Madison's POV
The slap rang out in the air like a gunshot, the stinging pain spreading across my cheek as I jerked back. The tray of tea slipped from my trembling hands, crashing to the marble floor. Porcelain shattered, and scaling liquid splashed against my bare feet, searing my flesh.
There was a weighted silence, just long enough for me to brace myself for what would follow next.
"You arrogant idiot!" Jenny's voice—no, not my mother, just Jenny—sliced through the air like a knife. "Look what you've done! You can't do anything right! I should have gotten rid of you the moment you started showing your foolishness!"
I swallowed hard, my head still lowered. Never make eye contact. Never talk back. Never cry. I had learned the rules well.
"Forgive me, Mother. Forgive me, Father. I'll clean it up," I mumbled, falling to my knees to pick up the broken pieces.
"Who is your mother?"
Savannah's voice was sweetly ill, with an edge of amusement.
I had no time to answer before she ground her foot onto my hand, pressing my fingers into the sharp porcelain.
A jagged shard cut through my palm, and a burning bolt of pain ran up my arm. I gasped, but bit down hard on my lip to keep myself from crying out. Shouting would only make things worse.
Savannah laughed. "Pathetic."
She pressed her heel down harder, twisting it, daring me to do something. The glass sliced in deeper, warm blood rising under my fingers.
"You're always making trouble," she continued, her voice dripping with insincere sympathy. "I don't know why we even keep you around. A stray dog would be more use than you."
I wanted to scream. I wanted to fight back. But I didn't.
I couldn't.
Not after all these years of being beaten down, of knowing that my pain didn't count to them.
I hated remembering how it all started.
There was a time when this house was a dream.
I was seven years old when Jenny and Stephen Greenadopted me. They told me that they had chosen to adopt because they couldnt have their own baby so they wanted to have a home for a child instead of going through the trouble of bringing one up from a toddler.
I can still remember standing in front of the doors to the orphanage, barely able to contain my excitement. I had hoped for a family. I had prayed for a family. And when they brought me home, it felt as if all my dreams had come true.
They hugged me, kissed me, told me I was their special little girl.
Until Jenny got pregnant.
The day Savannah was born was the day that everything changed.
It started with small things.
They no longer addressed me as their daughter. They forgot to wish me goodnight. They were too occupied spoiling her, their real daughter.
And then there were the punishments. The chores. The slaps.
I was nothing.
And Savannah? She thrived in my suffering.
"Get out of here. You disgust me, slave." Jenny's voice was detached, cold, as if she was talking about something less than human.
My so-called father, Stephen, didn't say anything. He never said anything. He just sat at the table, sipping his coffee, reading the newspaper, pretending I wasn't there.
My hand throbbed as I held my palm against my dress, blood leaking through the sheer fabric. But I didn't dare go to get help. I cleaned up the mess, biting back pain, and then hurried out of the room before they could find another excuse to punish me.
I stumbled downstairs to the far end of the house —my bedroom.
It wasn't my room forever. I used to have a nice bedroom with light pink walls and stuffed animals. But when Savannah turned six, she decided she wanted both rooms, so I got moved in here.
A tiny, suffocating room with a leaking ceiling and a mattress on the floor. No windows, no heater for the winter. Just four walls to keep me in.
I shut the door behind me, my back against it as I breathed in short, sharp gasps.
I searched through my trembling hands for something to wrap around my wound, but I only had my torn, old clothes. I didn't have anything that hadn't been broken. Anything that was mine.
My eyes landed on a bottle of liquor hidden in the back of my closet. I had found it in this room when I newly moved in several years ago, thank God I didn't throw it away when I found it
I poured the drink onto my palm.
The burn was instant, searing, but I bit down on my lip until my mouth filled with the metallic taste of blood. I would not cry. I would not break.
But God, it hurt.
Not just my hand. Everything.
I was not just bleeding from my palm. I was bleeding from the inside out.
I was not wanted.
I was not loved.
I was just a broken puzzle piece, forced into a picture where I would never fit.
I was startled by a sudden knock at the door.
"Madison!" Savannah's voice was mocking. "Mother says you need to sweep the garden and scrub the stairs. And don't take all day about it—I want the floors clean before my friends arrive."
My throat bulged with a lump, but I swallowed it down.
"Yes, Savannah," I whispered, though I knew she was already walking away, laughing to herself.
I took the broom and the bucket and made myself go back downstairs.
