Justine pushed open the heavy mahogany door of her bedroom. She stepped inside, turned around, and immediately threw the deadbolt. The solid click locked the McConnell family out.
She walked straight past the massive four-poster bed and into the expansive, marble-clad en-suite bathroom. She reached out and flipped the switch for the vanity lights.
The harsh, bright LED bulbs flared to life, illuminating the mirror.
Justine stopped and stared at her reflection. The right side of her face was a horrifying mess. The skin over her cheekbone was split open, the edges jagged and raw. The surrounding tissue was already swelling into an angry, purple mound, narrowing her right eye into a slit. Half-coagulated blood painted the right side of her jaw and stained the collar of her white cashmere top.
Her eyes, however, were completely calm. They were the eyes of a surgeon assessing a trauma patient. Cold. Analytical. Detached.
She crouched down and opened the cabinet beneath the dual sinks. She reached past the expensive La Mer face creams and Chanel bath oils, pushing her hand all the way to the back. Her fingers found the hidden latch.
She pulled out a heavy, professional-grade medical trauma kit.
It was the only piece of her past she had smuggled into this house. Before she became Carl McConnell's silent accessory, Justine Ward had been the top surgical resident at Johns Hopkins. She had hands that could stitch a torn artery in the dark. She had been weeks away from accepting a prestigious fellowship in trauma surgery in Zurich, Switzerland, poised to become one of the youngest lead surgeons in her field.
She hauled the heavy kit onto the marble counter and unzipped it.
She pulled out a bottle of medical-grade hydrogen peroxide, a pack of sterile cotton swabs, and a sheet of artificial skin dressing.
She soaked a cotton swab in the peroxide. Without a single moment of hesitation, she pressed the soaked cotton directly into the open gash on her cheekbone.
The chemical reaction was instantaneous. Thick white foam bubbled up from the wound as the peroxide attacked the bacteria and the torn tissue.
The pain was blinding. It felt like a lit match being pressed directly against her skull. Justine sucked in a sharp, hissing breath through her teeth, but her hand did not shake. Her fingers remained perfectly steady.
As the physical pain burned through her nervous system, it dragged a memory to the surface-a memory from three years ago in a sterile VIP hospital room in Washington D. C.
The room smelled of bleach and impending death. Her older sister, Eleanor, lay in the hospital bed, her body broken beyond repair from a massive car pile-up.
Eleanor's skeletal hand had gripped Justine's scrub top with terrifying strength. Tears streamed down Eleanor's sunken face as she begged. Justine, please. Carl's family is ruthless. Claire will eat Leo alive. She will bring in some socialite stepmother who will destroy my boy. Promise me you'll marry Carl. Promise me you'll protect Leo. Please, for my blood.
Carl had been standing at the foot of the bed. He wore a black trench coat, looking like a grieving statesman. He had looked Justine in the eye and sworn a solemn oath. I will respect you as my equal, Justine. I will protect you for the rest of my life.
Crushed by the weight of her dying sister's tears and the suffocating guilt of family duty, Justine had nodded. She had thrown her Zurich offer into the trash and walked into the McConnell cage.
Justine blinked, pulling herself back to the present. She looked at the bloody cotton swab in her hand.
She let out a short, sharp laugh that sounded more like a sob.
Carl's "protection" was throwing her into a freezing koi pond, locking her in a 55-degree cellar, and smashing her face open with a two-pound book.
And Leo. The boy she had sacrificed her entire future to protect. The boy had looked her dead in the eye, pushed her into the water, and smiled as she drowned.
Justine tossed the bloody swab into the trash can. She looked at her reflection in the mirror.
"I paid my debt, Eleanor," Justine whispered to the empty room. "I owe you nothing anymore."
She peeled the backing off the artificial skin dressing and carefully, expertly applied it over the cleaned wound. It sealed the cut perfectly, stopping the bleeding and protecting the tissue.
She zipped the trauma kit shut and shoved it back into the dark recesses of the cabinet.
When she stood back up, a massive wave of dizziness hit her. The adrenaline from the cellar was crashing. Her core temperature was still dangerously high. The room spun wildly. She grabbed the edge of the marble sink to keep from collapsing.
