The cold, damp stone of the cellar against my back. The metallic tang of blood in my mouth. My body, a canvas of bruises and broken promises. Three days in the dark, the silver chains burning my wrists, while my wolf whimpered inside me, too broken to heal. Amber's triumphant laughter echoed with Preston's sneering voice, their words twisting into the final blades that ended my pathetic first life.
"You were never worthy of this pack."
"Did you really think I would marry you? You're nothing."
I clenched my fists, my nails digging into my palms. The faint, sharp sting was a welcome anchor to the here and now. It was real. This second chance was real. And this time, I would not be the one in chains.
Up ahead, the Payne family estate glowed, a beacon of false joy in the twilight. Music and the murmur of laughter drifted on the wind, a soundtrack to my execution-or so they thought.
I reached the entrance to the sprawling garden where the Mating Ceremony was in full swing. Lanterns hung from ancient oaks, casting a warm, golden light on the faces of the pack's elite. The scent of roses and champagne filled the air, masking the rot beneath.
I took a deep, steadying breath, smoothing the front of the simple black dress I had chosen for this occasion. Mourning clothes, they would think. But black was not for grief. Black was for power. Then, I stepped through the floral archway.
My entrance was not loud, but it was felt.
It was like dropping a single, cold stone into a warm, bubbling spring. The music seemed to falter. Conversations died in mid-sentence. Heads turned, one by one, until a wave of silence rippled through the garden.
Then came the whispers, buzzing like angry hornets.
"Is that the wolfless widow? What is she doing here? She has no shame."
"Poor thing. Probably lost her mind after her mate died."
I ignored them. My gaze cut through the crowd, a laser finding its target. There, on the raised dais, stood the happy couple: my former fiancé, Preston Payne, and my treacherous half-sister, Amber Brown.
Amber, draped in virginal white, her face a mask of sweet innocence. She held a bouquet of white roses, a symbol of a purity she never possessed. When her eyes met mine, a flicker of panic marred her victorious smile before it was quickly replaced by smug satisfaction. She had not expected me to show my face. She had thought I would hide in my shame like a good little victim.
Preston's handsome face contorted into a mask of pure disgust the moment he saw me. It was a look I was intimately familiar with. His hand, resting on Amber's waist, tightened into a fist, his knuckles turning white. Predictable.
Amber immediately melted against him, her voice a soft, saccharine whisper meant for all to hear.
"Preston, don't be angry. Maybe sister is just here to wish us well."
Her words were gasoline on the fire of his contempt. His jaw tightened further. He had no idea how disrupted his evening was about to become.
A sharp, grating voice cut through the air beside me. "What do you think you're doing here? Haven't you embarrassed this family enough?"
Brenda Brown, my stepmother. Her eyebrows, plucked into impossibly thin, severe arches, were raised in disdain. Her face, a roadmap of petty cruelties, was twisted in a snarl. In my first life, it was her hand that had locked the cellar door.
My father, Howard Brown, shuffled behind her, his expression a miserable mix of shame and annoyance. "Alright, alright, Brenda. Hayley, just... find a corner and sit down. Don't cause a scene."
He wouldn't meet my eyes. He waved a dismissive hand, muttering under his breath. "What did I do in a past life to deserve this?"
I looked at them, at this pathetic tableau of greed and weakness, and felt nothing but a cold, clinical detachment. They were actors in a poorly written play, and I had already read the script. I knew every betrayal. And I had come to rewrite the ending.
I offered no reply.
Instead, I walked past them, my posture erect, my steps measured. I moved through the sea of whispering guests, their stares like physical things against my skin, and made my way to an empty chair in the front row. The chair that should have been reserved for the bride's family. The chair I had every right to occupy.
I sat down, crossed my legs, and placed my small clutch on my lap. I was not a crasher. I was a guest of honor at the execution of their lies.
My composure was a weapon. It unnerved them. It threw them off balance. The air crackled with an anticipation that had nothing to do with the impending vows.
The officiant, a flustered elder, cleared his throat and hurried the ceremony along, desperate to regain control. His eyes kept darting to me, a bead of sweat tracing down his temple. He knew something was wrong. Everyone did.
Preston and Amber turned to face each other. The lies began to flow. Words of undying love, of fated connection, of loyalty. The Moon Goddess must have been weeping.
A faint, humorless smile touched my lips. I remembered this script well. I remembered Amber, in another lifetime, boasting about the wolfsbane she'd slipped into his wine, how she'd crawled into his bed, how she'd faked a pregnancy to trap him. The pregnancy, of course, had been a lie. There was no child. There never had been.
Preston's eyes, even as he recited his vows to Amber, kept flicking towards me. They were filled with a toxic cocktail of hatred, resentment, and something else-guilt. He knew what he had done. And he was terrified that I knew too.
Amber noticed. Of course, she did. Her grip on his hands tightened, her body pressing closer, a silent, desperate claim.
"You may now..." the officiant began, his voice booming with false cheer.
That was my cue.
I rose from my seat. The movement was slow, deliberate. My voice, when it came, was not a shout. It was a clear, cold note that cut through the warm evening air and reached every corner of the garden.
"Wait."
Every head snapped in my direction. The garden was utterly silent, a held breath of shock and morbid curiosity.
Preston's face turned a blotchy, furious red. "Hayley, what the hell do you think you're doing!" he roared.
I met his furious gaze without flinching. I let my eyes sweep over the crowd, over my cowering father and furious stepmother, over my triumphant, trembling sister.
I let them all see me. Not the broken girl they had discarded. But the woman who had crawled out of her own grave to collect a debt.
Then, I spoke the words that would shatter their perfect little world.
"This union," I said, each word a perfectly polished stone of defiance, "I object."