Cora shoved her mother backward with brutal force. Mavis stumbled, her back hitting the edge of the vanity.
Cora snatched a plastic bottle of sleeping pills from the nightstand. She clawed frantically at the childproof cap, her fresh acrylic nails slipping uselessly against the stubborn plastic ridges. Unable to open it, a fresh wave of impotent rage washed over her. She hurled the sealed bottle violently against the wall, watching it bounce harmlessly off the wallpaper. "I'll find a way to end it! I swear I will!" she shrieked, her chest heaving with dramatic, breathless sobs. "I am not spending the rest of my life pushing a wheelchair for a man whose dick doesn't even work!"
Out in the wide hallway, Howard paced. The thick soles of his Italian leather shoes thudded against the hardwood floor. He bit down hard on the end of his unlit cigar.
His phone vibrated in his palm. Another voicemail from a Wall Street creditor. The notification flashed red on the screen.
Hearing his daughter's hysterical screech, Howard snapped. He kicked the half-open bedroom door. It slammed against the wall, the hinges groaning.
"You will marry him!" Howard roared. The veins in his neck bulged against his tight collar. "You will put on that white dress, and you will save this family's cash flow!"
Cora flinched. Her knees gave out. She collapsed onto the thick carpet, her chest heaving. Black mascara ran down her cheeks, staining her flawless foundation. The pill bottle slipped from her sweaty grip, rolling across the floor and stopping at Howard's shoes.
Mavis dropped to her knees. She wrapped her arms around Cora's shaking shoulders, shielding her. Mavis snapped her head up, glaring at her husband. "There has to be another way, Howard. You can't feed her to that monster."
Howard yanked at his silk tie, loosening it violently. "The Branch family specifically asked for a Battle daughter. If we break this contract, the bank seizes this house by Friday. We are dead."
Mavis's eyes darted toward the window. Her breathing slowed. She lowered her voice, the sound sliding out like a snake over the carpet. "They asked for a Battle daughter. They didn't specify which one."
Howard stopped pacing. He stared at his wife.
"Areli," Mavis whispered.
"The bastard?" Howard's brow furrowed deep. "She's been rotting on that farm in Pennsylvania for ten years. The car crash scrambled her brain. She can't even string a sentence together. Finn Branch is a violent psychopath. A retard will insult him."
Mavis let out a short, cold laugh. "Finn Branch is a paralyzed cripple. The Branch family just needs a warm body to stand next to his wheelchair for the cameras. A brain-damaged mute is better. She won't complain. She won't fight back. She's a perfect puppet."
Cora stopped crying. She wiped the black streaks from under her eyes with the back of her hand. She scrambled up from the floor, her silk robe clinging to her legs. "Mom is right. Send the idiot. She only deserves my garbage anyway."
Howard's phone vibrated again. A text message from the bank. Final Notice.
Howard pulled the cigar from his mouth. He pressed the unlit end hard into the crystal ashtray on the dresser until the tobacco leaves snapped.
"Fine," Howard gritted his teeth. "Get her."
He turned on his heel and marched out of the room. "Get the car ready!" he shouted down the sweeping staircase to the butler. "I'm going to Pennsylvania."
Cora watched her father's broad back disappear down the hall. She kicked a large shard of glass out of her way, walked over to her vanity mirror, and picked up a makeup wipe.
Mavis stood up, smoothing the wrinkles from her skirt. She stepped up behind Cora, her eyes hard in the mirror's reflection. "Not a word of this to anyone. As far as the press is concerned, Areli is the legitimate, beloved daughter of this house. Understood?"
Five hours later, the black Maybach exited the smooth asphalt of the interstate and hit the dirt roads of rural Pennsylvania.
The heavy car bounced violently. The undercarriage scraped against sharp rocks, the metal shrieking.
The driver slammed his foot on the brake. Sweat dripped down his temples. "Mr. Battle, the suspension can't take this. The road is completely washed out ahead."
Howard shoved the heavy car door open. His $2,000 leather shoe sank instantly into a deep, wet puddle of mud mixed with fresh cow manure.
The stench hit the back of his throat. He gagged, pressing a silk handkerchief over his nose and mouth.
He dragged his feet through the thick sludge, walking toward the rotting wooden cabin at the end of the path. The roof sagged. The porch steps were splintered.
By the broken wire fence, a girl in a faded, torn floral dress crouched in the dirt. Her back was to him.
Howard stopped. He cleared his throat, a loud, irritated sound.
The girl turned her head slowly.
Two thick streaks of black mud were smeared across her cheeks. Her eyes were wide, vacant, and completely out of focus.
Her dirty fingers were wrapped tight around a large, grey toad. The toad kicked its legs, trying to escape.
The girl looked at Howard. She opened her mouth and let out a loud, hollow giggle. Saliva pooled at the corner of her lips.
Howard's stomach violently contracted. He took a fast step back, his heel slipping in the manure. He barely caught his balance.
The girl dropped the toad. It plopped into the mud and hopped away. She stood up, her shoulders slouched. She tilted her head to the side, her mouth hanging open.
"Da-da?" she slurred, the word thick and clumsy on her tongue.
Howard stared at the filthy, feral creature standing in front of him. He saw the empty eyes. He saw the drool.
She was exactly as he remembered. A harmless, useless idiot.
A cold, calculating smile stretched across Howard's face.