LOGINMaximillian
"Are you sure about this, Max?" My brother, Julian, asked me." He appeared even more nervous than I was, despite my suggestion for him to wait in the car. Nevertheless, he insisted on joining me, accepting whatever challenges awaited us.
"This is your last chance to leave," I warned him as the screen door opened and Darius's mother, Annis Sterling, emerged with Darius's dog, Bomer. I had missed Darius's funeral due to a coma, making this moment even more significant.
"No way. If anything happens to you, dad will have my head," Julian protested as Annis descended the porch steps. He questioned whether I had informed our father about our presence here, but got no response from me. "You didn't tell him?!" His eyes went wide.
Just before she turned away, Annis noticed me, her expression changing from indifference to outrage. Despite her disapproval, Darius and I had always found ways to stay connected, even defying Annis's attempts to keep us apart.
The last encounter between Annis and Darius had been on my birthday, three months ago. Despite her prohibition, Darius had sneaked out to see me after I shared a photo of the new car my dad had gifted me. Little did Annis know, that would be the final time she saw her son alive.
"What are you doing here? You have the nerve to show your face to me." She demanded in a voice frigid enough to freeze the sun.
I sat in an electric wheelchair, still recovering from the accident and subsequent surgery that had saved my leg and face. It was evident that she wished it had been me, not her son, who died in the accident, judging by the disdain on her face.
"How dare you show your face to me after what you did?!" She yelled, her anger escalating.
Tears welled up in my eyes, and a single tear dropped onto the back of my hand. Attempting to speak, I found myself speechless, further fueling her rage.
"You killed my son, you bastard!" She accused, releasing her dog and lunging at me. Julian intervened, trying to hold her back, but she threw him off balance, and he fell on the mowed lawn. She attacked me, screaming, "I hate you! I hate you!"
"I'm sorry." I sobbed, my voice barely audible. "I'm so sorry."
"Justice!" I was abruptly pulled out of the nightmare, locking eyes with a stranger—her brown eyes filled with concern. Confused, I sat up, trying to comprehend my surroundings. Why did she call me Justice? Where was Julian?
"Are you okay? You were having a bad dream." She said, her voice gentle and reassuring.
I forced myself to focus on her face, realizing I wasn't in front of Annis, or in a wheelchair, or with Julian. The truth hit me like a ton of bricks—I had run away from home and was now in Havindelle, trying to start a new life as Justice, devoid of any memory of my past.
"I'm fine," I said hastily, wiping the tears from my eyes, feeling embarrassed at being caught crying. I hoped she wouldn't inquire about my dream, but thankfully, she didn't linger. Rising to her feet, she left me alone.
My memories, both before and after the accident, appeared to me as dreams. Every time I woke up, tears would be streaming down my cheeks. Some dreams lingered in my mind, while others faded away as soon as I regained consciousness.
"Edwina! Edwina Jonas!" A booming voice echoed from outside.
Intrigued, I rose from my makeshift bed and ventured outside to investigate. Before me stood a man, roughly fifty years old, brandishing a machete and wearing a menacing expression. I pondered whether his intention was to harm Edwina with the weapon or merely to intimidate her.
Edwina calmly emerged from the house and brushed past me, positioning herself directly in front of the man. Despite the threat, her demeanor exuded confidence, leaving me to wonder if she was foolishly fearless or simply pretending to be brave.
"What is it?" She demanded. "Why are you shouting my name like that?"
"You, this stupid girl! Where are the items you stole from my house? My wife informed me that you intruded this morning..." The man accused, his anger palpable.
"Correction... I didn't steal anything from your house. I simply took food items worth the money your wife owes my sister. It didn't even amount to that much," Edwina retorted, crossing her arms defiantly. "Are you here to settle the debt?"
"Are you mad?" The man exploded. "Why would I do that?"
"In that case, you have no reason to be here," She responded nonchalantly. "Kindly leave, sir."
"I'm not going anywhere until you produce those items, and I hope for your sake that you've not touched anything," He threatened her, menacingly brandishing the machete in front of her face.
Surprisingly, she laughed in the face of danger, and I couldn't help but think she was either remarkably brave or incredibly foolish for underestimating the man's intentions.
"Edwina," I called out, attempting to intervene.
Her head whipped around, as if surprised by my presence or my calling her name. The warning in her eyes urged me to mind my own business, but I couldn't stand idly by, watching her potentially seal her fate.
"Give him what he wants so he can leave," I urged, trying to reason with her.
"Will you pay the debt his wife owes me?" She demanded, glaring at me defiantly.
"No, but..."
"Exactly. Since you don't have the money to pay me, why don't you let me handle my family business as I see fit?" She snapped, cutting me off.
Feeling defeated, I raised my hands in surrender, turned on my heel, and retreated back into the house. If she wanted to face danger head-on, who was I to stand in her way? Foolish woman, I thought.
About twenty minutes later, she triumphantly walked back into the house, brandishing four crisp bills in her hand and wearing a smug smile on her face.
"Just because I'm a woman doesn't make me weak," She declared proudly. "Thank you for your concern, but it wasn't needed. I handled him all on my own."
"Got it, boss," I replied, my voice dripping with sarcasm, emphasizing the foolishness of her actions.
"Is that sarcasm I detect in your voice?" she asked, narrowing her eyes at me.
"Is it?" I replied, arching a brow.
