by Melissa
Part 25. The Hands
of the Fox.
The dawn light was
gray and unforgiving, filtering through the high, barred window of the maid's
quarters. I lay stomach-down on my hard cot, the thin sheets feeling like
sandpaper against the fire still smouldering on my skin. I was drifting in that
heavy, post-traumatic sleep - the kind where your brain tries to hide from
reality when a sudden, jarring vibration
shook the metal frame of my bed.
"Wakey-wakey,
Melissa, little jailbird," a voice drawled, sharp with mock cheer.
I bolted upright - or tried to. Before I could even clear the mattress, a jagged line of white-hot pain shot up from my lower back, searing through my nerves. I gasped, a strangled sound escaping my throat as I collapsed back into the pillow with a low moan.
Sabrina stood over
me, leaning against the door frame. Her maid's uniform was impeccably pressed,
a sharp contrast to my dishevelled state, and her eyes glinted with that
familiar, predatory mischief.
"Oh, look at
you," she cooed, stepping closer until she was hovering over me, her eyes
dancing with malice. "The prodigal servant returns. I heard the charges
were dropped. Quite the creative defense your lawyer cooked up. So, what should
I call you now? Our little resident thief? Or should I go with 'the little
masseuse'?"
The blood rushed
to my face, a heat that rivaled the sting of the Dean's paddle. I forced myself
to look at her, my voice trembling with indignation. "I didn't steal that
money, Sabrina! And I'm not... I'm not that kind of girl. I never gave anyone a
foot massage for money. It's a lie. A legal trick to keep me out of a
cell."
Sabrina threw her head back and laughed, a dry, melodic sound that echoed off the cramped walls. "Deny it all you want, honey, but that's a pity. Truly. If you're actually good at it, you're wasting a talent. In a place like this, everyone is selling something - their names, their loyalty, their bodies. If you've got a skill that makes a girl melt, you'd be a fool not to put a price tag on it. Survival isn't about dignity, Melissa. It's about leverage."
I tried to shift,
intending to stand up and defend whatever shred of dignity I had left, but as I
moved, another white-hot spike of pain shot through my body. I winced, my
features contorting in sudden, sharp agony. I instinctively reached back,
hovering my hand over the bruised, inflamed skin beneath my nightshirt.
The laughter died
in Sabrina's throat. Her sharp eyes tracked my movement, then flicked toward
the hallway, toward the memory of the Dean's office. The smirk vanished
instantly, replaced by a grim, knowing clarity.
"Wait,"
she whispered, her tone dropping an octave. "The Dean. She gave you a
'private welcome' back in her office, didn't she? The old-fashioned way?"
I didn't answer. I
bit my lip and stared at the floor, my silence a screaming confession. I felt
exposed, more than I had when I was actually naked in Henderson's office. The
power dynamic shifted in an instant: the predator in front of me became something
else, a comrade in a shared war.
Sabrina sat on the
edge of my cot. The metal groaned under her weight, but her touch, when she
reached out to squeeze my shoulder, was uncharacteristically steady. "Look
at me, jailbird."
I reluctantly
lifted my gaze, blinking back tears of sheer frustration.
"I'm glad
you're back," she said, her voice devoid of its usual barbs. "And
don't look so miserable. The Dean might hate your guts, but you have more
friends in this snake pit than you think."
"Friends?"
I whispered, my voice cracking. "Everyone thinks I'm a delinquent or... or
a servant who sells herself."
"The labels
don't matter as much as the actions, you idiot," Sabrina countered, giving
my shoulder a small, firm shake. "The maids didn't just sit around while
you were in a cell. We caused a stir. We 'forgot' to bleach the Dean's linens, we
let the dust pile up in the faculty lounge. It was a silent strike, Melissa.
Even the students - the ones you think look down on you - signed a petition to
have you brought back. They liked having someone who actually knew how to
handle their delicate silks without ruining them."
My heart gave a
strange, painful thud. A petition? The girls I envied, the ones whose lives I
was supposed to share, had actually noticed I was gone?
