Chapter 2: The Girl Who Replaced Me

984 Words
She was smaller than I remembered. That was the first thing that hit me when Lillian Whitmore stepped through the front doors, one hand loosely holding a nurse’s arm, the other pressed lightly to her chest like she was steadying her own heartbeat. Soft cream dress. Hair the color of pale honey, falling in gentle waves past her shoulders. She looked like something delicate that had been handled too roughly and never quite recovered. The whole room seemed to hold its breath. Margaret moved first, crossing the foyer in three quick steps, and then her arms were around Lillian and she was crying. Actually crying. I had never seen Margaret Whitmore cry before, not once in twelve years, and yet here she was, pressing her face against this girl’s hair like she was trying to memorize her. Victor stood a few feet back, jaw tight, eyes wet. He didn’t touch her right away, just looked at her the way you look at something you were certain you had lost forever. I stood at the edge of the foyer with my coffee still in my hand. Nobody looked at me. The last time I had lived through this moment, I had stood in almost the same spot, and I had felt something soft and generous, some genuine happiness for this girl who had supposedly suffered so much. I had wanted to welcome her. I had even smiled. I didn’t make that mistake again. “Lillian.” Victor finally moved, resting both hands on her shoulders, studying her face like he was reading a document. “You’re home.” Her eyes filled. Just enough. Not too much. She blinked slowly and nodded, pressing her lips together in a trembling smile that somehow managed to look both grateful and heartbroken at the same time. It was a good performance. I knew that now. “Mom,” she said, and her voice cracked on the word in a way that made Margaret pull her close again. I took one quiet sip of my coffee. “Elena.” Adrian’s voice came from just behind me. Low, careful. I turned and found him watching not Lillian, but me. His expression was unreadable, which was nothing new, but the attention was. “She looks fragile,” I said, keeping my voice even. Something shifted in his face. “She’s been through a lot.” “So I’ve heard.” He studied me for a beat too long, then looked back toward his mother and Lillian. I did the same. Lillian’s gaze had drifted across the room, and then, slowly, it landed on me. I remembered this part too. The first time, I had smiled at her, stepped forward, introduced myself. I had said something like, “I’m so glad you’re finally home,” and meant it completely. This time I held her gaze and didn’t move. Something flickered across her face. Too quick to name. Then she smiled, wide and warm and trembling at the edges, and she took a small step toward me, pulling gently free from Margaret’s arms. “You must be Elena,” she said softly. “I am.” She tilted her head, studying me with those pale, careful eyes. “I’ve heard so much about you.” “Funny,” I said, “I’ve heard very little about you.” The smile didn’t waver. If anything, it softened further, like my words had made her sad rather than stung. She reached out and took my hand in both of hers, and her skin was cool and dry and deliberate. “I hope we can be friends,” she said. Behind her, Margaret was watching me with an expression that was already expectant, already measuring whether I would embarrass the family. Victor had turned away to speak quietly with the driver. Adrian had gone still at my shoulder. I looked down at Lillian’s hands holding mine, then back up at her face. “We’ll see,” I said. It was the smallest shift from what I had said the first time. But Lillian heard it. I watched it register behind her eyes, quick as a blink, before the soft smile settled back into place. She let go of my hand. Margaret stepped forward immediately, sliding a protective arm around Lillian’s waist. “You must be exhausted from the drive. Let’s get you upstairs and settled.” She glanced at me briefly, the kind of glance that contained an entire instruction. “Elena, tell Mrs. Carter to prepare the east room.” Not a request. I kept my expression completely still. “Of course.” I turned and walked toward the kitchen, unhurried, coffee cup still in hand. The east room was the largest guest suite on the second floor. It had better light than mine. A bigger closet. A private bath with a claw-foot tub that I had used exactly once, on my eighteenth birthday, because Margaret had said it was a special occasion. I was being sent to fetch the housekeeper so the real daughter could be installed in the better room. It had happened exactly like this the first time. I had fetched Mrs. Carter, and smiled, and told myself it was only temporary. I found Mrs. Carter near the linen closet at the end of the hall, already pulling fresh sheets from the shelf. She looked up when she heard my footsteps, and something in her expression went quiet and careful. Like she already knew. “The east room?” she asked. “The east room,” I confirmed. She held my gaze for one long second, and in it was everything she couldn’t say out loud. I nodded once and walked back down the hall. The walls of the Whitmore house had never felt so close before.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​
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