Pregnant Maid Shamed At A Grave Until Damon Cross Appeared-Teptep

The rain had been falling since dawn, thin and steady, the kind that made the whole cemetery smell of wet stone, old leaves, and earth.

I had chosen that hour because no one at the house would miss me.

One hour.

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That was all I had left of myself each week.

For six days, I lived in someone else’s timetable, serving breakfast before the family came downstairs, polishing silver no one thanked me for, carrying sheets through halls where my footsteps were supposed to make no sound.

On the seventh morning, before the kitchen fully woke, I came to my mother.

I brought daisies from the supermarket because they were what I could afford, and because she had always said expensive flowers died just as quickly as cheap ones.

I knelt beside Ruth Harper’s grave with my coat pulled tight, my black maid’s apron damp at the edges, and my hand resting over the slight rise beneath it.

I had not told many people about the baby.

I had barely said it aloud to myself.

A child changes the shape of fear.

Before, I had been afraid of losing wages, losing rooms, losing the small spaces where I could stand without being ordered elsewhere.

Now I was afraid of hands, voices, doors closing, names being written on forms by people who thought they owned the world.

I pressed my fingers to the damp grass and whispered, “Mum, I don’t know what I’m doing.”

The cemetery answered with silence.

Then a voice behind me said, “I do.”

I turned too late.

Vanessa Caldwell crossed the grass as if the mud had no right to touch her.

Her cream-coloured coat sat perfectly on her shoulders, belted at the waist, expensive without needing to announce itself.

Her heels were narrow and polished, the sort no one wore unless someone else handled the dirty work.

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