đ CHAPTER ONE đ
âMaâam, I asked for lavender oil, not whatever cheap garbage this is.â
I glanced up from the inventory sheet, watching Mrs. Henderson wave the bottle like she was conducting an orchestra of complaints. The woman beside herâa regular Iâd helped dozens of timesâsuddenly stepped closer, her jaw tight.
âExcuse me, but I was here first. Some of us donât have all day to throw tantrums.â
Something cold twisted in my stomach. Mrs. Henderson never complained about the lavender oil. And Sarah Chen was the most patient customer we had. However they were both staring at each other now, tension crackling between them like static before a storm.
âLadies, perhapsââ
âDonât you dare tell me how to shop, you pretentious littleââ
âPretentious? Look whoâs talking, acting like you own the place.â
My hands trembled as I set down the clipboard.
This wasnât normal.
Nothing about their suddenly sharp voices or the way they were squaring off over essential oils was normal.
The air felt thick, charged with something I recognized but refused to name.
Not here. Not again.
âI think thereâs been a misunderstanding,â I managed, stepping between them. âMrs. Henderson, this is the same lavender oil you bought last week. Sarah, I can help you withââ
âDonât defend her!â Mrs. Henderson snapped, her eyes flashing with genuine anger. âI know quality when I see it, unlike some people who settle for mediocre everything.â
Sarahâs face flushed red. âMediocre? At least I donât storm into small businesses acting like a spoiled child.â
The energy in the room pulsed, feeding off their escalating anger. I could feel it building, responding to the chaos inside meâthe frustration Iâd been swallowing for months, the loneliness that gnawed at me every night, the constant fear that Iâd never be able to live a normal life.
âStop,â I whispered, but they werenât listening anymore.
They were shouting now, faces inches apart, ready to tear each otherâs hair out over nothing. Over absolutely nothing.
âWhat in the hell is going on here?â
Mr. Petersonâs voice cut through the chaos as he emerged from the back office. His eyes moved from the two women to me, and I watched his expression shift from confusion to that familiar look of wary disgust.
The same look everyone gave me eventually.
âMaya,â he said slowly, âstep away from the customers.â
âMr. Peterson, I was just trying toââ
âStep away.â His voice was flat, final. âMrs. Henderson, Sarah, I apologize for whateverâs happened here. Please, let me help you both.â
I backed toward the counter, watching in sick fascination as the two women blinked in confusion, the fight bleeding out of them like air from a punctured balloon. They looked around the shop as if seeing it for the first time, then at each other with embarrassed horror.
âIâm so sorry,â Sarah stammered. âI donât know what came over me.â
Mrs. Henderson pressed a hand to her chest. âGood gracious, neither do I. How rude of me.â
But Mr. Peterson wasnât looking at them anymore. He was looking at me with those cold, calculating eyes that had been growing more suspicious with each passing week.
âMaya. Office. Now.â
The walk to his cramped back office felt like a death march. He closed the door behind us with deliberate calm, the kind that meant I was completely screwed.
âSit.â
I remained standing. âMr. Petersonââ
âThis is the fourth incident this month.â He leaned against his desk, arms crossed. âFour times customers have gotten into fights for no reason while you were working. Four times good people turned nasty around you.â
âThatâs notââ
âItâs not normal, Maya.â His voice dropped. âNothing about you is normal. And Iâm done pretending otherwise.â
The words hit me like physical blows. âI donât control what customers do.â
âDonât you?â He studied my face with undisguised revulsion. âMy grandmother used to tell stories about people like you. Cursed bloodlines. Bad luck that follows families like a plague.â
âThatâs ridiculous.â
âIs it? Because everywhere you go, Maya, chaos follows. Broken equipment, spooked customers, accidents that make no sense.â He shook his head. âI should have listened to my gut months ago.â
âPlease, Mr. Peterson. I need this job.â
âAnd I need customers who feel safe in my shop. Youâre fired, Maya. Clean out your locker and go. Take your bad luck with you.â
The injustice of it burned through me like acid. Six months of perfect attendance, never calling in sick, going above and beyond for customers who barely acknowledged my existence.
All of it was meaningless because I couldnât control something I didnât even understand.
âYou canât fire me for things that arenât my fault.â
âWatch me.â He opened the door, dismissing me. âAnd Maya? Do yourself a favor. Find somewhere else to spread your poison. This townâs had enough.â
The rage hit me like a physical force, white-hot and devastating. Every glass surface in the officeâthe picture frames, the coffee mug, the small mirror by his deskâexploded simultaneously. The sound was like a gunshot, sharp and final.
Mr. Peterson stumbled backward, his face pale with terror.
I didnât wait to see if he was hurt. I grabbed my purse and ran.
~~~
The October air bit at my skin as I hurried down Main Street, ignoring the stares from people sweeping glass off the sidewalk in front of the shop. Word would spread fast in a town this small. By tomorrow, everyone would know about Maya the freak, Maya the cursed girl who destroyed Petersonâs Herbs in a fit of supernatural rage.
Just like mother.
The thought stopped me cold in the middle of the sidewalk.
A couple walking their dog crossed to the other side of the street rather than pass too close to me, and I didnât blame them.
I could still feel the energy crackling under my skin, looking for another outlet.
I pulled my jacket tighter and kept walking, my mind spinning with the same desperate questions that had haunted me since I was old enough to understand why foster families kept sending me back.
Why did this happen? Why couldnât I just be normal? Why did motherâs poison have to live in my blood?
My apartment building came into view, and all I wanted was to lock myself inside, pull the covers over my head, and pretend today never happened.
But as I climbed the stairs to the third floor, something felt wrong. The air was too still, too quiet. My door stood slightly ajar, even though Iâd locked it this morning.
I pushed it open with trembling fingers.
My small living room looked like a tornado had torn through it. Couch cushions slashed open, books scattered across the floor, kitchen cabinets hanging open with their contents spilled everywhere.
And on my coffee table, weighted down with a black stone Iâd never seen before, was a note written in elegant script:
YOU WILL PAY FOR YOUR MOTHERâs SINS.