The last thing I remembered was the cold, sterile smell of a hospital room, the rhythmic beep of a heart monitor that wasn't mine, and the sight of Liam' s family lawyers handing me divorce papers.
His family business, the one I had spent two decades bleeding myself dry to save, had finally collapsed, and I was the first piece of baggage they discarded.
"Ava, you look so beautiful tonight," a sweet voice cooed beside me.
I turned slowly. Chloe. My stepsister stood there, her eyes wide with fake innocence, a picture of perfection in her pale pink dress. The sight of her sent a jolt of pure, undiluted hatred through me. In my last life, this was the night it all began. The night she played the part of the concerned sister while orchestrating my complete and utter downfall.
"Thank you, Chloe," I said, my voice sounding distant and unfamiliar to my own ears.
I looked past her and saw him. Liam Hayes. My fiancé. He stood across the room, talking to my stepfather, Richard Chen. He looked so young, his face unlined by the years of failure and resentment that I knew were coming. He caught my eye and gave me a lazy, possessive smile. The same smile he' d given me moments before I was disgraced, branded a gold-digger, a social climber who had cheated on him the night of her own birthday party.
It was all real. The noise, the lights, the people. I was back. Back at the starting point of my own personal hell. The memory was so clear it felt like it happened a second ago. Chloe, with her practiced concern, would hand me a specially prepared drink. I would become dizzy, disoriented. A waiter, paid by Chloe, would conveniently bump into me, leading me away to "clean up." He would guide me to an upstairs bedroom where photographers were already waiting. Liam would burst in, followed by my stepmother, Eleanor, and my stepfather, Richard. The perfect scandal. Chloe would then comfort a "devastated" Liam, cementing her place by his side.
They had succeeded completely. Chloe married a senator's son, living a life of luxury she flaunted at every opportunity. I was forced into a loveless marriage with Liam to "save the family's reputation." I spent the next twenty years enduring his coldness and cleaning up his messes, only to be thrown away like trash when the money ran out.
Not this time.
The thought was a spark in the darkness of my past memories. It grew into a fire, burning away the fear and despair. This time, I knew the script. And I was going to rewrite the whole damn thing.
"Ava? Are you feeling okay?" Chloe asked, her brow furrowed in that way she had, the one that made everyone think she was an angel. "You look a little pale. Here, have a drink. It' ll help you relax."
She held out a glass of sparkling punch, the same one from my memory. The liquid inside seemed to mock me.
I looked from the glass to her perfectly made-up face. The resolve inside me hardened into something sharp and unyielding. I took a step back, letting my own champagne glass slip from my fingers. It shattered on the marble floor, the sound cutting through the music for a brief moment. Several heads turned in our direction.
"Oops," I said, my voice clear and steady. "How clumsy of me."
Chloe' s smile tightened at the edges. "It' s okay, accidents happen. Just be more careful. Here, take this one." She pushed her glass toward me again.
"No, thank you," I said, meeting her gaze directly. "I don' t want it."
My flat refusal hung in the air between us. Her mask of sweetness faltered, a flicker of irritation showing in her eyes before she quickly concealed it.
"Don't be silly, Ava. It's your party."
"Exactly," I said, a small, cold smile on my lips. "It's my party. And I don't want a drink from you."
I turned my back on her before she could respond, leaving her standing there with the poisoned glass in her hand. I walked directly toward Liam. He was watching me, a look of annoyance on his face because of the scene I' d just made.
"What was that about?" he asked as I reached him, his tone low and proprietary. "You're embarrassing me."
"Am I?" I looked him up and down, seeing him not as the handsome heir I was once supposed to marry, but as the weak, arrogant man who had let his resentment be manipulated by a conniving girl. "We need to talk."
"We can talk later," he dismissed, turning back to my stepfather.
I grabbed his arm, my grip surprisingly strong. "No. We'll talk now."
I pulled him away from the conversation, ignoring my stepfather' s disapproving glare. I led Liam to a relatively quiet alcove near the French doors that opened to the garden.
"Let go of me, Ava," he hissed, pulling his arm free. "What is wrong with you tonight?"
