Chapter 2 – The Hollow Mansion
The private gates of Pierce Manor swung open just before dawn, two weeks after the crash. The security lights cut through the mist, spilling over the long black car that rolled quietly up the drive.
Inside sat Alexander Pierce, gaunt, unshaven, his eyes shadowed like burnt glass. The city had begun to wake behind him, sirens echoing faintly from the distance, but to him the world sounded muffled, as though he were living underwater.
The driver slowed to a stop beside the marble staircase. The mansion rose before him, enormous and cold — five floors of polished limestone, windows like dead eyes staring out over the Hudson. Once it had been a place of laughter, Elena’s laughter; once the garden smelled of lavender and white roses because she’d insisted the scent made the house “smile.”
Now the air was heavy with rain and silence.
“Sir?” the driver asked softly.
Alexander didn’t move. His fingers rested on the handle, frozen.
“Should I help with the bags, sir?”
Alexander’s voice was low, hoarse from disuse. “Leave them. They’re just clothes.”
He stepped out into the chill morning, the gravel crunching beneath his shoes. Every step toward the door felt like walking deeper into a tomb.
---
Inside, Martha, his longtime housekeeper, waited in the foyer. She’d aged a decade in the two weeks since the crash — worry had carved new lines around her eyes.
“Welcome home, Mr. Pierce,” she said quietly. Her voice wavered on the word home.
He gave a small nod. “Is it ready?”
She hesitated. “Everything’s been prepared. The press… they’re still camped outside the gates. And—”
“I don’t care about them,” he interrupted. “Just… make sure no one comes inside.”
He walked past her toward the grand staircase, but at the first step he stopped. The sight of the portraits along the wall caught him — Elena’s painted smile gazing down from the gilded frame above the landing. It was a photograph-turned-painting from their wedding day: her in ivory lace, him laughing, the world still whole.
He turned away sharply. “Cover them,” he said.
“Sir?”
“All of them. Every portrait. Every photo. I don’t want to see her face here.”
Martha’s mouth parted in quiet protest, but she only nodded. “Yes, sir.”
---
That night, Alexander sat alone in the study with the curtains drawn and the fire cold. On the desk lay dozens of condolence letters — CEOs, senators, actors — a collection of sympathy written in expensive stationery. He hadn’t opened a single one.
He poured whiskey into a crystal glass and stared at the dark amber liquid. They think words fix what’s dead.
The first sip burned. The second numbed.
Hours later, he found himself wandering through the hallways barefoot, glass still in hand. He opened the door to the music room; the piano gleamed under the dim light. Elena’s piano. He could still hear her playing it on quiet evenings — the soft, wistful melody of “Clair de Lune.”
He sat down on the bench, his fingers hovering over the keys. But when he pressed one, just one, the sound shattered him. He slammed the cover shut, the echo ringing through the mansion like a shot.
---
The Funeral
Three days later, black cars lined the drive. The funeral was a spectacle — cameras, microphones, lenses glinting like vultures’ eyes. The world wanted to watch a billionaire mourn.
Alexander stood under the gray sky, hands clasped, expression carved from stone. Elena’s coffin gleamed ivory white beneath a cascade of lilies. The priest’s words blurred together — eternal rest, beloved wife, gone too soon — meaningless syllables drowned by rain.
When the service ended, people approached him one by one, offering condolences that evaporated before reaching him. He nodded mechanically until a young journalist pushed too close and asked, “Mr. Pierce, what’s next for your company?”
Alexander turned on him, eyes blazing. “My wife is in the ground, and you want a headline?”
Security dragged the reporter away, but the cameras had already captured the fury. The next morning’s papers read:
> PIERCE LASHES OUT AT FUNERAL
Grieving mogul’s temper raises concern over mental state.
He didn’t care. He stopped reading the news after that.
---
Back at the mansion, he locked himself in the master bedroom for three days. Martha left food outside the door, untouched. On the fourth night, she found the door ajar and Alexander sitting on the floor amid scattered photographs.
In one picture, he and Elena stood at the edge of the ocean, her dress fluttering, his arms around her waist. The picture frame was cracked down the middle.
“She hated when I missed sunsets,” he said without looking up. “Said the world owed us beauty every day.”
Martha knelt beside him. “She loved you, sir. She wouldn’t want this.”
He laughed bitterly. “She’s not here to want anything.”
The bottle beside him was nearly empty.
---
The Empire Unravels
Two weeks later, the board of Pierce International held an emergency meeting without him. Investors were panicking; projects stalled, partners threatened to withdraw.
When Alexander finally appeared, the room fell silent. He looked thinner, paler, but his voice was steady — too steady.
“I built this company to prove I could,” he told them. “Now I don’t have to prove anything.”
“Mr. Pierce,” one executive stammered, “if you resign now, the market—”
“I didn’t say I was resigning,” Alexander cut in. “I said I don’t care. Run it. Break it. Sell it. It’s just money.”
The meeting ended in stunned silence. Within days, he vanished again, leaving his assistant to sign whatever papers appeared on his desk.
---
The First Party
It started with silence and ended with chaos.
One night, unable to sleep, Alexander called an old acquaintance — Graham Benton, a venture capitalist known more for scandal than success.
“Graham,” Alexander said flatly, “I need a distraction.”
Within hours, the mansion filled with music, lights, and strangers. Champagne flowed. Models laughed. Laughter echoed in rooms that hadn’t heard joy in months.
People whispered about him — the widowed billionaire trying to forget.
He smiled emptily, surrounded by faces he didn’t know.
A woman brushed his arm, her perfume sharp and sweet. “You look lonely,” she said.
He looked at her — blonde, dazzling, utterly replaceable. “I am,” he replied. “That’s why you’re here.”
They disappeared into the night, and by morning, the papers had a new headline:
> PIERCE RETURNS TO HIGH LIFE
Grief turns to glamour in record time.
---
But when the music faded, and the house emptied, the silence came back worse than before. He stared at the city from his balcony, the skyline glittering like false hope.
He whispered into the wind, “I can’t feel you anymore, Elena.”
Then he turned back inside, poured another drink, and called for another party.
---
Martha’s Worry
Martha watched from the shadows as her employer decayed behind polished glass. The man she’d once admired for his kindness now stumbled through days in a haze of alcohol and strangers.
One morning she found him asleep on the couch, lipstick smudged on his collar, a half-empty bottle dangling from his hand. She covered him with a blanket and whispered, “You’re better than this, Mr. Pierce.”
He stirred, barely conscious. “No, Martha,” he murmured. “I was. Not anymore.”
---
A Quiet Night
Weeks later, after another meaningless gala, Alexander returned home alone for once. The mansion was dark except for the faint glow of the hallway lights. He wandered upstairs, drawn by something he couldn’t name, and stopped before the piano room again.
The dust on the lid caught the moonlight. Slowly, he sat down and opened it.
His fingers trembled over the keys. He played one note — then another. The melody stumbled at first, broken by sobs, but soon it flowed, fragile and beautiful.
Tears fell onto the ivory keys. When the final note faded, he whispered, “I don’t know how to live without you.”
And somewhere deep inside, a small voice — not hers, but his own conscience — whispered back: Then learn.
---
He looked up at the mirror above the piano. The reflection staring back was a stranger — a man with hollow eyes and too much money to matter.
For the first time since the crash, Alexander felt something other than grief. It was anger. Not at fate, not at the sky — but at himself. For still being alive.
He smashed the glass with his fist.
Blood dripped onto the marble floor, bright and red and real.