
Breaking Free from His Betrayal
Chapter 2
Two weeks had passed since Anastasia's wedding, two weeks of watching her glide through the mansion like a conquering queen while I existed in the shadows like a ghost. The servants no longer met my eyes. The cook served my meals last, if at all. Even the gardener, who once smiled when I passed the rose beds, now turned away as if my very presence might contaminate his flowers.
I was arranging the wilted stems in my small vase—the only flowers I was permitted now—when the commotion erupted from the east wing. Shouts echoed through the corridors, followed by the sharp click of Anastasia's heels against marble.
"How dare you!" Her voice carried the authority of her new position, each word designed to cut. "Fetch that woman immediately!"
My hands stilled on the dying petals. That woman. Never my name, never even 'the mistress'—just that woman, as if I were something distasteful she'd found on her shoe.
Sophie appeared in my doorway, her face pale as parchment. "Miss Chloe, you must come. Mrs. Mitchell is... she's very angry."
I followed Sophie through the corridors I once walked freely, my bare feet silent against the cold floor. The other servants pressed themselves against the walls as we passed, their eyes filled with the peculiar mixture of pity and relief that comes from watching someone else's downfall.
Anastasia stood in the center of the storage room like an avenging angel, her morning dress pristine despite her fury. At her feet lay the remnants of what had once been her wedding gown—the priceless creation of imported silk and hand-sewn pearls now torn and stained beyond recognition.
"Look at it!" She gestured toward the ruined dress with theatrical horror. "Look what your jealous rage has wrought!"
I stared at the destruction, my mind struggling to process what I was seeing. The silk was shredded as if by claws, dark stains spreading across the fabric like spilled wine. Pearls scattered across the floor like fallen tears.
"I didn't—" I began, but Anastasia's laugh cut through my protest.
"Of course you didn't. You never do anything, do you? You simply exist here, poisoning the very air with your resentment." She turned to Ricardo, who stood in the doorway with the expression of a judge preparing to deliver sentence. "Tell her, husband. Tell her what happens to women who destroy what belongs to their betters."
Ricardo's eyes met mine for the briefest moment, and I searched desperately for some flicker of the man who had once whispered promises in the dark. But his gaze was as cold as winter stone.
"Martha saw you here last night," he said, his voice carrying the weight of military authority. "Near midnight, skulking about like a common thief."
Martha, Anastasia's personal maid, stepped forward with downcast eyes. "Yes, General. I saw her with my own eyes, standing right here by the dress. She looked... angry, sir. Vengeful."
The lie fell from her lips so smoothly I almost believed it myself. Almost. But I remembered last night—remembered lying in my narrow bed, staring at the ceiling and listening to the rain against my window, wondering if this was what drowning felt like.
"I was in my room," I said, hating how small my voice sounded. "I never came here. I would never—"
"Wouldn't you?" Anastasia moved closer, her perfume sharp and cloying. "Wouldn't you destroy the symbol of everything you can never have? The dress of a real wife, a legitimate union blessed by God and country?"
Each word was a carefully aimed blade, designed to find the deepest wounds and twist. I felt something inside me crumble, some last vestige of dignity finally giving way under the weight of her cruelty.
"Ricardo, please." I turned to him, abandoning all pride. "You know me. You know I wouldn't—"
"I know what the evidence tells me," he replied, and his indifference was somehow worse than anger would have been. "And the evidence says you committed an act of petty vengeance that cannot go unpunished."
Anastasia's smile was sharp as glass. "Oh, but it will be punished. Won't it, husband?"
Ricardo straightened, every inch the commanding officer. "Tomorrow morning, you will walk through town wearing appropriate attire for your crime. The people will see what becomes of those who destroy what belongs to their betters."
The words hit me like physical blows. A public humiliation, paraded through the streets like a common criminal. Through the town where I had once sold flowers, where people had known me as the gentle florist's daughter.
"A sign," Anastasia added with obvious relish. "She must wear a sign announcing her jealous destruction of sacred wedding property."
I looked around the room at the faces surrounding me—Ricardo's cold authority, Anastasia's triumphant malice, Martha's false piety, the other servants' careful neutrality. Only Sophie's face showed any compassion, tears streaming silently down her cheeks.
"The guards will escort you at dawn," Ricardo continued. "Four hours through the market square, so all may witness the consequences of your actions."
As they filed out, leaving me alone with the ruins of the wedding dress, I sank to my knees among the scattered pearls. Each one caught the lamplight like a fallen star, beautiful and broken and utterly beyond repair.
Just like me.
You may also like





