Because beneath their perfectly folded politeness, the truth was already shifting. I had seen it in their eyes, in the way Eleanor’s voice tightened, in the way Richard’s questions grew heavier. They had tested me, and I hadn’t bent. They believed they were the judges. But what they didn’t know was that the experiment was never about me proving myself worthy of their world.

It was about seeing whether their world was worthy of mine.

And as I followed them into the next room, the words still lingered in my mind like a promise.

“In our circles, image is everything.”

Soon, they would learn how fragile that image really was.

The smell of roasted coffee and rain filled the Mitchells’ parlor. The space looked like something out of a design magazine: sleek walnut furniture, a grand piano polished to a mirror sheen, a wall lined with art books no one had ever opened.

Eleanor sat on the velvet couch, legs crossed, as Richard poured coffee into delicate porcelain cups that clinked faintly on their saucers. Daniel stood near the fireplace, still quiet, still tense—a man suspended between two worlds.