"And you
should know," Sabrina continued, her voice dropping to a low,
conspiratorial hum, "Mrs. Henderson fought for you like a lioness. She
went head-to-head with the Dean, risking her own position to keep you from
being shipped off to a real prison. She insisted that you were 'Elmwood
property' and that your correction was Elmwood's responsibility, not the
State's."
I processed that
with a shiver. Elmwood's "protection" came with its own heavy price,
as my bruised skin could attest, but it was protection nonetheless.
"It was
Agnès, the receptionist, though, who really moved the mountains," Sabrina
added, her expression turning almost respectful. "That woman is a saint
with a steel spine. She was the one who tracked down that high-priced lawyer
for you and convinced her to take your case for pennies. I don't know what she
promised her, but she didn't sleep until she knew you were coming back."
Sabrina stood up,
smoothed her apron, and looked down at me with a complicated expression - part
pity, part respect.
"You've got
people in your corner, jailbird. Now, get dressed. Mrs. Henderson expects you
in the kitchen in ten minutes, and she won't be as 'gentle' as I am if you're
late. Apply that salve she gave you and move. The world doesn't stop turning
just because your backside is purple."
I watched her
leave, the door clicking shut behind her. I was still "Maid Jones,"
and I was still in pain, but as I reached for the tin of salve, I felt a spark
of something I hadn't felt in weeks. I wasn't just a ghost in the machine of
Elmwood Academy. I was real to them.
***
The hallway floor
was a cold, unyielding mirror of white marble, and my task was to make it
shine. I was on my knees, the coarse fabric of my uniform bunching at my
joints, moving the scrub brush in rhythmic, agonizing circles. Every reach
forward sent a fresh tug of fire across my back - a sharp reminder of the
Dean's "welcome" and the weight of the labels I now carried.
Suddenly, the
silence was shattered by the rhythmic thud of expensive loafers and the melodic
chatter of students. Before my arrest, I had been a ghost to them, a piece of
the architecture. Now, as the group approached, the air grew thick with a
different kind of energy. The chatter didn't stop; it changed.
"Is that
her?" a voice whispered, loud enough to carry.
"I heard
she's the one who does the massages..."
I kept my head
down, my knuckles white as I gripped the scrub brush. My back and thighs
throbbed with every shift of my weight. I wasn't invisible anymore. I was a
curiosity. A scandal.
"I heard
she's a thief," a girl mocked, her shadow falling over my bucket.
"I'd keep your lockers double-locked, girls. Some people just can't help
themselves."
"Oh, shut up,
Penelope," another voice snapped—it was a girl from the Leadership class I
used to envy. "She's back because the charges were dropped. That means she
didn't do it. Besides, we're the ones who signed the petition to get her released.
Don't act like you didn't see the list in the common room."
"Actually,"
a third girl chimed in, her voice softer, almost kind, "I'm just glad
she's back. I was one of the first to sign that paper. No one else knows how to
starch the pleated skirts without making them look like cardboard. Welcome back,
Melissa."
I didn't look up,
but my heart gave a small, painful squeeze. They knew my name. They had fought
for me, in their own privileged, distant way.
Then, a tall girl
with a perfectly tailored blazer stepped closer, her shadow engulfing me.
"So, is it true?" she asked, a smirk in her voice. "About the
massages? My arches are killing me from varsity practice. I've got ten euros in
my bag. What do you say, Jones? Just once? Consider it a thank-you for us
signing that petition to get you out of that dungeon."
I froze. The lie
Miss Delgado had crafted - the "foot massage" defense - was now a
bartering chip. I felt a wave of nausea, followed by that terrifying, illicit
heat I had felt in the police station.
"I... I am
not allowed to receive tips, Miss," I whispered, my voice thick with a
humility I had to force. "And I am not allowed to give... massages."
"Oh, come
on," the girl pressed, "who's going to tell? Just a quick one."
"She said no,
Sarah!" the second girl argued. "And stop bringing up the petition
like she owes us. We did it because it was right."
"Enough!"
The voice was like
a shard of ice. We all flinched as Mrs. Williams, the Leadership Development
teacher, strode down the hall. Her presence was suffocatingly cold. Her gaze
swept over the students, then landed on me with a look of pure, clinical
disgust.
