e locked in a rehabilitation center, telling the wor
t thing he did was swerve his car directly at me,
ocked me in a dog kennel. He forced me to kowtow to my "dead" sister's portrait until my head bled
herous business partner for the n
of hell were all part of her sick game. And when my little brother Aspen, my only reaso
ched him die a
art, I threw myself from a hospital wi
of my release. The warden's voice was flat.
iting. To drag him, and everyone
pte
e designed to erase people. For five years, it had been my world. The walls were bare,
. The clothes I wore, a loose-fitting uniform, hung on my bony frame. They were a constant reminder that I was
I was accused of killing my stepsister, Kinsley Alexander. He told the world it w
ont of me was a framed photograph of Kinsley, smiling. This was my daily ritual, my forced
ed and twenty-five days.
ke the silence. The warden
n. You're bei
elease? The word felt
as arranged it.
e me. The man everyone saw as a devout, compassionate saint for not divorcing the woman who
the devil who had meticulo
to see a friendly face, a family member, anyone. But the curb was empty. M
instructions. He said you are to continue your pe
ey. A cold dread washed over me. The prison wa
at me with open contempt as he held the door. The ride back to the mansion I once called home was silent. T
spers like the hissing of snakes. They l
final
. She looks
. A woman like that sho
single thread of hope. A promise I m
mine, "no matter what happens, you must prot
reason I had endured the last five years
and walked toward the grand staircas
ed just in time to see a silver sports car swerve directly toward me, its
had been standing. My knees were scraped raw, and my heart hammered against my ribs. I instinctively checked the photograph in my
r door
five years ago: impossibly handsome, with an air of cold piety that captivated everyone he met. His eyes, the
e had tried t
ears coiled in my stomach, suffocating me. This man was
old Courtland Johnson. I had changed everything about myself for him. I softened my edges,
ur wedding day was the happiest of my life. I
ied, and my wo
, bruised and trembling,
voice a raw whisper. "Court
eled form with disgust. He stopped right in front of
tasia." His voice was low and smooth, the sam
ngle word tearing from my
all, sharp gesture to the two large bod
humility," he said, his voice devoid of any emotion.
my arms. Their g
, turning his back on me as if I were nothing
as going to lock
throat. "No! Cour
leas echoing unanswered in