I overheard Edgar confess everything-the crash, my parents' deaths, his plan to keep me as his "obedient pet" forever.
He wanted to parade his new wife at his birthday gala, a final humiliation for me.
So I offered to plan the party for him. He thought it was a gesture of love. He had no idea I was planning his downfall.
Chapter 1
The taste of blood in my mouth was the first real thing I felt in three years. Then came the face, blurring into focus, a face I once knew, now twisted in pure malice. Amelie. My Amelie. My heart, which had been a hollow drumbeat for so long, suddenly throbbed with a terrifying clarity. It wasn't just blood on my tongue; it was the bitter, undeniable taste of betrayal.
I remembered the email first. A simple attachment. A photo. Edgar, my husband, smiling with a woman. Her hand was on his chest. It wasn't a friendly gesture. It was intimate. It was Amelie.
My mentee. The young, aspiring designer I had taken under my wing. The one I had financially supported through design school. The one I had introduced to my life, my home, my husband.
The anger hit me like a physical blow. I confronted Edgar that night, the photo still burning on my phone screen. He tried to deny it, to charm his way out, but the evidence was undeniable. His excuses were thin, transparent. He had underestimated me. He had underestimated my parents' daughter, a woman who built skyscrapers and empires.
I packed his bags myself. My hands shook, but my voice was steady.
"Get out, Edgar. We're done."
He pleaded, he begged, he even cried. Said he loved me. Said it was a mistake. But I had seen enough. The trust was shattered. The foundation of our life together crumbled into dust. I filed for divorce the next day, making it clear I wanted nothing from him, only my freedom and my peace. He wouldn't get a cent of my family's fortune, not one share of Everett Industries. He knew it. I knew it.
The drive was a blur. The Hamptons road, usually a calming escape, felt like a tunnel without end. My mind raced, replaying every lie, every stolen glance. The pain was fresh, raw. I gripped the steering wheel, my knuckles white.
Then the flash of headlights. A deafening crunch of metal. The world spun, then went black.
I woke up in a room I didn't recognize. White walls, soft light. A man's face hovered over me, filled with what looked like concern. "Elise," he said, his voice a soothing balm. "You're awake."
It was Edgar. My husband. Or so he said.
"Who are you?" I asked, my voice a rasp. My head throbbed, a dull ache behind my eyes.
He smiled, a gentle, sad smile. "I'm Edgar, your husband. You don't remember?"
I searched my mind. A blank. A vast, terrifying emptiness. Fragments of images, like broken glass, but nothing coherent.
"There was an accident," he explained, his hand warm over mine. "A bad one. You were targeted, my love. Business rivals, they wanted to hurt Everett Industries. They wanted to hurt us." His voice dropped to a whisper, laced with fear. "We need to be careful. You need to be protected."
He moved me to a high-security mansion in the Hamptons. It was lavish, opulent, yet it felt like a prison. The windows had bulletproof glass, the gardens were patrolled by silent guards. I was told it was for my safety. For our safety. Edgar rarely left my side, constantly reassuring me, filling in the gaps of my past with stories of our perfect life, our unbreakable love.
He called me his "precious Elise." He told me I was his wife, his world. He curated my life, my memories. He gave me a new identity, one crafted from his lies. Three years passed in that gilded cage. Three years of his fabricated devotion, his suffocating protection. My world was small, confined, made up only of Edgar and the few staff members he allowed near me. I believed him. I had no other choice.
Until today.
The slap across my face was sharp, unexpected. It wasn't Edgar. It was a woman. Young, with eyes that burned with a venomous light. She was beautiful, dressed in clothes that looked vaguely familiar, somehow mine.
"You think you can just come back?" she shrieked, her voice high and piercing. "You think you can take everything back?"
Her words were a riddle, but the pain, the shock, it shattered something inside me. Like a dam breaking, memories flooded back. Not fragments, but a torrent. The email. The divorce. The car crash-it wasn't rivals. It was him. Edgar.
And Amelie. My Amelie.
She stood over me, her chest heaving. The servant who had been by my side dropped to a low bow, fear etched on her face. Amelie, the young woman who had just attacked me, was treated like royalty. My mind reeled.
"Hello, Elise," Amelie sneered, a cruel smile twisting her lips. "Long time no see."
