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Everett Parker slid the heavy, cream-colored envelope across the polished mahogany desk. The paper made a dry, rasping sound against the wood, stopping inches from Kellen Lawrence's hand. Kellen didn't reach for it immediately. He kept his hands folded in his lap, his knuckles pressing against each other just hard enough to turn white. He needed the physical sensation to ground himself, to keep the cold calculation from showing in his eyes.
Everett leaned back in his leather chair, the expensive hide creaking under his weight. The sound was loud in the silence of the study. Rain lashed against the floor-to-ceiling windows behind him, blurring the manicured grounds of the Parker estate into a gray, impressionistic smudge. The room smelled of old paper, expensive scotch, and the distinct, sterile chill of central air conditioning that ran too high.
"Open it," Everett said. His voice was bored. It was the tone of a man disposing of a defective appliance.
Kellen reached out. His fingers trembled slightly. It was a practiced tremor, one he had perfected over three years of service. He opened the flap and pulled out the check. He glanced at the number. Fifty thousand dollars. His heart rate didn't spike. It remained steady, a slow, rhythmic thud against his ribs. Internally, he did the math. This would cover the next six months of Grandpa Artie's dialysis and the new roof for the foster home.
Kellen looked up, forcing moisture into his eyes. He widened them, letting his lower lip slacken just a fraction.
"Mr. Parker," Kellen said, his voice cracking on the second syllable. "I don't understand. Have I done something wrong? Elyssa... Miss Parker and I..."
Everett held up a hand. The gesture was sharp, cutting off the air in the room.
"You have done exactly what you were paid to do," Everett said. "But Elyssa is turning twenty-one next month. She needs to focus on her future. Her real future. We both know you aren't part of that equation. You were a placeholder. A companion to keep her out of trouble during her rebellious phase."
Kellen lowered his head. He stared at the check, letting his shoulders slump. He needed to look like a kicked puppy. Rich men loved kicking puppies, but they loved paying them to go away even more.
"I care about her, sir," Kellen whispered. "It's not about the money."
Everett scoffed. He pushed a second document across the desk. It was thick, stapled at the corner.
"It is always about the money, son. This is a Non-Disclosure Agreement. Standard termination protocol. You will not speak of Elyssa, you will not speak of this family, and you will certainly not speak of the arrangement. You sign, the check clears. You don't sign, I bury you in legal fees until you starve."
Kellen picked up the pen. It was a Montblanc, heavy and cold. He hesitated, the tip of the pen hovering over the signature line. He scanned the clauses upside down. Perpetual silence. No social media contact. A five-hundred-yard restraining order. It was airtight.
He signed. His hand shook on the paper, creating a jagged, pathetic scrawl. He capped the pen and set it down softly.
The heavy oak door to the study clicked open.
Kellen didn't turn around, but he felt the change in air pressure. The scent of lilies drifted into the room-cold, funereal lilies. Elyssa Parker walked in. She moved silently, her feet making no sound on the Persian rug. She was wearing a white dress that looked too thin for the weather.
Everett stiffened. He looked at Kellen, his eyes warning him to stay in character.
"Elyssa," Everett said. "I'm in a meeting."
Elyssa didn't look at her father. She didn't look at Kellen. She walked to the window and stared out at the rain. Her reflection in the glass was blank. Her face was a porcelain mask, devoid of blood or twitch.
Kellen stood up slowly. He turned toward her. He reached out a hand, letting it hover in the air between them, trembling.
"Miss Parker," Kellen said softly.
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