After Their Mother’s ᴅᴇᴀᴛʜ, Two Sisters Are Forced to Scrub 50 Pots by Their Stepmother… Until Their Billionaire Father Sees Everything
“Dad… last night there was a woman walking inside the house. And it wasn’t Grandma.”
Margaret Dawson froze, soapy water dripping from the mop in her hands. At sixty-five, very little startled her anymore. She had survived Midwest blizzards, power outages, even a raccoon once wandering into the kitchen. But the tremble in twelve-year-old Lily Harper’s voice sent a chill straight through her.
“What do you mean, sweetheart?” Margaret whispered, glancing down the hallway as if the walls themselves were listening.
Lily swallowed hard, clutching her sweater. Since her mother, Emily Harper, had passed away, her eyes had carried a weight far beyond her years.
“I saw her from the stairs,” Lily said softly. “She was walking slowly. Didn’t turn on any lights. Like she knew exactly where everything was. She went into Dad’s office. I thought it was you… or Grandma. But it wasn’t. She had her hair up. And she smelled like expensive perfume.”
Margaret’s heart pounded. Ever since Victoria Harper married Daniel Harper, the tech billionaire CEO who owned one of the largest software firms in Chicago, the house had felt different. Perfectly organized. Immaculate. But tense — like something was always being hidden beneath the shine.
“Don’t say anything for now,” Margaret murmured. “Stay close to me tonight, okay?”
But Lily’s eyes held certainty. Whoever that woman was, she hadn’t come by mistake.
Two nights later, at exactly 9:00 p.m., the iron gates of the Harper estate in Lake Forest creaked open. A black SUV rolled in quietly.
Daniel Harper had returned early from New York. He hadn’t told anyone. He wanted to surprise his daughters — eight-year-old Sophie and Lily. They were the only reason he kept pushing through endless meetings and boardrooms.
But the first thing he noticed was the darkness.
The garden lights were off.
Margaret never forgot the lights.
A cold wind brushed his collar as he stepped out. The house — massive, modern, wrapped in glass and stone — looked lifeless. When he opened the front door, silence swallowed him whole.
Then he smelled it.
Cheap soap mixed with burnt grease.
Daniel followed the scent down the hallway, his pace quickening. He pushed open the kitchen door — and his world split in two.
On the cold marble floor, beside the sink, lay Lily and Sophie.
Not in their beds.
Curled up on damp towels. Exhausted. Their small hands were red and swollen, covered in dried soap foam. Surrounding them was a towering pile of pots and pans — more than fifty. Some blackened inside, as if someone had deliberately burned them to make scrubbing impossible.
Daniel dropped to his knees.
He lifted Sophie’s hand gently. The skin was cracked.
“Daddy…” she murmured in her sleep.
The word cut deeper than any accusation.
He carefully picked her up and touched Lily’s shoulder. She jolted awake, eyes wide.
“Dad… you’re home.”
Before he could speak, sharp footsteps echoed behind him.
Victoria appeared in the kitchen doorway wearing a silk robe, hair flawless, expression rehearsed.
“Daniel. I didn’t expect you tonight.”
He didn’t answer immediately. His gaze moved from her to the mountain of pots, then to his daughters’ injured hands.
“What is this?” he asked quietly.
Victoria sighed, folding her arms. “I’m teaching them responsibility. They can’t grow up entitled. You spoil them.”
“Responsibility?” Daniel repeated, voice tight. “Fifty pots? Until they fall asleep on the floor?”
“You’re exaggerating,” she replied smoothly. “Discipline builds character.”
Daniel looked at Lily’s eyes.
There was no lesson there.
Only fear.
“Where’s Margaret?”
“I gave her the night off,” Victoria said. “The girls needed to learn this themselves.”
Daniel inhaled slowly, swallowing the fury burning in his chest.
“Take the girls upstairs,” he instructed Margaret, who had just appeared in the hallway, horrified. Then to Lily, more gently: “Go on. I’ll be there in a minute.”
Once they were alone, Daniel stepped closer to Victoria.
“Don’t ever touch my daughters like this again,” he said, calm but final.
For a second, her smile cracked. Then it returned.
“You’re tired. We’ll talk tomorrow.”
“No,” he said. “We won’t.”
