Gemma shrugged. The cashmere coat slid from her arms and hit the floor with a soft thud. She didn't slow.
Brenda's smile faltered. Her hands remained suspended where the coat should have been.
"Clara."
Gemma's voice cut the silence like a blade. Her assistant stepped forward from the alcove where she'd been waiting, a red leather folder bearing the Valdez family crest in her hands.
The folder changed hands. Gemma's fingers closed around it, her eyes never leaving Brenda.
The housekeeper's heels scraped backward on the marble. Half an inch. An unconscious movement, the body recognizing danger before the mind could process it.
Gemma slapped the folder onto the entry table.
The crack echoed through the vaulted space. Every servant within earshot stopped breathing.
Two men in black suits emerged from the east corridor. They moved silently, taking positions at the room's only exit. Their hands hung naturally at their sides, but the bulges under their jackets told their own story.
Brenda's eyes darted to the door. Then the stairs. Then back to Gemma.
"November third," Gemma said. Her tone was conversational, almost bored. "You called Carmela Bronte from the kitchen landline at 9:47 PM. You told her I would be attending the Hartwell fundraiser alone."
Brenda opened her mouth. Closed it. A wet click sounded in her throat.
"November eleventh. Forty thousand dollars was wired to an offshore account opened under your maiden name. The same day, you photographed the guest list for my father's private dinner with the chairman of the Commission and sent the images to a burner phone registered to a shell company in Delaware."
"Miss Gemma, I can explain-"
"November seventeenth." Gemma's voice didn't rise. It didn't need to. "You told her about my private meeting with Dr. Alistair Finch. The meeting about my brother's trust. That meeting led to a false story in the Post about my 'unstable grief,' designed to block my appointment to the family board."
Brenda's knees buckled. She caught herself on the entry table, her fingers brushing the red folder.
"You're a logistics coordinator," Gemma continued. "You schedule travel. You don't have access to my personal calendar. You don't know about my meetings with the family doctor. And you certainly don't have a bank account in the Cayman Islands."
"I was just-Mrs. Bronte told me to keep her informed, she was worried about you, she said-"
"Transfer reference 8847-Delta." Gemma recited the numbers without looking at the folder. "Passed through three intermediary accounts. Final destination: your son's construction company account in Jacksonville. The same son who suddenly paid off a two-hundred-thousand-dollar gambling debt last month."
Brenda went pale. Her head turned upward toward the second-floor landing, searching for the woman who had promised her protection in exchange for betrayal.
The landing was empty.
Silence spread. Brenda's breathing came fast and shallow, smelling of mint and rising bile.
"You're fired." Gemma's words dropped like stones into still water. "Effective immediately. All access revoked. Your personal effects will be searched before you leave. You will receive no severance. No recommendations."
"Please." Brenda's hand shot out, fingers grasping for Gemma's wrist. "I have a grandson. I have-"
The nearest soldier moved. His hand closed around Brenda's upper arm, wrenching her away from Gemma with enough force to pop her shoulder from its socket.
Brenda screamed. The sound was high and desperate, the sound of a small animal caught in a trap.
"I've instructed our legal team to prepare an information for wire fraud and racketeering," Gemma watched the struggle with detached interest. "Federal charges. The FBI has a particular interest in cases involving attempts to influence organized crime figures. The Don's reputation will make you a very attractive target for prosecutors looking to make a name."
"Federal?" The word came out as a gasp. "You can't-this is family business-"
"When you take money from a foreign entity, you make it federal." Gemma tilted her head. "Did you think we couldn't trace the beneficial owner of the shell company? Did you think Mrs. Bronte's connections would protect you when the indictment lands?"
Brenda's eyes rolled back. She thrashed in the soldier's grip, her body jerking with panic.
"Let me talk to Mrs. Bronte. Let me-she promised-she said she'd handle everything-"
"Mrs. Bronte is unwell."
Gemma made a small gesture. A second soldier stepped forward, taking Brenda's other arm. They began to move her toward the side door, the servants' entrance, the door of shame for those who had disgraced the family.
Brenda's heels dragged across the marble, leaving black scuffs. Then something inside her broke. Some last restraint.
She twisted sideways. Her right arm slipped free from the younger soldier-he'd been careless, overconfident, and she had thirty years of experience as a housekeeper, knew how to use her body when necessary.
She ran.
Not toward the side door. Toward the main stairs. Toward the second floor. Toward the woman who had bought her loyalty and then left her to the wolves.
Her heels hammered the marble. Five more steps to the first landing. Her hand reached for the brass railing.
The heel of her left shoe caught on the edge of the third step.
Physics took over. Momentum became torque, torque became disaster. Her body tilted backward, arms windmilling, fingers clawing at air where the railing should have been.
She landed flat on the marble.
The sound was unmistakable. A wet crack, like a melon dropped from a height. Then silence.
Brenda lay at the base of the stairs, her neck bent at an angle that made several servants turn away and retch. Dark liquid spread beneath her head, seeping into the white marble's veins, finding the grout lines, advancing across the floor with terrible patience.
The soldier she'd slipped stood frozen, his hands still in the position they'd been when she'd been in them.
Gemma walked toward the body.
She stopped two feet away. Close enough to see Brenda's eyes gone glassy, staring up at the chandelier. Close enough to smell the coppery tang of blood rising from the spreading pool.
Gemma reached into her jacket pocket. Her phone came out, the screen already lit.
"Crisis line," she spoke into the receiver. "Priority one. A death has occurred on the compound. Accidental fall. I want the family's doctor here before any emergency services. I want the scene secured. I want a headcount of all soldiers and staff on this side, and a reminder of their omertà obligations."
She ended the call. Her gaze swept the room, touching each face in turn. The maids. The gardeners. The underboss who had come to see what the commotion was.
Not one of them held her gaze for more than a second.
"Return to your posts." Her voice filled the space, calm and absolute. "This hallway is restricted until further notice."
Clara appeared at her side, a pack of wet wipes in her hand. Gemma took one, wiped her fingers methodically, and dropped the used wipe into Clara's outstretched palm.
She stepped over the spreading stain. Her heel landed two inches from Brenda's outstretched hand, close enough to notice the chipped nail polish, the calluses from decades of service, the gold band on the ring finger that had once been her pride.
Gemma did not look back.
She walked toward her father's study, where the real work of managing the family empire awaited her.