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Melany's POV
Crack!
The heel came down on my palm, and pain shot up my arm so fast that my breath caught in my throat. My knees hit the kitchen floor a second later. The tiles were cold and greasy under my skin, and for a moment all I could do was curl my fingers against them and try not to make a sound.
I knew from experience that screaming only made them laugh harder.
“Bitch.”
“Slut.”
They had called me worse things before, so the insults should not have hurt anymore, but every time they said them, I remembered what I was in this house. Not a girl. Not even a servant.
Victoria grabbed my hair and pulled my head back. My scalp burned as she forced me to look up at her. She looked beautiful, as always. Golden hair, clean dress, soft pink lips, and a face everyone in Black Moon admired. If a stranger walked in, he would probably think she was kind.
“You know very well why you are getting beaten,” she said, looking down at me as if I had dirtied her shoes by bleeding near them.
Her friends stood behind her, eager to join in now that Victoria had given them permission.
“Of course she knows. She is the daughter of traitors.”
“She should be grateful Alpha Andre let her live.”
A slap landed across my face before I could lower my head. My cheek burned, and the force made my teeth cut the inside of my mouth. I tasted blood almost immediately.
Victoria let go of my hair, but before I could crawl away, her heel pressed into my back and pinned me down again.
I tried to breathe through the pain. I tried to think about the stove, the flour sacks, the basket of eggs on the counter, anything that was not the sharp point of her shoe digging between my shoulders. That was how I survived most days. I made my mind leave my body until they got bored.
Then one of the girls laughed and said, “Maybe her parents begged before Alpha executed them too.”
My fingers stopped moving against the floor.
“No,” I said.
The kitchen went quiet enough for me to hear the oil popping in a pan somewhere behind me.
Victoria shifted her weight. “What did you say?”
I swallowed, but my throat hurt, so the words came out rough. “I said no. My parents were not traitors.”
For a second, no one moved. I knew I should have kept my mouth shut. I knew exactly what happened when I defended them. But I also knew my mother’s hands had once braided my hair before bed, and my father had once lifted me onto his shoulders so I could reach peaches from the highest branch. They had loved me. They had protected me. They had called me their little princess when I still believed princesses were allowed to grow up happy.
I could not spit on their memory just because Victoria wanted to hear it.
Her heel pressed harder into my back, and I had to bite the inside of my cheek to stop myself from crying out.
“Say it,” she ordered. “Say your parents were traitors.”
I stared at the crack between two tiles and forced my voice out again. “They were not.”
Someone kicked my ribs. My body jerked forward, and my injured hand scraped against the floor. The pain made my eyes water, but I blinked fast, because tears were another thing they liked to collect from me.
Victoria bent down, close enough that I could smell the sweet perfume on her skin. “You really think loyalty from a dirty slave means anything?”
Before I could answer, hurried footsteps crossed the hall outside the kitchen. One of the older maids rushed in, stopped at the sight of me on the floor, and immediately looked away as if she had seen nothing unusual.
“Miss Victoria,” she said, lowering her head. “Young Master Dominic is coming down for breakfast.”
The pressure on my back disappeared at once.
Victoria stepped away from me and smoothed the front of her dress. Her friends did the same, fixing their hair and wiping their hands as if they had only been helping prepare the morning meal. I stayed on the floor for a few seconds longer, trying to pull air into my lungs without showing how badly my ribs hurt.
Victoria looked down at me again. “You heard her. Get up and make breakfast. If Dominic has to wait because of you, I will break your other hand too.”
One of her friends laughed as they moved toward the door. “And clean the blood off your mouth. No one wants to lose their appetite looking at you.”
They left together, their shoes clicking lightly over the floor. I waited until the sound faded before I pushed myself up. My right hand throbbed so badly that I could not use it, and when I looked down, two of my fingers had already begun to swell. I did not have time to check if anything was broken.
Dominic was coming, and in this house, the Alpha’s son being hungry mattered more than a slave bleeding on the floor.
I wiped my mouth with the back of my left hand and limped to the counter. The kitchen was still warm from the morning fire, but my body felt cold under my thin dress. I cracked eggs one-handed, spilling some of the whites onto the table because my fingers would not stop trembling. Then I took bacon from the storage tray and laid it in the pan.
The smell filled the room quickly, rich and salty, and my empty stomach cramped so painfully that I almost bent over.
I had not eaten since yesterday afternoon. Maybe earlier. Sometimes the days became difficult to count when every meal depended on what scraps were left behind and whether the maids were in a generous mood. I kept my eyes on the pan and turned the bacon before it burned. Dominic liked it crisp but not black. I knew that because I had been punished once for making it too soft and once for making it too dry.
The kitchen door opened just as I slid the eggs onto the plate.
I lowered my head immediately.
Dominic walked in with the lazy confidence of someone who had never been afraid of entering any room. He looked as if he had just woken up, his chestnut hair slightly messy, his shirt half-buttoned at the throat, and his golden-brown eyes still heavy with sleep. Even like that, he looked like someone girls would whisper about in corners.
“Breakfast,” he said.
“I made it, Young Master,” I answered, keeping my voice low.
I carried the plate to the table with my left hand. It shook more than I wanted it to. The eggs slid slightly to one side, and grease from the bacon touched my thumb, but I managed not to drop it. For one foolish second, I felt relieved.
Then Dominic looked at the plate, looked at me, and his face twisted with disgust.
Before I could step back, his arm swept across the table. The plate hit the floor and shattered. Eggs, bacon, and broken porcelain scattered across the tiles near my feet.
