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Chapter 2: The Woman Beyond the Fence

The homeless woman returned two nights later.

This time, Joseph waited outside.

Alone.

No guards.

No weapons.

Moonlight silvered the iron fence separating them.

The woman froze.

Fear flashed across her face.

"I wasn't stealing," she said immediately.

"I know."

She clutched the canvas bag to her chest.

"My name is Grace."

Joseph studied her.

She looked exhausted.

Thin.

Weathered by years of hardship.

But her eyes remained steady.

"Why?" he asked.

Grace glanced toward the nursery.

"The older girl saw me months ago while I was collecting cans near the woods."

"Rosalyn?"

Grace nodded.

"She waved."

Her voice trembled.

"The next week, she slipped half a cracker through the bars and asked if I was hungry."

Joseph closed his eyes.

His daughter, who barely had enough food herself, had offered what little she possessed.

"I realized they were starving," Grace continued.

"At first I thought I was imagining it. But they became thinner every week."

"So you fed them."

"I know I shouldn't have come onto your property."

Joseph remembered the panic alarm beneath his finger.

Twelve armed men.

One push.

Grace would have died.

Instead, she had saved his children.

"What happened to you?" he asked.

Grace hesitated.

"Husband died. Medical bills took everything. Shelters filled up."

Silence settled between them.

Finally, Joseph spoke.

"You fed my daughters."

Grace lowered her gaze.

"They're good girls."

"They deserve better."

Joseph looked toward the mansion.

"So did you."

...

The next morning shocked the entire household.

Grace was seated at the breakfast table.

Rosalyn climbed into her lap without hesitation.

Camille offered her stuffed rabbit.

Joseph announced calmly,

"Grace will be staying here for a while."

The staff exchanged stunned glances.

Nobody argued.

Because for the first time since Elena's death, the girls were laughing.

Real laughter.

Not quiet obedience.

Not fearful silence.

May you like

Laughter that echoed through the halls.

And Joseph realized the mansion had sounded like a tomb for far too long.

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