The Maid In The Marble Bathroom And The Boss Who Walked In Too Soon-luna

Blood was dripping down Harper Queen’s leg before she even realized she was bleeding.

That was how tired she was.

That was how far pain had moved from emergency into routine.

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She stood in the private bathroom on the third floor of Gabriel Ashford’s Beacon Hill residence, with her maid’s uniform dragged halfway down her back and the cold chandelier light spilling over skin she never let anyone see.

The room smelled like bleach, lavender hand soap, and money.

It had white marble floors polished so bright they reflected her bare feet, a glass shower door without a single streak, chrome fixtures that caught every flicker of light, and a silence so expensive it made her afraid to breathe too loudly.

Across Harper’s back was a map nobody had been meant to read.

Purple bruises sat beside yellow ones.

Greenish shadows ran under the edge of her shoulder blade.

One dark mark curved near her ribs, and another disappeared under the waistband of the uniform she had pulled down so she could clean herself up before it stained.

Each mark had healed at a different speed.

Each mark told a different night.

Each mark had the same author.

Derek Lawson.

Her ex-husband.

Precinct 12 out of Roxbury.

A man who wore a badge in the morning, a gun at his hip, and a smile in public that made neighbors say things like, “He seems so polite,” while Harper learned to cover the left side of her face with her hair.

Derek had promised to love her in a courthouse ceremony with a cheap bouquet and a judge who barely looked up from the papers.

He had promised to protect her.

He had promised to respect her.

Then he spent the next three years proving that a vow in the wrong mouth was only another thing that could be used to trap you.

Words were paper to Derek.

Easy to tear.

Easy to burn.

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