"Did you even think?" the voice continued, laced with a familiar, weary contempt. It was Harrison's voice. Harrison Vanderbilt-Crane IV. Her fiancé. "Crashing a quarter-million-dollar car on the FDR Drive because you were what? Upset?"
Memory, brutal and unwelcome, slammed into her. The screech of tires on wet asphalt. The sickening crunch of metal. Brianna's face, a mask of feigned concern, just moments before she'd handed Chloe the keys, knowing full well she'd had the brake line tampered with. That crash hadn't been an accident. It had been the beginning of the end. Her end.
Chloe's eyes flew open. The room was sterile, white, and unforgivingly bright. A heart monitor beeped a steady, monotonous rhythm beside her. Her gaze darted around, frantic, until it landed on a digital clock on the wall, displaying the date.
October 12th. Ten years ago.
A violent tremor seized her body, a convulsion born not of injury, but of impossible reality. It couldn't be. She was dead. She remembered the cold emptiness, the final surrender. Yet here she was, in this hospital bed, on this exact day. The day it all began to unravel. Her heart hammered against her bruised ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage, torn between abject terror and a wild, soaring ecstasy. She was back.
"Look at me when I'm talking to you." Harrison's hand clamped around her wrist. The pressure was immense, a manacle of bone and flesh. It was a grip she knew intimately, the prelude to a lecture, to being dragged away from a party, to being silenced. The familiar sensation sent a jolt of pure, unadulterated panic through her veins, a ghost of a thousand past humiliations. Her breath hitched.
She forced her head to turn. He stood over her, impossibly handsome, his tailored suit unrumpled, his dark hair perfect. But the face she had once loved, had once spent years desperately trying to please, was twisted with disgust. The love she had carried for him, a crushing weight she'd borne even into death, was gone. In its place was a hollowed-out cavern of ice. All that was left was a hatred so profound it felt like a physical part of her.
"This is because I spoke to Brianna at the gallery opening yesterday, isn't it?" he scoffed, his grip tightening. "This is what this is all about. Another one of your childish, desperate attempts to get my attention."
Brianna. The name was a venomous dart. Chloe's vision sharpened, the hazy edges of the room snapping into focus. She remembered her past self in this moment. She had cried. She had apologized, pathetically, for a crash that wasn't her fault, begging him to believe she would never do anything to hurt him. The memory churned in her stomach, a wave of physiological nausea so strong she thought she might be sick.
The new awareness, the knowledge of a life lived and lost in misery, solidified within her. It was a core of steel forming in the wreckage of her past self. Never again.
Harrison saw her silence as acquiescence, a familiar pattern. His tone dripped with condescension. "Chloe, this childish behavior needs to stop."
Something inside her snapped. The steel core glowed white-hot. With a surge of strength she didn't know she possessed, she wrenched her arm free from his grasp.
The air crackled with stunned silence. In the space between one heartbeat and the next, she moved. She swung her arm, her palm connecting with his cheek with a crack that echoed in the sterile room. It was sharp, clean, and utterly final.
Harrison stumbled back a step, his hand flying to his face. His eyes, wide with disbelief, were fixed on her. He had never, not once in all their years together, seen her do anything but cower.
Chloe's voice, when it came, was a raw, rasping whisper, torn from a throat dry with pain and disuse. But the words were forged in the fires of a decade of suffering.
"We're done, Harrison."
His shock curdled into fury. This wasn't contrition. This was defiance. A new, more outrageous play for attention. "Do you have any idea what you're saying? Stop the theatrics!" he snarled.
She ignored his rage, her gaze as flat and lifeless as a winter sea. She repeated the words, each one a nail in the coffin of their past. "I said, our engagement is over. I'm breaking it."
There was no love in her eyes. No pain, no lingering attachment. There was nothing. And for the first time in his life, as Harrison Vanderbilt-Crane IV looked at the woman he thought he owned, he felt a sliver of genuine fear. This declaration wasn't a plea. It was a verdict. And with it, she had just severed the chains of her past and ignited the first flame of her revenge.