"Disperse.
Immediately," Mrs. Williams commanded. "If I see a single one of you,
students, loitering again, I will personally rescind my letters of
recommendation for your summer internships. Consider how the Board of Regents
will view a student who treats the hallways like a bazaar for... illicit
services. This is an institution of excellence: act as if you belong to it, or
find yourselves unwelcome in the circles you aspire to lead.
The students
scrambled, the sound of their retreating footsteps echoing until the hallway
was silent. Only Mrs. Williams remained, looking down at me as if I were a
stain she couldn't quite bleach out.
"Stand up,
girl," she snapped at me.
I forced myself to
my feet, stifling a wince as my muscles protested the movement. Shifting my
weight carefully to avoid the worst of the sting, I dropped into a deep, humble
curtsy, keeping my gaze fixed submissively on Mrs. Williams' sensible heels.
"You are a
distraction," she said, her voice vibrating with suppressed fury.
"Your presence here is contaminating the focus of my students. I will not
have my classroom discussions interrupted by the sight of a... disgraced
domestic. It seems your 'reputation' has preceded you, and I will not have my
girls corrupted by your presence."
She turned on her
heel. "Follow me. You are being reassigned."
Mrs. Williams
didn't speak to me as she marched me toward the servant's wing. She found Mrs.
Henderson in the linen room and spoke to her as if I weren't standing three
feet away.
"The Dean may
be content with her scrubbing floors, but I want her out of sight,"
Williams declared. "She is to be kept away from the student corridors. Put
her somewhere damp and dark where her 'talents' won't be a temptation for the
girls' curiosity."
Mrs. Henderson's
jaw tightened, but she nodded. "I understand, Ma'am. I'll put her in the
sub-basement laundry."
Once Williams
left, the Head maid turned to me. Her eyes softened for a fraction of a second
- perhaps remembering the salve she'd given me - before the mask of authority
returned. "You heard her. To the laundry, Melissa. Sabrina is already
there."
The laundry was a
world of steam and heavy, wet heat. The scent of bleach and lavender was
overpowering. In the center of the room, Sabrina stood over a large porcelain
basin, her sleeves rolled up to her elbows.
"Back so
soon?" Sabrina smirked, though it wasn't unkind. "The VIP treatment
didn't last long, did it? I heard Mrs. Williams caught a group of girls trying
to hire you."
"I'm
'distracting' the students," I said, my voice flat, plunging my hands into
the basin.
Sabrina pointed to
a pile of delicate, lace-trimmed fabric. "Well, welcome to the pit. No
machines for these, jailbird. These are the students' silk intimates.
Expensive, fragile, and filthy. You wash them by hand. Every stitch. If you
tear a single thread, Mrs. Henderson will have your hide, and I'll be the one
who has to report it."
I looked at the
mountain of delicate, expensive lace and silk. My hands were already raw from
the corridor floor, and the thought of hours of scrubbing by hand made my
muscles ache.
"Get to
work," Sabrina added, her voice dropping into a low, playful hum that set
my nerves on edge. "And remember, Melissa, treat these with the respect
they deserve. These girls pay for the privilege of never feeling a rough seam
against their skin."
I reached out, my
fingers trembling as they brushed against a camisole of cream-colored silk, so
light it felt like a sigh. The lace was intricate, a web of hand-stitched
floral patterns that looked like frost on a windowpane. It was cool, soft, and
impossibly indulgent.
As I pulled the
first garment into the basin, the movement caused my own uniform to shift, and
I was suddenly, acutely aware of the brutal contrast beneath my maid's dress.
While these students - girls who were supposed to be my peers - floated through
their day encased in the finest fabrics money could buy, I was trapped in the
"Court-approved" undergarments I'd been issued upon my arrival at
Elmwood. The fabric was a thick, industrial-grade cotton, bleached so
aggressively it had become abrasive. It was scratchy and stiff, the elastic
waistbands digging into my hips with a relentless, utilitarian grip.
