The rubber belt of the treadmill whirred beneath Evelyn's sneakers.
The sound was a steady, monotonous grind in the sterile silence of the high-end Manhattan physical therapy clinic.
Sweat beaded on her forehead, stinging her eyes as it rolled down her pale skin.
She focused on mimicking the memory of the sharp, burning ache that used to flare in the soft tissue of her right calf with every step she took.
She pushed through the discomfort, her breathing heavy but controlled.
On the stainless steel cart next to the machine, her phone screen lit up.
The caller ID flashed a name that made her stomach drop like a stone.
Arthur Vance.
Evelyn didn't stop walking. She reached out with a trembling hand and hit the green accept button.
She brought the phone to her ear, her chest heaving as she tried to steady her breathing.
"Evelyn."
Arthur's voice was a block of ice sliding down her spine.
There was no greeting. No asking how her physical therapy was going.
"I need you to back out of the Thorne family marriage arrangement immediately," Arthur demanded.
His tone left no room for argument. It was the same tone he used when firing a low-level employee.
"Chloe is far more suited for high-society networking than you are. You know this."
Evelyn's hand tightened around the handrail of the treadmill.
Her knuckles turned completely white.
A familiar, freezing numbness spread through her chest, suffocating the air in her lungs.
"Look at yourself," Arthur sneered through the speaker. "You can barely walk without a limp. You have no grace. You are going to embarrass the Vance family in front of Silas Thorne."
Evelyn reached out and pressed the down arrow on the treadmill console.
The belt slowed to a manageable walk.
A cold, humorless smirk touched the corners of her lips.
"Did you forget something, Arthur?" Evelyn asked. Her voice was flat, devoid of any daughterly affection.
"Forget what?" he snapped.
"Elias Sr. is the head of this family. Not you."
The silence on the other end lasted for two seconds before Arthur exploded.
"How dare you speak to me like that!" His voice spiked in volume, vibrating against her eardrum.
"I am your father! I put a roof over your head when you had nothing! You owe me this. Give the marriage to your sister."
The word 'sister' hit Evelyn like a physical blow to the ribs.
A sudden, violent image flashed behind her eyes.
Her mother, Eleanor, lying pale and lifeless, the empty pill bottles scattered on the nightstand.
The official story was suicide, but a cold knot of doubt had lived in Evelyn's gut for years. It felt wrong. It felt like a lie.
Evelyn's eyes turned as hard and cold as shattered glass.
"She is not my sister," Evelyn said, her voice dropping to a deadly whisper. "She is the bastard daughter of your mistress. Don't ever try to dress your disgusting infidelity up as family loyalty to me."
"You ungrateful little bitch-" Arthur roared.
Evelyn didn't wait for him to finish.
She pulled the phone away from her ear and pressed the red button.
The line went dead.
Her fingers moved rapidly across the screen, blocking his number permanently.
She tossed the phone back onto the cart. It landed with a loud clatter.
"Dr. Vance?"
Evelyn turned her head. Her physical therapist, a young woman in scrubs, was standing a few feet away, looking concerned.
"Do you need to sit down? We can take a break."
"No," Evelyn said.
She turned back to the console and slammed her finger against the up arrow.
The machine beeped rapidly. The belt accelerated from a slow walk to a full, demanding sprint.
Evelyn let go of the handrails.
Her posture straightened. Her stride lengthened.
Her feet hit the belt with perfect, powerful rhythm.
There was no limp. There was no weakness.
The soft tissue injury was a minor annoyance, nothing more. Her legs had fully recovered weeks ago.
But keeping up the facade of the crippled, helpless country girl was necessary.
It kept predators like Arthur blind to her actual strength.
Half an hour later, Evelyn stepped out of the clinic's private shower.
She dried off and dressed in a tailored, ivory silk blouse and wide-leg black trousers.
She stood in front of the mirror, adjusting her collar.
Her phone buzzed in her purse.
She pulled it out and opened an encrypted messaging app.
It was a text from the Vance family estate.
Elias Sr. requires your presence for an important meeting at 2:00 PM. Penthouse.
Evelyn typed a quick confirmation.
A sharp, determined light flickered in her dark eyes.
She grabbed her black Hermès Birkin bag and pushed open the heavy glass doors of the clinic.
The early autumn sun of New York hit her face, bright and unforgiving.
She pulled a pair of dark sunglasses from her bag and slid them onto her face.
A massive, black Lincoln Navigator was idling at the curb.
The driver, a man in a sharp black suit, immediately stepped out and opened the rear door for her.
"Good afternoon, Miss Vance," he said respectfully.
Evelyn climbed into the spacious back seat.
The leather was cool against her skin.
"Take me to the Vance penthouse by Central Park," Evelyn ordered.
The driver shut the door, sealing her inside the quiet, climate-controlled cabin.
The SUV pulled away from the curb, merging seamlessly into the chaotic Manhattan traffic.
Evelyn leaned her head back against the headrest and closed her eyes.
The war was just beginning.