That evening, when Nadia put the antique tea set deep at the bottom of the storage cabinet, she didn’t know she had just witnessed the first move in a game she didn’t yet know she had already become a pawn in. Before that game could even take clear shape, another figure stepped into the mansion, a man no one among the servants dared to name aloud.
It was a midweek evening when Theodore was hosting a private dinner he called a business matter, and the entire house had been instructed to prepare everything with care down to the smallest detail. Nadia overheard from Mr. Oswald that tonight’s guest was the man who had once saved the entire Hawthorne family from a disaster that ordinary money couldn’t solve.
A few years earlier, the family’s port investment division had fallen into the hands of a group of extortionists, men who threatened to burn every contract to the ground and destroy the family’s reputation if they didn’t receive what they wanted. Theodore, with all his wealth and his expensive lawyers, had still been helpless until one man appeared and made the problem disappear after a single conversation.
That man was Dragan Kovac, and from then on Theodore carried a debt of gratitude he knew money could never repay. When the polished black car rolled through the stone gates at dusk, the whole house seemed to sink down by one quiet beat. Dragan stepped out, tall and composed, wearing a perfectly tailored charcoal suit.
His gray eyes cold as cooled metal, sweeping once across the hall, taking in everything while revealing nothing. Behind him came a silent bodyguard, and the air around the two men carried such weight that even Clarissa, for the first time since arriving here, lowered her voice by a shade. Nadia was assigned to serve during dinner, and she worked with her usual carefulness, moving quietly among powerful people like a weightless shadow.
But that night, perhaps because of the tension, or perhaps because the guest’s sharp, cold gaze unsettled her, as she carried the tray of wine across the room, the toe of her shoe caught on the edge of the rug, and the tray tilted. A glass slipped from the tray, fell, and shattered across the marble floor. The crisp sound of breaking glass ringing through the silent room like an accusation.
In that moment, the blood inside Nadia seemed to turn cold. She bent down quickly, her trembling hands hurrying to gather the shards of glass, her head lowered, waiting for a shout, an insult, something she had grown far too used to. But what left her frozen wasn’t punishment. It was another hand bending down beside her, a large hand with old scars running across the knuckles, gently picking up a shard of glass and placing it on the tray to help her.
Nadia looked up, and for one brief instant, she met Dragan Kovac’s gray eyes looking straight into hers. There was no pity in that gaze, and no contempt either, only something difficult to name. As if he were seeing something others did not see, or remembering something he had tried to forget. The moment lasted only a breath, then he stood, said nothing to her, and returned to the dinner table as though nothing had happened.
Nadia withdrew from the room with her heart beating wildly, unable to understand why such a small gesture had moved her so deeply. It had been far too long since anyone in this house had bent down to her level. After dinner, as Dragan was being seen to his car, the bodyguard quietly said something about one of the servants having caused a clumsy incident, and Dragan stopped beside the car door, his eyes turning toward the lit windows of the mansion.
There are people who trample the weak because they think they have no one to protect them, he said quietly, his voice low and cold. But I never forget people who do that. The bodyguard didn’t fully understand the meaning of those words, and he didn’t dare ask. The car rolled away into the night, leaving behind a house that would soon become the place where the very rule he had just spoken of would be tested.
That trial began only a few days after the mysterious guest left, when Clarissa decided it was time to draw the boundaries of power inside this house. One morning, while Nadia was cleaning the hallway that led to Theodore’s study, the place where she had dusted the bookshelves and polished the walnut desk for seven long years, Clarissa appeared and blocked the doorway with her arms folded.
“Starting today, you’re not allowed to set foot in this room anymore,” she said, her voice flat, but cold as stone. Nadia softly explained that it was part of her work, that Mr. Theodore had always wanted the room kept clean, but Clarissa tilted her head and looked at her with a thin smile, as if she were looking at a child who had dared to talk back.
“I didn’t ask for your opinion,” she said. “When I say you’re not allowed in, it means you’re not allowed in. And the next time you open your mouth to contradict me, you’ll learn that in this house there are people who are allowed to speak and people who are only allowed to stay silent.” Nadia lowered her head, swallowed the bitter lump in her throat, and stepped back.
She was used to insults, but there was something in the way Clarissa spoke that made her understand this wasn’t a passing impulse, but a calculated strategy, a way of tightening the cord little by little around the necks of those she considered threats. A few days later, the humiliation reached the deepest place in Nadia’s heart.
That afternoon, Mila stopped by the mansion to bring her sister a small box of pastries she had just made as a trial at the bakery, and the two sisters stood speaking to each other in sign language in the side passage near the kitchen, their hands moving through the air, their faces bright with a rare joy. Clarissa passed by, stopped to watch them for a moment with curiosity mixed with contempt, then dropped a sentence that left them both frozen.
“What a strange sight,” she said, “the two of you sisters, one who can’t speak and one who really shouldn’t speak. Perhaps both of you should learn how to keep quiet according to your place.” Nadia felt as if someone had slapped her across the face, not because Clarissa had aimed at her, but because she had dared to touch Mila, dared to turn the most sacred thing between the two sisters into a cheap joke.
Disclaimer : This content may be created by AI for entertainment purposes. Any resemblance to real persons, events, or places is coincidental.