Every time I
leaned over the porcelain tub to scrub, the coarse material chafed against the
sensitive, inflamed skin where the Dean's paddle had left its mark. The thick,
uneven seams of my panties felt like jagged ridges, a constant, stinging
reminder of my "delinquent" status. I was literally surrounded by
luxury, my hands submerged in a fortune's worth of silk and lace, yet my own
body was held prisoner by the rough, humiliating reality of the state's
"correctional" attire. The silk in the water was for the leaders, the
scratchy cotton against my skin was for the servants.
"Something
wrong, jailbird?" Sabrina asked, leaning back against the drying rack, her
eyes tracing the tension in my shoulders.
"No," I
whispered, my voice thick as I plunged a pair of silk knickers into the soapy
water. "Just realizing that some fabrics are designed to make you forget
you have a body... and others are designed to make sure you never forget you're
being punished."
Sabrina's smirk
softened, just for a second, into something that looked like pity.
"Welcome back to Elmwood, Melissa. At least the silk is pretty to look at
while you're working."
I didn't answer. I
just scrubbed, the suds stinging the raw patches on my fingers, while my own
rough, court-issued underwear continued to bite into the welts on my skin with
every agonizing movement.
***
The humid,
bleaching heat of the laundry room was a physical weight, but it was nothing
compared to the chill that ran down my spine when Mrs. Henderson appeared at
the door.
"Melissa. Dry
your hands," the Head maid commanded, her voice neutral. "Mrs.
Williams wants to see you in her office. Immediately."
Sabrina gave me a
long, low whistle, her eyes tracking the damp, red skin of my forearms.
"From the pit to the lion's den. Good luck, jailbird."
I smoothed my
apron with trembling fingers, every movement a jagged reminder of the Dean's
wooden paddle. The walk from the sub-basement felt like a journey between two
different planets. I left behind the roar of the washers and the suffocating
scent of bleach, ascending into the hushed, climate-controlled elegance of the
west wing. Here, the air was scented with expensive wood and the quiet hum of
privilege. My rough, court-issued cotton underwear felt like a leaden weight
with every step on the plush carpet, a reminder that no matter how high I
climbed these stairs, I was still wearing the uniform of the fallen.
When I reached the
heavy oak door of the Leadership Development office, I took a steadying breath
and knocked.
"Enter."
Mrs. Williams was
framed by the afternoon sun, looking every bit the cold architect of Elmwood's
elite. I stepped onto the plush carpet and immediately dropped into a deep,
practised curtsy, my eyes fixed on the floor.
"Ma'am. You
summoned me?"
"I did,"
she said, her voice a sharp, clinical instrument. "Stand up, girl,"
she said, her voice surprisingly conversational. "I find myself in a state
of rare curiosity. In all my years at Elmwood, no maid has made such a... vivid
impression on my students. Nor has any domestic been caught smuggling my
personal lecture notes on Leadership Development."
I felt the heat
climb my neck. "I... I found them, Ma'am. I shouldn't have kept
them."
"And yet, you
didn't just keep them. You annotated them." She leaned back, tapping a pen
against her chin. "You referenced my own biography of Machiavelli in the
margins. Why?"
I swallowed hard,
the "Maid Jones" mask slipping for a fleeting second. "Because
of you, Ma'am. Before I... before I came here, I read your work on the
pragmatism of power. I wanted to come to Elmwood specifically to sit in your
classroom. I thought... I thought I could learn how to lead."
Mrs. Williams'
eyebrows arched. "A maid with an interest in 'The Prince'? Tell me then,
what is Machiavelli's view on the stability of the class structure?"
"He believed
that a ruler must either treat the people so well that they have no reason to
rebel, or crush them so completely that they lack the power to do so," I
answered, my heart hammering. "But he also warned that the most dangerous
position for a ruler is to be hated by the common people while being envied by
the elite. It creates a vacuum where the structure collapses from both ends. To
maintain stability, a ruler must possess Machiavellian 'virtù' - not a
conventional morality, but the cunning and strength to adapt to the whims of
Fortune, ensuring the State survives regardless of the cost to one's own
soul."
A heavy silence
followed. Mrs. Williams stared at me, her gaze no longer clinical, but sharp
with a dangerous kind of recognition.