This was my life. This was all it would ever be.
The grand staircase was the most elegant part of the Greenestate—white marble steps, a gleaming mahogany railing, and intricate gold detailing along the edges. A chandelier hung above, its crystals casting dazzling reflections across the polished surface.
It was beautiful.
And I was on my knees, scrubbing it.
My fingers ached as I dragged the brush over the cool marble, pushing away dirt that wasn’t even visible. The water in my bucket had turned a murky grey, and my already wounded palm stung with every movement.
My body screamed for rest, but I didn’t stop. Stopping meant punishment.
The rhythmic sound of footsteps echoed through the grand hall. Slow. Measured. Confident.
I instinctively lowered my head, keeping my eyes on the floor. Never make eye contact. Never draw attention.
But something in the familiar, steady gait made me glance up.
Samuel.
Madison's pov Dressed in a perfectly tailored suit, he walked toward me with an air of effortless grace. His dark hair was neatly styled, his strong jaw cleanly shaven. He carried himself like someone who belonged here, unlike me.But he was different.The only one who didn’t look at me like I was worthless."I see you’re scrubbing the staircase," he said, his tone casual. "Nice work."A small smile played on my lips, a rare, fleeting moment of warmth. "Mr. Samuel, welcome."He sighed, shaking his head. "Madison, how many times do I have to tell you? Drop the ‘Mr.’ stuff. Just call me Samuel."I swallowed hard, quickly checking over my shoulder to see if anyone was nearby.He followed my gaze and let out a knowing chuckle. "Relax. No one’s here to scold you for talking to me."That wasn’t entirely true. Someone was always watching.Still, I let myself breathe just a little."I brought you something," he said, pulling a small package from his coat pocket.Curious, I took it, my finger
Madison's povSavannah laughed—strong, bitter, derisive. "A gift? Who in their sane mind would throw money away on you?"I remained quiet only made her furious.Her hand closed around the spine of the book, her knuckles bleaching."No," I gasped, my chest tight with panic.She tore out the first page with a disgusting tear.My breath was frozen in my throat.Then another.And another.I rushed forward, trying to grab it from her, but she shoved me out of the way so hard I bounced into the crate, my aching hand smacking against the wood. Pain shot through my palm, but I barely noticed.I had to stand there—helplessly, hopelessly—while she ripped the book to shreds, page by page, scattering the pieces on the floor like dry petals."Please," I gasped, searing tears stinging my eyes. "Please, stop."Savannah just smiled.And with one final, deliberate motion, she ripped the cover in two and sent the tatters to my feet. Anger and despair convulsed within me, constricting, strangling. But
Madison's POVI stood in the corner of the great hall, broom still clutched in my hands. My palms ached from the hours of scrubbing, but I barely noticed. My eyes were fixed on the man before me.Samuel.His tall frame stood beside Savannah, his hand in hers. They were a match made perfect—sophisticated, wealthy, powerful. The kind of couple that was meant to be. The kind of marriage that would be history in the making.Mr. Johnson, my adoptive father, stood proudly beside Samuel's father, their voices filled with gravitas."As we've always said," Mr. Greenexclaimed, a proud smile spreading across his face, "this will be a strong union. The Greenname and the Wright family combined—what more could you want?"The room boomed with laughter as they all clinked their glasses Samuel didn't say anything, his expression stoic. He was always polite, always composed. But I saw how his fingers tightened around Savannah's hand for a moment, his jaw clenching.Savannah, however, beamed, holding o
Madison's POVI spent the entire morning on my daily chores—scrubbing, dusting, ensuring everything shone before a complaint could ever be lodged. My hands were scorched, my back was sore, but nothing could prepare me for what followed.Samuel appeared around half past eleven, alighting from his carriage in haste that sent my pulses racing. His face was aglow with something that I couldn't quite put my finger on. Excitement? Relief?"Madison!" he shouted, advancing towards me.I looked up, stunned. "Mr. Samuel?"He rolled his eyes at the appellation but didn't scold me this time. Rather, he grabbed my hands, the warm, solid grip."You won," he panted.My brows furrowed. "Won?"Samuel grinned, blue eyes twinkling. "The lottery, Madison. You won! The scholarship—the foreign trip on all expenses—you're going!"The world around me froze.The world beyond me spun.I looked at him, not breathing, not believing.Then, in an instant, I shrieked.I shrieked with joy, my hands flying to my mout
