LOGINThe night air was a sharp, biting reminder that I was alive. As I slipped through the back gate of the Silas estate, the mud ruined my silk shoes, but I didn't care. Every step away from that house felt like shedding a layer of lead. I wasn't just walking into the dark; I was walking toward the only man who had ever seen my talent as a weapon rather than a charity case.In my past life, I had been so brainwashed by the "loyalty" my father preached that I viewed Mister Joe as a predator trying to lure me away from my family duties. I had ignored his letters, blocked his calls, and eventually, he had stopped asking. I had chosen a cage of gold over a throne of diamonds.I flagged a taxi at the edge of the district, my breath hitching as I gave the address to the Vanguard Tower. It was a sleek, glass needle piercing the city’s skyline, a monument to the jewelry empire that rivaled—and often crushed—my father’s stagnant business.When I stepped into the lobby, the silence was heavy and ex
“You think you can just get away with everything you’ve done to your twin sister? You tried to get rid of her back then, and now you’re showing your true colors!” She jerked my head down, forcing me to my knees on the cold hardwood floor. The impact sent a jolt through my joints, but I didn't make a sound. “Beg for forgiveness,” Mom commanded, her voice trembling with rage. “Kneel and beg, and I’ll let everything you’ve done slide. Show some remorse for the life you stole from her!” I looked up. From my position on the floor, Elena looked like a queen on a throne of lies. She looked down at me, her eyes shimmering with a fake, watery light that my parents mistook for compassion. “Oh, Mom, no! Please, let her go,” Elena said, her voice a melodic, heartbreaking sob. She stepped forward, reaching out a hand as if to help me, but the look in her eyes was a jagged blade. “I understand if she’s angry. It’s been a very long time... with time, me and my twin sister will get along soon… r
The word was quiet, but it carried the weight of a gavel. Leo paused, his hand inches from the flask. "What’s your problem now, Elara? Are you jealous that she didn't make any for you?" "Actually," I said, walking toward them. The heels of my shoes clicked against the hardwood like the ticking of a countdown clock. "I’m worried about your health, Leo. You’ve always had a sensitive stomach. Who knows what 'herbs' she found in the slums? For all we know, she’s been cooking hemlock in a rusted pot." "How dare you!" Mother screamed, standing up. "Elena is a saint! She’s trying to bond with her brother, and you’re accusing her of—of what? Poor hygiene?" "I'm accusing her of being a stranger," I said, looking Elena dead in the eye. "Seventeen years is a long time. People change. Some people get bitter. Some people learn how to extract what they want from those who abandoned them." Elena’s hand trembled—just a fraction. She knew I was seeing through the veil. She quickly turned to Leo,
I stood up, my legs feeling like lead. I walked toward the hallway mirror, my heart in my throat. I turned my head. There it was. The rose birthmark, vibrant and clear, tucked behind my ear.I wasn't dead. I was back.“She’s here!” my father shouted from the front porch. His voice was full of a joy he had never once directed at me. “The car is pulling up!”My mother scurried past me, nearly knocking me over in her haste to get to the door. She didn't even look back to see if I was following.I stayed in the shadows of the hallway, my fingers gripping the edge of the doorframe so hard the wood bit into my palms. I watched the front door swing open.The light from outside was blinding, silhouetting the figure standing on the threshold. It was Elena. She looked exactly as she had in the hospital—pale, dressed in deceptive white, her eyes wide with manufactured innocence.“Elena! My darling girl!” My mother wailed, throwing her arms around her.My brother, Leo, ran from the stairs, shouti
“If you die, just think of it as paying back the air you’ve wasted for twenty-three years.”My mother’s voice was as cool as the sterilized tiles of the operating theater. She didn’t look at my face. Instead, her eyes were fixed on the surgical consent form in her hand, her thumb stroking the paper with a rhythmic, anxious twitch. She wasn’t worried about the needles that were about to pierce my skin; she was worried the ink wasn't dry enough on the legalities that would save her ‘precious’ son.“Sign it, Elara,” my father added. He stood by the window, the harsh afternoon sun casting his shadow long and jagged across the floor. He smelled of expensive cedarwood and the metallic tang of the hospital. “Leo is the only heir this family has. You? You’re just a girl with a cursed mark and a debt to pay. This heart is the only thing you’ve ever possessed that is actually worth something.”I looked down at my hands. They were trembling, the hospital gown—thin, scratchy, and smelling of indu







