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"The Queen Who Washed Dishes" Chapter 2

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Chapter 2: The Echoes of a False Savior

The kitchen of the Thorne estate was a cavern of chrome and cold tile, a stark contrast to the opulence of the ballroom just a floor above. For Elinor, it was a purgatory.

The air was thick with the scent of degreaser and the lingering, nauseating aroma of expensive wine spilled on expensive silk.

She scrubbed at a stubborn streak of crimson wine on a white tablecloth, her movements mechanical, precise, and devoid of soul.

Every muscle in her arms throbbed from the twelve hours she had already spent on her feet, but she did not allow herself the indulgence of a sigh.

To sigh was to show weakness, and in the Thorne household, weakness was a currency that Julian and Isabella traded in with ruthless efficiency.

"Do it again," a voice drawled from the doorway.

Elinor didn’t turn around. She knew the cadence of that voice—the syrupy, affected sweetness that hid a blade of pure vitriol. Isabella leaned against the doorframe, her dress a shimmering emerald that had once been the centerpiece of Elinor's own wardrobe, now tailored to fit Isabella’s thinner, sharper frame.

"The table in the solarium," Isabella continued, stepping into the kitchen with a rhythmic click of heels.

"I saw a spot. It’s barely visible, but I know it's there. You’ve become so sloppy, Elinor. It’s almost sad."

Elinor finally stood, her spine straight despite the exhaustion. She turned, her face a mask of placid obedience.

"I’ll see to it immediately, Isabella."

Isabella didn't walk past her; she drifted, circling Elinor like a shark assessing a wounded diver. Her eyes flicked to the serving tray Elinor had been forced to carry all evening.

"Julian is so generous. Most men would have discarded a wife like you years ago. But he keeps you around. For the service, of course."

She picked up a crystal flute left on the counter, turning it in the light. "I was telling Alistair earlier—about the fire. About how I pulled him from the wreckage.

He was so moved, Elinor. He told me that a woman who saves a man’s life with such… sacrificial love… deserves the world. And look at me. I have the world."

Elinor’s jaw tightened, a microscopic shift that she forced herself to relax instantly. Five years ago, it had been Elinor’s hands that had bled, Elinor’s lungs that had burned, and Elinor’s name that had been erased from every record and memory by the inferno. Isabella hadn't been within ten miles of that ruin.

"You’re a hero, Isabella," Elinor said, her voice dry as parchment.

Isabella’s expression soured. She hated that Elinor didn't scream, didn't cry, didn't fall to her knees.

She wanted the mess, the drama, the validation of her stolen life. With a sudden, sharp motion, she reached for a bowl of half-cooled bisque on the counter and, with a feigned stumble, shoved it off the edge.

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The hot, viscous liquid splashed directly across Elinor’s forearm.

The sting was instantaneous and searing. Elinor gasped, her composure flickering for a heartbeat, but she didn't drop the silver platter she was holding.

She stood still, watching the white bisque drip down her sleeve, staining the fabric a sickly, mottled cream.

"Oh! My goodness," Isabella gasped, her hand over her mouth, though her eyes were alight with cruel, glittering triumph.

"You clumsy girl. Look at you. You’re ruined."

Martha, the head housekeeper—a woman whose loyalty to the Thornes was as rigid and unfeeling as the iron fences surrounding the estate—stepped into the room, her eyes narrowing at the mess.

"Elinor," Martha snapped, her voice like grinding stones.

"You’ve made a disgrace of the kitchen. Clean yourself up, then finish the solarium. Do not let me see you idle for a single second."

Elinor didn't look at Martha. She didn't look at Isabella. She looked at the floor, at the sea of broken glass and spilled soup, her mind already calculating the variables.

The upcoming infrastructure bid. The Thorne family’s reliance on the Kane corporation’s logistical support. Isabella’s arrogance was a leverage point, a structural weakness she was going to drive a wedge into until the whole facade shattered.

She began to pick up the jagged shards of a shattered wine glass. Her hands were trembling—not from pain, though the burn on her arm was a dull, thumping ache—but from the sheer, icy clarity of her resolve.

As her fingers brushed the cold tiles beneath the service island, something hard and metallic caught the light.

Elinor paused, her breath hitching. She reached into the dust and grime, pulling out a heavy, platinum cufflink.

