Rising From Ruin: The Discarded Heiress

The walk up the driveway felt longer than usual. The gravel crunched under Dejah's sneakers-cheap canvas shoes she had found in the garage months ago. The manor stood against the night sky, a monument to excess and bad taste.

She reached the massive double doors. She pushed. Locked.

She knocked. Silence.

She waited.

Finally, the side door-the service entrance-creaked open. Mr. Henderson, the butler, stepped out. He was a man who had perfected the art of looking down his nose, even though he was shorter than most of the guests.

"Miss Dejah," he said, clasping his hands behind his back. "Mrs. Kensington has given strict instructions. After 6:00 PM, you are to use the servants' entrance."

Dejah checked her watch. "It's 6:05."

"Rules are rules," Henderson said, a smug smile playing on his lips. "Just because you've been out gallivanting doesn't mean you've earned the front door privileges."

Dejah stepped toward him. Henderson didn't move. He expected her to beg. He expected the old Dejah.

She focused. She let the mask slip. She didn't touch him. She just projected.

It's called Sakki in the East-Killing Intent. It wasn't magic; it was a biological broadcast. She dilated her pupils, dropped her chin, and focused her gaze entirely on his carotid artery. She visualized the blade entering, the spray, the gurgle. The micro-movements of her facial muscles and the shift in her pheromones signaled 'predator'.

Henderson's smile faltered. His eyes widened. He took an involuntary step back. His hands started to shake. He couldn't explain it, but his lizard brain was screaming at him that he was standing in a cage with a tiger. The air around them seemed to drop ten degrees. He struggled to breathe.

Sweat broke out on his upper lip. "I..."

The front door clicked and swung open. Kathryn stood there, her face a mask of fury.

"Henderson! What is taking so long? Let the ungrateful girl in!"

Henderson practically collapsed with relief. He scrambled aside, bowing low. "Yes, Madam. Sorry, Madam."

Dejah walked past him. She didn't blink.

The foyer was blindingly bright. Crystal chandeliers dripped from the ceiling. Kathryn stood in the center, arms crossed.

"You have some nerve coming back here," she hissed. "Jenna is suffering because of you."

"I am not her organ farm," Dejah said quietly.

Kathryn gasped. "We fed you! We clothed you for fifteen years!"

"You fed me scraps and clothed me in hand-me-downs," Dejah corrected, looking around the opulent hall. "While you bought Jenna a Steinway."

Kathryn opened her mouth to scream, but stopped. She saw Dejah's eyes. The same coldness that had terrified Henderson made her pause. She felt it too-the shift in the power dynamic.

A maid came down the stairs, carrying a pile of Dejah's clothes-her few t-shirts and jeans.

"Since you want to act like a stranger," Kathryn said, regaining her composure, "you can sleep like one. The Sterling family is arriving tomorrow. Their patriarch needs the guest suite on the second floor. Your room."

"Where am I supposed to sleep?"

Kathryn pointed a manicured finger upward. "The attic. The storage room. It fits you better."

Dejah looked at the maid, then at the stairs leading up to the dusty, uninsulated attic. A slight smile touched her lips, invisible to them. The attic had the only skylight access to the roof. It was exactly what she needed.

"Fine," she said.

She didn't argue. She didn't cry. She took the clothes from the maid and walked past Kathryn.

The attic was perfect. It was isolated. It had a skylight that opened onto the roof. It was the perfect staging ground for a ghost.

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