Chapter 16 â Ruby, the Marchionessâs Daughter
âLâLady Ruby?â
Miel and Soya turned toward the door in shock.
There stood Ruby, looking proud and confident, her chin lifted high.
Her eyes swept quickly around the roomâtaking in every cornerâbefore landing on me, sitting quietly on the sofa.
âWow, I actually found you faster than I thought!â
But after taking only a few steps toward me, she stopped abruptly.
Her bright eyes narrowed as she looked around.
Compared to the rest of the mansion, this room was simpleâjust a few old pieces of furniture, faded wallpaper, and a worn-out rug.
It was the servantsâ lounge.
Ruby wrinkled her nose, covering it with one hand.
âUgh. It smells like⌠commoners.â
I stared at her, my mouth slightly open.
Like mother, like daughter, I thought dryly.
While I was thinking that, Ruby waved her fingers at me.
âYou. Come here. I donât want to walk any farther inside.â
I quickly hid my expression and stood up from the sofa, pretending to obey.
As I walked closer, a smug little smile spread across Rubyâs face.
âSo you are obedient. I was worried you might act all arrogant or something.â
âUm⌠but, you knowâŚâ
When I spoke softly, Ruby frowned.
I hesitated, then motioned for her to lean in as if I wanted to whisper something secret.
Ruby blinked, curious, and after a momentâs hesitation, she leaned closer.
Then, right next to her ear, I said quietlyâ
âAre you sure that smell isnât your sisterâs?â
Ruby froze.
She stared at me like she couldnât believe what sheâd just heard.
âWhat?â
I scratched my head, pretending to be embarrassed.
âWell, you said it smells bad here. But Ria doesnât smell at all.â
Then I looked at her very seriously.
âSo maybe that awful smell⌠is actually coming from you.â
Rubyâs face turned bright red from the neck up.
I smiled sweetly and added, âItâs okay, sis. You probably just forgot to brush your teeth, right? Donât worry! I can lend you my toothpaste!â
***
âOhâoh my goodness! Ruby!â
Marchioness Camilla whipped her head around at the sound of her daughterâs voice.
At the entrance of the sitting room stood Ruby, face red with fury.
âRuby!â
Camilla jumped up from her seat and rushed over to her daughter, inspecting her anxiously.
Sheâd told Ruby to quietly explore the mansion, yet somehow the child had returned with her neatly braided hair coming undone.
âT-that girlâsheâshe reallyâŚ!â
Ruby sputtered, too angry to speak, and finally yelled,
âThat commoner! That orphanâhow dare she!!â
Camillaâs eyes widened in outrage.
âWhat?! What did she do to you?! Did that crazy little brat hit you?!â
Ruby faltered for a second.
Then she remembered what had just happened.
***
Ruby Coel.
The one and only daughter of the Coel Marquisate.
Smart, confident, and always getting exactly what she wanted.
Her mother had always told herâ
âDuke Abner? Donât let the title fool you. That woman was nothing more than her husbandâs shadow.â
Ruby had believed every word her mother said.
âMoney exists to show your strength, Ruby. You must use it.â
âUse it?â
âYes. Thereâs nothing in this world money canât buy! Look at meâI even bought Sharon Abnerâs affection with it.â
Sharon Abner.
The current Duchess of the Abner familyâ
a woman Camilla described as an aging noble too obsessed with ambition to ever give up her title.
âSheâll never hand the dukedom to that violent son of hers,â Camilla had whispered once.
âWhich means sheâll soon start looking for a proper heir. And who better than you, Ruby?â
Ruby had believed it completely.
Who wouldnât like someone as beautiful and smart as me?
She truly thought sheâd one day live in the Abner mansionâ
and that everything the Abners owned would eventually become hers.
But then that girl appearedâŚ
***
âYouâare you insane?!â Ruby screamed. âHow dare you say that to me?!â
In a burst of fury, she shoved Annelia hard.
The smaller girl stumbled back, nearly falling over.
But even then, Annelia didnât look away.
âYou filthy commonerâhow dare you talk to me like that?!â
Rubyâs eyes blazed with anger.
Unable to hold back, she raised her handâ
Only for Annelia to flinch first and fall backward on her own.
âAh! My lady!â
The two nearby maids gasped and rushed forward, faces pale.
Ruby froze with her hand still in the air, looking bewildered.
âWait⌠did I even touch her?â
She blinked, confused.
Then she noticed something strangeâtears.
Drop, drop.
Tiny droplets were falling onto Anneliaâs skirt.
Rubyâs eyes widened in disbelief.
The girl was trembling and crying softly in the maidâs arms.
âS-sheâs cryingâŚâ one maid whispered, her voice shaking. âOh no⌠poor thingâŚâ
âI-itâs because of me,â Annelia hiccuped.
âAnnelia did something bad. Because Anneliaâs just⌠a commoner.â
Her voice was so small and sad that even the servants looked heartbroken.
Ruby, on the other hand, was speechless. Thenâ
âYouâre so fake.â
Her eyes narrowed dangerously.
âFine,â Ruby sneered, mimicking her motherâs haughty tone. âLetâs say I did hit you. So what? Youâre cryingâwhat now?â
She pointed toward the terrified maids.
âIf you were a real noble, theyâd already be calling the guards to protect you. But look! Theyâre just standing there. Why? Because youâre a commoner!â
Then, with a furious glare, she shoved Annelia again.
The girl fell once more, landing hard on her backside.
âSee? You canât even fight back! What can you do?â
Ruby placed her hands proudly on her hips.
âThe only reason the Abners survived their crisis was because of us! The Coel family!â
ââŚâ
âAnd those mana crystal mines everyone praises? My mother helped them find those too!â
Ruby grabbed Anneliaâs collar roughly and hissed,
âSo you think you can act all high and mighty just because you got some charity? Do you really think Lady Sharon likes you more than me?!â
She yanked on the neckline of Anneliaâs plain white dress, the seam tearing slightly.
âLook at these clothes! What are you even wearing? Did you dig this rag out of a trash heap?â
Her lips curled in scorn.
âSo this is the girl everyoneâs talking about?â she thought mockingly.
âPathetic. If the Duchess truly cared about her, sheâd dress her better than this.â
Any trace of guilt in Rubyâs mind vanished completely.
âYou clearly donât know your place, so let me teach you,â Ruby said coldly.
She raised her hand high.
âMy mother says commoners arenât real people. That the only way to make them understand is through punishment.â
This time, her hand really came swinging downâ
But it never reached Annelia.
ââŚWhat?â
Ruby blinked in confusion.
A maid had stepped in front of Annelia, arms outstretched protectively.
âWhat are you doing? Move.â
âI⌠Iâll take the hit instead, my lady.â
Ruby stared at her, shockedâthen smirked cruelly.
âFine. Have it your way.â
Behind her, Annelia watched in stunned silence as the maid braced herselfâ
ready to protect her at any cost.