A shard of the dashboard, sharp and unforgiving, was buried in her abdomen. The phantom pain of it, a memory seared into her soul, made her gasp even now. But when her hand flew to her stomach, it met only smooth, whole skin. The memory was the only wound left. Every shallow breath sent a fresh wave of fire through her veins. Her fingers, slick with blood, fumbled for her phone on the passenger seat floor.
The screen flickered to life, cracked but functional. And there it was. A news alert, pushed to her lock screen like a final, cruel joke.
Brenton Harding Weds Petrochemical Heiress Arabella Vance in Lavish Hamptons Ceremony.
A picture accompanied the text. Brenton, smiling, his arm wrapped around Arabella's waist. He was wearing the custom suit she had spent six months designing and tailoring for him herself, a birthday gift poured from her own talent and devotion. The sight of it was a deeper wound than the metal in her gut.
Her thumb hovered over the screen, then pressed the contact photo of him. It was a picture she'd taken, one summer day in Montauk. Before everything.
The phone rang. Once. Twice.
On the third ring, he picked up. The sound wasn't his voice, but the swell of an orchestra, the murmur of a hundred happy guests.
"What?" Brenton's voice was sharp, impatient. The sound of a man annoyed by a distraction on the most important day of his life.
"Brenton," she coughed, a wet, rattling sound. The taste of copper filled her mouth. "I... I was in an accident. On the highway."
A pause. She could hear the officiant's voice in the background, something about love and forever.
"Khloe, don't play these games. Not today," he said, his tone dropping to a dangerous whisper. "It's pathetic."
"I'm not... I'm not playing." Her vision was starting to tunnel, the edges turning dark. "The car... it's bad, Brenton. Please... help me."
A feminine laugh tinkled near the receiver. Arabella. "Who is it, darling?"
"No one," Brenton replied, his voice smoothing out for his new bride. "Just a wrong number."
Then, back to Khloe, his voice was pure venom. "Listen to me. Whatever mess you've gotten yourself into, get yourself out of it. It would be better for everyone if you just disappeared. Die, for all I care. Just don't ruin my wedding day."
The line went dead.
The silence that followed was heavier than the twisted metal pinning her in place. The phone slipped from her grasp. Disappeared. He wanted her to disappear.
Her consciousness began to fray, memories flickering like a dying film reel. Being brought to the Harding mansion as a child, the orphaned daughter of their driver. The constant, subtle reminders that she was an outsider, a charity case. Brenda Harding's tight, disapproving smiles. Britteny's habit of stealing her designs and passing them off as her own. And Brenton... Brenton's love, which had felt like a lifeline, but was just another chain.
The wail of a siren cut through the rain, a distant promise that came too late. Flashing red and blue lights painted the inside of the car.
The groan of metal again, but this time it was different. The Jaws of Life. A man's calm, authoritative voice cut through the fog in her head.
"We're getting you out. Ma'am, can you hear me?"
The door was peeled away like a can opener. A face leaned in, rain dripping from the brim of his cap. He was a doctor, his expression grave as he took in the scene.
"Multiple penetrating trauma to the abdomen. Get a line in, now. We need to move."
They worked quickly, a blur of efficient hands. They loaded her onto a backboard, into the ambulance. The doctor was beside her, his presence a steady anchor in the chaos.
Her heart monitor beeped, a frantic, weakening rhythm. She felt a strange coldness spreading from her chest outwards. She reached out, her fingers brushing the sleeve of the doctor's jacket.
Her lips formed a word, silent, a final, desperate prayer to a god she didn't believe in.
Revenge.
The doctor, Alvan Gilmore, saw the flicker of her lips. He leaned closer, trying to understand, but her eyes were already losing focus.
"We're losing her," he said, his voice tight. "Charge the paddles."
A jolt. Nothing.
"Again."
Another jolt. The beeping of the monitor flatlined into a single, piercing tone.
Dr. Gilmore worked for another minute, his movements precise, almost frantic. Finally, he stopped, breathing heavily. He looked at the clock on the wall.
"Time of death, 11:17 p.m."
Darkness swallowed her. A cold, absolute void. The hatred was the only thing left, a burning ember in the infinite black.
Then, a light.
Not the gentle light of an afterlife. It was a brilliant, blinding glare that made her squeeze her eyes shut.
Khloe took a breath. A real one. Deep and painless.
She opened her eyes.
She wasn't in an ambulance. She was staring up at a magnificent crystal chandelier, its light refracting into a thousand tiny rainbows. The air smelled of lilies and expensive perfume.
She sat up. A white, floor-length gown of heavy silk clung to her body. She looked down at her hands. No blood. No cuts. Just perfectly manicured nails. Her stomach... she pressed a hand against her abdomen. It was flat, whole, and painless.
She scrambled off the plush king-sized bed and rushed to a full-length, gold-leaf mirror.
The woman staring back was her. But it was her from a year ago. Younger. Healthier. Her face was a canvas of professional makeup, her hair swept into an elegant chignon. She was wearing the custom-made dress for her engagement party to Brenton Harding.
Her eyes darted around the room. The presidential suite of the Waldorf Astoria. She remembered this night. She remembered everything. Her gaze landed on the small marble-topped bar where she'd placed her clutch and phone upon entering the room.
On a small table by the window sat a single glass of champagne, still fizzing with tiny bubbles. That champagne. The one Brenton had insisted she drink. The one that had made her feel dizzy, weak, her limbs heavy and unresponsive.
Just then, the lock on the suite door clicked.
A familiar voice, dripping with false tenderness, came from the other side.
"Khloe, darling? Are you ready? Everyone's waiting to congratulate us."
Brenton.
Khloe's gaze shifted from the door, back to her reflection in the mirror. The confusion in her eyes evaporated, replaced by something ancient and cold. A glacial stillness. The last ember of hatred from the void had ignited into a raging inferno.
She didn't answer him. Her movements were slow, deliberate, as she walked towards the mini-bar. Her eyes bypassed the bottles of liquor, the silver ice bucket, and locked onto a heavy, square-cut crystal decanter.
She picked it up. It was heavy in her hand. Solid. A satisfying weight.
The memory of his voice on the phone-Die, for all I care-echoed in her mind, not as a memory of pain, but as a declaration of war.
She looked at herself in the mirror one last time, the decanter held firmly at her side. A slow, cruel smile touched her lips.
"This time," she whispered to her reflection, "I make the rules."