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CHAPTER 2 — The Man Everyone Forgot The boutique fell so silent that even the soft piano music seemed to disappear. The saleswoman stared at the silver-haired executive, convinced she had misheard him. "I'm... sorry?" she whispered. The executive ignored her. Instead, he faced the father and bowed slightly again. "Mr. Harrison, I sincerely apologize. I stepped away for only a few minutes to prepare your private viewing room." The father's expression remained calm. "It's alright, Daniel." The little girl tugged gently on her father's sleeve. "Daddy... who is he?" Her father smiled. "Just an old friend." Daniel couldn't help smiling. "Your father is being modest, Miss Emma." He turned toward the stunned employees. "This gentleman owns Harrison Jewel Group." Nobody moved. Nobody breathed. The saleswoman's smile disappeared completely. The Harrison Group... The very company that owned this boutique. She slowly looked around the showroom. Every display. Every diamond. Every employee. Every paycheck. All of it ultimately belonged to the quiet man she had just insulted. "I... I didn't know..." The father simply looked at her. "I know." He wasn't angry. That somehow made everything worse. Emma looked up at him with innocent confusion. "Daddy... if this is your store..." He knelt beside her. "It belongs to many people who work hard every day, sweetheart." "Then why didn't you tell her?" He gently brushed a strand of hair behind her ear. "Because respect shouldn't depend on knowing someone's name." Daniel lowered his eyes. Every employee standing nearby felt the weight of those words. For the first time, the saleswoman wished she could disappear. / Chapter 1 / 2 8

CHAPTER 3 — A Birthday Lesson

CHAPTER 3 — A Birthday Lesson

Instead of walking into the private showroom, Mr. Harrison surprised everyone.

"I'd like to keep shopping here."

Daniel looked confused.

"Sir?"

"Like any other father."

The saleswoman swallowed hard.

"I... I'd be honored to help."

Mr. Harrison smiled politely.

"No."

He looked toward another employee standing quietly in the back.

A young sales associate who had watched everything happen without saying a word.

Her name tag read:

Sophia.

She approached nervously.

"Good afternoon, sir."

Mr. Harrison smiled warmly.

"My daughter likes necklaces."

Sophia immediately knelt to Emma's height.

"What kind of things do you like?"

Emma thought seriously.

"Bunnies."

"And stars."

"And Mommy liked butterflies."

The room became quiet.

Sophia nodded gently.

"I think I know exactly which one."

She didn't reach for the largest diamond.

She didn't mention price.

Instead, she carefully brought out a delicate white-gold necklace with a tiny butterfly surrounded by small sapphire stars.

Emma gasped.

"It looks like the sky!"

Sophia laughed softly.

"I thought you might say that."

Mr. Harrison watched silently.

Not once had Sophia looked at his clothes.

Not once had she guessed his wealth.

She had only listened to a little girl.

"Perfect," he said.

"We'll take it."

Emma hugged the necklace box as though it contained treasure.

"It'll help Mommy remember my birthday."

Several employees quietly wiped away tears.

Daniel finally understood.

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Mr. Harrison hadn't come to test the jewelry.

He had come to teach his daughter that kindness was the most valuable thing anyone could wear.

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