
The Stepdaughter's Retribution
Chapter 2
I traced my finger over the fading red mark on my cheek as I stared at my reflection in the antique vanity mirror. Three days had passed since Evelyn's palm had connected with my face, yet the humiliation burned far more fiercely than the physical sting ever had. With methodical precision, I opened the false bottom of my jewelry box and retrieved the leather-bound journal hidden beneath.
"May 17th," I wrote, my pen pressing firmly into the cream-colored page. "Evelyn referred to me as 'the charity case' while speaking to Aunt Margaret in the conservatory. Suggested I should be 'grateful for the scraps from Victor's table' rather than expecting a place at it."
I added this entry to the growing collection of slights, insults, and manipulations I'd been documenting for years. Dad had taught me the importance of evidence, of patterns, of patience. These journals were my silent witnesses.
A burst of laughter from the garden drew my attention to the window. I pulled back the heavy damask curtain just enough to see Evelyn gesturing dramatically to a team of landscape designers. Her voice carried up to my third-floor bedroom with remarkable clarity.
"The rose garden will need to be completely redesigned," she instructed, waving dismissively at Mom's prized heritage roses that Dad had lovingly maintained after her death. "I'm thinking something more structured, more European. Victor's first wife had... quaint tastes, but it's time this property reflected proper family values."
The designer nodded eagerly, no doubt calculating the commission on such an extensive overhaul.
"And we'll discuss interior renovations next week," Evelyn continued, glancing up toward my window. Our eyes met briefly before I let the curtain fall back into place. The message was clear: she was erasing every trace of my mother—and by extension, me—from the Whitmore legacy.
I returned to my journal, adding this new declaration to my records. The leather cover was cool under my fingertips as I closed it, a strange calm settling over me. Dad's voice echoed in my memory: "The most dangerous opponent is the one who never loses their composure, Maddie."
The rumble of an engine drew me back to the window the following morning. Harrison's new Porsche—a vehicle he certainly couldn't afford on his company salary—gleamed in the circular driveway. He emerged with shopping bags from Boston's most exclusive boutiques dangling from both arms.
"Mother!" he called out as Margaret appeared at the front door. "Just a few investment purchases. Got to look the part when I take over the company, right?"
I slipped out of my room and moved silently along the hallway, positioning myself at the top of the grand staircase where I could hear without being seen.
"Theodore called," Margaret said, her voice hushed but excited. "He mentioned the will reading is quite straightforward. Family assets staying with family, as they should."
Harrison laughed, the sound echoing through the marble foyer. "Has anyone told the stepdaughter to start packing? I'm thinking of converting her room into a home gym once this is all settled."
"Harrison," Margaret chided, though without conviction. "She is still in mourning."
"Please. She's calculating her next move. Probably trying to figure out which distant relative to latch onto next. Speaking of which—" His voice dropped to a conspiratorial whisper. "Is she up there?"
I retreated before they could spot me, my heart pounding not from fear but from a cold, crystallizing resolve.
The following afternoon brought Evelyn's infamous tea party—a transparent attempt to reassert her social standing now that Dad was gone. I needed access to the library, which required crossing through the main parlor where a dozen of Boston's most formidable society widows had gathered.
As I approached the doorway, conversation suddenly hushed. I kept my eyes forward, spine straight as Dad had taught me during our impromptu etiquette lessons.
"As I was saying," Evelyn's voice cut through the silence, deliberately loud, "stepchildren who don't understand their place create such awkward situations in proper families."
Murmurs of agreement rippled through the room. I felt their eyes on me, assessing, judging, pitying.
"The Harrington girl knew to step aside gracefully when her stepfather died," someone commented. "Moved in with cousins, I believe."
"Blood tells in the end," another added. "You simply can't expect the same loyalty from those not truly connected to the family name."
I continued walking, my footsteps measured against the parquet flooring. Their words were designed to wound, to provoke a reaction—tears, anger, anything that would confirm their narrative of me as an interloper.
Instead, I offered a polite nod as I passed, my face a perfect mask of composure. Only the slight trembling of my hands betrayed the storm brewing beneath my calm exterior.
Six more days until the will reading. Six more days of their assumptions and cruelty. Six more days before they learned what Dad had really thought of his "true family."
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