Beep. Beep. Beep.
The sound drilled into Iona Crane's skull, rhythmic and cold. She tried to open her eyes, but her eyelids felt like they were weighed down with lead. There was only blinding white light filtering through the slits.
Then the memories hit her. The screech of tires. Miranda's scream. The freezing water closing over her head, filling her lungs with icy fire.
She tried to move her fingers, but her body wouldn't respond. She was trapped in the dark, listening to the mechanical heartbeat of the ICU monitor.
Voices drifted in from the hallway. The door was cracked open just an inch.
"What did the doctor say?" Preston Harmon's voice was sharp, impatient. "When is she going to wake up? The Vance dinner is tonight."
Iona's chest tightened. That was her father. The man who had demanded she be perfect. The man who had dragged her from the Rust Belt to New York, only to treat her like a stray dog that had tracked mud onto his Persian carpets.
"Who knows?" Miranda Harmon's voice dripped with venom. "This Rust Belt trash always finds a way to ruin our important moments."
Iona's heart skipped a beat. The physical pain in her chest wasn't from the water in her lungs anymore. It was a sharp, twisting sensation, like a hand squeezing her organ until it threatened to pop. Ten years. Ten years of smiling, obeying, shrinking herself to fit into their world, and this was what they really thought.
"Mom, don't be mad." Veronica Harmon's sugary voice chimed in. "Maybe sis just wanted some attention."
"Veronica is right, don't stress over it." Eric Espinoza's voice followed. His tone was light, flirtatious. "You look beautiful tonight, by the way."
Iona could picture it perfectly. Eric's arm around Veronica's waist, his eyes lingering on her younger sister the way they used to look at her. A wave of nausea rolled through her stomach. It wasn't sadness. It was revulsion.
"If she's mentally unstable, we should just send her to that facility in the Hamptons." That was Caleb Harmon, her third older brother. His voice was as cold as a slab of marble. "Tell the press she needs rest."
"Excellent idea." Preston agreed immediately. "We can't have her running her mouth and tarnishing the Harmon name."
The conversation moved on. Veronica and Eric's laughter echoed down the hall as they left for their date. Miranda gave final instructions to the housekeeper.
"Martha, watch her. When she wakes up, call the lawyer. I want her to sign the inheritance waiver."
Footsteps faded. The hallway went dead silent.
The monitor beeped.
Something inside Iona's brain clicked. It was like a lock turning in a dark room. A rush of cold clarity washed over her, drowning out the pain and the self-pity.
She saw it. The riverbank. The slippery rocks. Miranda's hand wrapped around her wrist. And then... the fingers uncurling. The push. The deliberate delay before the scream for help.
It wasn't an accident. It was a cleanup operation.
The panic evaporated. In its place was a terrifying, absolute stillness. She wasn't Iona Crane, the pathetic girl desperate for love. She was the inheritor of Silas. Decades of knowledge, restoration techniques, and the dark histories of a thousand artifacts flooded her mind.
She felt her right index finger twitch against the rough hospital sheet. A single tear leaked from the corner of her eye, tracking down her temple and soaking into her hair. It wasn't a tear of grief. It was a farewell to the fool she used to be.
She thought of Eleanor Vance. The only person in this city's gilded cage who had ever looked at her like she was worth something.
A plan formed. Sharp. Dangerous. Final.
The monitor's beeping didn't spike; instead, its rhythm subtly shifted, the space between each beep becoming infinitesimally longer, steadier. It was a new pulse, slow and deliberate. The rhythm of a predator waiting in the dark.
Iona forced her eyes open. The white light of the room stung, but she didn't blink. The hope that had always lived in her gaze was gone, burned away by the icy water. All that was left was a flat, burning calm.