
Hibiscus flowers fall into the sea of people
After three days and three nights of agony, Melissa finally gave birth to a baby boy.
Exhausted and utterly spent, she still longed to hear her husband’s praise. She’d shake her head and tell him it hadn’t hurt.
But what met her was Tyler’s icy voice.
Outside the birthing chamber, he cast a disdainful glance at the infant and ordered his subordinate without hesitation, “Get rid of it. What use is a simpleton’s child? I will not have a fool for a son and heir.”
The man hesitated. “Sir, this is your firstborn. The manor needs an heir…”
Tyler waved a hand, cutting him off. “Years ago, she became this imbecile to save me. I will honor my pledge to keep her for a lifetime—but my children? She has no right to bear them.”
“The heir to this manor must come from an intelligent woman like Barbara. Anything less would only tarnish our family’s name.”
Melissa froze. She shook her head violently, but the dam broke, and tears streamed down her cheeks.
She hadn’t been born a fool. Her brother once told her she’d been a celebrated beauty and wit in the capital.
It was only three years ago, saving her then-fiancé Tyler, that she’d struck her head. When she woke, her mind was that of a child.
She’d feared he would abandon her because of it. But he hadn’t. He married her with great fanfare, a story that once charmed the capital.
She’d asked him, “Does this embarrass you?”
He said no—and she, in her innocence, believed him.
She didn’t understand why he’d changed. The man who once loved her so deeply now looked at her with contempt, even rejecting the child she’d borne him.
She tried to rise, to stop them from harming her baby, but the maidservants held her down.
“I’m not a fool! I’m not! Let me save my child!”
“Madam, my lord said you must rest.”
Weak from the ordeal, how could she fight them? Darkness swamped her vision, and she fainted.
When she woke again, Tyler was stroking her hair gently, his face alight with pleasure. “Barbara has come. She wishes to see you.”
The mere arrival of his distant cousin Barbara could make him smile like that. Even in her diminished state, that smile felt like a blade to Melissa’s eyes.
She seized his hand. “The baby… where is my child?”
Then Barbara entered, cradling a small dog. Her voice was soft, coaxing. “Sister, look. Here is your child.”
Melissa stared, bewildered. She was simple, but she knew she’d given birth to a human, not a puppy.
“No… no… That’s not my child!”
She clutched at Tyler, desperate for him to set things right.
His expression stiffened, but he nodded. “Melissa, this is your child.”
Hope shattered. She looked from Tyler to the puppy in Barbara’s arms. So they thought her a fool they could deceive at will.
She began to thrash, frantic to find her real child. Tyler’s patience snapped.
“Melissa, if you keep this up, I’ll have you confined. Until you learn to behave.”
Despair tore a sob from her. He wanted to lock her away again. Every time she vexed him, he’d shut her in until she yielded, contrite and compliant.
But not this time.
Her struggles only grew wilder. Utterly exasperated, Tyler stood and turned to leave with a dismissive wave. “If she refuses to be obedient,” he told the servants, “do not bring her any food.”
The moment he left, Barbara dropped her act. “You want to know where your child is, sister? I’ll tell you.”
“I mentioned the ginkgo tree in the back garden looked a bit sickly. Brother Tyler ordered it fertilized. They say nothing feeds a tree like fresh blood and bone.”
Melissa’s pupils contracted. She understood. They had buried her child beneath that tree.
She refused to believe Tyler would do this to her.
That night, when all were asleep, she slipped out to the ginkgo tree. She dug and dug, her fingernails splitting, until her hands struck a small, cold form in the earth.
Her child. Tyler had truly buried him here.
Frantically, she wiped the dirt from the tiny body and pressed her ear to its cold cheek. She remembered the strong, healthy cry at birth.
Now, the baby lay motionless, silent.
“Please cry. Just once, for your mother. Please?”
No response ever came. Desolation finally claimed her.
“Aaaah—!”
Her wails brought the household running. Tyler took in her disheveled, dirt-streaked state, and his lip curled in disgust. This was no lady of his manor. His frown deepened.
Seeing him, Melissa grasped at a final straw of hope.