"Whatever," She huffed. "I do not know why my mother insists on treating you like royalty when we don't even have enough food." She mumbled under her breath. "What would you like for lunch?"
"It's noon already?"
"Obviously," She sneered. "You went right back to bed after breakfast."
"Maybe because I'm still recuperating?"
"From what? You look fine to me," She said, eyeing me critically.
"I'm sorry for sleeping around like a lazy bum, Your Highness. I'll try to do better so I don't get thrown out of the house," I retorted. "I'll pass on lunch, thank you."
She gave me a scathing look before flouncing out of the sitting room, likely plotting ways to evict me from her father's house.
EdwinaSix months later I sat very still while the hairstylist moved around my sister, watching Esther's reflection in the mirror like I still couldn't quite believe what it was showing me.My big sister is getting married today. To my boyfriend's brother.It still didn't feel real, even with the dress hanging on the door and the hairstylist's hands moving fast through Esther's curls. Esther had never said the words out loud, not once, but I had always known — the quiet worry that sat underneath my sister's smiles, the fear that she'd go through life without ever finding someone who loved her the way Mom and Dad loved each other.Well. I guess she doesn't have to worry about that anymore.In a few hours my sister was going to become a princess, and looking at her now, I didn't think I'd ever been happier for anyone in my life."Eddie, do you remember when you were little and you told Evelyn and I about the dream you had?" Esther asked, catching my eyes in the mirror."What dream?" I
Maximillian Julian was nervous. Anyone with eyes could see it — the way his knee bounced under the table, the way he kept lacing and unlacing his fingers like he was trying to remember how hands worked. Nobody pushed him to speak. We all just sat there, waiting, the silence stretching long enough that it started to feel like its own kind of conversation.Something's coming, I thought, watching him. Something he's been carrying around for a while.It made sense, in a way. This was the first time in longer than I could remember that Julian had actually summoned everyone — called a family meeting like we were a board he had to report to. Whatever he was about to say, it wasn't going to be small."Um..." He cleared his throat, lacing his fingers together again. "What I'm about to say is very important to me, so I'd really appreciate it if you all could take it in stride." Then he did something that made the whole room shift — he stared pointedly at Bianca. "Whatever opinion you might
Maximillian Six months later Julian was hiding something big.I'd known it for weeks — the way his gaze would slide just a fraction too far to the left whenever certain topics surfaced, the measured pauses before ordinary sentences, the almost imperceptible shift in his posture whenever Edwina's family came up. He was carrying a secret he'd tucked behind his ribcage, believing no one could see the shape of it pressing against him from the inside.He thinks I don't know, I thought, watching him from across the breakfast table one morning, keeping my expression carefully neutral. He really thinks I have absolutely no idea.I wasn't going to call him out on it though. That wasn't the kind of brothers we were. Julian would tell me when he was ready — I was certain of that much. So I waited, patient and quiet, carrying the weight of knowing without letting it show.After the funeral, Mercia held me like a place that had decided it wasn't done with me yet.I stood at the window of my ch
Maximillian Pastor Emmanuel stepped aside, and the chapel held its breath as Dad rose from the front pew.He buttoned his jacket as he stood — a small, automatic gesture, the kind muscle memory produces when a man has spent his whole life being watched. He walked to the podium the way he walked into every room — like he owned it, like the floor had been expecting his footsteps. But I watched his hand grip the edge of the podium when he got there, and I saw what the rest of the chapel probably missed.He was holding on.He unfolded a single piece of paper, looked at it for a moment, then set it aside.He wasn't going to read it."My father," he began, and then stopped. Cleared his throat. Started again. "My father used to say that a man is not measured by the height of his throne but by the depth of his roots.""He said it so often that we stopped hearing it the way you stop hearing the sound of rain after a while — it just becomes part of the atmosphere."A quiet ripple of recogniti
EdwinaA year laterThe chapel had never felt so heavy.Every pew was filled — dignitaries, business partners, old family friends, CEOs of companies that bore the Sebastiani name in their boardrooms, politicians who had shaken Andrei's hand across negotiation tables, and ordinary people whose lives had been quietly changed by a man who never thought small.They had come from every corner of the world, dressed in black and grey, their faces carrying the particular exhaustion that only grief can produce. Outside, the bells had tolled at dawn and had not stopped until the procession entered the chapel doors.The casket sat at the front of the nave, draped in the royal colors of Mercia — deep crimson and gold. Atop it rested his crown. Not worn. Just placed there, quietly, as if even the crown understood it had lost its king.I sat with the family in the front pews, close enough to see everything, far enough to feel like I was watching something I wasn't sure I deserved to witness. These
Maximillian You know that moment when everything shifts—and you don’t need anyone to say a word because their faces say it for them? Yeah… that was me the second Edwina’s parents walked into that hospital room.I didn’t need a mirror to know I looked like the villain in their story. They didn’t even try to hide it. The disappointment, the anger, the blame—it was all right there, aimed straight at me. And honestly? I couldn’t even argue with it.Because what kind of man lets the woman he loves end up in a hospital bed… because of his own family?I stood there, hands stiff at my sides, forcing myself not to look away as more of them filed in—my parents, my grandparents, her sisters. The room felt smaller with every step they took, like the walls were closing in, squeezing the truth tighter around my throat.This is on you.They could say it wasn’t. They probably would. But I knew better. I’d seen the tension. I’d noticed the looks. And what did I do? I trusted my sisters. Trusted them