I stared at the mess, too tired to react.
“You look too dirty,” he said. “How am I supposed to eat something you made?”
She never looked away.Her eyes were too wide, following me until the very end, as though she expected to see something happen right there in front of her. I found myself wondering what was going through her mind at that moment. Whether there was regret. Whether there was hope. Whether, for even a single second, she believed it would actually work.I lowered my arm slowly and let the empty glass fall beside the bed.Then I stood.Melany released the breath she had been holding, her shoulders relaxing just slightly, as though her body had reacted before she could stop it.There was no turning back.For either of us.“It’s a good thing you came,” I said, keeping my voice steady, as though nothing had shifted out of place.I had already let her go too far to turn back now. I couldn’t allow her to realize that a few drops of poison would never be enough to bring me down.She didn’t know.
I remained silent for a moment, feeling the rough fabric against my sensitive skin.“Then I can’t stay here for long.”She answered with a nod.A thin cry echoed through the house, uneven, persistent enough to cut through the silence between one breath and the next. I frowned and turned toward the sound, trying to figure out where it was coming from.Nora was already walking away before I could even ask, as though she knew I would hear it.“There’s a lot you don’t know about me. Come.”I followed her down the narrow hallway, the floorboards creaking beneath our steps until it opened into a larger room. The living room was simple but carefully kept—wooden furniture, only a few belongings, a rug covering the floor. Light streamed in through a wide window at the back, illuminating the rocking chair placed beside it.My eyes went straight to it.Sitting in the rocking chair was a woma
There was no immediate answer, only the muffled sounds coming from inside—footsteps, something being dragged across the floor, a distant voice. Then the lock shifted, and the door opened just enough to reveal part of a wary face, one eye studying me from head to toe.“A delivery?”I gave a slight shake of my head. “No.”The door opened wide enough for her to get a proper look at me. She was a tall woman with broad shoulders, filling almost the entire doorway, her arms crossed as though she were used to turning away people who did not belong there.“Looking for work, girl?” she asked, making no effort to soften her tone.“Yes. I was told to ask for Nora.”She watched me for another moment, her gaze drifting over my hood and the cloak that was still partially soaked, as though weighing my answer against what she saw. Then she uncrossed her arms and stepped aside, making room.“
The cold was the first thing I felt when I came to, seeping through my soaked skin and settling deep into my muscles like a weight that made even breathing difficult.I opened my eyes slowly, still not understanding where I was, staring at the dull sky stretched between the towering branches. The sound of rushing water reached me, muffled and constant.When I tried to move, my body resisted, every part of it protesting in a different way, as though it had been carelessly stitched back together.I rolled onto my side with effort, bracing myself on my elbow against the damp ground. Cold mud clung to my skin and clothes, dragging every movement down. It was only when I managed to push myself up a little farther that I saw him. The horse lay a few yards away, stretched out on its side, motionless in the unmistakable stillness that left no room for doubt.He was dead.His hind leg remained twisted, locked at an angle that did not belong to a living body
I frowned, turning my head on instinct. And then I saw lights emerging between the trunks, fast, flickering, and men breaking through the darkness, forcing their way forward.“STOP!” The shout came out ragged, and before I could even process it, another gunshot exploded.My body reacted before my mind, flinching, my fingers locking around the reins as something sliced through the air beside me and buried itself in the trunk ahead, ripping splinters of wood free.The horse startled, swerving sharply to the side. My body lurched with it, my foot nearly slipping from the stirrup. I clung on tightly, pulling myself back into the saddle, my fingers sinking into its mane.Another shot.Closer this time, and I felt the air shift beside my face, fast, violent. “Shit…”I pressed my legs against the horse’s sides, urging it forward. It answered with more speed, its muscles tightening beneath me as it surged between the trees with long strides. The path was narrow, littered with exposed roots an
My breathing failed, caught halfway, while something tightened hard in my chest. I pulled my hand away for an instant, but it returned, almost on its own, resting there for one second longer than it should have.“I…” I began, but the word died before it could take shape. Because there was nothing to say. There was no justification that fit that moment, no strength enough to hold any sentence until the end.A tear threatened to fall, but I blinked to contain it. I stood and ran to the door, this time without looking back and without allowing myself to feel pain for him. I reached the key in the door lock again and removed it. I opened the door carefully so as not to make noise, because now I truly could not fail anymore. I stepped out and closed the door behind me, turning the key firmly until I heard the click of the lock.I grabbed the cloak from the corner, putting it on in a hurry, hiding everything that needed to be hidden — includin
I should have apologized. I should have lowered my head. I should have done anything except what I did next.But then someone behind him muttered, “No wonder. Witches are dirty bitches.”My mother’s face came into my mind so clearly that it hurt more than my broken hand. Her fingers combing my hair
My fingers tightened around the edge of my apron. I wanted to tell him that Victoria had done this. I wanted to say I had made his breakfast with one good hand because no one else would. But people like me did not explain things to people like him. Dominic pointed at the floor. “Now you made a mes
Dominic pushed me away and I was surprised that I lost thought because of his action. He told Victoria, "Amo has a keen sense of smell and he hates the smell of women's blood."Victoria was not quite convinced by Dominic's explanation, still, she wrapped her arms around him like she was showing of
“Washing clothes,” I answered, because the truth was already humiliating enough and I had no better lie.His eyes narrowed slightly. “In that?”Heat rose to my face. I gripped the basin and tried to stand, but Dominic reached for it before I could move away. I held on by instinct, even though there







