The Vale estate sat like a fortress in the early morning, frost glittering along the edges of the stone walls. Lira Vale moved carefully through the halls, each footstep measured. Even the slightest creak could draw the attention of Selene or Marissa.
Selene’s laughter sliced through the silence before Lira reached the kitchen. “Finally decided to show up,” she sneered. “Or did you sleep under the bed again?”
Lira’s shoulders tightened, but she lowered her gaze. Kira, warm and steady at the edge of her mind, pressed reassurance against her chest, a heartbeat of comfort in the oppressive house.
Marissa’s heels clicked sharply across the floor. “You’re late,” the woman snapped, eyes cold and calculating. “Do you want me to demonstrate what happens to lazy girls?”
“Yes, Mother,” Lira whispered, bowing her head.
Hours passed with chores, folding, sweeping, polishing, every movement careful, every breath quiet. Selene watched her like a hawk, ready to laugh at any misstep. Marissa hovered nearby, correcting every motion, every small error, until Lira felt like she was shrinking under their gaze.
When the house finally fell into quiet, Lira stole outside to the garden. Frost crunched under her boots, and the air bit at her cheeks. She knelt, pressing her palms into the frozen soil. A faint, fleeting warmth tickled her fingers—too slight to notice fully, gone almost immediately. She didn’t name it, didn’t question it.
Kira pressed close, a gentle, constant presence reminding her she wasn’t entirely alone. Lira closed her eyes for a moment and imagined a life without cruelty—without Selene’s sharp laughter, without Marissa’s constant scorn. The thought lasted only a moment, but it gave her a flicker of something she hadn’t felt in a long time: hope.