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The sickened luna’s last chance

Chapter 122
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Chapter 122

Chapter 122

“Oh,” she said. “I didn’t realize the Luna had company.” She set the linens down on the end of my bed and

looked like she had no intention of being the one to leave.

“I should get going,” Liam said, standing. He squeezed my hand gently. “We'll talk more later, okay?”

| nodded, although | doubted there was much left to say. Liam was a good friend, but he didn’t

understand. He never would.

After Liam left, Sarah hastily moved to fluff my pillows before | could even sit up. The movement jostled my

head, makingwince as pain shot through my skull where I'd slammed it on the tiles the other night.

“Careful,” | muttered.

“Sorry.” Sarah giggled. “You just look so fragile lying there. Like you might break if | breathe on you wrong.”

| bit back my first response, which would have involved several colorful words about where she could shove her

observations. Instead, | just said flatly, “I’m recovering from a head injury.”

“Of course you are.” Sarah moved around the bed and began unceremoniously ripping the linens off even

though | was still laying there. “Must be nice, having everyone wait on you hand and foot. | wish I didn’t have to

work for a living!”

“Sarah,” | said slowly, warningly, “I don’t appreciate your tone.”

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She paused in her bustling, looking atwith those bright blue eyes. “I'm sorry, Luna. | didn’t mean any

disrespect.”

But there was disrespect in every line of her body every fake smile, every word that cout of her mouth.

She'd been doing this for days now-ensuring she was just polite enough that | couldn't formally complain, but

rude enough to make her distaste forobvious.

| was certain that Alexander and Gabriel had put her up to this.

“Just... please be more careful,” | said, too tired to make a bigger deal out of it.

Sarah nodded and moved to my vanity, where she began rearranging the bottles and jewelry boxes. | watched

her nervously as she handled my things, sof which were delicate or had

sentimental value.

“Actually,” | said, “you don’t need to clean that area. | can take care of it myself when I'm feeling better.”

“Oh, but it's such a mess,” Sarah said. “Really, Luna, when was the last tyou organized

Chapter 122

any of this? It’s like a tornado went through here”

“It’s fine the way it is.”

“No, no, | insist.” Sarah picked up a crystal perfbottle that had belonged to my grandmother, sniffed it, then

wrinkled her nose at the scent. “A Luna should have higher standards. What would people think if they saw your

vanity looking like this? That you're a slob?”

My temper flared. “Put that down. | told you to leave it alone.”

“I'm just trying to help-*

“I said put it down.”

Sighing, Sarah set the perfbottle down with a sharp click, hard enough that | was surprised the glass didn’t

crack. Then she reached for the music box sitting in the corner of the vanity.

“Don’t touch that,” | said sharply, sitting bolt upright despite the pain in

my head.

But Sarah had already picked it up, holding it by its delicate base instead of supporting it properly. It was small

and old, made of carved wood with intricate flowers painted on the lid.

It was my mother’s. It played a lullaby when you opened it, and I liked to imagine my mother humming it to me

when | was a baby, although | was so young when she died that | couldn’t remember. | didn’t even know the

sound of her voice or if she liked to sing.

“This old thing?” Sarah said, turning it over in her hands. “It's so dusty. When was the last tyou-"

The music box slipped from her fingers.

| watched in horror as it fell, seeming to move in slow motion as it tumbled toward the hardwood floor. The

delicate wooden corners hit first, and | heard the sickening crack of wood splintering. The lid popped open on

impact, and the tiny ballerina inside broke off from her post, spinning uselessly as the music box cto rest in

three separate pieces.

The melody it had played for fifteen years was silenced forever,

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