She tied off the last suture and stepped back. For a moment, she stood perfectly still, hands at her sides. Then she bowed-a slow, deep bow from the waist, the kind of reverence one might offer at an altar. "Go in peace," she whispered, the words barely audible.
A soft thud, the familiar sound of a rubber-tipped cane on linoleum, echoed from the doorway.
Geneva didn't look up. She saw his reflection in the polished surface of the instrument tray: Julian, the man who ran the mortuary and had taken her in when she had nowhere else to go. He was leaning his stooped frame against the doorjamb. His eyes, visible even in the distorted reflection, held their usual mix of professional approval and a deep, quiet pity that always made her skin prickle.
"A new guest?" she asked, her voice even and calm, absorbed in her task. She began to suture a delicate incision, her stitches small and perfect.
"No," Julian's voice was a low rasp, like stones grinding together. "Just a reminder. You need to take tomorrow morning off."
Her hand paused for a fraction of a second, the needle hovering. Then, the rhythm resumed, seamless. She knew exactly what he was talking about. The world outside these quiet walls.
"I know," she murmured. "The wedding dress fitting."
A heavy sigh filled the silence between them. Julian limped into the room, the tap of his cane a slow, mournful beat. "Geneva. Are you sure about this? Marrying Preston Hayes. I've watched you grow up in this place. I don't want to watch you marry a notorious playboy. What's more, you don't love him at all."
She finished the last stitch and carefully placed the needle back on the tray, straightening it until it was perfectly parallel with the forceps beside it. Only then did she strip off her blood-flecked gloves and walk to the deep basin sink. The rush of hot water felt like a temporary absolution, washing away the physical remnants of death, but not the weight in her chest.
She stared at her reflection in the mirror above the sink. Pale skin, dark, serious eyes. A face that looked too young to be so familiar with finality.
"It's not about what I want, Julian," she said, her voice hard. "It's my 'responsibility' as a Hayes." She paused, her jaw tightening. "The only responsibility I chose for myself is in that room."
The word hung in the sterile air, dripping with a sarcasm only he would understand. A flashback, sharp and unwelcome, flickered in her mind: a small, scared girl, orphaned at thirteen, being led into the cold grandeur of the Hayes mansion. And there was Catherine Hayes-her new guardian, Preston's mother, a woman who wore designer dresses like armor and smiled only when it served her. Catherine's perfectly manicured hand rested on the girl's shoulder, a gesture that looked like affection but felt like ownership. "We've given you everything, Geneva. You must be grateful." Another image followed-Catherine's cold smile when Geneva mentioned wanting to study forensic pathology instead of business. "Girls like us don't choose, dear. We are chosen for."
The Grahams had been old money, respected and wealthy. Then the car accident took her parents. Cancer took her grandfather a year later. In the span of thirteen months, Geneva lost everyone. The Hayes family had offered her a home-and a cage.
Julian was beside her now, his limp more pronounced. He offered her a clean, white towel. "Gratitude isn't a life sentence, kid."
She dried her hands, the rough texture of the towel grounding her. "For me, there's no happiness. There are only transactions."
She turned to face him, her expression as clinical as if she were delivering a cause of death. "They need this marriage to secure a business alliance. I need this marriage to activate the trust fund my grandfather left me." The Graham fortune-once one of the largest in the city-had been sealed in a trust after her grandfather's death. She had been seventeen, too young to inherit a cent. The terms were simple: marry, and the money would be hers. Nearly two billion dollars. But she couldn't touch a single dollar until she wore a wedding ring.
Julian's weathered face tightened. He looked at her not with pity, but with something heavier-regret. "That fund," he said slowly, "they haven't told you the whole truth about it."
A cold knot formed in her stomach, but she kept her face a placid mask. "What do you mean?"
He shook his head, his eyes dark with knowledge he refused to share. "The time isn't right. Just know this: you are holding cards you don't even know you have. You're much more powerful than you think. More than they want you to believe."
She walked back to the table and gently pulled the white sheet over the young woman's peaceful face.
After pulling off her scrubs and changing into her simple jeans and sweater, she was ready to leave the sanctuary of the mortuary.
"The party is at The Sterling Club, isn't it?" Julian called after her. "The most pretentious place in Port Sterling."
Geneva paused at the door, a cold smile touching her lips. "The perfect stage for a grand charade."
She stepped out into the biting night air. The wind whipped her long, dark hair across her face. Above, a sliver of moon hung in the inky sky, offering no warmth.
Her phone buzzed. A text from Evan Price, her best friend since childhood-the only person who had never asked her for anything. "You're not going to believe this. Someone just sent me a voice memo from Bar Sovereign tonight. Preston is there right now, 'celebrating' his engagement. With Jocelyn Vance. And he's running his mouth about you. About your work. Listen."
A voice memo loaded beneath the text. Geneva pressed play, holding the phone to her ear.
Preston's voice, slurred with whiskey, crackled through. "...can you believe I have to marry that? A mortician. I mean, what's she going to do, embalm me in my sleep? The guys are right-she probably smells like formaldehyde..." Laughter erupted in the background. "...but the money. Two billion. After the wedding, I can do whatever I want..."
After hearing his words, she remained completely unfazed.She felt nothing for the engagement. No excitement, no fear. Only the cold, hard certainty of a plan.
Her car, a beat-up sedan, looked pitiful in the shadow of the mortuary's gothic architecture. It was a world away from the luxury vehicles of the Hayes family.
As she slid into the driver's seat, another text arrived. From Preston.
"Babe, don't be late tomorrow. And wear something hot."
She glanced at the message. Then, without replying, she tossed the phone onto the passenger seat. It landed with a dull thud.
She started the engine, the old car rumbling to life. As she pulled onto the empty street, she didn't turn toward her apartment. She turned toward the highway. Toward Bar Sovereign.
Her eyes, reflected in the rearview mirror, were clear and determined.