A Maid Was Forced To Hide Her Face. Then The Groom Saw The Compass-Quieen - Chainityai

A Maid Was Forced To Hide Her Face. Then The Groom Saw The Compass-Quieen

The bride forced the maid to cover her face and humiliated her for being “too beautiful” in the middle of the party, never imagining that this humiliation would reveal a family promise capable of destroying her marriage.

Emily had been ordered to wear the black shawl before the first guest even arrived.

Not because she was ill.

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Not because the party had some private family tradition.

Not because anyone in that house cared about modesty, respect, or comfort.

Jessica wanted Emily hidden because men had started noticing her.

That was the truth, and in that house, truth was usually the first thing pushed into a closet.

The engagement party was set up across the back patio of Michael’s family home, a sprawling old place with white columns, a long driveway, and a porch flag moving gently in the warm evening air.

The lawn had been clipped so clean it looked fake.

The glass doors had been polished until they caught every string light and turned it into gold.

Waiters moved between round tables with trays of champagne.

A small quartet played near the fountain.

The air smelled like roses, cut grass, expensive perfume, and appetizers coming hot from the kitchen.

In five weeks, Michael was supposed to marry Jessica.

Michael was thirty-six years old and had inherited more money than he knew how to carry gracefully.

He owned commercial buildings, rental properties, and a construction company his father had built with the kind of discipline people praised only after they were gone.

His father, David, had died nine months earlier.

Since then, the house had felt too large for one man.

Michael moved through it like a guest who had misplaced the person who invited him.

Jessica entered his life during that grief.

She was polished, careful, and always in the right place at the right time.

She knew how to speak softly when people were mourning.

She knew how to touch an arm for exactly one second too long.

She knew how to become necessary before anyone questioned how quickly she had arrived.

To everyone else, she looked like the kind of woman who would save Michael from loneliness.

Emily saw something different.

Emily lived in the house too, though most guests would have sworn they had never seen her.

She was twenty-nine, a live-in housekeeper, and she had learned the strange art of being present without being noticed.

She started coffee before dawn.

She folded napkins in the laundry room.

She watered the porch planters before the sun hit the front steps.

She restocked bathrooms, polished glass, carried groceries through the side door, and disappeared before the family friends came in.

She was not invisible by nature.

She had been trained into it.

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