My vision swam, but the image of her, so young, so eager, so full of innocent ambition, now morphed into this monstrous figure, was stark. I had mentored her. I had poured my heart and knowledge into her. I had seen a spark, a potential. I had given her everything.
A sharp pain shot through my skull, making me gasp. I heard muffled voices, Edgar's among them. He sounded annoyed, but not truly angry.
"Amelie, what did you do?" he grumbled, his voice closer now.
"She provoked me, Edgar!" Amelie whined, her voice instantly shifting, dripping with artificial sweetness. "She looked at me, like she knew... like she remembered!"
"Don't be ridiculous," Edgar said, his tone dismissive. "She doesn't remember anything. You know that."
"But what if she does?" Her voice trembled, a calculated tremor. "What if she's pretending? She looked at me with so much hatred. Like the old Elise."
My eyes remained shut, my body limp. I forced a ragged breath, feigning unconsciousness. My mind raced, piecing together the broken fragments of my past. The pieces clicked into a horrifying mosaic. Edgar. The car crash. The fake death. Amelie. The usurped identity. My parents.
My parents. Oh God, my parents.
"Stop being paranoid, Amelie," Edgar sighed, rubbing her back. "She's just a broken doll. We've been over this. Her parents are long gone. The company, the fortune, everything is ours. Yours, darling. All yours."
"But... but what if the police... what if someone finds out?" Amelie's voice was still laced with fear, but a different kind now. The fear of losing what she had stolen.
"No one will," Edgar said, his voice firm, reassuring. "Her death was a tragic accident. A closed case. And you, my beautiful Amelie, are the grieving widow, the rightful heir. You wear her name, her rings, her status. You are Elise Everett now."
My breath hitched. Elise Everett? My name. My identity. Stolen. By her. By the girl I had championed.
"I just... I don't want to share you, Edgar," Amelie said, her voice dropping to a seductive purr. "Not even with her. She needs to understand her place."
My blood ran cold. Share him? They were married. My stomach churned with disgust.
"She is a ghost, Amelie. A past that never existed. She's a convenience, a pet, nothing more," Edgar chuckled, a low, guttural sound that sliced through me. "But a very useful convenience. She thinks she's my lover, that we're still married. It keeps her docile. Keeps her close. You know how... dedicated she is."
My teeth clenched. Dedicated. He meant devoted. Devoted to him, to the man who had orchestrated my near-death, stolen my life, and killed my family. My mentors, my friends, my entire world-they must think I was dead.
"But it's just so humiliating," Amelie whined. "Having her here. In our house. Knowing she thinks she's your wife. It's like... like she's a relic. A ghost haunting my new life."
"She is a ghost, darling," Edgar reiterated, his voice soothing. "And a very quiet one, if she knows what's good for her. Don't worry, my love. Everything is ours. Always has been, always will be. You just need to keep her in line. Like a good little dog."
My eyes remained closed, but a storm raged within me. A cold, calculating rage. He called me a relic. A ghost. A dog. The man I had loved, the man I had married. The man I had fought to divorce, only to be dragged back into his twisted web.
My mind, once a blank slate, was now a roaring tempest of memories and revelations. I remembered the words I'd once used to describe Amelie's future, her bright potential. "She's going to take the design world by storm," I'd told Edgar, my voice filled with pride. "She's got that spark, that drive. She'll be unstoppable."
Now, Amelie was unstoppable. Because she had stolen my name, my legacy, building her new life on the ashes of mine.
Edgar and Amelie. A match made in hell, built on greed and betrayal. And I was their prisoner, their twisted secret.
I felt a cold dread settle in my stomach, quickly hardening into something sharper, colder. Edgar thought I was his broken doll. He thought he could control me. He thought he had won.
He was wrong. So utterly, completely wrong.
I needed to act. I needed to escape. I needed to contact someone. Kaye. My best friend, Kaye Jones. She would know. She would help.
The moment they left the room, I fumbled for the hidden burner phone I had found weeks ago, a relic from a past I couldn't remember, tucked deep into the lining of an old coat in the back of a closet. I dialed the only number I vaguely recognized, a number that felt right, even if I didn't know why. Kaye's number. It rang, once, twice, then clicked to voicemail. My heart sank.
Beep. "Hey, it's Kaye! You know the drill, leave a message. If it's important, try me again. Or just text!"