It was engraved with a crest—the stylized wolf of the Kane family. It was a piece of history, an heirloom she recognized instantly.

She had held this very cufflink in her palm five years ago, stained with soot and blood, as she had tried to unfasten Alistair’s shirt to check for a pulse.

Her heart hammered against her ribs. How had it survived? How had it ended up here?

Alistair.

The realization was a thunderclap. He wasn't just a business rival of the Thornes; he was stalking them. He was digging, looking for something, someone.

"Elinor! Why are you staring at the trash?" Isabella shrieked, annoyed by the sudden silence.

"Get up!"

Elinor stood, the cufflink pressed firmly into her palm, a secret weight against her skin. She wiped her hands on her apron, ignoring the sting of the burn, and turned to face Isabella.

"I'm sorry, Isabella," Elinor said, her voice dropping to a low, melodic tone that made Isabella pause.

"I’ll make sure the solarium is perfect. I’d hate for you to have to answer any questions about the Thorne budget at the Kane meeting next week without being… properly prepared."

Isabella stiffened.

"What is that supposed to mean?"

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Elinor didn't answer. She walked toward the door, her walk precise, her head held with a grace that was entirely foreign to the domestic servant she was supposed to be.

She turned the corner into the solarium, the moonlight spilling over the expensive ferns. She was so focused on tucking the cufflink into the hidden pocket of her apron that she didn't hear the footsteps behind her—heavy, deliberate, and undeniably masculine.

She turned.

Alistair Kane stood in the doorway, his coat draped over his arm, his eyes reflecting the silver moonlight. He looked like a phantom, a predator who had wandered into the wrong den and found something he hadn't expected.

Elinor froze. Her knees buckled involuntarily, a reflex born of the absolute, crushing power he radiated.

She went down, not in subservience, but because her legs had suddenly lost the ability to carry her weight against the sheer gravity of his presence.

She knelt on the polished tile, the fragments of the glass she had been carrying clattering to the floor. The burn on her arm flared, a sharp, white-hot reminder of her station. She hunched her shoulders, trying to hide the ruined sleeve of her uniform, trying to shrink into the shadows.

"I—I apologize, Mr. Kane," she whispered, her head bowed.

"I didn't realize anyone was—"

Alistair didn't speak. He stepped into the light, his movements predatory and silent. He stopped directly in front of her.

He didn't look at her face. He looked at the floor where she was kneeling. He looked at the fragments of the glass. And then, his gaze fixed on her hand—the hand that was clutching the platinum cufflink against the floor.

Elinor felt his eyes on her. It was a heavy, physical sensation, like being pinned to the ground by a blade. He knelt down, his expensive charcoal trousers brushing against the same grime that stained her knees.

"You’re hurt," Alistair said. His voice was different now—not the cold, distant roar of the ballroom, but something closer, more dangerous.

"It’s nothing, sir," she replied, her heart drumming a frantic rhythm. She tried to pull her hand away, to hide the cufflink, but he was faster.

He caught her wrist. His fingers were cool, calloused, and firm. He didn't pull her up; he just held her hand, turning it over to examine the burn on her forearm.

The sight of the white bisque clinging to her skin seemed to darken his expression.

"This is not nothing," he murmured.

Then, his eyes shifted. They moved from the burn to the object she was desperately trying to conceal beneath her thumb. He saw the gleam of platinum. He saw the wolf crest.

Alistair’s breathing hitched. The air in the solarium seemed to vanish. He looked up, his grey eyes locking onto hers with a hunger that had nothing to do with business and everything to do with a long-buried ghost.

Elinor felt her breath catch in her throat. She had been playing a dangerous game, but here, in the dark, she realized the game was changing.

She wasn't just a maid anymore.

She was a witness.

She was a threat.

"Where," Alistair whispered, his voice trembling with a raw, terrifying intensity, "did you get that?"

Elinor stared back at him, the silence of the solarium pressing in on them. She had the power to lie, to deflect, to play the role of the broken wife.

But as she looked into Alistair Kane’s eyes, she saw the same fire that had consumed her world five years ago, and she knew—she could no longer afford to be a shadow.

She met his gaze, her eyes hard, clear, and utterly unafraid.

"I found it," she said, her voice a low, steady echo of the queen she had once been.

"Just like I found the truth, Mr. Kane. Are you sure you’re ready to see it?"

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