The alarms of deathâs immediate arrivalâthe same crisis she felt on the day she ran into the Countâcame back again with full force.
I ran away thenâ but where should I go now?
Retreating footsteps abruptly stopped when a thought occurred to me.
If I run away, the Count who took me will be in trouble.
Even if the Princess killed her today, in the end, she had the king on her side.
The Count is a knight and royal servant; he cannot just ignore the Princessâs opinion and will.
She was an ignorant maid who didnât know anything, but she knew about her position.
âWhat are you waiting for?â
When the Butler hesitated for a moment with the cane he was forced to receive, Julia, impatient, stood up and snatched the rod from him. Donât be like Julia
âIf you donât want to do it, Iâll do it myself. Afterward, Iâll make sure youâll pay for the crime of deceiving a member of royalty, Butler.â
She yelled out savagely and lifted the cane aiming for Shadaâs face.
Closing her eyes, Shada gave strength to her shaking legs.
You canât run away. If you run out⦠⦠.
âWhat are you doing now, Julia?â
It was then that I heard a low sweet voice that was jarringly out of place.
Shada lifted her head quickly.
A picturesque man was sauntering towards her with his hands behind his back.
It seemed as if their gaze met in an instant, but he immediately turned his head.
For some reason, a side of Shadaâs chest started to twist.
The Countâs green eyes moved to his fiancee.
âI didnât expect you would come without notice.â
âItâs okay if it happens between us⦠Oh, my God! Huey, did you call my name?â
âYes.â
âOh, Iâm shy. Itâs so sudden.â
The Count laughed softly as he watched the woman who called his name freely and asked him to as well, long before they got engaged
âI didnât know youâd be shy because of itâ¦. â¦.. â¦.. Between us,â
He added, a beat late.
Then Julia was so happy that she couldnât stop the joy from reaching her eyes.
Already her anxiety and jealousy of Shada seemed long gone.
With the maidsâ support around her, Shada staggered up, quietly holding her hands together and lowering her head.
The Countâs expressionless face returned after the brief interlude.
âBy the way, why is Julia holding a rod to a maid of my mansion?â
âOh, wellâ¦â
An excited Julia was at a loss of words when he asked the straightforward question.
It hurt her pride to admit that she didnât sleep well all month because she didnât see him. But that this vulgar woman got to see him.
While she hesitated, the tip of his lips pulled into a straight line.
First taut, then loose, like a tight rubber band relaxing slowly with great care not to snap or break.
Count Kirchner muttered sadly.
âIt hurts my heart.â
âHuh?â
âNo matter how much I might be the Kingâs servant and knight, I am your fiance, and I must have been foolish to expect my authority to be respected.â
His melancholy eyes, indeed, looked very heartbroken.
That impeccable face hosted an expression that even strangers who witnessed it would be affected byânevermind the Princess who loves him passionately.
Julia helplessly closed her mouth with her hands.
âNo, Huey! Thatâ sâjust.. I! Sorry. I didnât know youâd be so upset. Just⦠I didnât like that little girl.â
The Count covered her eyes with his hands without a word, and the Princess was all the more restless.
The harsh atmosphere quickly changed in an instant.
Shada was in a position where she could see the Count from the side, so she glanced at him carefully while she bowed with the other maids.
She was dumbfounded when she saw her master with such a face for the first time.
Under his long fingers, those lips of his were sneered up. A contemptuous, degrading, eerie cold cynicism. And twisted disgust.
Huh?
Shadyâs eyes were swollen with the sensation of her heart sinking and pounding at the same time.
But it had quickly faded away.
When for a brief moment, her mouth was left agape, her eyes met with the Butler who had been expressionless throughout this ridiculous comedy.
He hurriedly lowered his gaze.
Shadaâs pounding heart didnât subside.
I felt like I had seen something I should have never been privy to.
My palms were filled with a cold sweat that was different from before.
In my dazed earsâthe voice of the Princess, who seemed to have given up her hunger for my death, and Count Kirchner, reservedly coaxing her like a zookeeper to lead her to a private parlorâechoed.
While escorting the Princess, his fingertips brushed past and rubbed by Shadaâs wrist very naturally.
In that short moment, he had held her tightly and released her.
Her wrist tingled strangely as though it had been stamped with fire even though he hadnât gripped her hard.
Shada stood, astounded, for a little longer holding her wrist gingerly even after all the maids scattered.
She only came to her senses after the Butler called her politely.
He handed over a small note to me and left.
I hesitated for a moment, and then I opened it up.
The words seemed to be scribbled in haste, but the handwriting was still elegant.
[To the library on the second floor.]
Fortunately, I had been in the royal palace for a long time, so I knew how to read letters.
And Shada, who cleans the Countâs room every day and picks up his mail, knew whose handwriting this was.
Even if she hadnât had those clues, she would have known by intuition alone.
For a long while, Shada fiddled the paper to the point itâs edges were in tatters before she climbed up the stairs.
As a maid, she had no choice.
But even if she had one, she was confused about whether or not she would reject his invitation.