-Chapter 3-
After staring for a moment at the silent kids who refused to respond, I finally crawled back out through the hole in the wall.
I was a little worried they might follow me, but the twins werenât naĂŻve enough to trust me just because Iâd handed them a chocolate bar.
âWell, whatever. Iâll just have to⊠mold the childhoods of these little future villains a bit.â
I want to live.
NoâI will live. Iâll survive, grow up into a proper adult, and make this orphanage mine.
Then Iâll make that horrible director pay for every bit of suffering she caused the children here.
Clenching my fists, I dashed toward the food storage room.
I thought I heard faint whispering from the hole Iâd come through, but I ignored it. There was too much to do.
***
âUgh⊠if Iâd known, I wouldnât have acted all cool earlier.â
Iâd strutted off confidently after promising to bring food to the twinsâbut today, of all days, the meal was just soup.
Thin, watery soup.
There was no way I could sneak any of it out without getting caught.
I stared blankly at the bowl, my excitement from earlier draining away.
âAisha! Youâre not eating?â
Elle, the girl whoâd shared a room with me until a few days ago, slid up next to me, eyeing the soup.
âIf you donât want it, can I have it? Iâve been so hungry lately.â
I looked at her for a moment, then pushed my bowl over.
âSure, go ahead. Iâm not hungry.â
âThanks!â
âJust tell them I ate it, and return the dishes for me.â
âOf course!â
Elle beamed at me, spooning up the watery soup with excitement.
I bit my lip. The reason everyone was always hungry wasnât a mysteryâthese âmealsâ were practically water.
âNo wonder weâre starving.â
They called it soup, but it was basically colored water with maybe one or two floating crumbs. No real nutrition at all.
âAnd the biggest problem here is that greedy director.â
No wonder the kids had taken to digging in the dirt for bugs to eat.
Even now, Elle was happily gulping down what was left of my âmeal.â
âPoor Elle. Poor all of us.â
Not a single kid here looked healthyâeveryone was skin and bones.
Meanwhile, the director looked like a bear. Big, heavy, towering over everyone.
And it made senseâshe ate all the donated food meant for us.
âThat awful woman.â
I was grinding my teeth in anger when a sudden, brilliant thought struck me.
âWaitâthatâs right! I can go there!â
Once the idea popped into my head, I didnât hesitate. I had to act fast.
I quietly slipped out the back door, keeping low so none of the staff would see me.
Despite my caution, a grin tugged at my lips.
âHow could I have forgotten that place?â
The one spot with more food than the kitchen or pantry combinedâthe directorâs room.
I usually hate the saying âpeople look the way they act.â Lifeâs not that simple. Some people look cold but are soft-hearted, and others look kind but scam you blind.
But the director? Even I had to admitâshe looked exactly like the greedy monster she was.
Her face was practically sculpted out of greed.
She wouldnât share even a single bean with anyone else.
Even when her hoarded food started to rot, sheâd rather let it go bad than give it to a hungry child.
Sometimes, sheâd toss a few scraps to the kids who flattered herâbut that was it.
I tiptoed toward her room, checking the time. The big clock in the orphanage courtyard struck noon.
âPerfect. She always leaves for lunch at this time. Especially on Wednesdaysâshe eats out on Wednesdays.â
I remembered every detail of her habits.
Most kids didnât pay attention to that stuff, but I made it my business to know everythingâabout her, and every other adult in this place.
So without hesitation, I made my move.
The window was wide open.
They usually kept it that way around this time, since the directorâs room always stank from her never cleaning up after herself.
The staff would air it out whenever she was gone for lunch.
It was practically inviting me in.
âWell,â I muttered, staring at the open window, âguess Iâm a thief now.â
The thought made me pause for just a secondâbut I quickly shook it off.
âThis is for the greater good. I need to feed the kids first!â
Grabbing my empty stomach, I climbed through the window.
And just like that, I was inside.
As expected, the directorâs room was filled with food.