Madison's POVI spent the entire morning on my daily chores—scrubbing, dusting, ensuring everything shone before a complaint could ever be lodged. My hands were scorched, my back was sore, but nothing could prepare me for what followed.Samuel appeared around half past eleven, alighting from his carriage in haste that sent my pulses racing. His face was aglow with something that I couldn't quite put my finger on. Excitement? Relief?"Madison!" he shouted, advancing towards me.I looked up, stunned. "Mr. Samuel?"He rolled his eyes at the appellation but didn't scold me this time. Rather, he grabbed my hands, the warm, solid grip."You won," he panted.My brows furrowed. "Won?"Samuel grinned, blue eyes twinkling. "The lottery, Madison. You won! The scholarship—the foreign trip on all expenses—you're going!"The world around me froze.The world beyond me spun.I looked at him, not breathing, not believing.Then, in an instant, I shrieked.I shrieked with joy, my hands flying to my mout
Madison's POVI stood in the corner of the great hall, broom still clutched in my hands. My palms ached from the hours of scrubbing, but I barely noticed. My eyes were fixed on the man before me.Samuel.His tall frame stood beside Savannah, his hand in hers. They were a match made perfect—sophisticated, wealthy, powerful. The kind of couple that was meant to be. The kind of marriage that would be history in the making.Mr. Johnson, my adoptive father, stood proudly beside Samuel's father, their voices filled with gravitas."As we've always said," Mr. Greenexclaimed, a proud smile spreading across his face, "this will be a strong union. The Greenname and the Wright family combined—what more could you want?"The room boomed with laughter as they all clinked their glasses Samuel didn't say anything, his expression stoic. He was always polite, always composed. But I saw how his fingers tightened around Savannah's hand for a moment, his jaw clenching.Savannah, however, beamed, holding o
Madison's povSavannah laughed—strong, bitter, derisive. "A gift? Who in their sane mind would throw money away on you?"I remained quiet only made her furious.Her hand closed around the spine of the book, her knuckles bleaching."No," I gasped, my chest tight with panic.She tore out the first page with a disgusting tear.My breath was frozen in my throat.Then another.And another.I rushed forward, trying to grab it from her, but she shoved me out of the way so hard I bounced into the crate, my aching hand smacking against the wood. Pain shot through my palm, but I barely noticed.I had to stand there—helplessly, hopelessly—while she ripped the book to shreds, page by page, scattering the pieces on the floor like dry petals."Please," I gasped, searing tears stinging my eyes. "Please, stop."Savannah just smiled.And with one final, deliberate motion, she ripped the cover in two and sent the tatters to my feet. Anger and despair convulsed within me, constricting, strangling. But
Madison's pov Dressed in a perfectly tailored suit, he walked toward me with an air of effortless grace. His dark hair was neatly styled, his strong jaw cleanly shaven. He carried himself like someone who belonged here, unlike me.But he was different.The only one who didn’t look at me like I was worthless."I see you’re scrubbing the staircase," he said, his tone casual. "Nice work."A small smile played on my lips, a rare, fleeting moment of warmth. "Mr. Samuel, welcome."He sighed, shaking his head. "Madison, how many times do I have to tell you? Drop the ‘Mr.’ stuff. Just call me Samuel."I swallowed hard, quickly checking over my shoulder to see if anyone was nearby.He followed my gaze and let out a knowing chuckle. "Relax. No one’s here to scold you for talking to me."That wasn’t entirely true. Someone was always watching.Still, I let myself breathe just a little."I brought you something," he said, pulling a small package from his coat pocket.Curious, I took it, my finger
Madison's POVThe slap rang out in the air like a gunshot, the stinging pain spreading across my cheek as I jerked back. The tray of tea slipped from my trembling hands, crashing to the marble floor. Porcelain shattered, and scaling liquid splashed against my bare feet, searing my flesh.There was a weighted silence, just long enough for me to brace myself for what would follow next."You arrogant idiot!" Jenny's voice—no, not my mother, just Jenny—sliced through the air like a knife. "Look what you've done! You can't do anything right! I should have gotten rid of you the moment you started showing your foolishness!"I swallowed hard, my head still lowered. Never make eye contact. Never talk back. Never cry. I had learned the rules well."Forgive me, Mother. Forgive me, Father. I'll clean it up," I mumbled, falling to my knees to pick up the broken pieces."Who is your mother?"Savannah's voice was sweetly ill, with an edge of amusement.I had no time to answer before she ground her f