Ti/Date: Early Morning, TC1853.01.01
Location: Emberhall Pavilion
Emberhall’s corridors stretched ahead like the guts of so gilded beast. All that crimson and gold, wheat motifs carved into marble—a testant to how far the Brenners had climbed from dirt-farming roots. Light through tall windows made shadows dance.
Raven’s feet made no sound on cold stone. Gray servant’s dress hung loose—funny how she’d beco a servant in her own family’s house. But sothing had changed in how she moved. Gone was that hunched posture of soone expecting the next blow.
Footsteps behind her.
"Mara! Mara, wait up!"
That honey-sweet voice could rot teeth. Raven kept walking. The na ant nothing now.
"Mara Brenner! I know you can hear !"
Still walking. Eyes fixed sowhere beyond the corridor’s end. She had better things to think about than whatever ga Amara was playing today.
Suddenly, Amara was there, blocking her path. Small and delicate in silk robes.
"Are you speaking to ?" Raven asked.
Amara’s face flickered—confusion chasing across features designed to inspire protection. "Of course I’m speaking to you, silly. You’re my sister, aren’t you?"
The warmth was manufactured, but Raven caught the tension around her eyes.
"Oh. Right. Mara Brenner." Said it like she was trying to rember where she’d left her keys. "I suppose that is what they call here."
That hit Amara wrong. This wasn’t how it was supposed to go. The Mara she knew would have been apologizing by now.
This version looked through her like air.
"Are you feeling well?" Small hands reached out. "You seem... different this morning."
Raven stepped aside, smooth as water. "I’m perfectly fine. Was there sothing you needed?"
Different. The word hung between them. Amara’s mind raced. The straight back where there used to be hunched shoulders. The controlled voice instead of broken whispers. And those eyes—should have been full of desperate hope, not this polite indifference.
"I just wanted to make sure you were ready for today," Amara tried. "Mother has planned such wonderful activities, and with Kael visiting—"
"How thoughtful." The interruption sliced clean. "I’m sure you’ve both put considerable thought into today’s... entertainnt."
The way she said that last word made Amara’s stomach clench. There was knowledge there. Things Mara couldn’t possibly know.
But she had to be imagining it. Mara was powerless, ignorant.
She doesn’t know, Amara told herself. Can’t know.
Yesterday—Mara kneeling on rice grains while Selene explained how ungrateful she’d been. The bruise on her cheek from Selene’s response.
Even then, bleeding and crying, there’d been sothing in Mara’s eyes. A flash of... what? Gone before Amara could identify it.
"Well," Amara said, maintaining her smile, "I should help Mother with preparations."
"Indeed." Raven’s nod managed to be respectful and dismissive at once. "Don’t let keep you."
Amara retreated. She couldn’t shake the feeling that she’d just lost a battle she hadn’t known she was fighting.
***
Three years ago
The courtyard filled with laughter—the kind that drew people like moths. Fourteen-year-old Amara held court among cousins, weaving flower crowns while spinning tales.
"And then I saw the most beautiful butterfly! Like a living jewel!"
Even the boys listened.
In the shadows, Mara watched with burning eyes. Sa age as Amara but already marked by casual cruelties. Arms full of laundry, hands raw from harsh soap. The contrast couldn’t have been starker.
"Oh! Sister dear, there you are! Co join us!"
The invitation ca with such warmth that the other children turned to welco their forgotten cousin. For one bright mont, Mara felt hope.
She stepped forward. Maybe today would be different.
"Careful of the stones, dear sister," Amara called sweetly. "The gardeners were repairing the pathway—such uneven footing!"
That’s when Mara saw it. Thin wire stretched across her path, nearly invisible. Not a repair tool left behind, but sothing deliberate.
Their eyes t. Amara’s expression perfectly composed, but in her gaze Mara saw calculation. Intent.
Try to prove it.
Mara stepped over the wire carefully. Hope curdled into sothing bitter. The children’s laughter seed harsh now.
"How lovely that you could join us," Amara said. "I was just telling everyone about my morning walk. Perhaps you saw sothing interesting during your... chores?"
The emphasis was surgical.
"I saw many things," Mara replied quietly. "Including so that weren’t what they appeared to be."
Sothing flickered across Amara’s features. "How mysterious. But shadows can play tricks, can’t they?"
The threat was wrapped in honey.
That night, lying on her narrow bed thinking about wires and calculations, Mara made a promise that would survive ninety-nine lifetis.
Soday there would be a reckoning.
***
The mory faded, but its lesson stayed sharp. Amara had always been a master manipulator.
Heavy footsteps approached—confident, carrying authority. Raven didn’t need to look. She knew that rhythm, burned into mory through five years of marriage and countless humiliations.
Kael Xuán.
Even knowing what he truly was, she felt that involuntary flutter. He was objectively handso—tall, lean, aristocratic features, and golden eyes that could freeze or burn. Perfect hair, clothes cut to show his fra.
In her first life, she’d thought him the most beautiful man alive. Convinced herself that the coldness was nobility.
Now she saw him clearly: a petty tyrant drunk on perceived superiority.
"Kael!" Amara’s voice rang out. "I didn’t know you were visiting today!"
She ca down the corridor at that pace she’d perfected—hurried but graceful. Her attention fixed entirely on Kael.
