Eveline's pupils contracted. The opulent ballroom, the glittering chandeliers, Ciara's crocodile tears... it wasn't a nightmare. It was a memory.
This was her twenty-fifth birthday. The beginning of the end. The day her life had been systematically dismantled, piece by painful piece.
She had been reborn.
In her past life, four-month pregnant Eveline was abducted alongside Ciara, her husband's lover. He let the kidnappers disfigure Eveline, break her limbs, and inject her with excruciating poison. In the end, he pushed the pregnant Eveline off a building to her death to save Ciara.
A few feet away, her husband, Frederick Tyler, stood with his hands in the pockets of his tailored tuxedo. His handsome face was a sculpture of ice. The look in his eyes wasn't one of concern or confusion. It was pure disgust, as if he were looking at something filthy he'd found on the bottom of his shoe.
"Eveline," he said, his voice void of any warmth, "I never thought you were this vile."
In her past life, those words had shattered her. Her heart had felt like it was being ripped from her chest. She had sobbed, pleaded, tried desperately to explain. Her frantic denials only earned her deeper scorn.
But now, hearing them again, Eveline felt nothing. A vast, cold stillness settled over her, the kind of calm that comes after a devastating storm has leveled everything to the ground. In the ruins of her heart, a single, cold flame of vengeance began to burn.
She didn't cry. She didn't argue.
Slowly, deliberately, she reached over with her free hand and began to pry Ciara's fingers from her arm. One by one.
Ciara's practiced sobs hitched in her throat. She stared, momentarily stunned by the dead, unfamiliar emptiness in Eveline's eyes. The grip loosened.
Eveline pulled her arm free and rose to her feet. Her movements were steady, graceful, betraying none of the weakness of someone who had just been "rescued." She scanned the room, her gaze sweeping over the gloating, curious faces of the guests. She committed each one to memory.
Her eyes finally landed on Frederick. A faint, mocking smile touched her lips. It wasn't a real smile. It was the baring of teeth.
The expression pricked at Frederick's composure. His brow furrowed, and a flicker of unease crossed his face-a reaction Eveline noted with quiet satisfaction.
"Are you done with your act, Ciara?" Eveline's voice was clear and calm, cutting through the tense silence of the ballroom.
A wave of gasps rippled through the crowd. This was not the reaction anyone had expected from the timid, insecure Eveline Woodard.
Ciara's face went white. The tears, which had momentarily stopped, now flowed with renewed vigor. "Sister, what are you talking about... I know you didn't mean for it to happen..."
Eveline let out a soft, humorless laugh that cut Ciara off mid-sentence. "Don't call me sister. My mother only gave birth to me."
The statement was loaded. It was a direct shot, a piece of dirty laundry aired for all of New York's high society to see. Several guests who knew the Schmitt family's history shifted uncomfortably.
Frederick's patience snapped. He took a step forward, his presence commanding. "Eveline, that's enough. Apologize to Ciara, and come home with me."
"Home?" Eveline repeated the word, her voice laced with a derision so profound it was almost a physical thing. She looked at him, truly looked at him, for the first time since her awakening. She saw not the man she had loved with a desperate, all-consuming passion, but a fool. A handsome, powerful, utterly blind fool.
"Alright," she said, her voice dropping to a near whisper, yet every person in the silent hall heard her. "But before we go home, let's get a divorce."
Frederick's mind went blank. He had prepared for hysterics, for begging, for more pathetic denials. He had never, in any possible scenario, anticipated this.
He thought he must have misheard. "What did you say?"
"I said, divorce, Frederick," Eveline's voice was steady, each word a perfectly formed stone dropped into a still pond. "Now. Immediately."
A flash of pure, unadulterated joy crossed Ciara's face before she could mask it with a look of shocked concern.
The whispers among the guests grew louder, more frantic. The drama had just escalated beyond anyone's wildest expectations.
Frederick's pride, a colossal and fragile thing, felt the blow. A harsh, incredulous laugh escaped his lips. "Are you sure about that? Without me, you're nothing."
It was his trump card, the line he'd used to keep her in her place for years.
But the woman standing before him was not the same one he had married.
"I'd rather be nothing," Eveline said, her voice dripping with contempt, "than spend another second with an idiot like you."
She turned her back on him. The simple movement was an act of finality, a severing of a bond she had once cherished more than life itself.
She knew, with absolute certainty, that from this moment on, she was the one setting the rules of the game.
She took a step, then another, walking toward the grand entrance of the ballroom, toward her new life.