Footsteps approached. They were the confident, rhythmic clicks of expensive Italian leather on concrete.
Dillon Newman stepped into her fading field of view. He smoothed the lapels of his custom navy suit, a look of practiced, theatrical regret plastered onto his handsome face. He looked like a man about to deliver a eulogy for a pet he didn't particularly like.
"It really is a shame, Cassie," Dillon said, his voice smooth. "You were always such a delicate thing."
A giggle bubbled up from behind him. Bianca Benson, her stepsister, slid her arm through Dillon's. She was wearing Cassandra's family ring-the vintage emerald cut that had belonged to her grandmother. It caught the light, mocking Cassandra with its sparkle.
"Don't be too sad, baby," Bianca purred, leaning her head on Dillon's shoulder. She looked down at Cassandra, her eyes gleaming with malice. "She wouldn't want you to be sad. She'd want us to enjoy the trust fund, wouldn't she?"
Cassandra tried to speak, to scream, but her throat was paralyzed. The neurotoxin had already shut down her vocal cords. She could only watch.
Bianca leaned closer, her perfume-a cloying vanilla scent that Cassandra had always hated-filling the air. "You know, the car accident wasn't just bad luck," she whispered, the words like a secret shared between sisters. "And daddy's 'financial trouble'? We moved the money months ago. Oh, and Kade? We made sure he wouldn't reach you. A coordinated series of false distress signals across the city has his private security chasing ghosts. By the time the political red tape clears and he realizes the decoy, you'll be cold."
Dillon checked his watch. "Time to wrap this up."
He produced a syringe. He didn't hesitate. He didn't shake. He handled it with the efficiency of a man disposing of a sick dog. He found the vein in her arm-the one already bruised from months of 'treatments'-and pushed the plunger.
Ice replaced the fire. The cold seized her heart.
In the final second, as the darkness swallowed the warehouse, Cassandra heard a distant, thunderous boom. The ground shook. Kade. He had come. He had found her. But he was too late.
If I have a soul, she thought, the hatred burning brighter than life itself, I will drag you both to hell.
Her heart stopped.
Then, her lungs exploded with air.
Cassandra shot up, gasping, her chest heaving like a drowning victim breaking the surface. She clawed at her throat, expecting the burn of the toxin, the constriction of paralysis.
There was no dust. No smell of rust and decay.
Instead, the air was cool and scented with expensive cedarwood and crisp linen.
She was drowning in sweat, her silk pajamas clinging to her skin. Her hands flew to her legs, gripping her thighs. She tried to move them. A jolt of responsiveness fired through her nerves-weak, trembling, but there. The paralysis that had bound her to the chair for the last few months of her life was gone. But the muscles were atrophied, soft from disuse.
She collapsed back against the pillows, her chest heaving. She wasn't paralyzed, but she was weak. Fragile. Just as they believed her to be.
Cassandra scrambled back against the headboard, her eyes darting around the room. It was a cavernous space dominated by grays and blacks. Minimalist, cold, masculine. Floor-to-ceiling windows showcased the glittering skyline of Manhattan, alive and arrogant in the night.
She knew this room.
This was the master bedroom of the Mullen Penthouse.
She looked at her hands. They were smooth. No needle tracks. No atrophy. She brought them to her face, trembling.
A sharp, splitting headache assaulted her, bringing with it a flood of memories that didn't belong to the dead woman in the warehouse. The date flashed in her mind. It was five years ago. The night she had tried to run away with Dillon. The night Kade's private security had intercepted them at the private airfield and dragged her back.
The door to the bedroom flew open.
It wasn't a gentle entrance. The heavy mahogany door slammed against the wall, the sound echoing like a gunshot.
Kade Mullen stood in the doorway.
The hallway light backlit him, turning him into a towering silhouette of broad shoulders and rigid tension. He stepped into the room, and the atmosphere instantly grew heavier, charged with a violent, suppressed energy.
Cassandra flinched. It was a physical reflex, a remnant of the terror she had felt in her final moments.
Kade saw it.
His steps faltered for a fraction of a second, his jaw tightening. The hurt flashed in his eyes-raw and bleeding-before he paved over it with a layer of glacial rage.
"What?" Kade's voice was a low rumble, dangerous and deep. He walked toward the bed, loosening his tie with a jerk of his hand. "Disappointed to see me? Were you hoping Dillon had come to rescue you from the big bad wolf?"
Cassandra stared at him. He was alive. He wasn't bleeding out in a warehouse trying to save her corpse. He was here, whole, angry, and magnificent.
He reached the side of the bed and climbed onto the mattress, his knee sinking into the duvet. He loomed over her, blocking out the city lights. The scent of tobacco and rain clung to him.
His hand, rough and calloused from years of handling weapons before he handled boardrooms, shot out and gripped her chin. He forced her face up.
"Look at me," he commanded.
Cassandra looked. She searched his face-the sharp angle of his jaw, the scar cutting through his left eyebrow, the storm-gray eyes that usually looked at her with frustration. Now, they held a mixture of fury and despair.
Tears welled in her eyes. Not from fear. From relief. From the crushing weight of knowing what he would sacrifice for her in a future that hadn't happened yet.
Kade misread the tears. Of course he did.
His expression twisted. The grip on her chin tightened, just to the edge of pain.
"Save your tears, Cassandra," he spat, his voice dropping to a whisper that was more terrifying than a shout. "You're crying for a coward who left you on the tarmac the moment my men showed up. He didn't fight for you. He ran."
"Kade..." she whispered, her voice raspy.
"Don't," he cut her off. "As long as I have breath in my lungs, you will never walk out that door to him. You are mine. Even if you hate me for it."
He released her chin with a shove that sent her falling back against the pillows. He reached into the inner pocket of his jacket and pulled out a folded document. He threw it onto the bed.
It was their marriage certificate.
"Read the name," he said, standing up and adjusting his cuffs, his back rigid. "From tonight on, you will play the part of Mrs. Mullen. If you try to run again, I will dismantle the Newman family brick by brick. I will leave them with nothing but the clothes on their backs."
He turned and marched toward the door. He paused at the threshold, his hand on the frame, his knuckles white. He didn't look back.
"Welcome home, Cassandra."
He slammed the door shut.
The silence that followed was deafening. Cassandra reached out and picked up the paper. Her fingers traced the date. It was real. The nightmare of the warehouse was gone, replaced by the nightmare of a marriage she had destroyed before it even began.
She didn't try to get out of bed. She knew her legs wouldn't support her, not yet. And more importantly, she knew the value of being underestimated. To the world, she was the crippled heiress. To Dillon and Bianca, she was a broken doll.
"Let them believe it," she whispered into the darkness.
But inside, the gears were turning. The cold, analytical mind of the surgeon-the woman who had stitched up warlords in damp basements and mixed antidotes from kitchen supplies in her past life-was waking up.
She stared at the closed door, her eyes narrowing. The fear evaporated, replaced by a cold, calculating resolve.
"Dillon," she whispered to the empty room. "Bianca."
She smiled, and it wasn't a nice smile.
"I hope you enjoyed the money. Because I'm coming to take it all back."