The heat licked my skin, and instinct surged through me. In one desperate, unthinking motion, I twisted. The iron didn’t meet the swell of my stomach but slammed into my forearm instead. The sound was a sickening hiss, a metallic scream that seemed to echo against the marble and wood of the kitchen. The smell of burning flesh made my stomach lurch violently, my body igniting with pain so intense it felt like a white-hot supernova. My knees buckled, and I crumpled to the floor, clutching my arm as tears streamed down my face. The world spun in nauseating, disorienting circles, and for a moment, I thought I might pass out right there, right at the edge of this grotesque family portrait.
“Now for the source of the problem,” Patricia purred, stepping closer, the iron once again poised over the vulnerable curve of my abdomen. Her shadow stretched over me like a dark eclipse, and I realized I could smell the perfume and the blood mingling in a suffocating haze. The taste of terror coated my mouth as I tried to crawl backward, my hands scraping against the cold tile, but Amanda’s grip prevented any real escape.
And then—chaos shattered the tension like glass. The heavy oak doors didn’t just open; they exploded inward, the lock snapping with the brutality of a gunshot. “What in the name of God is happening in here?” The voice was authoritative, commanding, and impossibly familiar.
Christopher Lancaster stood in the doorway, his tailored suit wrinkled, hair disheveled from travel, eyes burning with a fire that made Patricia’s iron seem laughably insignificant. This wasn’t the polished, billionaire son the world adored. This was a man who had crossed the Atlantic on a gut feeling, a man who sensed the danger that no one else could see.
For a heartbeat, the room was suspended in silence. Patricia’s lips curled into a smile, a ghastly twitch of delusion. “Christopher, darling! You’re home early. This girl… she attacked me. I was simply—”
But Christopher’s gaze didn’t linger on his mother. It found me, huddled on the floor, my arm already blistered and weeping, eyes wide with terror. He saw the iron poised like a weapon, he saw Amanda’s panicked, guilty expression, he saw the truth that no amount of family loyalty could hide. The silence that followed was deafening, heavy with the sound of a dynasty cracking at its foundation, and for the first time, the glittering halls of Lancaster Manor felt like a tomb.
“Security,” Christopher’s voice came, calm yet absolute, a death sentence veiled as instruction. “Lock the gates. Nobody leaves. Call the police. And tell the board… the Queen is dead.”
Patricia’s smile faltered, flickering like a candle in the wind. Amanda released me, stumbling back, eyes wide, mouth opening and closing without sound. I collapsed fully onto the floor, my body shaking, but the immediate danger had been broken. I could still feel the heat of the iron, still smell the burnt flesh of my arm, still feel the wild, primal terror thrumming in my veins. But above all of that was Christopher’s presence, a shield of authority and fury that had arrived just in time.
The kitchen, once a palace of luxury and meticulous design, was now a battleground of fear, fire, and revelation. The walls seemed to close in, echoing with the unspoken horrors that had been hidden behind the veneer of wealth, status, and tradition. Every expensive marble surface, every polished utensil, every glimmering chandelier bore witness to the fracture of a family, to the consequences of cruelty, and to the unyielding instinct of a mother determined to survive.
As I lay there, crying and shivering, the heavy gates clanged shut, the sirens outside faintly beginning their wail, and I realized that nothing would ever be the same. The Lancaster empire had lost its grip, and in the chaos, I clung to the life growing inside me, the one proof that even in the midst of unthinkable terror, some spark of hope could survive.
I didn’t know what would happen next. I didn’t know if I would make it out unscathed, if Patricia and Amanda would face justice, or if the legacy of pain and cruelty would stretch even further than the estate’s boundaries. All I knew was that the iron, the screams, the betrayal—they were behind me, and in front of me was the uncertain, fragile promise of survival, of motherhood, and of retribution that had only just begun.
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