She forced her legs to move. She stumbled out of the bathroom and walked toward the bedside table.
She picked up the heavy, antique landline phone. She dialed the internal estate extension for the head housekeeper.
Herta answered on the second ring. "What is it?" Herta's voice was dripping with insolence.
"I have a severe infection and a high fever," Justine said, her voice completely devoid of emotion. "My face is severely injured. I will not be attending the afternoon reception for the Astor-Paine family."
Herta let out a loud, mocking scoff. "Do not use cheap excuses to avoid your duties as the hostess, Mrs. McConnell. The Madam will not tolerate it."
Justine did not argue. "If you want the Astor-Paine family to see Carl's wife greeting them with a face covered in blood, you are welcome to send your security guards to drag my body down the stairs."
Before Herta could respond, Justine reached down and violently yanked the phone cord out of the wall jack.
The line went dead. She had physically severed her communication with the rest of the house.
She turned away from the bed and dragged her heavy feet toward the antique writing desk in the corner of the room. She unlocked the bottom drawer and pulled out a thick, sealed manila envelope.
Inside the envelope was a legal document her private lawyer had drafted three weeks ago. She had kept it hidden, paralyzed by the lingering guilt of her promise to Eleanor.
It was a Relinquishment of Stepparent Guardianship.
Justine pulled the cap off her fountain pen. She flipped to the last page of the document. She did not hesitate for a single second. She pressed the nib to the paper and signed her name with sharp, aggressive strokes: Justine Ward. Not McConnell. Ward.
The moment the ink dried, the massive, suffocating boulder that had been sitting on her chest for three years shattered into dust. She could breathe.
She slid the document back into the manila envelope and placed it dead center on the writing desk, right where anyone walking into the room would see it. It was a ticking time bomb.
Her mission was complete. Her body finally gave out.
Justine stumbled away from the desk. Her knees buckled. She collapsed onto the massive bed, her hands blindly grabbing the heavy comforter and pulling it over her shivering body.
The darkness of the fever rushed up to swallow her brain. But as her eyes fluttered shut, the corners of her mouth lifted into a genuine, peaceful smile. She was finally free.
Downstairs, the atmosphere in the grand drawing room of the McConnell estate was suffocatingly elegant.
The Astor-Paine family, representing generations of East Coast old money, sat on the antique velvet sofas. Among them sat Anabella Sullivan. She wore a pristine white Dior dress, her blonde hair falling in soft, perfect waves. She sat next to Carl's grandmother, laughing softly and pouring tea with the practiced grace of a woman who fully believed she was the true mistress of the house.
Carl stood near the grand fireplace. He held a crystal glass of sparkling water, his knuckles white from gripping it too tightly. He kept shooting anxious, furious glances toward the grand staircase in the foyer.
He could not believe Justine had actually defied him. He had expected her to clean the blood off her face, put on some heavy concealer, and walk down those stairs to do her duty. When he tried to call her room, the line was dead. She had actually unplugged the phone.
Claire McConnell noticed her son's panic. She elegantly excused herself from the guests and glided over to Carl.
"Control your face, Carl," Claire hissed under her breath, her smile never wavering for the guests. "You look like a panicked amateur. Where is your wife?"
"She locked herself in," Carl muttered, his jaw tight. "She unplugged the phone."
Claire's eyes flashed with cold fury. She turned back to the guests, her smile widening into a mask of perfect, sympathetic grace.
"I must apologize for Justine's absence," Claire announced to the room, her voice dripping with fake sorrow. "Today is the anniversary of her late sister's passing. She is in her room, conducting a private, silent prayer. She is deeply devoted to her family's memory."
The guests murmured in understanding, nodding at the display of familial piety.
Anabella, however, lowered her head to take a sip of her tea. Behind the rim of the porcelain cup, her lips curled into a vicious, knowing smirk. She knew exactly what was happening. Justine was breaking.
Having secured the family's public image, Claire immediately left the drawing room. The moment she stepped into the hallway, the smile vanished, replaced by absolute venom.
She snapped her fingers. Herta, who was waiting by the dining room doors, rushed forward.
