Location: Freehold Estate Kitchen & Upper Levels, Arvia Province
Time: Late spring, Year 2853 of the Lower Realm
Eleven years old, and Jade had learned that grief was a luxury slaves couldn't afford.
Three months since Zhek's death, and she'd buried the loss deep where it wouldn't interfere with survival. The ring hung on a cord around her neck, hidden beneath ragged clothes—a constant reminder of the man who'd taught her that family wasn't about blood, but about choice.
The kitchen assignment had come through exactly as Zhek had predicted. His final gift from beyond death—weeks spent carefully planting suggestions with the right guards, trading information for the promise that his "little ghost" would be moved to more suitable work.
Better food, better air, and most importantly, access to the upper levels where information flowed like spilled wine.
"Move along, aberrant," Kitchen Supervisor Marta snapped, her wooden spoon cracking against the preparation table. "Turnips don't peel themselves, and Young Master Edvard wants his afternoon refreshments."
Jade kept her head down, small hands working efficiently with the paring knife. Around her, the estate's kitchen hummed with controlled chaos—two dozen slaves working in careful coordination. The hierarchy here was subtler than in the pits, based on skill and seniority rather than simple brutality.
But it was still slavery. Still property serving masters who saw them as barely human.
(At least the food's better,) she thought, allowing herself a small moment of gratitude. (And no one's tried to stab me with ice needles in weeks.)
Small victories, the voice in her head agreed with dry humor. Though kitchen politics can be just as dangerous as pit fights.
The voice had grown stronger since Zhek's death, offering advice that felt borrowed from someone with extensive experience. But that was impossible—she was eleven years old. What could she know about strategy and survival?
"Jade!" Mama Dee called from across the kitchen. The head cook was a stout woman with kind eyes and hands bearing decades of burn scars. "Take the tea service to the garden pavilion. Silver tray, mind you don't drop anything."
The tray was elaborate—delicate porcelain cups painted with dragons and phoenixes, small cakes that probably cost more than most slaves saw in a year. Jade balanced it carefully as she climbed the winding stairs from kitchen to upper levels.
The garden pavilion stood like a jewel among manicured grounds—white marble columns and silk curtains catching the afternoon light. And lounging within it like a predator in his den was her cousin Edvard, now seventeen and bearing all the arrogance of inherited power.
He wasn't alone. Beside him sat a pale boy about his age with nervous eyes—Terran Millfield, son of a minor noble family.
"—told the instructor that obviously he didn't understand advanced Torrent manipulation," Edvard was saying with smug satisfaction. "Really, how can someone teach what they've never mastered?"
(Show-off,) Jade thought, setting the tray down with careful precision. Each piece of porcelain placed exactly where it should be. (He always has to be the smartest person in the room.)
"Ah, finally," Edvard said, noticing her presence. "I was beginning to think the kitchen staff had forgotten what 'promptly' means."
Terran glanced at her with obvious discomfort. "Edvard, perhaps we should—"
"Nonsense," Edvard interrupted with a lazy wave. "She's just a kitchen slave. Barely worth noticing." His eyes found Jade's with familiar cruelty. "Isn't that right, cousin?"
The word hung in the air like poison. Cousin. Acknowledging their blood relationship while emphasizing how far she'd fallen.
"Yes, young master," Jade replied quietly, keeping her voice perfectly neutral.
"You see, Terran?" Edvard leaned back in his chair. "Perfectly trained. No spirit left at all. Father says breaking them early makes them so much more... manageable."
Terran shifted uncomfortably. "I really don't think we should—"
"Oh, don't worry," Edvard said with false reassurance. "She's completely harmless. A Voidforge aberrant—born without even a spark of essence. Completely empty."
The words carved deep, finding every insecurity she'd tried to bury. Empty. Broken. Worthless.
He's wrong, the voice said firmly. You're not empty. You're something he can't understand, and that threatens him.
"But here's what makes her fascinating," Edvard continued, obviously enjoying his captive audience. "Despite being spiritually vacant, she's managed to survive ten years in the slave pits. Most children last six months."
He stood, circling her slowly. "Which raises interesting questions about resourcefulness versus breeding. My friend here believes bloodline determines everything. I believe proper conditioning can shape anyone."
(Oh no.) The realization hit like ice water. (I'm not a person to him. I'm a test case.)
Classic predator behavior, the voice observed. He's using you to prove a point about dominance.
"So I've been thinking," Edvard said, settling back into his chair with predatory satisfaction. "Perhaps it's time for a more... comprehensive experiment."
He reached for his teacup with deliberate casualness. "You're wasted in the kitchens. Peeling vegetables and scrubbing floors—any slave can do that. But you... you have potential for more specialized service."
