~ HEIDI ~
As my hurried paces bounce off the walls, I throw a glance over my shoulder to wash off the lingering feeling of being followed.
The pressure overwhelms me sooner and unease seizes my chest. I break into a run.
I don’t look back. And I don’t stop until I reach the stair flight. There, I bend over, hands on my knees as I gasp for air but stand alert when I hear gentle footsteps coming from the lower stairs.
It could be an Officer. Or not. A policeman's wallet wouldn’t get him near those brown-polished shoes appearing on the steps below.
Curiosity marks the trail for my eyes to travel upward—looking over black pressed pants to a leather belt of the same color, resting briefly on the red tie over a crisp white shirt that’s tucked neatly into a black vest before moving to the inked neck introducing the face bearing a darkened eye.
I’m not scared, not angry either. Just tired; tired like I had just finished a long hike up the mountain.
The motherfucker found me already, and there’s no more running.
“Hunter,” I breathe out, my shoulders dropping from exhaustion.
As I let out a hollow laugh, the man stops ascending the stairs and looks at me.
He cocks his head to the side and says flatly. “Come now, Love. Time to go home.”
~
TWENTY-EIGHT HOURS AGO.
Last I checked it was past nine in the morning, and I’ve spent the past eight hours preparing for the event that’ll soon create a rift throughout the country.
I stand on the balcony and clutch the handrail before inclining against it, sniffing in crisp fresh air as the late morning dews kiss my skin.
Staring at the distant foggy mountains, my face cracks with a smile. And I’m pleased with how the snowflakes drop slowly. But then the moment is disrupted when my cell phone dings in my apron pocket.
“Fuck!”
My hands work fast as I put the phone to silence so as not to piss off the person in the bathroom. His ears are the sharpest, that one. So is his tongue.
He’d stroll into the room wearing underpants while slinging a towel over his shoulder.
‘The hell are you doing on my balcony, Heidi?’ the bugger would say with a raspy voice. ‘And leave that phone of yours somewhere that’s not my room, will ya?’ he’d add just before yanking me out the door.
I unlock the phone and tap an unread message.
General Yosvolec: When I gave you my address it was to come over, not send presents.
Another message pops in immediately.
General Yosvolec: *crying emojis*
I can’t help but giggle as my fingers dance on the phone screen.
Heidi: Happy birthday, love xx
General Yosvolec: I want only youuu *crying emoji*
I try to imagine his expression while typing that. But then there’s the haze in my mind called worry. Worry that I may never get to see my lover in real life. That he’ll soon get frustrated with my excuses and call the relationship off.
He’s my first-ever romantic partner and we’ve been texting for over a year. I’m certain I made the right choice, except there’s still the case of meeting face-to-face.
It has just been texts, voice calls and video calls and I can’t tell him that I’m a servant who can’t go out or receive visitors, as I fear it might put him off.
Hell. Who’d tell their lover that?
My strongest excuse has been that I work as a caregiver and have little or no time for myself.
Heidi: We’ll see each other soon…
I hesitate to send, thumbs lingering on the screen as I press my lips to a thin line. Nope. That doesn’t pass. There’s no use leading him on when I may be trapped in a mansion for life. I hit the erase button real quick.
Heidi: You lovable rascal. Do u like the gift though?
There’s a smile on my face as I step into the room while typing that, but I don’t get to send it before footfalls on the creaking wooden floor sound close.
I pretend to be busy, stealthily sliding the patio doors shut while tucking away my phone.
As I take Morton’s ironed Vicuña pants from the ironing board to put them on the hanger, Dad Tad opens the door and pushes his head in.
I sigh in relief, thankful he didn’t catch me sneaking on Morton’s balcony.
“Where’s Morton?” he inquires after glancing around the room.
“No idea,” I lie. I may be Morton’s servant, but I’m not his bloody body camera.
The late-middle-aged man watches as I neatly arrange the pants alongside a matching vest, a jacket, and a blue dress shirt.
Ironing Morton’s clothes is the last of my duties before I can finally have time for myself, which is why I’m now brushing my apron with sassy fingers as I turn to face Dad Tad.
“I can join the party now, yes?” I say… with high hopes. Ones that get crushed when the man scrunches up his face.
“Hm.” He looks around the room, nodding, before his eyes settle on me again. “You will join the kitchen maids instead.”
I huff. “But I’m no fucking housemaid.”
“I say you are today,” he insists. “Go on, run along. And be quick about it. Your first brother arrives in less than an hour. We can’t have him witness your clumsiness.” He leaves without closing the door, his last sentence echoing down the hallway. “It’s enough that I have to tell him what a failure you are.”
Okay, duh!
“Some things don’t just settle, do they?” I say under my breath.
They aren’t cutting me some slack and I can’t understand why they keep pushing the matter as if I’m not serving enough punishment as it is.
Morton, Saturn, and I were adopted in the same year at the same age. We lived in separate mansions for twenty years, tutored on company management.
We were given shares from the highly rated White Group at fifteen with the rights to manage a company of our choice, and we were to submit a report of our profits five years later.
The goal was to earn as much as our first brother did in his time. Whoever does that could keep their shares and position, while the loser would serve the winners.
My fate tied me to the weak end of that string and I ended up stripped of my shares, position, dignity, and last name.
“Bloody arseholes!” I spit. “You might as well lick a blobfish’s ass with your disgusting habits.”
“Shut up, woman!” Morton yells from the bathroom. The guy’s too gross for my liking. Even his voice now sounds like grinding stones to my ears.
I roll my eyes as I exit the room, hitting the send button of my previous message.