I was out back in the woods, mid-swing with a splitting maul, when a guy in a suit showed up claiming he was my "protection detail." The poor guy looked like he’d seen a ghost—or maybe it was just the way I handled the axe. He dropped a slip of paper with an address on it and bolted before I could even ask who was paying him. The night before I left for the city to join the Montgomerys—my biological family, apparently—my foster mom gripped my hands tight. She wouldn’t stop fretting. "The city’s got lights and money, Aggie, but those high-society types? they’ve got rules that’ll suffocate a girl like you. Don’t let them look down on you." "If they give you even a second of grief," she added, "you come right back to the Ozarks. I can still outwork any three of those city boys to keep us fed." I just laughed and puffed out my chest. "Don’t you worry, Mom. Nobody’s gonna push Aggie 'The Hammer' around. Not a chance." To prepare for the lions' den, I stayed up all night devouring about two hundred "Secret Heiress" stories on my Kindle. I was ready for everything: the jealous sister, the cold-hearted father, the scheming stepmother. I had my counter-moves mapped out. The next morning, sporting two dark circles under my eyes, I rumbled up to the Montgomery estate driving my beat-up 1974 International Harvester tractor. I stared at the massive, gilded iron gates. Locked. Classic, I thought. The 'Power Play' cold shoulder. Just like the books said. I hopped down, took a deep breath, and delivered a kick that would’ve leveled a barn door. The gates creaked open. "Aggie’s home, losers!" I bellowed. But the scene inside stopped me cold. My biological parents and the "fake" heiress weren’t sneering at me from a balcony. All three of them were on their knees in the foyer, faces ash-white, trembling like they were awaiting a firing squad. "W-welcome home... Miss Montgomery!" they stammered in unison. I stood there, completely floored. This wasn’t the script. Where was the condescension? Where was the drama? 1 I scratched my head, looking at the three of them huddled on the floor. "Uh... what exactly is the vibe here?" My biological mother, Diane, and the girl who’d been living my life, Maisie, traded a terrified glance. Diane forced a jagged, awkward smile. "Aggie, darling... this is the welcome ceremony we spent all night rehearsing. Do you... do you like it?" I stared at them, my skepticism dial turned to ten. Man, city people are freaking weird. I sighed and waved a hand. "Alright, get up. The floor’s probably freezing." They looked like they’d just been granted a stay of execution, helping each other up with shaky limbs. That’s when I noticed their clothes. For "Old Money" billionaires, they looked... plain. Almost aggressively so. Is this a trap? I wondered. Are they trying to make me feel guilty? Maisie stood tucked behind the parents, her eyes downcast, looking like a kicked puppy. She looked like she wanted to say something but was too scared to breathe. Robert and Diane stepped forward, hugging me with the kind of ginger care you’d use for a live grenade. "Aggie, we’re just so glad you’re back." They led me upstairs to pick a room. When we passed a suite that looked like it belonged in a Disney castle—all silk and mahogany—the three of them stiffened. I saw the shame flash across their faces. Here it is, I thought. The classic trope. The fake daughter gets the palace, and the real daughter gets the broom closet. I know how this ends. But then Robert pointed to a modest, beige bedroom tucked near the servant's stairs. "That’s... that’s where Maisie stays now." I blinked, looking from the "Princess Suite" back to the beige room. "Fine. I’ll take the big one," I said, testing them. Their expressions went from nervous to downright bizarre. "Is that a problem?" I barked. "No! No, no!" Diane squeaked. "Aggie can stay wherever she wants!" At dinner, Maisie came to find me. She stood in the doorway, looking all soft and innocent. I went on high alert. This is it. She’s mad about the room. She’s going to fake a fall or start a fight to make me look like the villain. Instead, she reached out and gently took my elbow. "Sister... I noticed the floors were just waxed. They’re slippery. Let me help you down." When we got to the dining room, there wasn't a five-course meal served by a butler. It was just home-cooked food. No staff in sight. I was convinced: They’re playing 'poor' to test my character. How original. Suddenly, the front door slammed open. A woman in a designer suit walked in like she owned the place. I expected her to be a mean aunt or a socialite rival, but Robert and Diane jumped like they’d been shocked. "Mrs. Hannigan," they whispered. Maisie leaned in, tugging my sleeve. "That’s the housekeeper," she whispered. I ignored them and went back upstairs to unpack. Later that night, as I was getting ready for bed, Maisie knocked. She was carrying a warm glass of milk. My internal alarm bells went off. According to every trope I’d read, there was an 80% chance that glass was hitting the floor, and a 100% chance I’d be blamed for it. "Sister, have some milk," she murmured, her head low. "It helps with sleep." I watched her, stone-faced, waiting for the performance to begin. Suddenly, her foot slipped. She lurched forward, losing her balance completely. The glass flew from her hand, shattering into a million pieces at my feet. And now come the waterworks, I thought. She’ll cry, say I pushed her, claim she was just being sweet, and the whole family will burst in to condemn my 'brutality.' I folded my arms and waited. I even had my comeback lines ready. 