A wave of nausea rolled through her. Her stomach clenched, a tight, painful knot. She wasn't dead. She was in a hospital room. Sterling City Memorial.
She knew this room.
She knew this day.
One month. She had one month before the world started to unravel.
"Arlena, did you hear me?" Grandma Tucker's face loomed over her, a mask of impatience. Her thin lips were a tight line of disapproval. "Brandi needs this. The family needs this."
The Bone Marrow Donation Consent form. The words blurred, but she knew what they said. She knew what they meant. They were her death warrant, signed a lifetime ago.
Or, not a lifetime ago. Just... before.
"Your cousin is sick, Arlena." Uncle Dale stood at the foot of the bed, his arms crossed over his barrel chest. He was using his 'reasonable patriarch' voice, the one that always preceded a demand. "It's your duty. Blood is thicker than water."
Blood. The word made her stomach churn again. Her blood. The blood they wanted to take, to drain, to use. The donation that would crash her immune system, leaving her vulnerable and weak when the heatwaves hit, when the power grid failed, when the sickness came.
The memory was so clear it felt like a physical blow. The fever, the weakness, the way her body had betrayed her long before the cold finally claimed it. All because of this. Because of them.
A coldness that had nothing to do with phantom memories settled deep in her chest. It pushed out the fear, the confusion. It was a hard, sharp clarity.
"No."
The word was a rasp, torn from a throat raw with disuse. It was quiet, but it landed in the silent room with the force of a gunshot.
Grandma Tucker's jaw dropped. For a second, she looked genuinely shocked, her carefully constructed mask of familial concern slipping to reveal the raw greed beneath.
Then came the rage.
"What did you say?" she shrieked, her voice climbing into a register that made Arlena's teeth ache. "After everything we've done for you! Ungrateful girl! You will sign this, or you are no longer part of this family!"
Brenda, Dale's wife, glided forward. Her eyes were already red-rimmed, a performance of practiced sorrow. She took Arlena's hand. Her grip was surprisingly strong, her nails digging slightly into Arlena's skin.
"Please, Arlena," she whispered, her voice thick with fake tears. "Think of Brandi. She's so young. She has her whole life ahead of her."
Arlena looked at Brenda's perfectly made-up, grieving face. A different memory surfaced. A loaf of bread, the last of Arlena's food. Brenda's hand, snatching it away. The triumphant, ugly sneer on her face as Arlena collapsed from hunger.
The root of a dark, satisfying idea began to grow in the cold soil of Arlena's heart. Revenge.
She pulled her hand away from Brenda's grasp.
Her gaze swept the room, landing on the button for the nurse's call bell. She pressed it. Hard.
"I'm thirsty," Arlena said, her voice a little stronger now. "I need a nurse. And some water."
The interruption threw them off balance. Dale and Brenda exchanged a look, a flicker of annoyance mixed with something else. Something smug.
"Your parents are having such a lovely time in Europe," Brenda said, her tone shifting to casual conversation. "Dale and I were just saying how they deserved this break. That little tour group was such a bargain."
There it was. The confirmation. They had planned this. Waited until her parents, Robert and Helen, were out of the country, unreachable. They had isolated her.
The nurse, a kind-faced woman whose name tag read REYNOLDS, entered the room. "Everything alright in here?"
"I just need some water, please," Arlena said, her eyes fixed on the nurse. A silent plea.
As Nurse Reynolds turned to get the water from the pitcher on the counter, Arlena's gaze flickered to the small medical tray on the bedside table. A pair of stainless-steel surgical scissors lay next to a roll of tape.
With a subtle movement, she nudged the table with her elbow. The scissors slid off the tray, falling silently into the folds of her blanket. Her fingers closed around the cool metal.
She felt the weakness in her body, the lingering ache from a sickness they'd probably exaggerated to get her here. This body wasn't the hardened, starved frame of her previous life. It was soft. Vulnerable. They had always seen her as a resource. A blood bag. A spare part.
Nurse Reynolds handed her the cup. The cool plastic was a solid, real thing in her hand.
"About that tour group in Europe," Arlena said, her eyes locking with Dale's over the rim of the cup. "The one you booked for them. I heard there was a massive transportation strike in France. Are they stuck?"
The smug look on Dale's face vanished. His eyes widened in genuine surprise. "How did you...?"
He didn't know. He couldn't know that she knew. The information was a weapon, and she had just fired her first shot.
Grandma Tucker, seeing her advantage slipping, surged forward again. She was done with persuasion.
"We are not leaving until you sign this," she hissed, grabbing Arlena's wrist. Her fingers were like talons, rough and strong.
The touch was electric. It sent a jolt of pure, undiluted terror through Arlena. The feeling of being pushed. The feeling of falling into the snow. The feeling of giving up.
Not again.
Never again.
A strength she didn't know she possessed flooded her limbs. It was the strength of a cornered animal.
She shoved.
She shoved with all the force of her resurrected life, all the rage of her stolen one.
Grandma Tucker stumbled backward, tripping over her own feet and landing on the floor with a heavy, undignified thud.
Silence.
Dale and Brenda stared, first at their fallen matriarch, then at Arlena, who was now sitting up straighter, the blanket hiding the scissors clutched tight in her hand. Her face was a mask of cold indifference.
The weak, compliant niece was gone. The person looking back at them was a stranger.
Dale's face purpled with rage. He took a step forward, his voice a low, menacing growl. "You little bitch. You'll regret this. I'll make sure you can't even get a job cleaning toilets in this city."
Arlena took a long, slow sip of her water. The liquid soothed her throat. In her last life, she had dreamed of water. Begged for it. Fought for it. Now, she would guard her resources with the ferocity of a dragon.
She saw Brenda give Dale a subtle nod, a flick of her eyes toward Arlena. A silent command. Hold her down.
Arlena's grip on the scissors tightened.
"That's it," Grandma Tucker screeched from the floor, scrambling to her feet. "I'm giving you to the count of three. One... Two..."
Arlena didn't wait for three.
She reached out, snatched the consent form from the clipboard, and ripped it in half. Then in quarters. The sound of tearing paper was the most satisfying sound she had ever heard.
She threw the pieces onto the floor. They fluttered down like toxic confetti, landing at Dale's feet.
The war had just begun.