LOGINElara stood before the mirror, her breath hitching as if she stared at a ghost.
The reflection didn't wear the tattered hospital gown or the hollowed-out expression of a woman who had given up. Instead, it was her—eighteen, freshly on the cusp of adulthood, and the sole owner of an estate worth millions. She was the star of a play she never realized was scripted against her. She reached out, her fingertips trembling as they brushed the cool glass. ‘I’m warm. I’m breathing. I’m not dead.’ The memory of the heavy steel bar crashing against her skull flashed behind her eyes, sharp and white-hot. She gasped, clutching the edge of the vanity until her knuckles turned white. The phantom pain was so real she almost reached up to feel for the blood. But there was no blood. Only the faint scent of expensive jasmine perfume and the distant, hauntingly familiar sound of laughter from downstairs. Selene. The sound sent a chill straight down Elara’s spine. It was the laugh of a sister who had watched her go mad with a smile on her face. Elara forced her lungs to expand, drawing in a shaky breath. She remembered everything. The fake accounts Damien had framed her with. The forged signatures. The drugs planted in her vanity drawer. She remembered the security footage they had edited to show her "insanity" when she finally broke under their pressure—watching the world move on without her from behind a locked door in a psychiatric ward. Not this time. She grabbed a soft blue blouse—the one Damien always said made her look "innocent"—and tucked a stray strand of hair behind her ear. She smiled at her reflection, not with joy, but with the cold, sharp precision of a predator. She didn't dress to look pretty today. She dressed to build a fortress. The grand staircase curved like a question mark, its polished railings gleaming under the morning light. From the landing, Elara saw them—Selene, perched on the velvet couch like a delicate flower, and Damien Blackwood. He stood with practiced ease, holding a bouquet of white lilies. He didn't know she hated lilies; he simply assumed she loved them because they were expensive, and in her past life, she had been too lovestruck to correct him. His eyes were fixed on Selene with a hunger he didn’t even bother to hide. How had she been so blind? She saw it now: the way Selene’s fingers lingered on Damien’s wrist, and the way their voices dipped into a low murmur, sharing secrets Elara was never meant to hear. “Morning, Ellie!” Selene chirped, her voice dripping with fake honey. “You look beautiful today.” Elara felt a surge of pure, icy bile rise in her throat, but she bit the inside of her cheek until the copper taste of blood grounded her. “Thank you,” Elara said, her voice smooth as silk. “You too, little sister.” As she sat down, Damien leaned in. The scent of his expensive cologne—once her favorite—now made her want to gag. It smelled like the end of her life. “Elara. You’re radiant, as always,” he murmured, reaching for her hand. She flinched instinctively before forcing herself to let him take her fingers. His skin felt like a reptile’s. She realized now he had never watched her with love, only with strategy. He wanted her name, her wealth, and her controlling shares in VossTech. The butler, Marius, appeared with the tea service. When Elara looked at him, her vision blurred with sudden, hot tears. He looked younger, his hair less gray, his posture reflecting a loyalty that few others could match. Her chest tightened at the memory of the night she lost him and Nanny Agnes. While she had been locked away, drugged and broken, Damien and Selene had moved against the only two people who could have saved her. Marius and Agnes had gathered evidence—files and recordings that could have exposed the conspiracy. And it had cost them their lives. The memories hit Elara like a physical blow: the flash of blood on the study walls, the sound of Marius’s strangled gasp, and the chilling sight of Selene holding the knife. Their final looks hadn't been of fear for themselves, but of guilt—sadness that they had failed to protect her. Not this time. I will be the one protecting you. She looked up at Marius, meeting his gaze with a new steeliness. He paused, sensing the change, and gave a faint, almost imperceptible nod. “Aren’t you going to tell her, Damien?” Selene hummed, leaning toward him. Damien cleared his throat and stood, squaring his shoulders. Elara knew what came next: the breathless tears of joy she’d shed the first time he knelt. The same ring that would later end up on Selene’s hand. “Elara Voss,” he began. “I’ve known you for years. I know you aren't perfect—you have your... little flaws—but I am willing to guide you. Together, we can make the Voss name legendary.” My flaws? Elara thought, her heart turning to stone. You mean the ones you plan to invent on camera? “Be my wife.” It wasn't a question. It was a command drizzled with sprinkles. A total takeover. Elara let the silence stretch, studying him like a specimen under a microscope until his confident expression began to twitch. Then, she gently pushed the velvet box away, snapping it shut with a decisive click. “Let me think about it.” Damien’s mask didn't just slip—it cracked. “What?” “Marriage is a serious legal decision,” Elara continued smoothly. “Especially when it involves the future of the Voss estate. I need to consult with my advisors before making such a... permanent commitment.” In the corner, Marius looked up sharply, his lips twitching into the ghost of a smile. Elara didn't wait. She stood and walked toward the study, her heels clicking against the marble like a war drum. Once inside, she locked the door and dialed a number she had memorized in the dark of her asylum cell. “Nanny Agnes?” she whispered. Her hand was steady now. “I need you to come back to the estate. Immediately. And bring Mr. Hanover with you.” Mr. Hanover, the family lawyer, was the only man who could secure her assets before Damien could sink his claws into them. In her