"Since my daughter-in-law wishes to pray," Claire said, her voice dropping to a sinister whisper, "we will help her. Lock down her corridor. She is to undergo a seven-day silent fasting retreat. No food. Only water."
Herta's eyes gleamed with sadistic pleasure. She nodded.
Claire's true motive was far darker than simple punishment. She knew Justine was sick. A high fever combined with seven days of starvation would severely damage Justine's reproductive system. Claire wanted to ensure that Justine was physically incapable of getting pregnant anytime soon, guaranteeing that Leo remained the sole, undisputed heir to the McConnell fortune.
Herta immediately summoned two massive, broad-shouldered security guards. She grabbed a silver tray from the kitchen. On it, she placed a single glass of tap water and a stale, hard piece of bread.
The three of them marched up the grand staircase.
Outside Justine's bedroom door, a young, freckled maid named Moira Kelly was pacing frantically. Moira was Justine's personal maid, the only person in the entire estate who treated Justine with genuine kindness. Moira was holding a silver basin filled with steaming hot water and a clean washcloth, crying softly as she knocked on the heavy wood.
"Madam, please open the door," Moira whispered, her voice trembling. "Let me clean your face."
Herta marched down the hallway. When she saw Moira, her face twisted in rage.
Herta lunged forward and violently slapped the silver basin out of Moira's hands. The heavy metal crashed onto the floor. The scalding hot water splashed everywhere, soaking Moira's uniform and burning her shins.
Moira cried out in pain and dropped to her knees.
"Get away from that door, you stupid girl," Herta spat, standing over Moira. "The Madam has ordered a seven-day fasting isolation for Mrs. McConnell. No one is allowed to see her."
Moira's eyes widened in horror. "You can't do that!" she cried, looking up at Herta. "She has a terrible fever! Her face is bleeding! Seven days without food will kill her!"
"That is none of your concern," Herta sneered. She turned to the security guards. "Use the master key. Open the door."
Moira scrambled to her feet. Driven by a sudden burst of desperate loyalty, she threw herself in front of the door. She spread her arms wide, blocking the keyhole with her body.
"No!" Moira screamed. "I won't let you!"
Herta's face turned purple with outrage. A lowly maid daring to defy her authority was unacceptable. Herta raised her heavy hand again, her face contorted with malicious rage. "I will have you sent down to the basement laundry room for a month," Herta spat, standing over the trembling girl, "where your skin will peel off from the lye!"
Before her foot could connect, the heavy mahogany door of the bedroom was violently yanked open from the inside.
Justine stood in the doorway.
She looked like a ghost. Her skin was translucent, her lips pale, and the right side of her face was covered by the stark white medical dressing. But the aura radiating from her body was terrifying. The air in the hallway seemed to instantly drop ten degrees.
Justine looked down at Moira bleeding on the floor. Then, she slowly raised her eyes and locked them onto Herta's raised foot.
Justine stepped out of the room. She bent down, her movements slow and deliberate, ignoring the dizzying spin in her head. She gently grabbed Moira's arm and helped the sobbing girl to her feet. Justine raised her thumb and softly wiped the blood from Moira's lip.
Then, Justine turned her body to face Herta.
"Who gave you the courage," Justine asked, her voice so quiet and deadly it made the hairs on the security guards' arms stand up, "to touch my people?"
Herta was momentarily paralyzed by the sheer, murderous intent in Justine's eyes. But she quickly recovered, puffing out her chest, relying on Claire's authority.
"The Madam ordered a seven-day fasting prayer for you to reflect on your sins against Master Leo and your late sister," Herta declared loudly, pointing at the pathetic tray on the floor.
Justine looked at the stale bread. A low, dark chuckle vibrated in her chest. The sound was eerie, echoing in the quiet hallway.
She saw right through Claire's bullshit. It wasn't about prayer. It was about breaking her body. It was about control.
Justine stopped laughing. She took one step toward Herta. The two massive security guards instinctively took a step back.
"You think this garbage is going to break me?" Justine whispered, her eyes burning into Herta's soul. "Since you people love rules so much, let's talk about the law."
Justine turned around and walked back into her bedroom, heading straight for the writing desk.