Zara's POV
The next three days passed in a blur of quiet tension and pretend peace. Dr. Henry continued his rounds, checking vitals that were already stable, offering calm reassurances I didn’t need. “Physically, you’re fine,” he said, tapping at his clipboard. “Sometimes, reconnecting with nature or revisiting familiar places can jog the memory. Even conversations with loved ones might help.” I nodded, said thank you, smiled when expected, but inside, my mind was a battlefield. I didn’t care about that. I wasn’t here to get Aria's memories. I'm back for revenge. Every second that ticked by was time slipping through my fingers, time I needed to gather evidence, to figure out who helped Cassian throw me into that water, and to bring them both down. I hadn't seen Cassian since waking up in Aria’s body. So after the doctor left that morning, I turned to Nana. She was fluffing pillows and humming softly to herself. “Where is Cassian?” I asked, keeping my voice light. She looked up. “Oh, he traveled. Two days after your accident.” “Traveled?” I repeated. She nodded. “Yes. That’s why Mr. Everhart insisted you be brought here. We didn’t want any press photos from the hospital, it’s safer here.” I sat back slowly, digesting that. Aria is a public figure, a billionaire heiress, socialite, face of brands. Of course the news would’ve feasted on her injuries if word got out. But her husband, newly married, had just left? After two days? Who does that? What kind of man leaves his wife in a coma and vanishes for weeks? It didn’t add up. None of it did. I glanced at the luxurious room again, the gold-framed mirrors, the velvet drapes, the way the sunlight filtered through cream sheers and landed gently on a crystal vase by the window. Every detail was immaculate. Aria’s world was beautiful. I didn’t know the rules here, the people or routines, but I would learn. I had no choice. Because somewhere inside this life I didn’t choose, was the only path revenge. Nana watched me carefully. “You know, dear,” she said gently, “maybe walking around the house will help jog your memory.” I nodded, if I was going to pretend to be Aria, I needed to know the stage I’d been thrown onto. We began the tour. The fourth floor was off-limits, Mr. Everhart’s private domain, but even the glimpse I caught through the locked glass doors screamed untouchable power. On the third floor was a dining room that looked like it belonged in a palace, its long, sleek table faced a panoramic skyline through floor-to-ceiling windows. In another room is an arcade. Of course. I paused at a balcony wrapped in elegant wrought iron. Below, a matte-black helicopter rested on a private helipad like something from a spy film. The second floor was just as unreal. A bar, each bottle looking more expensive than my rent. Past that, a music room housed a black grand piano, polished to perfection. Even that room was bigger than my old apartment. Down the hall, a glass-walled gym gleamed with top-tier equipment. The kind celebrities brag about but rarely use. Twin staircases spiraled toward the lower floors, and two elevators glided silently between them. Each turn unveiled another corner of obscene wealth, balconies that framed the estate like art galleries, and an infinity pool so pristine it looked photoshopped. Just when I thought I’d seen the extent of it, Nana led me down a private pathway through the garden. At the end, we stepped onto a private marina where two yachts bobbed gently. “You love hosting parties here,” she said with a knowing smile. I almost asked, Me? But I stopped myself just in time. Right. Aria. Then, as if this world hadn’t already broken every rule of excess, she led me further to a hangar. Inside were two private jets. Not chartered, but owned. It hit me all at once: this wasn’t wealth. This was an empire. And Mr. Everhart wasn’t just rich, he was untouchable, he was a man who could rewrite rules, erase stories, and silence worlds. “Would you rather walk through the estate?” Nana asked. “You had so many favorite spots growing up.” “No,” I said quietly. “I think… I’ll rest.” Because the truth was, I’d seen enough. When I finally returned to my chambers, I sat motionless on the edge of the bed. This was a life I didn’t recognize. The next day after lunch, a domestic staff member came to my room. “Ma’am, Mr. Everhart requests your presence at a birthday party this evening.” Nana, seated beside me, perked up immediately. “Let me call your stylist.” Stylist? I gently stopped her. “It’s alright, Nana. I can manage.” She hesitated. “You haven’t been seen in public for a while. People will start talking. Are you sure you can manage on your own?” I nodded. “Yes.” By evening, I’d settled on a sleek black gown that hugged curves I still wasn’t used to. It felt foreign, like I was slipping into someone else’s polished skin. Matching heels, a simple purse, and a smile I had to glue to my lips. In the car, silence stretched until Mr. Everhart finally