Which is why she missed the loose marble tile the servants had failed to secure.
Her slipper caught the edge, and physics took over. For a mon,t she windmilled, hands grasping for purchase that wasn’t there.
Then she was falling, tumbling down marble steps. The landing produced a sharp crack—bone eting stone—and a scream raw with real pain.
But even lying there bleeding, Amara’s mind worked with cold calculation. Pain or no pain, opportunity was opportunity. A whisper at the edge of her consciousness urged patience. Let her dig her own grave. Use it.
"Kael!" she gasped, voice breaking on exactly the right syllable. "Thank the Light you’re here!"
He rushed forward, noble composure cracking. Knelt beside her.
"Don’t move. You might have injured your spine—"
"She pushed ," Amara whispered, eyes finding Raven with arrow precision. "I was trying to greet her, and she... she just pushed down the stairs!"
***
The accusation hung like poison. Kael’s head snapped up, golden eyes fixing on Raven with fury cold enough to freeze blood.
"You pushed her?"
"I did not." Steady, matter-of-fact. "I was standing here when she fell. Made no move toward her."
"She’s lying!" Amara’s sob could have moved stones. "I was coming to include her, and she deliberately shoved !"
Brilliant, Raven thought. Even genuine accidents beco weapons.
Kael rose slowly, movents carrying predatory nace. "Apologize."
"For what? I haven’t done anything requiring an apology."
The dismissal hit him like a slap. He was used to instant obedience from inferiors. This nobody servant should have been on her knees by now.
Instead, she stood straight-backed, muddy brown eyes completely unimpressed. Sothing tugged at Kael’s consciousness—a familiar resonance he couldn’t place. The way she held her chin stirred mories that made no sense.
"Mara Brenner." Her na ca out like profanity. "You will kneel and apologize this instant, or I will personally ensure you regret your arrogance."
"No."
The word dropped into silence. A passing maid dropped her tray, the crash echoing. Servants didn’t say no to nobles. Ever. Bastards didn’t refuse direct orders.
But that’s exactly what Raven did.
"No?" First crack in his composure.
"No. I will not apologize for sothing I didn’t do. Will not kneel to ease your wounded pride. And will not pretend what you witnessed was anything other than an unfortunate accident."
Footsteps approaching. Selene Lin appeared, beauty unmarred by forty-nine years, expression shifting from curiosity to alarm.
"What happened here?"
"Mother!" Amara’s cry was perfectly pitched. "Mara pushed down the stairs!"
Selene’s gaze swept the scene. Amara crumpled and bleeding. Kael standing protective and furious. And Mara—who should have been sobbing apologies—standing tall without a tear.
"Mara. Kneel and apologize to your sister imdiately."
"She is not my sister. And I will not apologize for cris I did not commit."
Selene’s voice faltered for just an instant—those defiant eyes held sothing she’d never seen before. Then her face hardened. This wasn’t the broken girl she’d crafted through years of abuse. This was sothing else.
Sothing dangerous.
"You will do as I say, or face punishnt that will make previous lessons seem gentle."
"Then I’ll face whatever punishnt you devise. The consequences cannot be worse than the injustice of false confession."
"How dare you—" Kael began, but Raven cut him off with a look that conveyed both pity and dismissal.
"Lady Amara requires dical attention," she said, addressing Selene with formal courtesy that felt more insulting than defiance. "I suggest focusing on her wellbeing rather than—" Raven caught herself before adding ’planning your next sche.’ "—pursuing vengeance for imagined slights."
For a mont, the air around Raven seed to shimr—then the sensation passed.
Then she turned and walked away.
Not fled. Not scurried like a beaten dog. Simply turned and walked with a asured pace.
***
Silence stretched behind her like a taut wire.
"Don’t just stand there!" Selene’s voice cracked like a whip. "Help get Amara to her chambers."
As they lifted Amara between them, Kael found himself glancing back toward the empty corridor. In all his years of privilege, no one had ever simply dismissed him like that.
There’d been sothing else, too. Sothing in her posture that reminded him of soone else. Soone whose mory he tried hard not to examine.
But that was impossible. The scar on her wrist proved she was nothing more than what she appeared.
Still...
"I don’t understand," Amara said as they helped her upstairs, voice wavering. "She’s never acted like this before. Never been so... cold."
"People change," Selene murmured, but her eyes stayed fixed on the corridor where Raven had vanished. "Sotis in ways we don’t expect."
None of them could shake the feeling that sothing fundantal had shifted.
"Send for Doctor Maren imdiately," Selene told a maid as they reached Amara’s chambers.
Selene’s fingers drumd against her skirts. The girl would need watching now. Closer watching.
"Mother," Amara whispered as they settled her onto the bed, voice already calculating despite pain, "what if she tells people I fell? What if she spreads lies?" Her mind was working, cataloguing witnesses. "Did you see how coldly she stood there while I bled? How she refused to help?"
Selene’s smile was as sharp as winter. "After today’s defiance, I doubt anyone will listen to what Mara Brenner has to say."
But even as she spoke, tending Amara’s injuries, Selene couldn’t convince herself the problem would be easily contained.
The girl who’d walked away hadn’t been broken or cowed or properly afraid.
She’d been sothing else entirely.
User Comments
0 comments from readers