INICIAR SESIÓNFawn’s POV
Air ripped into my lungs like I’d swallowed knives.
I jerked upright, hands flying to my chest, half-expecting water to gush out of my mouth as I gulped in air. For one panicked, blinding second, I was back in the bath, drowning. No, not drowning… being murdered as I fought to stay alive. But I hadn’t fought them off; they had been stronger. I could still smell lavender oil for a second before it was gone. Like a snap.
Now everything smelled like bleach and plastic and something harsh that stung my nose. I wiggled my nose to stop myself from sneezing as I focused my eyes, or tried to.
The light above me was too bright. Everything around me was white, sterile, and clean. Not my bathroom. Not home. Not even anywhere I recognized. There was a plastic rail at my side. A beeping that was fast and frantic. It was damn annoying.
I became aware my throat hurt, and I needed a drink of water, and I was dizzy.
“Easy—easy!” Someone’s hand hovered near my shoulder, not quite touching.
I blinked, vision clearing.
A man stood at the foot of the bed. I had been looking in his direction.
He didn’t fit… Not Richard.
No. This man was taller, broader, in a shirt with the sleeves rolled up and a loosened tie. His jaw was sharp and dark with stubble, his mouth a hard line, his eyes a steel gray that made my stomach twist because I knew that face. Which didn’t make sense. I blinked once.
Blake Huntington.
My husband’s rival. The man Richard ranted about after too many whiskeys. The “arrogant prick,” the “smug bastard,” the name he spit whenever a deal didn’t go his way. Or when Mr. Huntington had won a project he wanted. Both Richard and Blake had businesses in construction, and they often placed bids for the same jobs.
So why the hell was he in my hospital room?
Then it hit me, I was alive. They hadn’t killed me after all. I must have passed out, and they thought I was dead. It didn’t explain the out-of-body experience. But how had I gotten here? Had they called the police to say I had drowned, but instead of the police finding me dead, I had been very much alive?
The room wobbled a little, then snapped into focus in jerks. Blake wasn’t the only one in the room with me. Two men in white coats… I would take a guess they were doctors; both stared at me like I’d just crawled out of my own grave. Maybe I had, after Richard and Gemma tried to kill me. Also, a nurse stood pressed against the wall, one hand over her mouth, eyes huge. I almost felt the urge to check myself and make sure I still had a head, but my eyes were working, so my head had to be on my shoulders, right?
The older doctor recovered first. “Cassandra,” he said slowly, like he was testing it. “Can you hear me?”
Cassandra? My ears were working, but that wasn’t my name.
I frowned. The effort made my head throb. “That’s… not my name,” I tried to say, but the words barely made it past my dry lips. Had they mixed up my files with another patient’s? Well, that was embarrassing. For them, not me. “I’m… That is… I’m…”
My voice wasn’t right; it stopped me from going on because I was so shocked by the sound. It was deeper, huskier, like I’d smoked a pack a day for ten years, and there was this weird… accent? No, not an accent. Just not mine. The voice was a New Yorker’s voice, but it was sexy, and my voice wasn’t sexy. Was it a side effect from the almost drowning. Well, I hoped it stayed.
Blake Huntington took a step closer to the bed; those grey eyes locked on me as if he could somehow pin me in place with his stare alone.
“Cassie?” he said, and his voice was rough. “You… you weren’t supposed to—”
Die? I thought, and a hysterical little laugh bubbled up that I swallowed down. Too soon for that joke yet, I was guessing.
“I… I don’t…” My throat still felt like sandpaper. Not surprising when I had swallowed a bath full of water. “Water.”
The nurse jolted into action, grabbing a cup, pouring some water into it, then fitting a straw and guiding it to my lips. I sucked greedily, the cool liquid tasting like heaven, not like the bathwater I had swallowed.
As she took it away too fast for my liking, my hands dropped to the sheet, to the hospital gown hanging off my shoulders. The fabric was thin and scratchy. I had hospital tape on the back of my hand where it looked like an IV would go. My fingers looked… different and, well… wrong.