Jade's blood ran cold. Specialized service could mean anything—and most of those things were worse than kitchen work.
"I'm going to request you as my personal attendant," Edvard announced with obvious pleasure. "Someone to manage my correspondence, organize my study materials, assist with research projects. Close, personal service."
(Personal attendant.) The implications made her stomach turn. She'd seen what happened to slaves who served the family too closely. They either disappeared entirely or emerged... changed.
Tactical assessment, the voice said grimly. This significantly alters your situation. Proximity to family members increases both opportunities and dangers.
"Of course," Edvard continued with mock concern, "such a position requires certain... skills. Reading, writing, basic education. Can't have an illiterate slave handling important documents."
Terran finally found his voice. "But if she can't read—"
"Oh, she'll learn," Edvard said with cold certainty. "I'll make sure of that. Personal tutoring, you might say. Very hands-on instruction."
The threat in his words was unmistakable. He would teach her—whether she wanted to learn or not, using whatever methods he deemed necessary.
"What do you think, cousin?" Edvard's smile was sharp as broken glass. "Ready to expand your... education?"
Jade looked between them, seeing the trap clearly but having no way to avoid it. Refuse, and he could have her beaten for insubordination. Accept, and she'd be completely at his mercy.
"I live to serve, young master," she said finally, the words tasting like ash.
"Excellent," Edvard replied with satisfaction. "I'll speak to Father tonight. By tomorrow, you'll be transferred to my personal service." He leaned forward with predatory interest. "And then your real education can begin."
As if summoned by his words, a guard appeared at the pavilion's entrance—Marcus, one of the estate's enforcers with scarred hands and dead eyes.
"Young Master Edvard," Marcus said with a respectful bow. "Your father requests your presence in his study. Family business."
"Of course," Edvard replied, rising gracefully. "Terran, we'll continue this discussion later." He turned to Jade with obvious anticipation. "And you... you should prepare yourself. Personal service is very different from kitchen work. Much more... intimate."
As the boys departed, Jade remained frozen beside the tea service, processing what had just occurred. In a matter of minutes, her entire situation had changed. No more kitchen safety, no more blending into the crowd of faceless slaves.
She would belong to Edvard now. Completely.
This complicates everything, the voice said with clinical assessment. Personal slaves have access to information but face constant scrutiny. Every action will be monitored.
(He's going to make my life hell,) she thought with growing dread. (Just how many years of this can I endure?)
Possibly, the voice agreed. But consider the opportunities. Personal attendants handle correspondence, research materials, and private documents. Access to information that most slaves never see.
(You think I should be grateful?) The thought came with a spike of anger.
I think survival sometimes means accepting terrible situations and finding ways to use them. He wants to educate you? Let him. Learn everything you can. Knowledge is power, even for slaves.
The late afternoon sun cast long shadows across the garden as Jade made her way back to the kitchen. Mama Dee took one look at her expression and asked no questions—just handed her a bowl of leftover stew and pointed toward a quiet corner.
"Eat," she said simply. "Whatever's coming, you'll need your strength."
That night, lying in her cell, Jade stared at the stone ceiling and tried to prepare herself for what was coming. Personal service to Edvard meant leaving the relative safety of the kitchen. It meant being alone with someone who saw her as an interesting experiment rather than a person.
But it also meant access to books. To writing. To information that could change everything.
A couple more years, the voice reminded her. Until you're older, stronger. If you can learn everything possible, build your knowledge...
(Then what?) she wondered.
Then maybe we find a way out. But first, survival. Always survival.
Outside her cell, the slave pits settled into their usual nighttime rhythm of whispered conversations and stifled sobs. But for the first time in months, Jade felt something that might have been hope.
Edvard thought he was claiming a broken toy for his amusement. Instead, he was about to give her access to the one thing that could make her truly dangerous.
Education.
(Let him teach me,) she decided with cold determination. (Let him think he's breaking me while he's actually making me stronger.)
Good, the voice said with quiet approval. Use his arrogance against him. Learn everything you can. And when the time comes...
(When the time comes?)
When the time comes, maybe we'll be ready to find our own path.
The ring around her neck felt warm against her skin—Zhek's final gift and a reminder that she wasn't truly alone. The old man had protected her for as long as he could. Now it was time to protect herself.
And maybe, eventually, to find a way to escape this place entirely.
A couple more years as Edvard's personal slave. Learning, growing, preparing.
Until she was old enough and smart enough to make her own choices about what came next.
The pits had tried to break her and failed. Edvard would try to break her too.
Let him try.
She was stronger than he knew.