"Never say
those things to the Dean," she said quietly. "She views 'stability'
as a divine right, not a calculated maneuver. If she knew you had such a mind
for political philosophy, she wouldn't just give you the paddle, girl. She
would break you entirely to ensure you stayed in your place."
"I don't try
to attract attention, Ma'am," I whispered. "I just wanted to
learn."
"And yet,
attention follows you like a shadow," she sighed, standing up and walking
to the window. "I have a problem. My Leadership class is obsessed with
you. They aren't discussing Machiavelli, they are discussing your 'divine
touch' and the rumor of the foot massages. It is disrupting the curriculum. It
has become a myth, and myths are harder to control than facts."
She turned back to
me. "Tell me the truth. About the rumor."
"I have never
given a massage for money, Ma'am," I said, my voice steady despite the
shame. "But... I have given one. Once. It was... a moment of
weakness."
"A moment of
weakness that has become a legend," Mrs. Williams sighed. "I have a
problem, and I prefer to solve problems through 'legitimacy.' If I forbid it,
the obsession grows. If I ignore it, it remains a scandalous secret."
She paused, her
eyes tracing the line of my jaw with a clinical, detached curiosity. "But
you have only given a massage once? That is a surprising lack of practice for
someone with such a reputation. Though," she added, tapping a manicured
finger against the manila folder on her desk, "perhaps it is in the blood.
According to your file, your mother is also a foot masseuse."
My mother? The
words hit me like a physical blow. I nearly opened my mouth to protest, to tell
her that my mother was a world-class planetologist currently prepping for a
Mars simulation, a woman who dealt in geological and atmospheric data, not
reflexology. But then, the cold reality of the "biometrics" caught in
my throat. I looked at the folder. It wasn't my file. It was the file of the
other Melissa Jones, the girl whose life I was wearing like a leaden weight.
The "mother" Mrs. Williams was referring to was a woman I'd never
met, a woman who worked with her hands just as I was being forced to do.
Mrs. Williams
leaned forward, her eyes pinning me like a butterfly to a board. "The
Elmwood Academy Festival is next week-end. I am proposing that you provide foot
massages as part of a controlled, school-sanctioned festival booth. If the
girls see it as a regulated service, the illicit thrill will vanish. It puts
the rumor in the rearview mirror."
She paused, noting
the flicker of pure, naked horror in my eyes before I could mask it with my
'Maid Jones' persona.
"Consider
this a strategic exorcism, Melissa," she continued, her voice regaining
its instructional cadence. "Once the curiosity is satisfied and the
service is rendered common and public, the mystique dies. Therefore, I have
made it a condition of this arrangement that after the festival concludes, your
duties in this specific... capacity... will be terminated. You will return to
your standard domestic labor, and the students will be strictly forbidden from
requesting such services again. We are killing the myth by overindulging it for
two days."
The thought was a
double-edged sword. Two days of being a public spectacle, a 'star' of a booth
where my degradation was the main attraction, in exchange for a future where I
might finally be left alone to scrub floors in peace. It was a high price for a
small mercy, but in the world of Elmwood, it was the only 'virtù' I had left to
trade."
My jaw dropped.
"You really want me to... give massages at the festival?"
"But,"
she paused, her eyes narrowing, "this plan only works if the rumor is
actually true. If you are mediocre, the legend persists. If you are as good as
they say, the novelty will wear off once they've all had their turn."
Mrs. Williams
stood up, walked around her desk, and sat in the guest armchair, crossing one
elegant leg over the other. She kicked off her sensible heels, revealing feet
clad in expensive silk hosiery.
"The rumors
say you have a 'divine touch,' girl. I am a woman of facts, not rumors."
She gestured toward her feet. "Kneel. I wish to test your ability. Prove
to me that you are worth the scandal."
I felt the blood
drain from my face, then rush back in a torrent of heat. The memory of my dream
in the cell - the bowing, the submission, the scent of expensive perfume -
collided with the cold reality of the office. I was a student of Machiavelli, a
girl who wanted the stars, and yet here I was, being told to prove my worth
through the most debased form of service.
I looked at her
feet, then at her cold, expectant eyes. My mind screamed at the humiliation,
but my body... my body felt that terrifying, illicit spark of anticipation.
