Chapter 3Ā
āIām not sure what you mean, my lady,ā Reina said smoothly. āAs your nanny, Iām only trying to educate you properly.ā
āEducate me, huh.ā
āYes. You seem quite sensitive today,ā she added with a fake smile.
Always like thisāsheād twist things around and make it seem like I was the one overreacting. I was grinding my teeth at her when the mansionās front door suddenly opened.
āAmannet?ā
The moment I heard that familiar voice, I turned away from the nanny.
āDad!ā
āThere you are, my little girl! What are you doing out here?ā
Fatherās face lit up with the brightest smile.
But to an outsider, we probably didnāt look like father and daughter at all.
The Marquis of Reizeāmy fatherāhad fiery red hair and eyes the color of molten rubies.
Meanwhile, I had dark navy-blue hair, like the night sky, and purple eyes.
It was no wonder Grandmother always doubted my parentage.
Still, Father never cared about that. He looked at me with the same gentle expression as always.
Normally, he wouldāve run straight over to scoop me up, but this time he hesitatedāhis hand resting instead on the shoulders of two small boys behind him.
āAh⦠Amannet,ā he said with an awkward chuckle. āI was going to introduce them later, but, wellā¦ā
I tilted my head, pretending to be clueless, as if this was all new to me.
He really brought them.
I had hoped that things might change in this new lifeābut no. Nothing had changed. Father had brought those twins again.
The only difference was the setting.
In the past, we met in the dining room. Father had taken them straight there where I was waiting, and when the hungry twinsā stomachs growled at the sight of all the food, I hadāashamedlyāthrown my fork in disgust.
I didnāt throw it at them, but still. Looking back, Iād acted horribly.
That first meeting ruined everything. The twins had avoided me after that, and their shy, awkward behavior only made me angrier.
Iād promised myself that if I ever got a second chance, Iād make sure our first meeting went differently.
I just didnāt think Iād actually get that chance.
And yet here we were again. Same moment, same people.
Father stood there smiling, looking between me and the boys.
Ha⦠Father. Even in this life, you brought them again.
He had no idea what was to comeāthe nightmares those boys would grow into. I could only sigh deeply.
Those two boys standing there would one day become the mad twins who would kill me.
This⦠really wasnāt fair.
In my previous life, my soft-hearted father had one day brought home twin boysāno one knew from where. Maybe he adopted them. Maybe he kidnapped them. Who knew?
Either way, I despised them from the start.
Who could possibly welcome complete strangers into their home? Especially when the father who used to smile only at you suddenly started smiling at them too.
If Iām being honest, Iād been jealous. Iād been petty. Iād bullied them a little, out of spite.
Iād gone from being a poor, ordinary girl in my first life to the pampered daughter of a marquisāand Iād wanted to keep all that attention for myself.
But those twins? Theyād taken some of it away.
They were like stones on the path of my perfect lifeāsmall, but always getting in my way.
And after Father died, they showed their true colors.
Thatās when I realizedātoo lateāthat I was living inside a novel.
Right before I died.
Honestly, who remembers the real names of side characters? You only ever remember the main ones. And those two? They were minor villainsāthe hidden twin antagonists.
So yes, I had excuses. Sort of.
While I was lost in thought, Father gently pushed the boys toward me.
āAmannet,ā he said softly, āthese two will be your brothers. Donāt fight with them, all right?ā
I blinked in mock surprise, then grabbed the hem of my skirt and gave a deep, polite bow toward the twinsāmy face plastered with the most innocent smile I could fake.
āWelcome home, brothers.ā
Father looked even more shocked than the twins did.
āEh? Amannet, youāre⦠not angry?ā
If you knew Iād be angry, maybe you shouldnāt have brought them, Father.
Youāve already done itāso whatās the point of asking now?
āOf course not!ā I chirped.
After all, those two are the villains whoāll grow up to destroy everything.
And IāIām planning to survive this time.
āAh⦠thatās a relief,ā Father said, scratching his head awkwardly. āI thought youād hate them. Theyāll be staying with us because of⦠certain unavoidable circumstances.ā
Oh, I know. You said that last time too.
Something about a promise you couldnāt break, something secret and important.
Still infuriating, even remembering it now.
āThen I understand,ā I said sweetly. āIf thatās the case, Iāll do my best.ā
āO-Oh⦠thatās⦠very mature of you,ā he stammered.
He clearly hadnāt expected this reaction.
I glanced at the twins again. In the past, theyād arrived looking like beggars.
Their hairāonce a clear, sky-blueāhad turned a dull gray, and their sea-colored eyes were filled with unease. Their clothes were torn and threadbare, barely hanging onto them.
They looked exactly the same now.
Even so, I stepped forward and extended my hand.
āItās nice to meet you, brothers. My name is Amannet.ā
I smiled brightlyātoo brightly. If my fate was already tied to theirs, I might as well start buttering them up early.
āā¦ā
Of course, neither of them took my hand.
They didnāt even pretend to. They just stared.
In the past, their constant coldness had driven me crazyāand Iād lashed out because of it.
But not this time. Not anymore.
āI really hope we can get along,ā I said softly.
The truth was, these boys werenāt just random orphans. They were the illegitimate sons of one of the most powerful families in the Empireāthe Aporta Duchy, known as the Empireās āSword.ā
Their family was so influential that even the Emperor tread carefully around them.
I glanced at the twins again, biting my lip.
Why would they end up here? And how did my gentle, timid father have the nerve to bring them into our home?
I looked back at Father, silently asking for an explanation, but he was too busy beaming at how āwellā we were getting along to notice.
So frustrating.
I never found out why he brought them, not even before I died. Maybe he had a reason, maybe he didnāt. If there was a plan, it never came to light.
What I did know was that the twins themselves didnāt even know who they were.
According to rumors, theyād been kidnapped at birth and kept hidden for over ten yearsāuntil Father ārescuedā them and brought them to our mansion.
And it was here, under our roof, that they discovered their true identity.
For a while, Iād thought they were just awkward boys trying to adjust.
But the moment they learned they were of noble blood, they turned on usāaccusing our family of kidnapping and imprisoning them.
They destroyed everything.
Even remembering it made my jaw tighten.
After all Father did for themā¦
Still, I couldnāt seek revenge.
From their point of view, Father had been their captor, not their savior.
If things went on as before, history would repeat itselfāand I would die again.
And this time, I wasnāt going to let that happen.