He fakes being in a wheelchair to test his girlfriend’s love

Part Three: Emma

She had been with him for five years, which was longer than any other member of his household staff. He had not specifically retained her — she had been part of the arrangement when he moved into the villa, inherited from the previous owner’s household the way certain fixtures are inherited, and she had simply remained, through several rounds of staff changes, because she was good at her work in the way that people are good at things when the work matters to them rather than merely employing them.

Her name was Emma Reyes. She was twenty-nine — he knew this from her employment records, not from anything she had told him, because they had not had, in five years, many conversations that moved beyond the requirements of the household. She had dark hair that she kept pulled back, a face that was composed without being closed, and a quality of movement that was so efficient as to be nearly invisible — she appeared when something was needed and was elsewhere when it wasn’t, the gold standard of household service, which he had always appreciated without particularly examining why.

She came in with breakfast — his breakfast, prepared exactly as he liked it, which meant she had been in the kitchen at some point before seven-thirty making it, which was not part of her contractual morning duties. He noticed this and filed it in the way he filed small things that he meant to think about more carefully later.

Sofia’s reaction to Emma’s entrance was the specific performance of someone who considers certain presences beneath acknowledgment: a visible compression of the expression, a slight orientation of the body away, the treatment of a human being as furniture that is not quite in the right position. She said, without looking at Emma directly: “While you’re here, change the sheets right away.”

The tone was the tone of someone who has decided, permanently and without appeal, that there is a category of person to whom courtesy is optional. Not harsh — harshness implies engagement. Simply absent. The absence of the register in which one human being addresses another.

Daniel watched Emma receive this. Her hands, which had been steady placing the breakfast tray, adjusted very slightly — the micromotion of someone absorbing something and choosing not to show the absorption. She said, “Yes, of course,” and began to move toward the linen.

“Sofia,” he said.

She looked at him.

“Please speak to her respectfully.”

Sofia looked at Emma, then back at him, with the expression of someone who has been asked to do something they find so unnecessary as to be barely worth responding to. She rolled her eyes. She returned to her phone.

It was such a small moment. It lasted perhaps four seconds. He had intervened before, mildly, in similar moments — had said something about tone, had smoothed things over, had told himself it was a matter of social style rather than character. But watching Emma move across the bedroom with that small adjustment in her hands, watching Sofia return to her phone with the complete indifference of someone who has processed the interaction and found it irrelevant, he felt something shift in his understanding.

Not a decision. Not yet. A recognition.

He lay there after they both left and held the recognition up to the light.

In three years, I have never seen her genuinely care for anyone except herself.

The thought had the quality of something he had known for a long time in a peripheral way, the way you know things you are not ready to look at directly. He looked at it now. He turned it over. He found that it held from all angles.

And underneath it, the question he had been not asking: Do you love me? Or do you love what I am?

He was not certain. And he had understood, lying there in the silk sheets with the morning light through the huge windows, that a conversation would not make him certain, because Sofia was skilled at conversations, and what he needed was not her words but her actions when the words were not performing.

He needed to change the conditions. He needed to remove the thing she valued and watch what remained.

He reached for his phone and called his oldest friend.

For illustration purposes only

Part Four: The Plan and Its First Night

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