A Maid’s Daughter Reached the CEO’s Deaf Son Before His Father Did-hamyt - Chainityai

A Maid’s Daughter Reached the CEO’s Deaf Son Before His Father Did-hamyt

The first thing Lucy Harper noticed was not the chandelier.

It was not the string quartet under the staircase, or the champagne glasses passing over silver trays, or the line of cameras flashing every time Alexander Vale turned his famous smile toward another guest.

It was the boy by the marble column.

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Twelve-year-old Matthew Vale stood there in a custom black suit that fit perfectly and still looked uncomfortable on him, as if every seam had been chosen by someone else.

He was close enough to the party to be seen.

He was far enough from the laughter to be forgotten.

Across the ballroom, his father was doing what everyone had come to watch him do.

Alexander Vale, the most powerful tech CEO on the East Coast, moved through senators, billionaires, donors, and investors with a practiced ease that made people lean toward him before he had even finished a sentence.

He laughed at the correct moment.

He rested a hand on a shoulder when the cameras were close.

He looked like a man who had built a whole life out of being understood.

But he never looked at Matthew.

Not once.

Matthew’s face had the stillness of a child who had already learned what adults did when they were uncomfortable.

Some guests gave him a soft smile and then turned away.

Some bent down and exaggerated every word, their mouths stretching wide enough to make him look younger than he was.

Some spoke louder, as if sound could turn into language if they pushed it hard enough.

Matthew was deaf.

That was not a secret in the Vale mansion.

Everyone seemed to know it in the shallow way people know a fact printed in a program.

Almost no one seemed to understand what it meant.

Lucy watched from behind the velvet curtains near the service hallway, where children of staff were supposed to be quiet, invisible, and grateful.

She was eleven years old, wearing a simple blue dress her mother had ironed twice, and holding the worn book of poems she had brought so she would not get bored during the gala.

Her mother, Clara Harper, had been the Vale family’s head housekeeper for six years.

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