
Breaking Free from His Betrayal
Chapter 3
The days following my public humiliation blurred together like watercolors in rain. I moved through the mansion like a specter, invisible to all but the most observant eyes. The servants who once offered tentative smiles now averted their gazes, their silence a protective shield against Anastasia's wrath.
Only Sophie remained constant in her quiet devotion.
She would appear at my door each morning with a tray of weak tea and dry toast—the meager breakfast allotted to me now. Her dark eyes held a warmth that had become precious beyond measure in this house of calculated cruelty. Sometimes she would smooth my hair with gentle fingers, or straighten the threadbare shawl around my shoulders, small gestures of care that reminded me I was still human.
"Miss Chloe," she whispered one evening as she helped me prepare for bed, "there are things... things you should know."
I looked up from the washbasin, catching her reflection in the cracked mirror. Her face was pale, shadows dancing beneath her eyes like bruises. "What things, Sophie?"
She glanced toward the door, then moved closer, her voice dropping to barely a breath. "I've been watching. Listening. Mrs. Mitchell and her maid Martha—they speak freely when they think no one hears."
My hands stilled on the rough towel. "Sophie, you mustn't—"
"The wedding dress," she interrupted urgently. "You never touched it. Martha destroyed it herself, on Mrs. Mitchell's orders. They planned it all—the timing, the witnesses, everything."
The revelation should have brought vindication, but instead it settled in my chest like lead. Of course. The elaborate cruelty, the perfect timing, Martha's too-convenient testimony—all of it orchestrated to provide Anastasia with justification for my public degradation.
"There's more," Sophie continued, her fingers trembling as she reached into her apron pocket. "Letters. Plans for... accidents. They mean to be rid of you permanently, Miss Chloe. I heard them speaking of the cellar, of how accidents happen in old buildings."
The blood drained from my face. "Sophie, no. You can't know such things. If they discover—"
"Someone must know the truth." Her voice carried a fierce determination that reminded me she was braver than any soldier I'd ever met. "Someone must survive to tell it."
She pressed a folded paper into my palm, her fingers ice-cold against mine. "Hide this. When the time comes, when you can escape this place, take it with you. Let the world know what monsters wear silk and pearls."
I wanted to refuse, to protect her from the danger such knowledge brought. But the desperate hope in her eyes stopped me. Perhaps she was right. Perhaps someone needed to remember, to bear witness to the truth buried beneath Anastasia's lies.
"Promise me," I whispered, gripping her hand. "Promise me you'll be careful."
Sophie smiled, the expression transforming her plain features into something luminous. "I promise, Miss Chloe. I'll be as careful as morning mist."
But promises, I was learning, were fragile things in this house of shadows.
Three nights later, the screaming woke me.
I bolted upright in my narrow bed, heart hammering against my ribs as the sound echoed through the corridors—raw, terrified, abruptly cut short. Footsteps thundered past my door, voices shouting orders I couldn't understand.
I threw on my thin robe and crept to the doorway, peering into the hallway where servants rushed back and forth like disturbed ants. Margaret Hayes, the head housekeeper, stood at the top of the main staircase, her face carved from stone.
"What happened?" I asked, but she turned away as if I hadn't spoken.
It was young Thomas, the stable boy, who finally whispered the truth as he passed my door. "Sophie, miss. She fell down the stairs. Her neck..."
The world tilted sideways. I gripped the doorframe, my legs suddenly unable to support my weight. "Fell?"
But Thomas was already gone, swept away by the tide of servants converging on the scene.
I found myself moving without conscious thought, drawn toward the main staircase like metal to a magnet. The marble steps gleamed in the lamplight, pristine and innocent, giving no hint of the tragedy they had witnessed.
Sophie lay at the bottom, her body twisted at an impossible angle, dark hair spilled across the white stone like spilled ink. Her eyes stared sightlessly at the crystal chandelier above, reflecting its light one final time.
"Such a terrible accident," Anastasia's voice drifted from somewhere behind me, smooth as poisoned honey. "Poor girl must have been carrying too many linens. These old stairs can be treacherous in the dark."
I knelt beside Sophie's broken form, my trembling fingers reaching toward her still face. That's when I saw them—the bruises on her wrists, dark as storm clouds against her pale skin. Finger-shaped marks that spoke of struggle, of hands that had gripped and pushed.
"Don't touch her." Dr. Chen appeared beside me, his medical bag clutched in white-knuckled hands. "The scene must remain undisturbed until the authorities arrive."
But I had already seen what I needed to see. The bruises. The too-convenient timing. The way Anastasia watched from the shadows with barely concealed satisfaction.
Sophie hadn't fallen. She had been silenced.
The funeral was held two days later in the servants' cemetery—a brief, perfunctory affair attended by those who had no choice. I stood at the edge of the gathered mourners, watching as they lowered Sophie's simple pine coffin into the cold earth.
Anastasia arrived just as the first shovel of dirt struck the wood, her black mourning dress a mockery of grief. She positioned herself where everyone could see her, dabbing at dry eyes with a lace handkerchief.
"Such a devoted servant," she murmured to no one in particular. "So... loyal to her mistress. Perhaps too loyal for her own good."
The message was clear as church bells. This was what happened to those who showed me kindness. This was the price of loyalty in Anastasia's reign of terror.
As the cemetery emptied, I remained by the fresh grave, my hands pressed against my stomach where a strange queasiness had been building for days. The nausea that had plagued me since Sophie's death, the bone-deep exhaustion, the way certain smells now made me retch—symptoms I had attributed to grief but now recognized as something else entirely.
Something that would change everything.
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