Her heart hammered against her ribs in a frantic, bruising rhythm. It beat so hard it made her vision blur. The phantom sensation of thick smoke and metallic blood still coated the back of her tongue.
She threw her legs over the edge of the bed. Her knees buckled the second her bare feet slapped against the cold, warped linoleum floor. She stumbled forward, her shoulder slamming hard into the doorframe, but she didn't stop. She threw herself into the tiny, cramped bathroom.
Her hands slammed down on the edges of the porcelain sink. She gripped it so tight her knuckles turned a stark, bone-white. She forced her head up. She forced herself to look into the cracked mirror.
The face looking back at her wasn't charred. The skin wasn't melting off her cheekbones. There were no blackened, blistered wounds from the explosion that had ended her life. She was young. Her skin was pale, covered in a thin sheen of cold sweat, but it was flawless.
Her phone vibrated on the edge of the sink. She snatched it up. Her thumb trembled as she pressed the power button. The harsh blue light of the screen illuminated the dark bathroom.
The date stared back at her. Three years ago.
It was the exact day her mother had signed the papers. The day she was forced into a marriage contract with the Bradford family.
Before Janet could process the impossibility of her own breathing, a sharp, blinding spike of agony drove itself directly behind her eyes. She dropped the phone. It clattered into the sink bowl.
She gripped her head, a low groan tearing from her throat. It wasn't a headache. It was an upload.
A fragmented, disorienting surge of memories washed over her. It wasn't a clear picture, but a chaotic storm of instincts and fractured images that tore through her synapses. She felt a strange, latent heat deep within her chest, a dormant spark she couldn't quite understand or control. The ghost of a life she hadn't fully lived yet pressed against her skull, leaving her dizzy but hyper-aware. Vague echoes of medical terminology and anatomical structures flickered at the edges of her consciousness, refusing to fully materialize. She gasped, her spine arching backward as a warm, terrifyingly unfamiliar sensation hummed under her skin. It was an awakening, a raw and unpolished potential that left her trembling, gripping the edges of the sink as she tried to ground herself in the overwhelming reality of her second chance.
Then, the sound broke the silence.
Click. Clack. Click. Clack.
Heels. Expensive, heavy heels striking the cheap wooden floorboards of the hallway outside her bedroom. The sound was arrogant. It was a march of victory.
The bedroom door didn't just open. It was shoved with brute force. It slammed against the drywall with a violent crack, the cheap wood splintering around the hinges.
Kandy.
Her cousin stood in the doorway, a stark contrast to the rotting Rust Belt house. She was wearing a Chanel dress, the latest season, the fabric clinging to her in a way that screamed new money and desperate validation.
Kandy didn't say a word at first. She just raised her left hand. Deliberately. Slowly.
The diamond caught the flickering overhead light. Five carats. Pear-shaped. A heavy, gaudy rock that looked like a tumor resting on her perfectly manicured finger.
"I'm marrying Jax Adler," Kandy announced.
Her voice was shrill. It vibrated with a desperate, hungry need for Janet's devastation.
Janet didn't blink. She didn't breathe.
She looked past the ring and into Kandy's eyes. She saw the wild, manic certainty there. The absolute conviction of someone who knew the future. The kind of certainty that only comes from living a life and waking up to do it again.
She was reborn. Just like Janet.
Kandy crossed her arms, the diamond resting prominently against her collarbone. She waited for it. She waited for Janet's knees to buckle. She waited for the tears to well up, for the screaming, the begging, the complete mental collapse.
Janet leaned her shoulder against the bathroom doorframe. Her chest was steady. Her stomach didn't drop. There was no anger boiling in her blood. There was only a cold, clinical pity.
Kandy's smug smile faltered. Her signature tell-her fingers immediately dropped to twist the massive ring on her finger. She hated the silence.
"You're going to marry Gaylord Bradford," Kandy spat, stepping closer, invading the space. Her perfume was cloying, suffocating. "That paralyzed monster. That burned freak. He's a rotting corpse, Janet."
She wanted to hurt her. She wanted to break Janet's spirit with the gruesome details of his injuries.
But Janet's mind was already pulling up Gaylord's file from her past life. The Ouroboros bloodline. The emperor star. The man who would eventually tear open the fabric of reality and conquer six dimensions. He wasn't a monster. He was a dormant god.
And Jax Adler? The Wall Street golden boy Kandy just stole from her?
Jax's kidneys were currently failing. Irreversibly.
"He's going to inherit the billion-dollar trust," Kandy bragged, her chest puffing out, her voice echoing in the small room. "I'm going to be the queen of Manhattan. And you? You're going to be wiping drool off a cripple's chin."
Janet tilted her head, her face an unreadable mask.
"Kandy," Janet said softly, her voice carrying a strange, heavy pity that made the air in the room feel thick. "I truly hope you know the man you've chosen. I hope the glittering future you think you've stolen is exactly what it appears to be."
The color drained from Kandy's face in an instant. Her hand froze on her ring. Her eyes darted to the side. Panic. Raw, unfiltered panic flashed across her features. She hated the ambiguity in Janet's voice, the calm certainty that suggested Janet knew a terrible secret she didn't.
"What are you talking about?" Kandy demanded, her voice shrill. "Jax is perfect! He's going to rule Wall Street!"
Janet stood up straight, pushing off the doorframe. She was only two inches taller than Kandy, but right now, looking down at her trembling form, she felt ten feet tall. She didn't need to expose everything right now; planting the seed of doubt was enough.
The strange heat hummed under Janet's skin, a warm, powerful current that begged to be released. Kandy took an involuntary step back, intimidated by the sudden, suffocating shift in Janet's aura.
Janet raised her hands and clapped. Slow. Loud. Mocking.
"Congratulations, Kandy," Janet said, offering a slow, chilling smile. "You successfully intercepted the exact fate you deserve. I wish you both a long, revealing life together."
Kandy's face turned a sickly shade of purple. Her jaw clenched so hard it looked like her teeth would shatter.
"You're just jealous! This is pathetic! You're going to be a widow in a month!"
Janet felt the power in her veins. She knew the exact biological pathways to pull Gaylord Bradford back from the edge of hell.
She pointed a steady finger toward the hallway.
"Get out of my room. Now."
Kandy planted her feet, biting her lower lip so hard a drop of blood welled up. She wanted a fight. She needed to see Janet break.
Janet didn't give her the satisfaction. She turned back to the sink, picked up her phone, and pulled up the Perkins family security speed dial. Her thumb hovered over the call button.
Kandy's eyes widened. She knew Janet would do it. With a frustrated, guttural sound, Kandy took a step back, her posture defensive.