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I Saved Him, He Betrayed Me Novel Cover

I Saved Him, He Betrayed Me

"Look at me when I'm speaking to you." I lifted my head, meeting her cold blue eyes. Amanda's face was perfectly made up for the holiday dinner, her blonde hair swept into an elegant chignon that probably cost more than most people's monthly salary. "You're disgusting," she said, her voice dripping with contempt. "Crawling around on the floor like the animal you are. Do you know what day it is, Belle?" I nodded. "Thanksgiving," she continued, circling me like a predator. "A day for gratitude. And what are you grateful for, I wonder? The roof over your head? The food you're allowed to eat? The privilege of serving your betters?" The belt came down again, this time across my ribs. I gasped, the air rushing from my lungs as white-hot pain bloomed across my side. "I asked you a question." "Y-yes," I whispered, the word scraping against my throat like sandpaper. "Grateful." "Good." Amanda's smile was razor-sharp. "Because tonight, you'll be preparing our Thanksgiving feast. Every course, every garnish, every single detail must be perfect. And when you're done, you'll serve us with a smile, knowing that this is exactly where you belong."
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Chapter 2

The weeks following Thanksgiving passed in a blur of menial tasks and careful avoidance.

I learned to move like a shadow through the mansion, appearing only when summoned, disappearing the moment my presence was no longer required. The welts on my back had faded to ugly yellow bruises, but the memory of that belt remained fresh, a constant reminder of my place in this world.

I was polishing the silver in the dining room when Amanda's voice cut through the afternoon silence like a blade.

"Belle! Get up here. Now."

The urgency in her tone made my stomach clench. I set down the candlestick I'd been working on and hurried upstairs, my worn shoes silent on the marble steps. Amanda stood in the doorway of her bedroom, her face a mask of barely controlled fury.

"My necklace is missing," she said, her voice deadly quiet.

I felt the blood drain from my face. The necklace—a family heirloom Robert had given her for their engagement, worth more than I could ever hope to earn in a lifetime. Diamonds and sapphires set in platinum, a piece that had belonged to his grandmother.

"The Ainsworth sapphires," Amanda continued, stepping aside to reveal the open jewelry box on her vanity. "I left them right here this morning, and now they're gone. You were the only one who cleaned this room today."

I shook my head frantically, my hands trembling as I tried to form words. "N-no," I whispered, my damaged voice barely audible. "I didn't—"

"Don't you dare lie to me." Amanda's eyes blazed with a cold fire. "I know exactly what you are, Belle. A jealous, grasping little thief who's always wanted what belongs to me."

She moved to the intercom on her nightstand, her finger hovering over the button that would summon Robert. "I think it's time my fiancé knew what kind of person he's been harboring under his roof."

The next few minutes felt like an eternity. I stood frozen in place, my mind racing through possibilities, explanations, anything that might save me from what was coming. But I knew it was useless. Amanda's word against mine—there was no contest.

Robert's footsteps echoed down the hallway, sharp and purposeful. He appeared in the doorway, his dark eyes immediately taking in the scene—Amanda's distressed expression, the open jewelry box, my guilty posture.

"What's happened?" he asked, though his tone suggested he already knew.

"The sapphires are gone," Amanda said, her voice trembling with just the right amount of emotion. "I left them in the box this morning, and now they've vanished. Belle was the only one with access to the room."

Robert's gaze settled on me, cold and judgmental. "Is this true?"

I tried to speak, to explain, but only a strangled sound emerged from my throat. Desperately, I looked around for paper, for anything I could write on to make him understand. There—a notepad on Amanda's desk.

I lunged for it, my hands shaking as I scribbled frantically: *I didn't take it. I would never. Please believe me.*

Robert glanced at the note with disgust. "More lies," he said, his voice flat. "Just like when you tried to claim you were the one who saved me."

