This was the ritual, I would learn. For three years, the Sterling dinners were not about food. They were a theater of power, a constant reminder that I was the uninvited mistress of the house.

“Now that we are all here, eat,” Arthur said.

He took the first bite. Only then did Julian put his phone down to eat with practiced, robotic elegance.

He never looked at me once during that entire meal.

I was a ghost in my own home.

I picked up my fork, but the food tasted like ash in my mouth. My throat felt tight, my stomach churned, but I forced myself to eat.

I knew tonight was different. Arthur’s gaze was sharper tonight, more final, like a judge preparing to pass sentence.

I felt the blade hanging over my head. I did not ask when it would fall. I simply waited.

“Nora,” Arthur said, wiping his mouth with a silk napkin after what felt like an eternity. “My study. Now.”

Julian did not even flinch.

The heavy oak doors of Arthur’s study closed behind me with a sound like a tomb sealing shut.

Arthur sat behind his massive desk like a judge about to pass a death sentence. The room smelled of old leather and expensive cigars.