The Maid Hid Me In The Wardrobe Before My Nephew Came To Kill Me-Teptep

I walked into my bedroom expecting an empty house, but before I could even switch on the light, a hand clamped over my mouth and dragged me into the wardrobe.

The woman everyone overlooked—my maid—risked her life to stop me from making a single sound.

A few seconds later, I realised the men waiting to kill me were not strangers.

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They were led by someone I had loved like a son.

I was not meant to come home that night.

That was the first thing I understood, though I understood it too late.

The meeting had ended early after a man who had spent twenty minutes pretending to be brave suddenly remembered he had a wife waiting and a mortgage he did not want to leave behind.

I let him go.

Mercy always frightened people more when it came from me.

Outside, the evening had turned wet in that quiet British way, not dramatic enough to call a storm, just a steady drizzle that slicked the pavement and softened the lamps along the drive.

My driver offered to ring ahead.

I told him no.

There was no reason for it, not really.

Perhaps I liked the idea of arriving without the whole house rearranging itself around me.

Perhaps some foolish part of me wanted to catch my family as they were when I was not being Vincent Torino, the name that made men lower their eyes.

I had been away from the house all day, and I imagined a late tray left in the kitchen, the kettle still warm, the corridor lamps low, my wife upstairs, the staff gone quiet in their rooms.

I imagined ordinary things.

Ordinary things are dangerous when a man has forgotten how rare they are.

The house stood dark at the edge of the gravel, all pale stone and black windows, the kind of place people called an estate because they did not want to say fortress.

Every gate had a lock.

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