Michael. I'm Michael. Laughing, smiling, walking toward a private room. Not alone. Not just anyone. But her-Sherry. My best friend. The one person I had trusted above all others.
The world tilted. My stomach dropped. My knees threatened to give way. I couldn't look away. My heart screamed as I watched him close the door behind her, that small click slicing through me like glass.
Then the door opened again. He saw me.
Michael's smile didn't falter, but the warmth in his eyes-the one that had once made my chest ache with longing-was gone. Replaced by a cold, sharp calculation I didn't recognize.
"Henrietta," he said, slow, deliberate, each syllable like a knife. "I've changed my mind. I'm done pretending." His voice was casual, but it carried the weight of every shattered dream I'd ever had. "You're just a poor girl. A maid. Nothing more. I want someone... better. Someone unique. Someone educated. Someone like Sherry."
My knees buckled. My chest felt hollow, as if the air had been ripped out. All those years of sacrifice, of hidden work, of giving myself completely for him-worthless. Gone.
Sherry laughed. That laugh. Once comforting, now vicious. Every note stabbed at my chest, at my ribs, at the hollow where my trust used to live. I wanted to scream, to cry, to punch the world, but my body froze, every instinct paralyzed by the sharp, cruel reality of their betrayal.
I ran.
Out of the street, away from the building, from the life I had thought I could call mine. Past the cars, past the people, past the noise of a city that no longer seemed alive but mocking. Tears streaked my face, mingling with the rain that had started falling, cold and unforgiving, mirroring the emptiness inside me. I ran until my lungs burned, my chest heaved, until I couldn't hear their voices anymore, until all that was left was the pounding of my own heartbeat.
Three years. For three years I had given myself entirely to a man who would betray me without a second thought. Three years spent building his future while my own crumbled quietly in the shadows. And now, in a single moment, it had all evaporated.
I stumbled into an alley, leaning against the wall, drenched, shivering, and shaking. My palms pressed against my knees as the rain ran down my face, my uniform clinging to my body. I hated him. I hated her. I hated myself for believing in love, for trusting loyalty, for thinking patience could buy me a place in his life.
But beneath the pain, beneath the tears, beneath the raw ache in my chest... Something fierce began to stir. Not the soft, obedient Henrietta he knew. Not the girl who bent, who stayed quiet, who gave too much. No. Something hard. Something alive. Something angry.
I straightened my shoulders, forced the tears to stop falling, and let a fire burn where heartbreak had hollowed me out. They had taken my love, my trust, my future-but they hadn't taken me. Not entirely. Not yet.
I thought of my father, my name, the wealth I had given up to hide in shadows, and the life I had buried to protect someone who didn't deserve me. I had been invisible for so long, pretending to be nothing, and now I realized something terrifying and exhilarating: I could stop being invisible. I could stop pretending. I could rise.
The rain pelted my skin and soaked through my uniform, and yet I welcomed it. It felt cleansing, like it was washing away the fear and the shame and leaving only raw, honest fire in its place. I had no plan. No strategy. Only a promise: they would regret ever underestimating me.
And then I almost ran straight into him. Not Michael. Not Sherry. But a man taller than anyone I had ever seen, calm, sharp, and unnervingly present. He stepped aside, his gaze cutting through me like he could see every ache, every wound, every flicker of fire beneath my despair.
"Careful," he said, low and measured, not unkind but not soft. "You might break if you're not careful."
I stared at him, chest tight, eyes wide. My entire body tingled with alertness I hadn't felt in years. Who was he? What did he want? And why did I feel like he had just seen something in me I had tried so hard to hide?
The city blurred around me. The rain streaked my vision. The people moved like ghosts. And yet, I felt... alive. For the first time in years, alive, burning, and terrified all at once.
I didn't know who this man was or what he wanted, but the thought of him made my pulse spike with something strange-something dangerous. Something I wasn't ready to name yet.
And I knew one thing for certain: Michael and Sherry had no idea what was coming next. Not a single clue. They thought they had won. They thought I was nothing.
But I had just begun to remember who I really was.
And soon, very soon, I would make them regret every choice they had made.