spoke, his voice cold and mechanical. “When we arrive, smile and return greetings. Don’t show any sign of amnesia. We can’t afford a scandal.” I nodded, hands clenched tight in my lap. “Okay.” Scandal? Because Aria was sick? He didn't even ask if I was doing okay, I just had to make an appearance. I expected a gala, something grand and political, but when we arrived, I froze for half a beat. It wasn’t a boardroom event, not a fundraiser or launch. It was a birthday party for a cat. A cat! The venue was a vision, twinkling chandeliers, champagne trays, a live string quartet playing soft jazz. There were canapés labeled like museum pieces. An actual cake shaped like a diamond-encrusted tuna can. I bit the inside of my cheek to keep from laughing. This wasn’t just wealth, it was insanity dressed in designer couture. Still, I smiled. Nodded. Replied “thank you” and “so lovely to see you” like a script I’d memorized. Every time someone said “Aria,” I flinched internally, reminding myself that's my name now. Mr. Everhart melted into the crowd, mingling with the elites gathered near a gold-trimmed bar, leaving me adrift. I stood alone, surrounded by clinking glasses, laughter, and eyes that felt like lasers. My hands trembled slightly. I wasn't made for this, these people’s jokes could pay off my debt. Their shoes probably cost more than my entire apartment and restaurant, but I kept smiling, because if I cracked now, they’d smell the difference. That’s when I saw a man whose presence didn’t just command attention, it silenced the room without trying. He looked younger than most of the men here, early forties maybe. Black hair, effortlessly styled, framed a face sharp enough to be sculpted. High cheekbones. A jawline carved like a greek god, and that frame, tall, broad, and commanding made his tailored suit fall over him like liquid power. I didn’t mean to speak to him, but I felt his eyes on me. I turned to refill my glass, hoping the motion would ground me. It didn’t. The moment he stepped closer, I caught the scent, something masculine and expensive. My heart skipped. That scent. The same one from Hudson Yards. The stranger who caught me when I collapsed, the one who vanished before I woke in the hospital. But colognes are mass-produced, anyone could wear it. I just needed to hear his voice. He reached for the decanter beside me, before I could think, the word escaped: “Hi.” He looked at me, his lips pulling into a slight, unreadable smile. “Hi,” he replied. That voice, deep and smooth, was unmistakable. My vision had been blurred that day, but I remembered that voice. I almost said thank you. But that was Zara. Now, I am Aria. “Nice party,” I said casually, trying to sound like someone who belonged in this world. He let out a quiet scoff, just the hint of amusement dancing in his storm-grey eyes. “Is it?” he murmured. “Personally, I think I have better ways to waste my evening. She called it her ‘child’s birthday.’ It’s a cat.” A laugh escaped me before I could stop it. “I know, right?” I took a slow sip of champagne, grateful for the glass in my hand to steady me. I could see his reflection in it, eyes still fixed on me. Was he married? Taken? Before I could spiral too deep, he spoke again softer this time. “How are you doing?” It wasn’t small talk. There was something else in the way he said it, like he already knew something. Did he remember me? That's impossible. “Better now that you’re talking to me,” I said, lips curling into a playful smile. He studied me. Something flickered in his eyes, he looked like a man who didn’t trust easily, but for a second, I saw a softer shadow behind the sharpness. Before I could say more, another polished man approached us. “Aria,” he said warmly, extending a hand. I took it with a poised smile. “Good evening, kind sir.” Then he turned to the man beside me. “Mr. Blackwell,” he greeted, shaking his hand. “It’s been a while.” Everything inside me stilled. The man who helped me. The man now standing beside me… Was a Blackwell?Zara's POV Back home, I slipped into the shower. Feeling refreshed, I tried calling Raina, but she didn’t pick up, probably still at work.I decided to nap, and by the time I woke up, the evening light was already dimming. After a quick check on my laptop for some work updates, my phone buzzed. Sterling.“You make me want you more and more every day,” he confessed, his voice low, velvety.I laughed softly. “You’ll spoil me if you keep saying things like that.”We lingered in conversation, teasing and easy, before he mentioned Nana’s food.“I have to admit,” he said, “I’ve only had Indian food a handful of times, but nothing has ever come close to this.”“I told you,” I said smugly.He chuckled. “But still… nothing beats your chicken riggies.”“Oh, please,” I laughed, shaking my head. We spoke for a while longer.After we hung up, I tried Raina again. This time she answered, we greeted awkwardly then I went straight to the point.“I just wanted to tell you I did the polygraph test,” I
