“My Son Left His Fortune to His Young Wife—And Left Me a Single Plane Ticket to Rural France. What I Found at the End of That Dirt Road Changed Everything.”

He asked me to meet you personally. He thought perhaps it would be too much, after your journey and your recent loss, to face him without warning.”

Pierre Beaumont was alive.

Pierre Beaumont was here. Pierre Beaumont—the man I had loved with the desperate intensity of youth, the man I had believed dead for forty-two years, the man who, if my suddenly racing heart and churning stomach were any indication, was Richard’s biological father.

“How?” The question came out strangled, inadequate.

“How did Richard find him?”

The driver’s eyebrows rose slightly. “Ah, I think perhaps Monsieur Beaumont should explain these things himself. If you will permit me?” He gestured toward a sleek black Mercedes waiting in the small parking area.

Numbly, I followed him, my mind spinning through calculations I had avoided for decades.

Richard had been born seven months after my hasty marriage to Thomas Thompson. Everyone had assumed he was premature—a common enough occurrence that no one questioned it.

Only I knew the truth: that he had been conceived in a tiny Paris apartment with faded blue shutters and a view of the Seine, with a French architecture student who had promised me forever and then died before I could tell him I was carrying his child. Except he hadn’t died.

He was alive.

He was here. And somehow, Richard had found him. The driver, who introduced himself as Marcel, seemed to sense my need for silence as we left the town behind, climbing a winding mountain road bordered by pine forests and breathtaking vistas.

Under different circumstances, I might have been overwhelmed by the beauty.

Now, I barely registered it, too consumed by memories I’d spent four decades trying to forget. “We are nearly there, Madame,” Marcel said eventually, as we turned onto a private road marked only by an elegant wrought-iron gate.

“Château Beaumont has belonged to Pierre’s family for twelve generations, though he has restored and modernized it considerably since inheriting it from his father.”

Château Beaumont. The name stirred something in my memory—a midnight conversation in that Paris apartment, Pierre’s voice passionate as he described the ancestral home in the Alps that he would someday restore.

I had thought it was a romantic fantasy, the kind of dreaming young people do when the future seems infinite.

Apparently, it had been real all along. As we rounded a final curve, the château appeared, and despite everything, I gasped. Built from golden stone that glowed in the late afternoon sun, it was a perfect synthesis of medieval fortress and elegant manor house.

Terraced gardens cascaded down the hillside below it, and beyond them, neat rows of grapevines stretched toward the mountains in the distance, creating geometric patterns across the landscape.

“The vineyards produce some of the finest wines in the Savoie region,” Marcel commented, pride evident in his voice. “Monsieur Beaumont is considered one of France’s premier winemakers now.”

Of course he was.

Pierre had always been brilliant, passionate, driven to excellence in everything he touched. While I had retreated into a small, safe life teaching high school English in New York, he had apparently built an empire here in the mountains of his homeland.

The car stopped in a circular drive before the château’s massive oak doors.

Before Marcel could come around to open my door, one of those doors swung open, and a tall figure emerged, backlit by the golden interior light. Time seemed to slow, each second crystallizing with impossible clarity. Though his hair was now silver instead of the black I remembered, though lines mapped his face where once there had been only smooth olive skin, I would have known him anywhere.

Pierre Beaumont, at sixty-four, was still unmistakably the man I had loved at twenty.

He stood utterly still on the threshold, watching me as I climbed out of the car on legs that felt like they might give way. Neither of us spoke for what felt like hours but was probably only seconds.

What words could possibly bridge a chasm of forty-two years? What could be said to explain a lifetime lived apart, secrets kept, truths hidden?

“Eleanor,” he finally spoke, and my name in his mouth still carried that particular French inflection that had once made my young heart race.

“You came.”

“Pierre.” My voice sounded strange, thin and breathless like someone else speaking through me. “You’re alive.”

“Yes,” he said, and something painful flickered across his face. “Though for many years, I believed you might not be.

That perhaps you had forgotten me entirely.”

Before I could ask what he meant by that cryptic statement, the world tilted violently.

The accumulated stress of the funeral, the humiliating will reading, the long journey, and now this impossible resurrection of a past I thought buried—it was too much. The last thing I remembered was Pierre rushing forward, his arms still strong despite the years, catching me before I hit the ground.

When consciousness returned, I was lying on a leather sofa in what appeared to be a study. Bookshelves lined the walls, a fire crackled in a stone hearth despite the mild spring weather, and someone had removed my shoes and tucked a soft blanket around me.

Pierre sat in a wing chair nearby, watching me with an expression that mingled concern, wonder, and something else I couldn’t quite identify.

“Welcome back,” he said gently. “Marcel has gone to prepare a guest room. I thought perhaps we should talk first, before you rest.”

I sat up slowly, my head swimming slightly.

“Richard,” I began, because nothing else mattered until I understood.

“Did he—was he—?”

“Your son came to me six months ago,” Pierre said, leaning forward with his forearms resting on his knees. “He had questions about his paternity—some medical testing had revealed genetic markers that didn’t match what he knew of his father’s family history.

Through DNA ancestry services and some very skilled private investigators, he traced a genetic connection to me.”

“So it’s true,” I whispered, the confirmation hitting me despite having already known in my heart. “Richard was your son.”

“Biologically, yes,” Pierre nodded, his eyes never leaving mine.

“Though in every way that matters—in the ways that truly shape a person—he was raised by you and…” He hesitated.

“Thomas,” I supplied. “Thomas Thompson. He died five years ago.

He never knew Richard wasn’t his biological son.

I never told him.”

“Richard explained that to me,” Pierre said, rising to pour two glasses of amber liquid from a crystal decanter. He handed me one—cognac, the warmth of it burning pleasantly as I took a sip.

“He told me Thomas was a wonderful father. Patient, encouraging, supportive.

That he had loved Richard completely.”

“He did,” I confirmed, my throat tight with emotion.

“Thomas was a good man. When I came home from Paris pregnant, panicked, certain my life was over—he married me without hesitation. He raised Richard as his own and never once threw it in my face, even during our worst arguments.”

Pierre settled back into his chair, his expression troubled.

“Richard told me you believed I was dead.

That you had tried to find me after returning to America but had been told I died in some kind of accident.”

The unfairness of his tone struck me like a slap. “I did think you were dead.

After you didn’t meet me at our café that day, I went to your apartment. Your roommate Jean-Luc told me you’d been in a terrible motorcycle accident—that you’d died in the hospital from your injuries.

I was twenty years old, pregnant, alone in a foreign country.

What was I supposed to do?”

Pierre went absolutely still, his cognac glass frozen halfway to his lips. “What accident? Eleanor, there was no accident.

I was at the café at exactly the time we’d arranged.

I waited for hours. When you never came, I went to your pension and they said you’d checked out that morning—that you’d left for America without even a note.”

We stared at each other across four decades of misunderstanding, the truth dawning with horrible clarity between us.

“Jean-Luc,” Pierre spoke the name like a curse. “He was in love with you.

I knew it, though you seemed oblivious.

When I went to Marseille that weekend to visit my dying grandmother, he must have—” He shook his head, still struggling to process the enormity of what had been done to us. “He told you I was dead. He told me you had abandoned me.

He destroyed both our lives because he couldn’t have you himself.”

“All these years,” I whispered, tears spilling down my cheeks.

“All these years lost because of one person’s jealousy and lies.”

The story continues on the next page...

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