Chapter 9
The Dukeās room was surprisingly clean for how huge it was.
Maybe it just feels empty.
There was barely any furniture: a bed, a desk, a few drawers⦠Oh? Whatās this?
Something large was covered by a black cloth. Unlike the other neat furniture, this cloth was thick with dust.
āHmā¦ā
That definitely looked like the messiest part.
But first, Iād clean everything else.
I set down the pile of cleaning tools I had lugged in and grabbed a fresh rag.
Bringing extra rags had been a brilliant choice.
Next time, I should get a proper container to carry my tools.
I was getting too used to using the monstersā bodies as ātools.ā Now using actual cleaning supplies felt strange.
Stop relying on shortcuts. Back to basics.
I rolled up my sleeves with renewed determination.
***
Alright, last part.
I had cleaned everything except the big black cloth.
Beside the bed, I had found a sword so long I couldnāt even hold it properly. A strange sticky liquid clung to it.
I scrubbed it as best I could.
Please donāt be bloodā¦
But it wasnāt red. It was bluish, almost glowing.
Creepy, but fine.
Aside from that, there wasnāt much to clean. No clutter. Just dusting off furniture here and there. Honestly, it almost looked like no one used the room at all.
But that canāt be right.
I clapped the dust off my hands and turned to the black cloth.
Coughādust rained down on me as I pulled it off. The cloth was taller than I was, and my head got showered in grime.
Still, I stayed calm, swept it all up, and tidied the floor.
Now, the real last part.
Whatever was under this cloth had to be important. Maybe this was why the Duke ordered me to clean his room.
I pulled the cloth away.
And froze.
āā¦!ā
A mirror.
Warning bells screamed in my head.
Rule #5. There are no mirrors inside the mansion. If you find one, do not look at it. Turn it around immediately.
ā¦I had forgotten.
That bizarre, nonsensical rule Eki had told me on my first day.
āYouāll never see mirrors in the mansion. Well, except sometimes in the Dukeās room⦠but youāll never have to go there, so donāt worry.ā
At the time, Iād brushed it off. Too many questions, too little energy.
But now? Of all places, there really was a mirror in the Dukeās room.
āOh?ā
Before I could even glance at it, darkness swallowed my vision.
As if something had blocked me completely.
Startled, I staggered backāstraight into something hard.
āā¦Was there something here before?ā
The room had been practically empty.
Yet when I bumped into it, chills shot down my spine. It felt like thousands of insects crawling over my skin.
I froze.
Then, a cold breath brushed my ear.
āDidnāt I tell you⦠not to look at the mirror?ā
It was the Dukeās voice.
But not like before.
Not calm, not soft.
This voice was low, icy, enough to make my heart tremble in my chest.
āā¦M-my lord?ā
So⦠the thing blocking my sight was his hand.
And the hard surface Iād hit was his body.
Yes, it had to be. His breath was steady on the top of my head.
But when had he come in? I hadnāt heard the door, not even a single footstep.
Thump, thump, thumpā
My heart pounded. Because of all things, heād caught me standing in front of the mirror.
āDid you look?ā
āNo! I didnāt see anything!ā
āTruly?ā
āYes!ā
I squeezed my eyes shut. How could I see, when he was covering me himself?
I felt like he was circling me slowly, though his hand never left my face. Maybe I was imagining it.
Wait⦠but is he even human?
āShasha.ā
āY-yes?ā
His tone was gentle again. The cold air from moments ago seemed to vanish.
Maybe he had decided I was telling the truth.
āWhat are you supposed to do if you see a mirror?ā
āIt⦠it said to turn it around.ā
āCorrect.ā
Well, that meant I had to look at it in order to turn it.
Couldnāt he lower his hand?
Guess not.
Awkwardly, I groped for the mirror and heaved it backward, turning it around. It was massive, but I managed.
At last, light returned to my vision.
As I blinked against it, I saw clearly: yes, it really had been his hand covering me.
Such a large hand, blocking out light so completelyā¦
I blinked again and saw the Duke standing in the room, arms crossed, surveying everything.
āClean,ā he said.
āā¦.ā
āGood work. You may go.ā
āYes, my lord!ā
Phewājust hearing that made all the tension drain out of me.
Having the employer suddenly walk in while I was working? Of course Iād be nervous.
At least Iād stacked the cleaning tools neatly by the door.
I picked them up in my arms and headed out, whenā
āYouāre not afraid of me?ā
The voice came from behind me. Cold, flat, without a hint of emotion.
I turned, startled. Did I hear him right?
The Duke tilted his head, watching me.
āā¦Sorry?ā
āNever mind. Go.ā
āYes, my lord. See you tomorrow.ā
I left, confused, and leaned against the hallway wall once the door was shut.
Not afraid of him?
Why would I be? Whatās scary about the Duke?
He paid me well. He gave me extra pay. He provided a room and delicious meals.
And he was handsome, too.
The only odd thing was the mirror rule⦠Wait.
I realized something.
In this enormous mansion, I had walked through countless rooms in the past week. But I had never seen a single portrait or painting.
That was strange. Every noble house displayed portraits of themselves.
Even Baron Armond had plastered his smug face everywhereāhuge paintings in every room and hallway.
So thenā¦
The Duke must have trauma related to his face.
Yes, that explained it.
He looked fineāmore than fineābut deep down, he believed himself ugly. Thatās why he banned mirrors. Thatās why there were no portraits.
A classic tragic backstory. The cursed Duke who thinks heās a monster, hiding from his reflection.
Ding! A giant bell went off in my head.
It fit perfectly.
I slapped my forehead in awe at my own genius deduction.
But then a pang of sadness hit me.
What pain had scarred him so deeply?
To think someone so beautiful might be burdened by such sorrowā¦
Maybe it tied back to his parents. Or the Imperial family. A grand conspiracy.
Why else would he become Duke at such a young age? Why else were there no portraits of his parents either?
One suspicion led to another. I stroked my chin thoughtfully.
But in the end, I was just a head maid.
There was nothing I could do to help.
I was just a plain girl with black hair and brown eyes.
People said I was āpretty,ā sure. But no hidden lineage, no secret past.
And I knew nothing of this worldās history.
ā¦
Sigh.
I hugged my cleaning tools a little tighter and trudged away.
After some thought, I realized:
The only way I could help the Duke was by cleaning.
Yes. Iāll clean harder than ever!
He had already raised my salary and given me extra pay. The least I could do was repay him.
āGood morning, my lord!ā
I flung open the office door with all the cheer I had.