Chapter 138
But she was the type of person who bullied the weak and feared the strong. She didn't dare blame Julian, instead placing all the fault on Rosalie, whom she believed the Talley family had prompted to instigate Julian's disrespect toward her elders.
“Damn,” Phyllis muttered. Only after Julian left the dining room did she dare slam her fork down and throw a tantrum. However, besides Edward, Helena, and a few servants, no one witnessed this scene.
At this point, Rosalie, already upstairs, was unaware that Julian had defended her downstairs. Standing in her unrecognizable bedroom, her eyes cold, she looked at the servant before her.
“Whose things are these?” Rosalie asked, already knowing the answer.
During her previous time travel, Rosalie discovered that Helena had taken over her master bedroom. Back then, Claudia and Helena feigned distress, claiming Helena's illness necessitated a temporary move to Rosalie's well-lit second-floor room.
At that time, Rosalie, enjoying a good relationship with the family and rarely home, readily gave up her room without a second thought. Now, seeing the room filled with tacky pink decorations, erasing all traces of her presence, Rosalie’s face hardened.
The servant, frightened by Rosalie’s demeanor, whispered, “Th-they’re Helena’s.”
“Who gave her permission to move in?” Rosalie asked.
“It was the mistress,” the servant replied.
Rosalie felt both anger and amusement. Her tolerance of the family, it seemed, had been mistaken for an invitation to be taken advantage of.