Her gaze swept across the room, a clinical assessment of the enemy. Her father, Harrison, face rigid with authority. Her stepmother, Sylvia, a practiced, sympathetic smile plastered on her face that didn't reach her cold eyes. And her stepsister, Melanie, perched on a silk armchair, radiating pure, undisguised glee.
The air in Ivy's lungs felt thin, each breath a conscious effort. "No."
The single word was quiet, but it landed with the force of a slap.
Harrison's jaw tightened. "This isn't a request. The merger between Barr Group and Davenport Industries hinges on this union. If you refuse, we face a bankruptcy filing. The family will be ruined."
Ivy merely lifted a single, unimpressed eyebrow. The threat of financial ruin felt distant, meaningless.
"Don't be ungrateful," Melanie chimed in, her voice dripping with venom. "For a high-school dropout with a dead-end past, marrying into the Davenport family is a miracle. Even if he is dying."
Ivy's eyes locked onto Melanie. The air around her seemed to drop several degrees. Ivy's mind went silent, replaced by a cold, predatory focus. It was a feeling she knew well, the calm before the kill.
"Ivy, dear," Sylvia cooed, stepping forward as if to comfort her. "We're only thinking of you. Jeffrey may not have long, but the inheritance... it would secure your future."
Ivy saw the raw greed flickering in Sylvia's eyes, as clear as the diamonds on her fingers. A bitter laugh almost escaped her lips.
"It's a great blessing that you're going to marry into their family. Don't end up like your sister, who had such bad luck that she agreed to marry them and then jumped off a cliff." Melanie added, twisting the knife.
Alice was the only person in the family who truly cared for her. Her sister disappeared forever days after the announcement of the marriage. They claimed she had gone mad and jumped off a cliff, but Ivy knew that wasn't the truth.
That was it. The mention of Alice, the casual desecration of her memory, snapped the last thread of Ivy's control.
The room saw only a blur.
One moment, Ivy was by the door. The next, she was behind Melanie's armchair. There was a sharp, sickening crack, followed by a piercing scream. Melanie was on her feet, one arm twisted behind her back at an unnatural angle, her face contorted in agony. Ivy held her there with one hand, her movements economical and brutally efficient.
"Say her name again," Ivy whispered, her voice a sliver of ice against Melanie's ear, "and I'll dislocate your jaw next."
Harrison and Sylvia stared, frozen in shock. The movements were too precise, too practiced.
Ivy released her hold, shoving Melanie forward. The girl stumbled and collapsed onto the floor, cradling her useless arm and sobbing.
Ivy's gaze swept over her so-called family, her voice low and steady. "My life is my own. And I will find out what really happened to Alice."
She turned and walked towards the grand staircase.
"You stop right there!" Harrison roared, his face purple with rage. "You will not walk away from this!"
Two of the household's security guards, burly men in black suits, moved to block her path at the bottom of the stairs. Ivy didn't break her stride. As the first guard reached for her, she sidestepped, a fluid motion that seemed almost lazy. Her elbow connected sharply with his ribs. He grunted, the air rushing out of his lungs, and folded. The second guard lunged, and she met him with a simple, brutal palm strike to the nose. He staggered back, blood pouring from his nostrils, his eyes wide with disbelief.
She placed a foot on the first step.
Melanie, still on the floor, managed to choke out through her tears, "You bitch!"
Without turning, Ivy's hand shot out, snatching an apple from a decorative bowl on a nearby table. With a flick of her wrist, she sent it flying. The apple arced through the air and hit Melanie squarely in the mouth, silencing her with a pained yelp.
Ivy continued up the stairs, the chaos erupting below her-Sylvia's shrieks, Harrison's bellowing-nothing more than background noise. She ignored it all, her mind a cold, clear void.
Her phone vibrated in her pocket. She pulled it out, her steps finally faltering on the landing. A message from an unknown number.
It contained only one sentence.
"Marrying him is the only way to get to the truth."
Her fingers tightened around the phone, the plastic groaning under the pressure. The cold resolve in her heart wavered, just for a second, as a new, unwelcome possibility took root.