/1/111182/coverbig.jpg?v=73d89e221a21d4259940fe3d30b29dcc)
"Do you take this man to be your lawfully wedded husband?"
The muffled voice of the wedding officiant drifted through the thick, bulletproof glass of the second-floor bedroom window.
Katelyn Reed stared down at the manicured lawn of the Atherton estate.
Down there, her cousin Chelsea was draped in custom Vera Wang, surrounded by a sea of white roses and California's tech elite.
Up here, the air conditioning hummed like a morgue refrigerator.
Heavy, rhythmic footsteps echoed in the hallway. Leather soles hitting marble.
Katelyn's pulse didn't spike. Her blood ran ice-cold.
She shoved the black burner phone-currently displaying a live cryptocurrency ticker-deep into the slit she had carved into the underside of her mattress.
She violently dragged both hands through her hair, tangling the dark strands until she looked feral.
She threw herself into the corner of the single armchair by the window, pulling her knees tight against her chest.
She forced her breathing to turn shallow and erratic.
Her lungs hitched. Her chest he heave. She locked her eyes onto the carpet, draining them of all life until only a hollow, terrified void remained.
The heavy oak door clicked and swung open.
Alistair, the head butler, stepped into the room. Two private security guards flanked him, their earpieces coiled tightly against their thick necks.
Alistair held a silver tray. On it sat a tiny paper cup and a glass of water.
"Time for your medication, Miss Katelyn," Alistair said. His voice was flat, devoid of a single ounce of human warmth.
Katelyn shrank back against the upholstery.
A pathetic, broken whimper clawed its way up her throat. She trembled, her shoulders shaking so violently that her teeth chattered.
It was a flawless performance. The textbook reaction of a deeply traumatized, broken girl.
Alistair didn't blink. He gave a microscopic nod.
The two guards stepped forward, their massive frames blocking the only path to the door.
Katelyn extended a violently shaking hand.
Her fingertips brushed the paper cup. She grabbed the two heavy sedatives and shoved them into her mouth.
She took the water glass with both hands, spilling a little down her chin, and swallowed hard.
"Mouth open. Tongue up," Alistair commanded.
Katelyn obeyed.
Alistair inspected her oral cavity. Satisfied that the pills were gone, he turned on his heel.
The guards filed out after him.
The heavy oak door slammed shut. The deadbolt slid into place with a sickening, metallic thud.
The second the lock engaged, the trembling stopped.
Katelyn's eyes sharpened into twin blades.
She sprinted to the en-suite bathroom, dropped to her knees in front of the porcelain toilet, and shoved two fingers deep down her throat.
Her stomach convulsed.
Acid burned her esophagus. She gagged, tears pricking the corners of her eyes as her body violently rejected the medication.
The two half-dissolved white pills splashed into the toilet water, surrounded by bitter bile.
She flushed the toilet and stood up, her chest heaving for real this time.
She turned on the cold tap and splashed freezing water over her face.
She gripped the edges of the marble sink, her knuckles turning bone-white, and stared at her reflection.
Pale skin. Dark, dead eyes. A ghost haunting her own life.
She wiped her mouth with the back of her hand.
Outside the estate, the California sun beat down on the edge of a massive botanical maze.
Etienne Strickland yanked a leaf off a manicured hedge and crushed it between his fingers.
He wore a custom dark hoodie and limited-edition sneakers that cost more than most people's cars.
He hated weddings. He hated golden anniversary luncheons even more.
He had just slipped away from the agonizingly boring party next door, desperate for a quiet place to smoke.
He stepped over a low, barely noticeable shrubbery border.
He had no idea he had just crossed the property line into the heavily guarded Reed estate.
Etienne pulled a windproof lighter from his pocket. The metal flipped open with a sharp clink.
Before the flame could catch, a burst of radio static crackled through the air.
He froze.
Fifty yards away, two perimeter guards in black tactical gear were walking two massive Dobermans.
The dogs were pulling at their leashes, heading straight for his position.
A muscle in Etienne's jaw ticked.
He didn't have the patience to deal with trespassing charges today.
He slipped into the shadows of the building, his sharp eyes tracking the microscopic blind spot of the rotating security cameras. He pulled a sleek, matte-black decryption fob from his pocket-a military-grade tool courtesy of his syndicate's tech division. He pressed it against the electronic lock of a heavy steel maintenance door. The device hummed, cycling through encrypted frequencies until a soft, satisfying click echoed. He pushed the heavy door open and stepped inside.
The hallway was dim, lined with thick carpets that swallowed his footsteps. The air smelled suffocatingly of expensive floral arrangements.
He shoved his hands into his hoodie pockets and walked deeper into the unfamiliar mansion, looking for another exit.
Upstairs, the deadbolt on Katelyn's door clicked again.
She scrambled back to the armchair, wrapping her arms around her knees just as the door flew open.
Her aunt Meredith stood in the doorway, dripping in diamonds and a suffocating cloud of Chanel No. 5.
Meredith looked at Katelyn like she was a stain on the carpet.
"Get her dressed," Meredith snapped at the two maids behind her. "Chelsea wants that landscape painting finished for the VIP lounge. Now."
Katelyn kept her head bowed.
"Yes, Aunt Meredith," she whispered, her voice barely audible.
Underneath the oversized sleeves of her sweater, her fingernails dug so hard into her palms that the skin nearly broke.
The maids stepped forward. They roughly yanked Katelyn up and forced a lifeless, pale gray dress over her head.
It was a dress meant to make her invisible.
They grabbed her arms and marched her out of the room, treating her like a prisoner on death row.
Down on the first floor, Etienne stood in the shadows of a grand staircase, a lit cigarette dangling from his lips.
He tilted his head back, blowing a stream of smoke toward the crystal chandelier.
His eyes casually drifted up to the second-floor landing.
Through the gap in the marble balustrade, his gaze locked onto a girl in a dull gray dress being shoved along by two maids.
She looked fragile. Pathetic, even.
As they reached the corner, one of the maids pushed her a little too hard.
Katelyn stumbled.
Her head snapped up.
For a fraction of a second, the terrified mask slipped.
Her eyes met Etienne's through the smoke and the shadows.
Etienne's breath caught in his throat.
There was no fear in those eyes. There was only raw, violent, unadulterated rage. It was the look of a predator locked in a cage, waiting for the perfect moment to rip someone's throat out.
Then, the mask slammed back into place. She lowered her head and disappeared down the hall.
Etienne slowly took the cigarette out of his mouth.
A slow, dark smirk spread across his lips.