On the big table sat fresh bread, milk, fruit, sandwiches, snacks, chocolate bars, even candyâall piled up like a mini feast.
âUnbelievable. She really is a greedy pig.â
The bread, in particular, caught my eyeâit was from the bakery nearby that donated to the orphanage every few days. Supposedly for us.
But of course, sheâd never shared it once.
I scanned the table quickly, then stuffed two small loaves of bread, one milk bottle, and one chocolate bar into my pockets.
âIf I take any more, I wonât fit through the window.â
I sighed at the pile of leftovers but turned toward the window again.
Thatâs when I heard it.
âUgh! Iâm so sick of this!â
The directorâs voice.
My heart dropped.
If she caught me here, sheâd beat me so badly Iâd be lucky to walk again.
âSeriously?! Of all daysâwhy today?!â
Every hair on my body stood on end.
âShould I hide? Iâm smallâI might fit somewhereâŠâ
But if I hid and she stayed in the room, Iâd starve to death before she left.
I froze in panic, until I heard another voiceâthe timid tone of one of the caretakers.
âDirector, is something wrong?â
The director barked back, voice full of venom.
âWhat, do I have to report every little thing to you now?â
âN-no, of course not! I was just surprised you came back so suddenlyââ
âShut up.â
âAhâŠâ
I could hear her mocking laugh.
âOh, whatâs this? Are you gonna cry again and gossip behind my back later?â
âTh-thatâs not it! You said we could speak freely if something bothered us, soââ
âIdiots. Shut your mouths. I canât even stand the sight of you.â
âDirectorâŠâ
Perfect. The argument was buying me time.
Clutching my loot, I quietly inched toward the window.
The problem was, my pockets were now fullâmilk, bread, chocolateâit was hard to move properly.
Maybe I should just hide, I thought.
But before I could decide, the door slammed open.
âI said shut up! I canât stand your stupid squeaky voiceâitâs like a pig being butchered!â
âD-Directorââ
âEnough! Go bring me my lunch! Oh, rightâremember that beef that was donated for the kids? Grill that for me.â
I didnât wait another second.
Timing it with the sound of her shouting, I hauled myself through the window and dropped to the ground outside.
My heart was pounding so hard it hurt.
I landed on my butt with a painful thud but didnât dare make a sound.
Thenâ
âWait a second! Whatâs this?!â
Her voice was even louder nowâand closer.
âOh no. Did she catch me?!â
I froze, pressing myself flat against the wall under the window.
My brain went blank. My mouth was dry as sandpaper.
I couldnât even breathe properly.
Then I heard the caretaker again, her voice trembling.
âD-did something happen?â
âOh, you bet something happened! Look at this!â
I heard papers fluttering through the air.
âTh-this isâŠâ
âUse your eyes! Canât you see? Thereâs no record of the latest donation money anywhere! Not a single coin came through for the kids!â
âAh⊠thatâs because⊠the situationâs been bad latelyâŠâ
âIf the situationâs bad, fix it! You think youâre getting paid to sit around?â
âY-yes, butââ
âYou know how much money we need here, right?â
âThe sponsors have stopped donating, so I wasnât sure what toââ
SMACK!
The sound of somethingâor someoneâbeing hit.
âIf you just stand around doing nothing, you think money will fall from the sky?! Go make yourself useful! Get those useless brats to earn their keepâmake them beg if you have toââ
âB-begging?!â
âNo, wait⊠Iâve got a better idea.â
Her voice turned low and sickly sweetâlike a beast savoring its next prey.
A chill ran down my spine.
âIâll just make a few of them look more pitiful. Remember last time? When one of them got hurt and the donations poured in?â
âD-Director, you donât meanâ!â
âThatâs right! Iâm a genius! Nothing brings in money like pity. Iâll pick a few myself. Make sure theyâre well-fed for now.â
I stayed frozen under the window, my heart hammering so loud I was afraid theyâd hear itâcaught between relief that I hadnât been discovered, and fury so sharp it burned.
That woman wasnât just greedy. She was a monster.