The fingers were longer. The nails were neater, longer. I couldn’t keep my nails that long; they chipped and broke all the time. My wrists were different as well…slimmer.
Okay. Weird. I’d lost weight. Or maybe almost dying was a great detox plan.
Had I been in a coma? Was that why I had lost weight? How long had I been here for? I had so many questions.
My gaze darted past Blake, catching a glimpse of myself in the reflective surface of a dark TV screen on the wall.
And my brain just… stopped. Frozen as I stared.
The woman staring back at me was gorgeous in a way I had never been. Not cute. Not “you have a nice smile” pretty. No. This was the kind of gorgeous that made people stop mid-sentence. And what was that saying… stop traffic. Yes, the woman staring at me would definitely stop traffic.
Long black hair spilled over her shoulders in a glossy mass, almost blue in the fluorescent light. Her skin was pale, with high cheekbones and a full mouth that could’ve sold lipstick in a magazine ad. Her eyes—I couldn’t tell, because the TV screen didn’t show that sort of detail well enough.
I stared. She stared back. I blinked. So did she.
“Okay,” I thought, grasping for logic while my heart hammered against my ribs. “So either I’m dreaming, or I hit my head without knowing it, or I’m in some kind of post-drowning coma hell where I have to live as a supermodel.”
The monitor beside me beeped faster, betraying me. No, my eyes must be playing tricks on me. I would not panic… panicking had been in that bath. I had lived through that.
“This shouldn’t be happening; she was… was brain-dead,” the younger doctor whispered to the older one. “She… was unresponsive. She shouldn’t—”
That snapped me out of whatever shock my brain had gone into.
“I can hear you,” I croaked. I hate it when doctors talk over your head, don’t you?
All three of them… two doctors, one nurse flinched like I’d slapped them. Well, what did they expect? They had been rude.
Blake didn’t move. He just kept staring at me with an expression I couldn’t read. Shock, yes. But under that, something else. Wariness. Guilt. Like he’d been about to do something unforgivable, and I’d caught him right in the act. Why would he care? He hadn’t… hadn’t tried to kill me. That was something I did know.
My last clear memory before waking up in the hospital slammed into me.
My bath. The scent of my lavender oil. Gemma’s nails biting into my arms. Richard’s hands on my shoulders, pushing but not bruising. The water in my lungs. The burning pain in my chest as my lungs were starved of oxygen. How would they explain Gemma’s nail marks as an accident? Richard had been careful not to bruise my skin, but Gemma hadn’t. Now I was alive; there was no way I would let them get away with trying to kill me. I would not be silenced.
Then the promise I’d made as the darkness had taken over. The way my soul had peeled away from my body like smoke. But I was back and alive.
I would make them pay… but I would make it hurt and hit them where it hurt.
My stomach churned.
“I… almost drowned,” I whispered, more to myself than anyone. “He… my husband tried to kill me with his mistress. They tried to kill me.”
Fawn’s POV“Fuck."I watched as he slammed his hand against the steering wheel."The only reason I’m not leaving you to the mess you created back there is because I saw the look on your face when he grabbed your wrist. You’re scared of him, but you’re fucking putting yourself in his path, and I can’t understand why. Did he do something to you before the accident?”I hoped Richard hadn’t been as observant as Blake, because he could wonder the same thing. I wanted to tell Blake. I really did. But that would mean telling him everything, including that his wife was dead and I was hijacking her body. He could never understand that. I was the one living it, and I was still trying to wrap my head around it. How could he possibly believe me? It just sounded crazy.So instead, I asked my own question.“Why did you turn up at the restaurant? I was sure you wouldn’t once the photos appeared in the media—” I stopped talking abruptly, realizing what I had let slip.And he was too smart to miss it.
