A sharp, stabbing pain shot through my skull, and with it came a flood of memories that weren't mine.
Anja Vinson. Daughter of a noble house. Weak, timid, pushed around by everyone. Today was her wedding day. A political marriage to an Alpha, Caleb Burke.
The memories were a torrent of quiet suffering, of slights and insults swallowed down, of a life lived in the shadows of others. The pain was so intense my stomach clenched, a knot of ice forming in my gut.
I, a top-tier assassin who had died on a mission gone wrong, was now in the body of this pathetic girl.
My head turned on the silk pillow, the movement slow, deliberate. My vision adjusted to the dim light.
And I saw them.
Tangled together on the other side of the massive bed, their naked bodies slick with sweat.
The man was my new husband, Caleb Burke. His face, which I'd only seen in a formal portrait, was flushed with exertion.
The woman beneath him, her dark hair fanned out across the pillows, was my half-sister, Dahlia Vinson.
Dahlia saw me first. A flicker of panic crossed her features, quickly replaced by a smug, triumphant smirk. She knew I was awake. She wanted me to see this.
Caleb, distracted by the shift in the woman beneath him, grunted in annoyance and looked up. His gaze met mine.
He froze.
I could see the expectation in his eyes-he was waiting for tears, for screams, for a hysterical breakdown.
He got nothing.
My face was a blank mask. My eyes, I knew, were as empty and still as a frozen lake.
Dahlia seized the moment to begin her performance. She let out a theatrical gasp, snatching a corner of the sheet to cover her breasts. "Sister, you're awake! It's... it's not what you think..." Her voice was a trembling whisper, laced with fake tears.
Caleb, on the other hand, simply pushed himself up, making no effort to cover his nakedness. A sneer twisted his lips. "So you're awake. Be a good girl and stay quiet. Don't ruin my mood."
I ignored them both. My training kicked in, overriding the confusing swirl of Anja's emotions. My mind became a cold, calculating machine.
Assess the environment.
The door was ten feet away, to my left. The windows were tall, floor-to-ceiling, likely locked. The room was on the second floor.
And on the nightstand, right beside my hand, lay a silver letter opener. Its handle was ornate, but its point was sharp. A weapon.
Slowly, I pushed myself into a sitting position. The heavy satin of the wedding dress pooled around my waist. My movements were fluid, unhurried, a stark contrast to the sordid chaos beside me.
The sheer wrongness of my calm seemed to finally unnerve them. Both Caleb and Dahlia stared at me, their little drama momentarily forgotten.
"Get dressed," I said. My voice was raspy from disuse, but the words were clear and sharp.
It wasn't a request. It was an order.
Caleb's face darkened with rage. "What did you say to me? Who do you think you are to give me orders?"
My gaze shifted to him. It was like looking at a piece of meat, something to be assessed and, if necessary, disposed of. "I said, get dressed. And then get out of my room."
I put a slight emphasis on the words "my room." A declaration of ownership.
Dahlia tried to interject, her voice dripping with false concern. "Sister, please, don't be angry. Caleb just had too much to drink, and we..."
My eyes sliced to her, and she flinched as if I'd physically struck her. "You," I said, my voice dropping to a low, dangerous pitch, "don't have the right to speak to me."
My hand moved, a blur of motion in the dim light. My fingers closed around the cool, solid weight of the silver letter opener.
The familiar feel of a potential weapon in my palm sent a sliver of security through me.
Caleb saw the movement. He laughed, a short, ugly sound. "What are you going to do with that? Write me an angry letter?"
But his laughter died as he met my eyes again. He must have seen something there, something cold and final, because the amusement in his expression curdled into uncertainty. He was an Alpha, used to projecting dominance, but what he was seeing in me was something else entirely. It wasn't defiance. It was the promise of violence.
I tapped the pointed tip of the letter opener against the wooden bed frame.
Tap. Tap. Tap.
The small, rhythmic sound was the only thing breaking the suffocating silence.
"I'll give you ten seconds," I said, my voice barely a whisper. "To disappear from my sight."
The words were soft, but they carried the weight of a death sentence. For the first time since I'd opened my eyes, I saw genuine fear flicker in the eyes of Caleb Burke and Dahlia Vinson.