first life, she had ignored them both. “I’m awake now, Nanny Agnes,” Elara said, her eyes fixed on the door. “And I’m never closing my eyes again.”The next morning, sunlight streaks rested gently on Elara like pixie dust. She stretched her arms like a baby, wriggling in all directions to ease her sore muscles. But she froze when she noticed a faint strip of ribbon tied around her wrist—right over the spot Damien had gripped so roughly the previous night.Her brows furrowed. Who tied this?Still half-lost in thought, she slid off the bed—only for her feet to brush something soft and furry. She looked down. A pair of adorable white bunny slippers sat neatly by her bedside.Slippers?She slipped her feet into them, blinking in surprise. They were a perfect fit. Her heart skipped a beat, and the corners of her lips lifted ever so subtly.Could it be... Cassian?Before she could dwell on it, the door creaked open.“Elara, you’re awake,” Nanny Agnes said warmly, stepping into the room with a tray of warm tea.“Nana!” Elara called instinctively, her voice carrying a soft, childlike tone she hadn’t used
He had never left.Cassian had watched from the shadows of the VIP lounge as the Blackwood family made their hurried, arrogant exit. He had known the moment he saw Damien’s smug expression that the bastard had left her behind.He didn't pull away. Instead, he lingered, instructing his bodyguard to keep a sharp watch on the grand entrance. The moment the alert came—“She’s out, sir”Cassian made a deliberate show of returning to his car. He wanted her to see him. He wanted to be the only hand reaching out in the dark.Elara felt as if she had stumbled upon a savior. To his eyes, the clueless little lamb had run straight to the Big Bad Wolf—exactly as he had orchestrated.“You called?” Cassian muttered. His voice was glacial, a stark contrast to the heat of satisfaction blooming in his chest at the sight of her standing so close.Elara bent slightly, hands on her knees as she caught her breath. When she finally stood straight, she found herself staring. She
Elara made her way back toward the ballroom with a light step, almost doing a victory dance in the empty corridor. The weight of the past felt a little lighter. But as she pushed through the double doors, she froze.The hall was ghost-quiet. The sea of glittering gowns and tuxedoes had drained away, leaving only a handful of staff clearing half-empty champagne flutes.How is that possible?She hurried to her table, her heels clicking loudly in the hollow room. Damien, his family, and Selene were gone. Not a single trace of them remained.They had left. Without her."My phone." She searched the hidden pocket of her dress—nothing. She checked the tablecloth, the floor, the seat. Empty.Then the memory hit her. Damien had dragged her away with such force that she hadn’t been able to grab her clutch. He had seen it on the table. He knew exactly what he was doing.She fumed, her knuckles turning white as she gripped the back of her chair. “What am I supposed to do now?”She sat down, stran
Elara watched the disdainful creatures slither away like snakes in designer heels. Only when the rhythmic click-clack of their departure faded did she move to push the restroom door open—then she paused.If she entered unprotected, she would succumb to the mist just as easily.Searching herself instinctively, her fingers brushed against a seam she hadn't noticed before. To her surprise, she found a black satin mask tucked into a hidden slit on the side of her gown.A pocket?She hadn’t realized the dress had been modified with one. Nor had she packed a mask. The realization sent a chill of confusion through her, but she didn't have the luxury of time. She slipped the satin over her nose and mouth, the fabric smelling faintly of cedar, and pushed open the door.The scent hit her like a physical wall—overpowering, floral, and cloyingly sweet. It coated the air like invisible, heavy smoke. Even through the mask, she could feel the edges of her mind beginning to fray, a synthetic warmth t
As the gala continued in full bloom, Elara’s eyes never left the actress.Arabella.She looked as dazzling as ever, a vision in shimmering silver. It broke Elara’s heart to remember how, in her past life, it had taken just one cruel night to ruin her. A swan dragged through the mud until she couldn't breathe. Humans were cruel, but fame was a predator that didn't stop until it reached the bone.Unbeknownst to Elara, a different kind of predator watched her from across the room.Cassian Vale sat like a silent wolf—composed, cold, and sharp as a double-edged sword. An untouched glass of bourbon rested in his hand, his gaze fixed on the crimson-clad woman who hadn’t so much as glanced in his direction since her speech.What are you thinking, little bird?He watched Damien lean close to her. Once. Twice. Three times. Each time, Elara’s profile remained as still as marble. She was ghosting him while sitting right next to him."Elara," Damien said, his voice soaked in forced charm that was
From the moment Cassian stepped into the ballroom, he had taken note of the little bird seated beside Damien.Crimson dress. Elegant neck. The same softness in her features he remembered, yet the air around her had shifted. It was no longer the scent of spring flowers; it was the calm before a storm. This was the first time he was seeing her in months, and the change was visceral.The room was a theater of wealth and deception—gilded laughter, the rhythmic clinking of crystal, and hostility veiled behind polite grins. But Cassian’s world had narrowed until all he could see was her.Elara.He almost didn’t recognize the woman now poised beside the Blackwoods—so composed, so terrifyingly self-contained. As he watched her, a ragged, tattered, and wronged memory of her flashed in his mind, but he shook it off. It was a ghost of a lifetime only he was plagued to remember and hate himself for not doing anything before it was too late.Cassian Vale had always had a soft spot for Elara Voss,