2 But the screaming never came. Maisie hit the floor hard. I heard her knee crack against the hardwood—a dull, painful thud. She didn't even look at her leg. She scrambled up, frantic, her first instinct being to check me for glass shards. Her face was a mask of pure panic and apology. "I’m so sorry! I’m so sorry, Aggie! The floor was too slick—did it hit you? Are you hurt?" She looked at the mess, her eyes welling with actual tears of terror. I stared down at her, feeling... confused. I hadn't even touched her. Maybe she’s just a really good actress, I reasoned. Establishing a baseline of innocence before the big move. I decided to play along. "I'm fine. Go to bed." The next morning, I was yawning my way to the stairs when a shadow blocked my path. Maisie was standing at the top of the flight, looking like she’d been crying for hours. Bingo, my brain whispered. The Staircase Scene. She’s going to 'fall' and blame me. This is the big one. I braced myself. I’d seen this movie. When she tipped, I’d grab her and pull her into a hug, ruining her little drama. Suddenly, Maisie lunged. She grabbed my arm with a grip so tight it actually surprised me. Wow, she really doesn't want me to escape the frame, I thought. I was about to flip her over my shoulder and end the charade, but she didn't push. She started guiding me down the stairs, one agonizingly slow step at a time. Her voice was trembling. "Aggie... I had a nightmare. I dreamed you fell down these stairs." "And then I got up for water and realized how slippery the wood is. I was so scared. Please, let me hold onto you. You have to be careful." Me: "..." I tried to pull my arm away. I was a girl who could carry a butchered hog over a mountain trail without breaking a sweat. I didn't need a waif-like girl to help me walk. But the more I pulled, the tighter she clung, tears streaming down her face. "Please don’t push me away. I can’t let you get hurt." I looked at her, then at the ceiling. What is happening in this house? When we finally reached the foyer, Robert and Diane were waiting. They saw Maisie clutching my arm, and their first reaction wasn't to ask what she was doing. They rushed me like a NASCAR pit crew, checking me for bruises. "Aggie! Are you okay? Did something happen?" Diane’s voice was pure anxiety. Robert turned to Maisie, his voice stern but shaky. "Honey, don’t grab her so hard. You’re going to bruise her arm." The whole family was a mess of frantic energy. Diane ran to the kitchen to order my favorite breakfast (or what she thought was my favorite), and Robert started digging through a first-aid kit, insisting on putting ointment on a "red mark" that wasn't even there. That’s when Mrs. Hannigan, the housekeeper, sidled up to me with a plastic smile. "Good morning, Miss Montgomery. I didn't get a chance to properly introduce myself yesterday. You can call me Elizabeth." I arched an eyebrow. "Is that right, Beth?" Her smile faltered for a micro-second. She leaned in, her voice dropping to a low, oily whisper. "Listen, honey. You’re new here. You don’t know how deep the water is with your parents. You and I? We’re the outsiders. You’d better watch your back with them." I nodded slowly, playing the part. It almost made sense. Their behavior was too weird to be normal. 3 A few days passed in a strange, quiet truce. Before I could really start investigating the family dynamics, I was told I’d been enrolled in the same elite private school as Maisie. Finally, I thought. The School Arc. Maisie probably realized she couldn't break me at home, so she was going to use her "Queen Bee" status to make my life a living hell on campus. Monday morning, as I headed for the door, Maisie came running up, out of breath. She shoved a breakfast burrito into my hand and wheeled out a bubblegum-pink electric scooter. "Aggie! Let me give you a ride to school!" I stared at the scooter, then at the sprawling mansion behind us. "Does this family not own a car?" "The... the car is in the shop," she stammered, looking pained. I patted her shoulder. "Maisie, your lies are getting pathetic." Her face turned bright red. "I... I..." I didn't wait for her to finish. I grabbed a Lime scooter from the sidewalk and zoomed off. At the school gates, I didn't even get five feet before a guy with bleached-blonde hair and a sneer blocked my way. "The boss wants to see you." I looked up. A few yards away, a guy was leaning against a black Range Rover, sucking on a lollipop and holding a photo. "So, you’re the hillbilly the Montgomerys dragged home?" I rubbed my hands together. Yes. Finally. The Plot is moving. He looked me up and down with pure disgust. "I’m Hunter. If you know what’s good for you, you’ll crawl back to whatever hole you came out of." I flipped a piece of invisible lint off my shoulder and gave him my best 'main character' smirk. "I'm your worst nightmare, kid." Hunter’s face turned purple. "You... you little..." The surrounding students gasped. "Who is she? Nobody talks to Hunter like that!" "She’s a dead girl walking." Hunter waved his hand at his goons. "Teach her some manners!" "Stop! Don't touch my sister!" Maisie came sprinting toward us, nearly tripping over her own feet. Hunter didn't even look at her. He just stuck out a foot, tripping her. She went face-first into the dirt right in front of me. I looked down at her. "Okay, that was a bit much. You don't need to bow that low." Maisie started sobbing, but she still tried to scramble up and stand between me and Hunter. Hunter just pushed her back down. "Shut up, you little brat. Get lost before I make you." Maisie’s eyes were wide with terror. She stopped crying. She looked paralyzed. I looked at Hunter, then back at Maisie. I looked at Hunter again. He had the same arrogant, shifty eyes as Mrs. Hannigan, the housekeeper. Oh. I get it now. The "fake daughter" wasn't a villain. She was a punching bag. And the housekeeper's son was the one holding the whip. I stepped forward, grabbed Hunter by the collar, and executed a perfect judo hip throw. He hit the pavement with a sound like a wet sack of flour. "The name," I said, leaning over him, "is Aggie." Hunter was wheezing, clutching his back. I looked at Maisie on the ground. "Get up. Kick him." She blinked through her tears. "I... I can't..." I glared at her. "Kick him, or I’ll kick you. Pick one." Maisie shivered, found a spark of courage somewhere in her gut, and delivered a shaky kick to Hunter’s ribs. Then another. Hunter howled. "You’re dead! Aggie, I’m gonna kill you!" As the crowd dispersed, Maisie followed me like a lost puppy, her eyes full of something I hadn't seen before. "Aggie, that was... incredible." "Aggie, you’re so cool." "Aggie..."

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