Slowly, I sank to
my knees on the plush carpet.
The silence in the
office was absolute, broken only by the distant hum of the academy and the
rapid, thudding rhythm of my own heart. I stayed on my knees for a heartbeat
longer than necessary, my mind a frantic battlefield. To my left sat the file,
the paper trail of a life that wasn't mine. Before me were the feet of the
woman who represented the very height of the intellectual world I craved to
join.
I looked at her
feet, then at her cold, expectant eyes. My mind screamed at the humiliation, a
raw, jagged instinct to stand up and shout my true name until the walls shook.
But then, the sharp, cool voice of Miss Delgado echoed in my head: "You
become the perfect maid, the one they think you are. You don't fight back...
Let me handle the rest."
Doing as I was
told wasn't an act of weakness. It was an act of virtù. To speak like
Machiavelli, it was the "fox" realizing that to survive the
"lion", one must first become invisible. I wasn't submitting; I was
biding my time, playing the part of "Maid Jones" so perfectly that
they would never see the strike coming.
Slowly, I reached
out. My fingers, still red and slightly swollen from the lye in the
sub-basement laundry, felt clumsy as I took Mrs. Williams' right foot into my
hands. The contrast was stark: her skin was cool, encased in the finest silk
hosiery, while my palms were rough and calloused from a week of manual labor.
"Remove the
silk, girl," Mrs. Williams commanded, her voice as detached as a
surgeon's. "I cannot judge a talent through a barrier."
With trembling
hands, I carefully peeled back the hosiery. As I began, I felt that strange,
focused calm settle over me, the same one I had felt in the jail cell. My
thumbs found the arch of her foot, and instinctively, I applied a firm,
grounding pressure.
I started with the
heels, using the base of my palms to work in slow, circular motions. I could
feel the tension in her tendons, the rigid, unyielding stress of a woman who
spent her life maintaining a posture of absolute authority. I focused all my
frustration, all my suppressed academic ambition, and all my physical pain into
the movement.
"You're
shaking," Mrs. Williams noted, though she didn't pull away.
"I am...
tired, Ma'am," I whispered, my thumbs sliding up toward the ball of her
foot.
I began to use a
technique I hadn't even known I possessed, a rhythmic, undulating pressure that
seemed to mimic the pulse of a heartbeat. I worked the small bones of the
metatarsals, my touch alternating between a deep, punishing friction and a
feather-light graze. I felt her breath hitch. The sharp, rhythmic tapping of
her pen against the desk stopped.
As I moved to the
toes, gently pulling and rotating each one, I heard a low, involuntary sound
escape her throat, not a moan, but a long, shuddering exhale of surrendered
tension.
"Machiavelli
spoke of the 'lion and the fox,'" Mrs. Williams murmured, her voice
sounding uncharacteristically thick. "The lion for force, the fox for
craft. You, Melissa... you have the hands of the fox. There is a deceptive
intelligence in the way you move."
I didn't answer. I
moved to the second foot, my confidence growing with every second of her
silence. I found the pressure points near the ankle, pressing inward until I
felt the muscles beneath the surface finally liquefy. I wasn't just massaging a
teacher, I was dissecting the stress of a ruler. I felt a surge of power - a
"virtù" of my own. For these few minutes, I was the one in control of
her equilibrium.
As I worked, a
wave of suffocating shame soon crashed over me. I was a girl who had dreamed of
piloting a craft through the vacuum of space, yet here I was, reduced to a
primitive, tactile service. I was proving my "value" not through my
mind, but through the dexterity of my fingers on another woman's flesh. The
humiliation was a physical weight, made worse by the rough, court-issued cotton
of my underwear scratching against my freshly paddled skin. Every shift of my
weight on the plush carpet was a reminder of my status: I was the
"delinquent" beneath her heels.
Yet, beneath that
shame, a terrifyingly illicit heat began to bloom in my core. It was a betrayal
of my own dignity - a rhythmic, pulse-pounding arousal that mirrored the
pressure of my thumbs. There was a dark, intoxicating power in being this low,
in the absolute clarity of my submission. To be 'the girl who gives massages'
was a debased identity, but in this room, under Mrs. Williams' heavy-lidded
gaze, it felt like a calling. My breath hitched, not from the effort, but from
the thrill of the "fox" realizing its own craft. I was the one
inducing the shuddering breaths from the woman who held my future in her hands.