“Husband, I beg you, save our child. He doesn’t move, he doesn’t cry. Please save him. I’ll be good, I promise, just save him…”
Tyler crouched down, his tone deceptively gentle. “Be good, Melissa. The child is dead. You shouldn’t have brought him out here in the middle of the night. It disturbs his rest.”
She shook her head, voice choked. “No. I didn’t bring him. She said… you buried him here. To feed the tree.” Her finger pointed accusingly at Barbara.
Barbara wore an expression of pure innocence. “Sister, what are you saying? How could I say such a thing? I prepared a fine coffin for
"My lord, the lady has taken no harmful draught. She is simply in a weakened state and requires strengthening tonics."
In an instant, every last one of Tyler’s doubts vanished. "Well?" he demanded, his voice sharp with anger. "What do you have to say for yourself now?"
"Barbara came only because she heard you were unwell. The medicine she brought was to help you recover. To me, it seems you and your maid conspired to entrap her. You will go and apologize to her immediately."
Melissa was stunned. The pain in her stomach sharpened—how could it be as the physician said?
"No. I won’t... She’s wicked. I refuse."
"And we are not sisters! Why does she keep calling me that? She is *your* cousin. Julia said she ought to address me properly, as 'sister-in-law'—"
***Slap!***
"Enough!"
Tyler was a trained martial artist. The force of his furious backhand left Melissa’s ears ringing, the world reduced to a muffled roar. Dazed, she watched him bark orders at the servants. Only when she saw Julia being seized and held did the reality of it all come crashing back.
Panic gripped her. Struggling to her feet, she threw herself onto her knees before Tyler. "Husband, I was wrong. Truly, I know I was wrong. Please, do not punish Julia..."
His face was stone, utterly indifferent to her pleading. With a dismissive wave of his hand, a servant raised a thick rod and brought it down heavily across Julia’s back.
Melissa scrambled forward, stumbling, trying to shield Julia with her own body. The servant could not check the blow in time. The rod struck Melissa squarely with a sickening thud. A sharp cry tore from her throat—then darkness swallowed her.
Three days later, Melissa awoke.
Tyler sighed in relief, then immediately scolded her. "A grown woman, with no sense of proportion."
She ignored him. Her first frantic thought was for Julia. "Where is Julia?"
He waved a hand. Two unfamiliar maids stepped forward. "Barbara selected them for you personally. They will attend you from now on."
Melissa shook her head vehemently. "No. I want only Julia. I don’t want anyone chosen by that woman."
His expression darkened. "It seems the lesson was not severe enough. Very well. Refuse them, and I will remove *all* the servants assigned to you."
The door slammed shut behind him. The room emptied swiftly, leaving only a deathly pale Melissa behind. She hugged herself tightly, weeping helplessly. She knew—Julia was never coming back.
Two days passed in a numb haze. On the third, she was hauled abruptly from her bed. Ignoring her feverish weakness, the new maids forcibly washed and dressed her. They dabbed rouge on her lips and powder on her cheeks, lending a faint, false color.
Lord Tyler and Barbara were waiting at the main gate. Taking in Melissa’s vacant expression, Tyler frowned. "Today is the Queen Mother’s birthday. Once we enter the palace, you will not disgrace us."
Barbara stepped forward warmly, linking her arm with Melissa’s. "Do not worry, cousin. I will look after my dear sister."
Tyler nodded, his gaze resting on Barbara with unmistakable admiration.
Melissa’s eyes darkened. She could not remember the last time her husband had looked at her that way. Somewhere along the line, his glances had become nothing but impatience and disdain.
Seeing Melissa’s ashen face, Barbara’s expression brimmed with smug satisfaction—a satisfaction that lasted right until the moment she, inside the palace, shattered the Queen Mother’s most prized possession: a potted **Ice-Blush Gentian**, a flower so rare it was said to be the only one in the entire capital.
Terror seized Barbara. Soil smeared the exquisite gown she had so carefully chosen. She scrubbed at it frantically, but the grime would not budge.
She glanced back at Melissa, who was following meekly. Seeing no one else nearby, a plan began to form in her mind.