
Poisoned by False Love
Chapter 3
The morning light filtered through the basement's tiny window, casting angular shadows across my small room. Seven days had passed since I'd been banished from my own life. Seven days of serving meals, cleaning floors, and enduring the whispers of staff who once answered to me. The humiliation had settled into my bones like a chronic illness—present even when I wasn't actively thinking about it.
I was arranging fresh linens in the hall closet when Sophia's voice drifted down the corridor.
"Charlotte? There you are."
I turned to find her leaning against the doorframe, wearing another of my dresses—a pale blue Chanel I'd bought for our anniversary last year. Alexander had barely noticed it then. Now, his new plaything wore it like a trophy.
"I was thinking we could have afternoon tea together," she said, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "Just us girls."
Every instinct warned me to refuse, but refusing wasn't an option anymore. "Of course, Miss Blake."
The title burned my tongue. Miss Blake. In my home.
"Wonderful!" She clapped her hands like an excited child. "The sunroom in thirty minutes. You'll prepare it, naturally."
Thirty minutes later, I carried a heavy silver tray into the sunroom. I'd prepared everything perfectly—Earl Grey tea in the Wedgwood pot, cucumber sandwiches with the crusts removed, and the French macarons Alexander had flown in from Paris last week. For her. Not for me.
Sophia lounged on the white chaise, scrolling through her phone. She didn't look up when I entered.
"Set it here," she instructed, patting the table beside her.
I approached carefully, the weight of the tray making my arms tremble slightly. Just as I began to lower it, Sophia shifted suddenly, her elbow knocking against my arm.
Tea splashed across her lap, soaking into the pale blue fabric of my dress.
"You clumsy bitch!" she shrieked, leaping to her feet. "Look what you've done!"
"I'm sorry," I stammered, reaching for a napkin. "You moved and—"
"Alexander!" she called out, her voice carrying through the house. "Alexander, come quickly!"
He appeared in the doorway moments later, his expression darkening as he took in the scene.
"What happened?" he demanded.
"She did it deliberately," Sophia sobbed, gesturing at the stain. "She poured tea all over me—all over this beautiful silk dress."
"It was an accident," I protested, my voice small. "She bumped my arm."
Alexander's eyes narrowed. "Always excuses, Charlotte."
He crossed the room in three long strides and gripped my shoulder hard enough to bruise. "You'll clean it."
"I'll get some stain remover," I said, trying to pull away.
"No." His fingers dug deeper. "You'll clean it now. With what you're wearing."
I stared at him, uncomprehending, until he shoved me to my knees before Sophia.
"Take off your blouse," he commanded.
"Alexander, please—"
"Now, Charlotte."
With trembling fingers, I unbuttoned my simple white blouse, feeling the weight of their stares as I stripped down to my plain cotton bra. Alexander snatched the garment from my hands and thrust it toward me.
"Scrub," he ordered.
I knelt there, half-naked, using my own clothing to clean a dress that had once been mine from the body of the woman who had stolen my life. Tears blurred my vision as I worked, but I refused to let them fall. I wouldn't give them the satisfaction.
"Harder," Sophia instructed, a smile playing at the corners of her mouth. "You missed a spot."
When I finally finished, Alexander dismissed me with a flick of his wrist. I clutched my ruined blouse to my chest and fled to my room, where I collapsed onto the narrow bed and let the sobs wrack my body.
Hours later, after the house had gone quiet, I found a bottle of expensive bourbon in the back of the staff kitchen cabinet. I didn't normally drink hard liquor, but tonight, I needed something stronger than tears to dull the edges of my shame. I drank straight from the bottle, welcoming the burn in my throat, the gradual numbing of my senses.
I must have fallen asleep on the kitchen floor, because the next thing I knew, sunlight was streaming through the windows, and my head was pounding with the worst hangover I'd ever experienced. I groaned, pressing my palms against my temples.
"Rough night?"
I looked up to find Sophia watching me, an amused expression on her face.
"Here," she said, holding out two small white pills and a glass of water. "These will help with the hangover."
I hesitated, eyeing the pills suspiciously.
"Oh, don't be paranoid," she laughed. "If I wanted to hurt you, I wouldn't need to be so subtle about it."
My head throbbed painfully, and nausea rolled through my stomach. I needed relief. With shaking hands, I took the pills and swallowed them with a gulp of water.
"Good girl," Sophia said, patting my head like a dog. "You should feel better soon."
As she walked away, I caught a glimpse of something in her eyes—a flash of malicious triumph that sent a chill down my spine. But by then, the pills were already dissolving in my system, and it was too late to take them back.
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