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"The Queen Who Washed Dishes" Chapter 3

Chapter 3: Bending the Knee

The gala was a display of excess so concentrated it bordered on the grotesque. Crystal chandeliers hung like frozen waterfalls above a sea of tuxedos and floor-length silk gowns, the air vibrating with the hollow, brittle laughter of the city’s elite.

Elinor moved through the crowd like a specter. Her presence was smoothed over by the uniform she wore—the gray, unobtrusive fabric Julian insisted upon. It was designed to make her invisible, to turn a woman of regal lineage into a piece of furniture that breathed.

She was carrying a silver tray, its surface polished to a mirror sheen. Every step was a lesson in endurance.

The burn on her forearm from the previous night’s “accident” throbbed with a rhythmic, searing heat, but she did not let the pain show. She had learned long ago that the Thornes fed on the spectacle of her suffering.

Julian’s voice boomed across the private alcove where he held court. He was standing with Isabella, his hand possessively splayed across her lower back.

A group of venture capitalists and board members flanked them, their faces masked in the sycophantic smiles of men who lived for the crumbs from the Thorne table.

Alistair Kane stood at the periphery, his presence a singular point of gravity. He wasn't participating in the mindless chatter; his slate-grey eyes were fixed on the room with a distant, clinical focus.

Julian’s eyes landed on Elinor, and they lit up with that specific, jagged malice that only came when he knew he had an audience for his cruelty.

"My wife," Julian announced, his voice carrying just enough to draw the attention of the surrounding circle.

"She’s quite the perfectionist. Isn't that right, dear?"

"Isabella is thirsty," Julian continued, his hand sliding down to grip Isabella’s arm.

"And Elinor insists on being the one to serve. She’s worried about the… quality of service our other staff provides. Aren't you, darling?"

He turned, his smile reaching his eyes—but it was the smile of a predator playing with a dying bird.

"The floor is clean enough, I assume? Or do you need to wipe it down first?"

Elinor looked at the marble floor—cold, unforgiving, and polished to a shine that reflected her own pale, composed face.

She could refuse.

She could walk out.

But then she remembered the boy.

She remembered the hidden birthmark on his wrist, the way he flinched at loud noises, the way he clutched her old, fading photograph as if it were a holy relic. She was not playing a game for herself anymore; she was playing for his future.

Fine, she thought, the hatred inside her crystallizing into something beautiful and cold. If you want a servant, I will show you the most perfect servant you have ever seen.

She sank to her knees.

The movement was slow, deliberate, and entirely graceful. She kept her back straight, her chin lifted just enough to maintain a shred of dignity that the Thornes could not strip away.

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As her knees struck the hard marble, Alistair Kane, who had been watching with detached indifference, suddenly stiffened.

A sharp, visceral jolt shot through his chest—a sudden, unbidden surge of adrenaline that he couldn't explain. He gripped the stem of his own glass so tightly his knuckles turned white, the crystal groaning under the pressure.

Why? The word echoed in his mind, sharp and insistent. Why is this happening?

Isabella held out her glass, her eyes dancing with cruelty.

"Be careful, Elinor. You’re shaking."

Elinor wasn't shaking. She poured the vintage deep red wine, the stream unwavering as it hit the crystal. She was entirely present, entirely focused, and entirely lethal. She looked up, her eyes finally meeting Alistair’s across the distance.

There was no plea for mercy in her gaze. There was no shame. There was only a profound, crystalline clarity that seemed to mock the entire room.

She looked at him with the chilling, detached poise of an equal, a woman who had mastered the art of being broken and found that it made her unbreakable.

She finished pouring and rose, her movements as fluid as oil on water. She stood before them, a gray silhouette against the bright, decadent colors of the room.

"As you wish, Alpha," she said, her voice soft, but it carried across the silence like a strike of lightning.

The use of the word wasn't a submission. It was a mirror. She was calling out the hierarchy, mocking it, throwing their own obsession with power back in their faces.

Julian blinked, thrown off by the change in her tone.

"What did you say?"

Elinor didn't answer him. She turned her gaze to Alistair again, her expression unreadable. She felt the cufflink in her apron pocket, a talisman of a world that once was, and she knew that the Thornes’ time was running out. She had paid the price of the knees today; tomorrow, she would collect the debt in blood.

"Everything is served," Elinor said, her voice cool and perfectly pitched.

She turned away, leaving the circle of socialites, leaving Julian’s baffled ego and Isabella’s petty triumph.

Alistair watched her walk away, his heart hammering against his ribs like a trapped animal.

He didn't know who she was, or why she triggered a part of his soul he thought had died in the fire, but he knew one thing with absolute certainty.

The game was no longer in Julian Thorne’s hands.

It was in hers.

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