Ela stood before the towering gates of the Norman castle, the wind whipping at the edges of her ashen-gray cloak. The fortress where she had once spent twelve long years loomed before her, shrouded in the dim light of dusk, its silhouette cold and foreboding.
She reached up, fingers brushing against the silver cross hidden beneath her collar—the only keepsake her mother had left her.
“Halt!” A guard’s spear barred her path. “Who goes there?”
“A healer, sent from the convent.” Ela lowered her head, letting the hood’s shadow obscure her face. It had been ten years since she had last set foot here, ten years since she had been the frightened, helpless girl cowering in these halls. But she was no longer that child. Even so, caution was a virtue.
The guard eyed her modest attire with suspicion and was about to speak when a commotion erupted from inside the castle.
A breathless maid rushed out, panic in her eyes. “Quick! Fetch a healer! The lady is unwell again!”
Ela’s lips curled slightly. It seemed her arrival was perfectly timed.
She was led up the spiraling stone stairwell to the second floor, where the heavy scent of incense and perfumed oil clung to the air, thick enough to choke her.
On the bed lay a pale-faced woman, her forehead slick with sweat. The moment Ela laid eyes on her, she felt her fingers tighten around the strap of her medicine satchel. Isabella de Rochefort.
Her stepmother. The Countess.
“The lady has been poisoned,” Ela declared, pressing her fingers lightly to Isabella’s wrist in a show of examination. “Has she received any unusual gifts recently?”
The Countess’s personal maid, Marie, stiffened, her expression betraying a flicker of fear. “Yesterday… the Viscount de Montreuil sent a box of sweets…”
Just as I thought.
Ela retrieved a small vial from her satchel, its contents a deep, translucent amber. “This is an antidote, but it must be taken for seven days. During that time, she must not consume any sweets.”
With a weak groan, Isabella drank the potion, unaware of the fleeting satisfaction gleaming in Ela’s eyes.
This was no antidote.
It was a carefully crafted poison—a slow, insidious venom, one that would eat away at Isabella’s body just as she had once done to Ela’s mother.
“Your name?” Isabella’s voice was hoarse.
Ela bowed her head, keeping her expression neutral. “Ela, my lady. Just a simple healer.”
Isabella let out a ragged breath. “Stay. I need someone with your skill.”
Ela inclined her head in obedience, but as she turned, her gaze flickered to the ornate, ruby-encrusted jewelry box on the countess’s vanity.
It had once belonged to her mother.
Now, it was just another of Isabella’s treasures.
Later that night, Ela was assigned a modest servant’s chamber on the castle’s west wing.
She stood by the window, staring at the distant spire of the chapel, the moonlight casting silver shadows across the stone floor.
She reached into her cloak and pulled out a small leather-bound notebook, its pages filled with years of meticulously gathered secrets—whispers of noble scandals, betrayals, and sins.
She traced the inked words with her fingers before whispering softly,
“Mother…”
“I have returned. And this time, everyone who hurt us will pay the price.”