random child wandering around the party. “She’s not a random child,” he said. “She’s Maria’s daughter, and Maria has worked in this home for 7 years.” “I know who Maria is,” Victoria said, a slight edge entering her voice.

“But she shouldn’t have brought her child to a formal engagement event without asking. That’s a professional boundary issue.” “She had an emergency,” Daniel said. “Her child care fell through.” “Then she should have called and sorted it out. There are solutions.” Daniel looked at her. “Victoria, she’s 3 years old. She was standing there looking at the chandelier, and your first instinct was to comment on her clothes and call her a maid’s kid in front of other guests.

👉 [Tap here for Next Part] 👈

Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.

Related Posts

CEO Mocked the “Single Dad Gatekeeper” — Seconds Later, His Combat Skills Shut Her Down- PART 30

PART 30: . To the moment, to the universe that had somehow given him a second chance at happiness. For what? Sarah asked. For showing me that…

CEO Mocked the “Single Dad Gatekeeper” — Seconds Later, His Combat Skills Shut Her Down – PART 29

PART 29: They’d taken broken pieces, grief and cruelty and fear, and built something whole, something that mattered. 10 years after the science fair, Crostech had become…

CEO Mocked the “Single Dad Gatekeeper” — Seconds Later, His Combat Skills Shut Her Down – PART 28

PART 28: There were dinners that ended in arguments about boundaries. movie nights where Sarah watched with beused tolerance as two adults tried to figure out how…

CEO Mocked the “Single Dad Gatekeeper” — Seconds Later, His Combat Skills Shut Her Down – PART 27

PART 27: She decided to talk about her father’s work, not the military part she didn’t know about, but the consulting work he did helping companies solve…

(630) CEO Mocked the “Single Dad Gatekeeper” — Seconds Later, His Combat Skills Shut Her Down – PART 26

PART 26: Transaction logs that match SEC filings cross-referenced with international wire transfers. Nothing about this is fabricated, Mr. cross. This is documentation of systematic criminal activity…

CEO Mocked the “Single Dad Gatekeeper” — Seconds Later, His Combat Skills Shut Her Down – PART 25

PART 25: My father just filed a lawsuit claiming I’ve been embezzling company funds. He’s using the same evidence we found about his moneyaundering, but he’s twisted…