"I' m just getting some clarity," I said calmly. "I wanted to tell you that our engagement is off."
Liam stared at me, then let out a short, humorless laugh. "What are you talking about? Is this some kind of joke? A pathetic attempt to get more attention?"
"There's no joke, Liam," I said, my voice devoid of any emotion. "I don't want to marry you. Not now, not ever. You' re weak, easily swayed by whatever Chloe whispers in your ear. You let her play you like a fool because you can't stand that I was chosen for you and she wasn't. Marrying you would be the biggest mistake of my life."
His face went from smug disbelief to flushed anger. "How dare you speak to me like that?"
"I dare because it's the truth," I shot back, my voice rising slightly. "You don' t love me. You love the idea of possessing me, of having the one thing your little friend Chloe wants. Well, you can have her. You two deserve each other."
Before he could process the insult, I did something I had dreamed of for twenty years. I slapped him. Hard. The sound was sharp and final. His head snapped to the side, a red mark blooming on his cheek.
He looked back at me, his eyes wide with shock and fury. "You're insane."
"I'm free," I corrected him. I turned and walked away, not giving him a second glance. The weight of two decades of misery felt like it was finally lifting from my shoulders.
I needed to get out. My stepmother, Eleanor, was already moving toward me, her face a mask of outrage. My stepfather looked furious. Chloe was watching from a distance, her expression a mixture of confusion and malevolence. The trap had failed, but they would corner me, try to force me back into my cage.
I didn't head for the front door. They would expect that. Instead, I pushed through the French doors Liam and I had just stood by, stepping out into the cool night air of the garden. The music and voices faded behind me. I walked quickly down the stone path, past the manicured rose bushes and the perfectly lit fountain, heading for the service gate at the far end of the property. Freedom was just a few hundred feet away.
As I neared a dimly lit section of the garden, tucked away behind a large oak tree, a faint blue light caught my eye. A figure was huddled on a stone bench, almost completely hidden in the shadows. A laptop sat open, its screen casting a glow on a young, focused face.
I stopped. I recognized her. Lily. She was the daughter of one of the estate' s groundskeepers, a quiet girl who was always ignored, always overlooked. In my past life, I barely knew she existed. But I knew her future. I remembered reading a magazine profile years later, a story about a tech billionaire who started with nothing, a genius who created a revolutionary data compression algorithm that changed the face of digital media. That was her. Lily.
She looked up, startled by my presence, and quickly tried to close the laptop.
"Don't," I said softly, stepping closer. "Don't hide it."
She looked at me with wide, wary eyes. "I'm sorry, Miss Chen. I'm not supposed to be here."
"It's okay," I said, my eyes fixed on the lines of code on her screen. "I won't tell anyone." I paused, my mind racing. This was an opportunity, a chance to build something for myself, an alliance based on merit, not manipulation.
I pointed to a specific part of her code. "That compression algorithm you're writing," I began, my voice steady. "You're designing it for file storage, right? To save space on hard drives."
Lily' s eyes widened in pure shock. "How... how did you know that?"
I ignored her question. "That' s small thinking," I continued, channeling the knowledge from a future she hadn't lived yet. "The real money, the real revolution, isn't in storage. It's in streaming. In three or four years, a company called StreamFlix is going to launch. They'll need a way to stream high-quality video without using massive amounts of bandwidth. Your algorithm, if you adapt it for real-time video streaming, would be worth a hundred times more than you can possibly imagine. They would pay a fortune for it."
Lily stared at me, her mouth slightly open. She was speechless. I had just laid out her future, a future she hadn't even dared to dream of yet.
"Think about it," I said, giving her a small, knowing smile. I took a pen and a napkin from my small purse and scribbled a number on it. "This is my personal number. When you're ready to talk about making that happen, call me. We can be partners."
I placed the napkin on her keyboard and turned to leave, my heart pounding with a new kind of excitement. I had dodged the bullet of my past and just fired the first shot of my new future. I slipped through the service gate and out into the street, leaving the suffocating party and my former life behind me in the darkness.
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