The fog lifted.
Suddenly, everything became clear—clearer than it had ever been.
. . .
Two hours later.
Howard had been waiting outside the entire time, growing more anxious as the minutes ticked by and no one emerged. Just as he finally decided to push open the door, it swung inward from the other side.
Mila staggered out, her face ashen and her eyes vacant, on the verge of collapse. Howard rushed forward, catching her before she could fall.
“Ms. Sutherland? Ms. Sutherland?”
The sound of her name seemed to reach Mila through a haze. She tried to answer, but the world spun, darkness closing in, and she crumpled in his arms.
“Ms. Sutherland! Ms. Sutherland!”
Panic flickered across Howard’s face as he gathered her up and hurried outside.
The doctor later said she’d fainted from sitting too long, combined with emotional shock. On the drive to the hospital, Mila regained consciousness halfway there.
She insisted the driver turn the car around and head back to Bamboo Grove.
“I’m fine—just a little low blood sugar,” she explained, managing a faint smile. “I just need to rest. No need for the hospital.”
After reassuring Forrest over the phone, Mila hesitated for a long moment before finally broaching what was really on her mind.
“Forrest, could you… play the piano for me tonight?”
There was a long silence on the other end, then Forrest’s gentle voice came through. “If you want to hear it, of course I’d play. But tonight might not be possible. Maybe another time, all right?”
But Mila knew the truth. It wasn’t just tonight—not ever again.
Her heart clenched as she remembered the photos: Forrest’s hands, fingers broken and covered in scars. She bit her lip, afraid her voice would betray her, and simply murmured an agreement before hastily hanging up.
. . .
The car pulled up to Bamboo Grove.
Mila retreated to her room, asking Howard to keep an eye on the child, and locked herself in the bathroom. She didn’t come out until evening.
By the time she reappeared, her face was calm again, betraying nothing.
She said nothing about what had happened. She tucked the child into bed as usual, woke them gently when sleepwalking threatened in the night, and then lay beside them until they both drifted off again.
Everything was exactly as it had always been—unremarkable, routine.
But the next day, Mila quietly asked Howard to remove all the security personnel from the villa grounds. Then, without a word to anyone, she crossed the street to Lillian’s Manor.
She went alone.
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