I tried again. And again. Nothing. Panic flared, cold and sharp. Had they cut her off too? Was she safe?
I needed to try someone else. Think. Who else? Chet. Chet Jones. Kaye's older brother. My childhood friend. He was always steady, always there. I tried his number, fumbling with the tiny buttons.
It rang a few times, then a gruff, familiar voice answered, "Jones."
"Chet?" My voice was barely a whisper, raw and trembling. "It's... it's Elise."
A beat of stunned silence. Then a choked gasp. "Elise? My God. Is that really you? Where are you? What's happening?" His voice was thick with disbelief, then immediate alarm.
"I... I don't know where I am exactly," I stammered, frantically looking around the opulent prison. "But I remember, Chet. I remember everything. And Edgar... he's kept me here. For three years."
"Three years?" His voice was a guttural growl of pure fury. "Elise, everyone thinks you're dead. There was a funeral. Your parents..."
He trailed off, his voice cracking. My parents. The words hung in the air, a heavy shroud.
"My parents? What about them, Chet? Please, tell me." A cold knot formed in my stomach, tightening with every beat of my racing heart.
His next words were a hammer blow, each syllable shattering a piece of my fragile world. "After your supposed death, Elise... your parents, they couldn't endure it. They died within months of each other. A broken heart, the doctors said. For your mother, and then your father followed soon after. Grief. Pure, unbearable grief."
The phone slipped from my numb fingers, clattering to the polished wooden floor. My parents. Dead. Because of Edgar. Because of his monstrous lie. The pain was beyond anything I had ever known, a gaping wound in my soul. My family, gone. My legacy, my name, my life, all stolen.
"And Amelie," Chet continued, his voice strained and heavy, "she married Edgar six months after your parents' deaths. She became the new 'Elise Everett,' the grieving widow, the sole heir to Everett Industries. She and Edgar took everything, Elise. Every single thing you owned, every penny your family had worked for generations to build."
I crumpled to the floor, the cold hard wood mirroring the emptiness inside me. My parents, dead. My fortune, stolen. My identity, usurped. Everything. I had lost everything. The thought of my parents dying of a broken heart, believing their only daughter was gone, twisted a knife in my gut. Edgar had done this. Amelie had helped him. They had built their empire on my grave.
A wave of despair threatened to drown me, but then, a flicker. A tiny, burning ember in the ashes of my life. I had nothing left to lose. And everything to gain.
"Elise? Are you there? Are you okay? I'm coming to get you. Just tell me where you are." Chet's voice was urgent, filled with concern. "Hang on. We'll get you out of there."
I closed my eyes, the tears streaming down my face for my lost parents, for my stolen life. But beneath the grief, something else ignited. A cold, hard resolve.
"No, Chet," I whispered, my voice barely audible but firm. "Not yet. I can't leave. Not like this. They took everything from me. My life. My name. My family. I will not let them get away with it."
My eyes snapped open. The despair was gone, replaced by a chilling clarity.
"Help me, Chet," I said, my voice gaining strength, steeling itself. "Help me take back what's mine. Help me make them pay."
The door creaked open. Edgar stood there, his eyes narrowing, a dangerous glint in their depths. "Who were you talking to, Elise?"
My heart slammed against my ribs. I had to pretend. I had to be strong.
"No one," I whispered, forcing my voice to tremble, forcing a vacant look onto my face. "I... I just woke up. My head hurts."
He stalked towards me, his gaze piercing. "You were talking, Elise. I heard you."
My eyes widened in feigned confusion, then watered. "Talking? Who would I talk to, Edgar? I don't know anyone." I swallowed hard, pushing down the surge of pure hatred. "Did... did I say something wrong?"
He watched me, his gaze unblinking. I held my breath, my entire body rigid.
"Did you remember something?" he asked, his voice low, deceptively soft.
"Remember what?" I asked, forcing a shaky breath, mimicking the terror of an amnesiac. "I don't... I don't understand."
He reached out, his hand brushing my cheek. I flinched, instinctively recoiling. His eyes darkened for a split second, then he forced a smile.
"Nothing, my love," he said, his voice saccharine sweet, but his eyes were cold. "Just making sure you're okay."
I knew, in that moment, that the game had begun. And I would play it to win.