The words hit me like a physical blow. I wrote again, more desperately this time: *I'm telling the truth. I swear on my life. I didn't touch the necklace.*

"Enough." Robert's hand swept across the desk, sending my pleas scattering to the floor like fallen leaves. "I'm tired of your pathetic attempts to manipulate me."

I dropped to my knees, scrambling to gather the papers, trying to write again on the margins, anything to make him listen. My fingers were clumsy with panic, the pen slipping in my sweaty grip.

"Look at her," Amanda said softly, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "So desperate. So guilty."

I was still on my knees, still writing, when Robert's shoe connected with my chest.

The impact drove all the air from my lungs, sending me sprawling backward. For a moment, I teetered on the edge of the grand staircase, my arms windmilling wildly as I tried to regain my balance.

Then I fell.

The marble steps were unforgiving. Each impact sent shockwaves through my body—my shoulder, my hip, my ribs. The world spun in a kaleidoscope of pain and confusion, the ornate ceiling above blurring into streaks of gold and white.

I came to rest at the bottom of the staircase, my body twisted at an unnatural angle. Pain radiated from everywhere at once—my left arm bent wrong, my ribs on fire, warm wetness spreading beneath my head. The taste of copper filled my mouth.

Footsteps descended slowly, deliberately. Through the haze of pain, I could see Robert and Amanda standing over me, their faces swimming in and out of focus.

"Call Dr. Hartwell," Robert said, his voice eerily calm. "Tell him it was an accident. She fell down the stairs."

"Of course," Amanda replied. "Poor clumsy Belle. Always was accident-prone."

The next three months passed in a fog of medication and isolation. The private clinic where they'd taken me was luxurious but sterile, a place where wealthy families sent their inconvenient problems to be quietly managed. My left arm was broken in two places, three ribs cracked, and I'd suffered a severe concussion.

Dr. Hartwell was efficient and discreet, asking no questions about how a young woman might have sustained such injuries. He set my bones, stitched my wounds, and ensured my recovery would leave no visible scars that might embarrass the Ainsworth family.

I was allowed no visitors except for the single afternoon when Robert and Amanda came to see me.

They stood at the foot of my hospital bed like judges delivering a verdict. Amanda wore a cream-colored dress that made her look angelic, the missing sapphires glittering at her throat.

"I found my necklace, by the way," she said with a smile that never reached her eyes. "It had just been misplaced. Silly me—I'd put it in my travel jewelry case and completely forgotten."

The revelation should have vindicated me, should have proven my innocence. Instead, Robert's expression remained unchanged, cold and distant.

"This is what you get for causing trouble," he said simply. "Perhaps next time you'll think twice before making false accusations or trying to manipulate situations to your advantage."

They left after ten minutes, their duty visit complete.

I stared at the ceiling for hours afterward, something fundamental shifting inside me. The pain in my body was nothing compared to the realization that finally, brutally, crystallized in my mind.

They didn't care about the truth. They never had.

I was nothing to them—less than nothing. A convenient target for their cruelty, a scapegoat for their sins. Robert would never see me as anything more than a burden, and Amanda would never stop tormenting me as long as I remained within her reach.

For the first time since that terrible night seven years ago, I began to plan.

When I returned to the mansion three months later, walking with only a slight limp that would fade with time, I was different. Quieter, more watchful. I performed my duties with mechanical precision, but part of me had detached, floating somewhere above the daily humiliations and casual cruelties.

I was waiting.

The opportunity came two weeks after my return, in the form of hushed conversations between the household staff.

"Seven days in Hartford," one of the maids whispered to another as they folded laundry. "Some big merger with the Blackstone Group. Mr. Robert and Miss Amanda will be gone the whole week."

"Lucky them," the other replied. "I heard they're staying at that fancy resort. All business meetings during the day, romantic dinners at night."

I kept my expression neutral as I dusted nearby, but my heart was racing. Seven days. An entire week when the mansion's security would be focused on protecting empty rooms while the principals were hundreds of miles away.

It was more than an opportunity.

It was providence.

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