"Now." Erin turned her gaze back to the rest of the room. "You, maid." She pointed to a different maid.
The unfortunate maid happened to be dusting the nearby bookshelves. She was pale with deep-set bags under her eyes, and the moment Erin turned her eyes on her, she grew paler. She placed her duster in her skirt apron with a nervous shake and bowed.
Erin barely glanced at the girl before she locked her eyes on the vase. "I want that gone." She pointed.
"Gone?"
"Yes," she said, the bling of her golden bronze jewelry nearly blinding the maid.
"But?" The maid peaked at the vase. "What do you want me to do with it?"
"I do not repeat myself." She glared.
"Yes, I'll take care of it right away, Lady Erina." She quickly picked up the vase and prepared to leave the room.
"Stop." Erin's voice locked her in place. "Actually, I think I want you to drop it. I want to see that ugly thing in pieces."
"Drop it?" The maid stared. Her eyes were ready to pop out of their sockets as she viewed her overlord with the same puzzlement and fear of seeing icicles in hell. "You want me to break it here?
"Are you daft?" Erin spat. "I won't say it again."
The pale maid's eyes jumped around the room, seemingly searching for some sort of consolation. But Erin's stone-cold features and growing glare squandered any hopeful ideas she could have thought of.
"I'm sorry Lady Erina." The maid quickly lowered her gaze and bowed her head. "It's just that if I were to break it here, the glass may go everywhere. People may get injured like before, and you as well are---."
"Just do as I say," she commanded.
"Yes, right away then, Lady Erina." The words came out choppy and frail as the maid nodded, slowly raising the vase above her head. With the vase swaying above her, she peered at the ground, her body rigid. Hesitantly, she brought the vase down and tossed it, causing the room to yelp and flinch.
Click!
Just as the vase broke, the door opened. "Lady Erina?" Another maid called to her from the room's parted door.
"What?" Erin scanned the glass on the floor, her reflection fractured and twisted between shards. Tilting her head, she watched her face shift, shrink, and bend.
She seemed fascinated by the sight, but she was even more fascinated by the light red line on her neck. One of the glass fragments had projected and sliced a thin feeble line underneath her ear.
"Lord Sutherton requested your presence," the maid said, as Erin traced her fingers over the cut.
She had barely felt the glass nick her skin. She rubbed her neck. Sabina would throw a fit if she found out she had injured herself. And if she were standing right there she might say, 'you know, I hate worrying about you more you worry about you.' Then she might smile, and hook with her elbow to elbow just to say, 'So, if you worry about me, worry about you.'
"And your father requested not to be kept waiting too long." The maid at the door added in Erin's silence.
But Sabina wasn't here, was she? Erin thought, pulling her hand away from her neck. Sabina was and is…? Well, was she really sure where? And Erin worried about her more than she worried about herself.
Without another word, looked up. "I understand, I'm coming."
The room was quiet as they watched Erin prepare to leave. They said nothing but watched in horror as she moved as if there was not glass splattered on the floors.
Crunch!
They all heard the crunch of glass, yet she kept walking and continued to the doors before she stopped. She turned back to face the anticipation in the room.
"Oh, and by the way," she said, pointing to the maid who broke the vase. "You're permanently dismissed for breaking Sutherton property."
"Lady Erina," the maid said, sinking. She collapsed to her knees; tears ready to spill. "I... I am so sorry! Please, don't fire me! I need this job more than anything and my family they---."
The door shut, leaving behind an empty silence.
𝕾𝖍𝖆𝖑𝖑 𝖜𝖊 𝖈𝖔𝖓𝖙𝖎𝖓𝖚𝖊?