Kinsley Knight, Darien's niece, the girl who had always smiled at her face and plotted behind her back, prodded Asha's bleeding leg with her stiletto heel. "Look at you, the little parasite the Knights took in. Still clinging to things that don't belong to you, even in death."
Her brother, Julian Knight, Darien's nephew and Kinsley's co-conspirator, laughed-a sound that echoed unnervingly in the cavernous, abandoned warehouse. "She's a sentimental fool. While she was crying over Darien, we were shorting Knight Group's stock. His death wasn't just an accident, you know. It was very, very profitable."
Dr. Evelyn Price, Darien's personal physician, the woman who had sworn to heal him, knelt down, elegant even in this grimy place. Her voice was as calm and sharp as a scalpel. "I altered his medical reports, of course. A slight adjustment to his medication, a misdiagnosis of a minor symptom. His old illness flared up so beautifully. He never suspected a thing."
Leland Foster, the man Asha had once called uncle, the man who had bounced her on his knee, gave a weary sigh. "I'm sorry, Asha. But they offered me a way out of my debts. All I had to do was leak Darien's security schedule. That car crash... it was meant to be."
Each word was a hammer blow, shattering the last vestiges of light in Asha's world. A raw, guttural sound, something animal and broken, tore from her throat. Her vision tunneled, focusing on the four faces swimming before her: the faces of her tormentors, the architects of her ruin.
Evelyn reached out, her fingers tracing the air near Asha's cheek. "This face," she murmured, her voice thick with a jealousy that had festered for years. "Darien was obsessed with it until the very end." She produced a small, gleaming knife. "I think I'll ruin it. A final gift."
As the blade neared her skin, something inside Asha snapped. The despair evaporated, replaced by an ice-cold, terrifying calm. A slow, chilling smile stretched her lips.
"You think," she whispered, her voice a rasp, "that I came unprepared?"
Her thumb found the small, recessed button on the bottom of the urn. She pressed it.
Julian's eyes widened. "What did you..."
It was too late.
The world erupted in fire and sound. Explosives planted around the warehouse detonated simultaneously. A wave of heat and force slammed into them. Kinsley and Julian were thrown like dolls, their screams swallowed by the roar. Evelyn, in a last, desperate act, tried to pull Asha in front of her as a shield, but Asha used the last of her strength to shove the doctor directly into the heart of the inferno. Leland turned to run, only to be crushed by a falling steel beam.
Smoke billowed, and the roar of flames filled the cavernous space. But Asha didn't wait for the chaos to settle. The cold calm still held her. She pushed herself up from the steel container, one hand clamped over the bullet wound in her abdomen, blood seeping through her fingers.
She walked first to where Kinsley lay, sprawled and gasping, her arm bent at an unnatural angle. Kinsley's eyes went wide with terror as Asha loomed over her. "Wait..." The word choked off. A swift, precise motion, and Kinsley went still.
Julian was crawling toward a collapsed section of the warehouse, dragging a shattered leg. He looked up, his face a mask of disbelief and horror. "You're insane..." His voice died in his throat. Asha's expression didn't change. One strike, efficient and final.
Leland was pinned beneath the steel beam, still breathing, his breaths coming in wet, ragged gasps. His eyes met hers, pleading. She remembered bouncing on his knee. She remembered the sigh in his voice when he said the car crash was meant to be. The memory was cold. Her hand was steady. She made it quick-quicker than he deserved.
The fire roared higher. She turned back toward the heart of the inferno where she had shoved Evelyn. The doctor's silhouette was barely visible through the flames, a dark shape that had long since stopped moving. The fire had done her work for her.
One by one, confirmed. Each death a deliberate, conscious act. Each face burned into her memory as she made sure.
She turned back to where she had fallen. The urn. She stumbled toward it, every step an agony, and scooped it up from the debris, clutching it to her chest once more.
Then the weakened floor beneath her gave way.
The blast had already compromised the structure. The fall flung her backward, through a gaping hole in the warehouse wall. She was still clutching the urn, holding it tight against her chest as she sailed through the air.
Then, she was falling.
Below her, the dark, frigid waters of the Puget Sound waited. She looked down at the urn one last time.
"Darien," she breathed, the words lost in the wind. "A new beginning..."
The impact was a shock of absolute cold. Water flooded her mouth, her lungs, a crushing weight pulling her down into the abyss. The distant wail of sirens was the last thing she heard before her consciousness began to fray.
A splitting headache, sharp and violent, tore through the darkness.
Then, a voice, cold and furious, exploded in her ear. "Asha Thorne, you're looking for death!"
Her eyes flew open.
Pain. A sharp, throbbing pain in her head, not the icy burn of a bullet wound. The world was a blur. She was in a room, a familiar room. Her bedroom in the Knight Manor.
A tall, imposing figure loomed over her, radiating a dangerous fury. Her vision slowly cleared, focusing on the face above her: a face she had just mourned, a face she knew better than her own, but younger, harder, angrier.
Darien Knight, the same man whose ashes she had held, now alive and furious.
She looked down at her hands. They were pale and slender, unmarred by blood or grime. She was wearing her favorite sundress from ten years ago.
Her gaze darted to the trash can beside her bed. Inside, a scattering of syringes and a small baggie of white powder. The beginning. The setup that had started it all.
A hand, strong and unforgiving, clamped around her wrist, hauling her upright. Darien's eyes, the color of a stormy sea, were filled with a raw, agonizing disappointment that hurt more than any bullet.
"Were you trying to overdose? Or just run away?" he snarled.
The memories of the warehouse, the fire, the fall, they crashed against the present moment with the force of a tidal wave. The pain in her head, the sight of him, the evidence in the trash can.
It wasn't a dream. It wasn't the afterlife.
She was back. Ten years in the past. Before the betrayals, before the ruin, before his death.
She remembered it all. In her past life, Kinsley planted the drugs, Brenda spied for her, and Evelyn poisoned him dose by dose. She had known nothing, fought him, pushed him away, let them win. But this time, she knew their names, their faces, their timeline. She would stop it before it started.