Fawn’s POV"Blake," I said softly, my heart hammering in my chest. I hadn't expected him to show up, though I should have realized he would. "This isn't—""Don't talk. I don't want to hear it," he cut me off, his voice deadly quiet. He turned to Richard. "Jones."The tension between the two men crackled like electricity. Richard straightened, attempting to recover his composure. Was it me, or did he try to look taller? Was he competing with Blake in that as well? There were three inches' difference in their height, but didn't Richard realize that it wasn't just Blake's height that made him imposing—it was the man himself?"Huntington," he said, false cordiality dripping from his voice. "Your wife and I were just having dinner.""Were you." It wasn't a question. Blake's gaze never left Richard's face. "Strange choice, considering I explicitly warned her to stay away from you.""I don't need your permission, Blake," I said, acutely aware of how this entire tableau must look to the onloo
The waiter chose that moment to arrive with our main meals, giving me a minute."Is that a problem?" I trailed my finger along the edge of my wine glass. "Art should be shared, not hidden away in some private collection. And it's just a loan. It's not the first time I have done so."Richard's eyes narrowed slightly. "Interesting that you'd choose to support your soon-to-be ex-husband's business dealings while claiming the marriage is over."I shrugged. "How am I supporting him? This is for my benefit. I appreciate beautiful things being displayed properly. The casino will make an excellent backdrop for that particular piece, increasing its value. I never gave any stipulations on loaning the piece. If you won the bid, it would still be on loan to the casino. If you like to think about business, it's my business by increasing my net wealth.""You're playing a dangerous game, Cassandra," he said once we were alone again. "Helping Huntington win projects against me, yet dining with me beh
Fawn’s POVRichard's knuckles whitened around his glass. "That's ridiculous. Fawn wasn't afraid of me. We had a normal marriage until—""Until you moved your mistress into your marital bed?" I finished. "Hardly what I'd call normal."His eyes darkened. "You seem to know a lot about our private affairs."I leaned forward, dropping my voice. "Fawn told me everything. She needed someone to talk to, someone who would listen. Someone who would know the truth if anything happened to her."Richard's face remained impassive, but I could see the calculation behind his eyes, the mental inventory of what Fawn might have revealed."Her death was a tragic accident," he said, each word carefully measured."Was it?" I smiled, enjoying his discomfort."What exactly are you implying?" Richard's voice dropped to a dangerous whisper.Before I could answer, my phone vibrated in my clutch. I reached for it, making a show of checking the screen. A text from Tom: "Photos live. Trending already."Perfect tim
Fawn's POVThe taxi slowed to a stop in front of Marconi's, its neon sign casting a blue glow across the rain-slicked sidewalk. I smoothed a hand over my black dress, mentally rechecking everything. Phone silenced but accessible and ready to record should anything get interesting. Cash for the cab tucked in my clutch. Makeup perfect. Expression carefully calibrated between boredom and intrigue.I paid the driver and stepped out onto the pavement, my heels not slipping against the wet concrete, thank God. The night air felt electric against my skin, or maybe that was just the adrenaline of walking willingly toward my murderer.Through the restaurant's windows, I spotted him immediately. Richard Jones stood at the far end of the bar, nursing what looked like a whiskey, checking his watch with the impatient energy of a man unused to waiting for anyone. But I had timed my arrival to be a few minutes late.In the shadow of a parked car across the street, I caught the subtle movement of a c
Blake's POVMy jaw tightened. "The second one.""Jesus Christ, Blake." Ford's voice was fully alert now. "After everything she put you through? After you spent months waiting for her to die so you could move on? What the hell were you thinking?"That was the problem. I hadn't been thinking. Not with my brain, anyway."I wasn't," I admitted, staring at the city skyline through the floor-to-ceiling windows. "We went to the casino bid announcement last night. She wore this fucking red dress that looked painted on. She was talking to Richard Jones, of all people, and I just—""Got jealous," Ford finished, his tone a mixture of disbelief and judgment. "Like clockwork. She's still playing you, man. She has always been able to tie you in knots.""It wasn't like that," I said, though I couldn't be sure. "She's different. I told you before." If anything, he jealous had been more… acute."And I told you it's an act. People don't change that fundamentally, Blake. Especially not Cassie."I rubbed







