
Escaping the Hamilton Mansion
Chapter 2
The kitchen smelled of rosemary and roasted chicken—Aidan's favorite dinner that I'd spent the afternoon preparing. I was arranging fresh vegetables on his plate when he burst through the doorway, his school backpack still slung over one shoulder.
"I want ice cream," he announced, dropping his bag on the pristine marble floor with a thud that echoed through the spacious room.
"After dinner, sweetheart," I said automatically, not looking up from the carefully portioned meal. "You need to eat something healthy first. Look, I made your favorite—"
"No." The word came out sharp and demanding, so much like his father's tone that my hands stilled on the plate. "I want chocolate ice cream now."
I turned to face him, taking in his flushed cheeks and the stubborn set of his jaw. At six years old, Aidan had mastered the Hamilton glare—that cold, imperious stare that dismissed any opposition as beneath consideration.
"Aidan, you know the rules. Dinner first, then—"
"I don't care about your stupid rules!" His voice pitched higher, carrying that edge of hysteria that meant a tantrum was brewing. "Renata said I could have whatever I want! She said you're not the boss of me!"
My chest tightened at the mention of her name. In the three weeks since Renata's return, she'd been systematically undermining every boundary I'd established, every routine I'd built to give Aidan structure and security. But I kept my voice steady, gentle.
"Renata isn't here right now, and ice cream before dinner will ruin your appetite. You won't want to eat this lovely meal I made for you."
"I hate your stupid meals!" Aidan's face contorted with rage as he grabbed the nearest object—a wooden toy truck from the counter—and hurled it at me. It struck my shoulder, hard enough to sting. "I hate you! You're not my real mother anyway!"
The words hit deeper than the toy, slicing through six years of sleepless nights, worried sick days, and countless bedtime stories. I'd been the one to teach him to walk, to comfort his nightmares, to kiss scraped knees better. But in his eyes, I saw nothing but the cold dismissal he'd learned from watching his father.
"Aidan, please—" I knelt down to his level, reaching out instinctively to comfort him as I'd done thousands of times before. "Let's talk about this. You're upset, I understand, but—"
"Don't touch me!" He shoved me with both hands, his small palms connecting with my chest with surprising force.
I stumbled backward, my heel catching on the kitchen rug. The world tilted as I fell, my head striking the sharp corner of the granite coffee table with a sickening crack. Pain exploded through my skull as I hit the floor, warm liquid trickling down my temple.
For a moment, the kitchen spun around me, the overhead lights blurring into streaks of gold. I pressed my palm to my head, fingers coming away sticky with blood.
Aidan's tantrum stopped abruptly. His face went pale, eyes wide with sudden fear as he stared at the red staining my fingers. "I... I didn't mean..."
"Oh my goodness, what happened here?"
Renata's voice floated into the kitchen like honey over broken glass. She appeared in the doorway, perfectly composed in her designer dress, her dark hair swept into an elegant chignon. Her eyes took in the scene—me bleeding on the floor, Aidan frozen in shock—and I caught the flash of satisfaction that crossed her features before her expression shifted to one of concerned sympathy.
But not for me.
"Oh, sweet boy," she cooed, rushing past me as if I were invisible. She dropped gracefully beside Aidan, pulling him into her arms. "Are you hurt? Did something frighten you?"
I struggled to sit up, my head pounding. "Aidan, I'm okay. You don't need to be scared—"
"Shh, darling," Renata murmured to Aidan, stroking his hair while shooting me a look that could have frozen fire. "It's alright now. I'm here."
She lifted him effortlessly, settling him on her hip as she moved toward the freezer. "Would you like some ice cream now? I think you've had quite enough upset for one day."
Aidan nodded against her shoulder, no longer looking at me or the blood still seeping through my fingers. Renata opened the freezer with one hand, maintaining her grip on him with practiced ease.
"There we go," she said, scooping generous portions of chocolate ice cream into a bowl. "Much better than those heavy meals that upset little tummies, don't you think?"
I pressed a dish towel to my temple, the white fabric blooming red. "Renata, he hasn't eaten dinner yet. The sugar will—"
"Will make him happy," she interrupted smoothly, not bothering to look at me. "Which is what matters most, isn't it? A child's happiness?"
She settled Aidan at the kitchen island, placing the bowl before him with theatrical flourish. "There you are, my sweet boy. Eat up."
Aidan dug into the ice cream eagerly, chocolate already smearing his chin. The fear in his eyes had vanished, replaced by the simple pleasure of getting exactly what he'd demanded. He didn't look at me once.
I stood slowly, gripping the counter for support as the room swayed. Blood had soaked through the towel, and I could feel it matting in my hair. But Renata had positioned herself between Aidan and me, a human barrier that somehow made my injury irrelevant, my presence unnecessary.
"Such a good boy," she murmured to Aidan, her voice carrying just loud enough for me to hear. "Some people just don't understand what children really need, do they?"
The front door slammed shut in the distance—Bryson, home from work. Right on schedule. I pressed the bloodied towel harder against my head and wondered if he would even notice.
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