Meanwhile, Mrs.
Williams' head had fallen back, exposing the vulnerable line of her throat, and
her breathing - once sharp and instructional - had devolved into heavy, jagged
sighs. At one point, her toes had curled instinctively against my palms, a silent,
desperate plea for the pressure to continue. She wasn't a teacher then: she was
a subject, conquered by the very "distraction" she had intended to
manage. The silence of the office hadn't just been quiet, it had been heavy
with the sound of her losing the war against her own senses.
For those minutes,
the "Leadership Development" teacher was gone. In her place was a
woman being methodically dismantled by a girl she had called a
"disgrace."
"Enough,"
she finally whispered, though her legs didn't move to withdraw. Her eyes
remained squeezed shut, the lids fluttering. "That is... quite enough,
Melissa."
I pulled my hands
away and tucked them back into the folds of my apron, sinking back onto my
heels. My breath was shallow, my own body humming with the residual energy of
the task.
Mrs. Williams
remained still for a long moment, her eyes closed, her head resting against the
back of the armchair. When she finally opened them, the cold, clinical mask was
gone, replaced by a look of genuine, almost unsettled wonder.
"The rumors
were wrong," she said softly, staring down at her own feet as if they no
longer belonged to her.
My heart sank.
"Ma'am?"
"They called
it 'magic,'" she corrected, finally looking at me. "But magic is a
trick. What you have is an instinct. It is... divine, Melissa. Truly. I have
traveled to the finest spas in Europe, and I have never felt a touch that so
thoroughly understands the architecture of the human body."
Mrs. Williams sat
up, the coldness returning to her eyes, though her voice remained hushed.
"It is a tragedy. A girl with your mind and these hands... you are a
walking paradox. But you have proven my point. This talent is too potent to be
left to the shadows. It must be brought into the light where we can manage
it."
She reached for
her hosiery, her eyes never leaving mine as she drew the fine silk back over
her skin with practised, elegant movements. The brief moment of vulnerability
was being methodically tucked away, replaced by the armoured layers of her
station. She reached for her shoes, sliding them back on with a sigh of regret
that seemed to mourn the loss of the relief I had provided.
"The festival
plan stands. You will be the 'star' of the Leadership Development booth. We
will call it 'The Philosopher's Rest.' It will be legitimate, it will be highly
exclusive, and once the girls have had their fill of you, the mystery will die."
I dropped into a
final curtsy, my face burning. "As you wish, Ma'am."
I felt a sickening
surge of bile at the thought of being put on display like a prize animal, yet a
dark, traitorous part of me hummed with the thrill of the power I had just felt
- the knowledge that I could bring one of the most powerful woman in the school
to a state of absolute, shuddering surrender.
"Go back to
the laundry," Mrs. Williams said, already reaching for a new pile of
grading. "And Melissa? Keep that 'fox' hidden. The Dean prefers lions, and
she has a very long memory for those she cannot tame."
As I walked back
to the sub-basement, the smell of bleach waiting to reclaim me, I looked at my
hands. They were the hands of a maid, stained and sore. But Mrs. Williams had
called them "divine." I was a servant, a "jailbird," and
now, a festival attraction. I was becoming so many things to so many people
that I wondered if there was anything left of the girl who came as a student
and wanted to touch the stars.

Dear Readers,
ReplyDeletePart 25 is officially live on this website! As usual, I would love to hear from you. Do not hesitate to drop your thoughts in the comments below!
Happy reading!
your humble maid Melissa
Note: if you want to read this story from the beginning, parts 1 and 2 are here. Parts 3 to 24 are also available on this website by clicking on the links in 'Blog Archive' to the right.
Oh amazing new chapter as always! This new part just made my day after laying in bed sick for the last few days. Very well written like always and so happy the new part came out in a timely manner and didn't take too long.
ReplyDeleteKeep up the amazing work, I absolutely love your story and can't get enough~