Zara's POV I went to Nana and hugged her warmly before sitting down beside her.“What was that about, beta?” she asked, her eyes narrowing with concern.“Nothing serious. Just Cassian trying to stir trouble between father and me, but it’s resolved now,” I assured her.“That snake,” she muttered, shaking her head.“I know, right?” I laughed.I joined her in the kitchen as she continued cooking, the air filled with the warm, spiced aroma of her dishes. When we finished, she served me, and I ate until my heart and stomach were satisfied, before asking for some takeaway.She happily packed it for me, humming as she worked. I reached into my bag and pulled out a perfume I had kept aside for her, the kind of excess Nico often bought. The moment I first saw it, I thought of Nana and decided to keep it for her.She gasped with delight when I handed it over, unwrapping the box carefully. The bottle itself was exquisite: round crystal, gleaming in the kitchen light, carrying a fragrance that w
Zara's POV When I got back home, I drowned myself in research about polygraphs. Every article, every documentary, every late-night forum thread screamed the same thing, scientists don’t believe it works a hundred percent. It’s not magic, it's manipulation.I stumbled across a test of a high-profile criminal on video. He answered every question flawlessly. Then came the final one: “Did you lie during this interview?”“Yes,” he said calmly.The machine agreed.That moment hit me like a slap. He’d lied and trained himself so thoroughly that not even the needles on the polygraph twitched. He didn’t just lie; he believed it. His pulse stayed steady, his breath smooth, his eyes blank but sure.So, I started doing the same. I repeated it over and over until my throat felt raw: “I am Aria Everhart.”I practiced possible questions, answering them with unwavering calm, slipping into her skin like a second soul. I spoke her name in the mirror until it stopped sounding like a mask and started so
Zara's POV I took a deep breath and dropped the phone. When Sterling called later, I told him work was overwhelming and I needed to spend the weekend buried in it. We'd meet next week. He didn’t push, and I was grateful.But as I laid on my bed staring at the ceiling, the question gnawed at me, what if the test exposes me? What if the machine screams that I am not Aria?Restless, I grabbed my laptop and started searching. Polygraph test. Hundreds of results poured in. I clicked a video. A man sat with wires wrapped around his chest, cuffs on his arm, sensors pressed to his skin. The screen showed his pulse, his breathing, the faintest electrical tremors in his body.I leaned forward. The truth is, the machine doesn’t actually know if you’re lying. It only listens to the body, the racing heartbeat, the hitch in a breath, the surge of sweat on the skin. That’s what betrays you. The examiner reads those spikes on the graph, and in their world, stress means deception.So no, the polygrap
Zara's POVI opened my eyes, but I couldn’t move. My chest rose and fell, but my body felt like stone, my tongue glued to the roof of my mouth. It wasn’t like sleep paralysis, it was something darker and heavier, like being trapped under ice.‘What’s happening?’ I screamed inside my head.Then a voice answered. ‘Who are you?’My pulse thundered. It was my voice, but not mine. It was coming from inside, echoing like a ghost.‘What? Who’s there?’ I asked.‘How are you here?’ the voice demanded again.A cold pull snatched at my insides, like invisible hands trying to peel me out of my own skin. My vision flickered.“No! No, stop… STOP!” The last word tore from my throat, jagged and loud.I bolted upright in bed, drenched in sweat, my hands trembling. My voice was back, my body was mine, but my heart wouldn’t stop hammering. This had never happened before.Was Aria trying to come back?The thought slashed through me like ice. I had built her life. I had worn her skin. I had deceived every
Zara's POV I returned to Dominic’s place and pushed my body until my muscles screamed. Every punch, every kick, every bead of sweat that hit the mat was me trying to silence the storm in my chest. My lungs burned, my knuckles stung, but I welcomed the ache. I needed the distraction.The irony wasn’t lost on me, I was training with the very man who had become the wedge between Raina and me. Every time his gaze lingered a second too long, I wanted to scream at him, but I bit down hard on the words. Maybe I had been too harsh on Raina, but I know her too well. She’s a lover girl to her core, soft where I’m steel, and I’ve seen her fall too easily, then drown in regret. And the thought of her repeating that mistake with Dominic? It churned my stomach.By the time I dragged myself home, every muscle was trembling. I showered until the water ran cold, threw on an oversized shirt, and forced myself to eat something. The silence of the house pressed in, Cassian was still out. Good. One less