This Time I Chose Him
img img This Time I Chose Him img Chapter 1
2
Chapter 4 img
Chapter 5 img
Chapter 6 img
Chapter 7 img
Chapter 8 img
Chapter 9 img
Chapter 10 img
img
  /  1
img

Chapter 1

The list lay on the polished mahogany table between me and my father. It wasn't long, just four names printed in stark black ink. Four heirs to the four most powerful families in the city, our rivals and allies in the intricate dance of corporate power. This was my future, condensed onto a single sheet of paper.

"Chloe," my father, Mr. Reed, said, his voice gentle but firm. "You turn twenty tomorrow. It's time. Your mother and I... we just want you to be happy and secure."

I looked at the names. Miller, Vanderbilt, Astor, Thorne. My eyes snagged on the first one, Ethan Miller. The world expected me to choose him. For years, I had chased after him, my devotion a public spectacle, a long-running joke in our elite circles. They all thought they knew the story. The heiress pathetically in love with the handsome, charismatic heir of the Miller Conglomerate.

They didn't know the real story. The one that ended with the screech of tires and the crushing impact of metal.

My heart went cold, a familiar, deep-seated chill that had lived with me since I woke up in my own bed six months ago, very much alive and nineteen again.

The memories came rushing back, not as a dream, but as a life already lived. I remembered the joy on my wedding day, the way I thought I had finally won Ethan' s heart. That joy had shattered just a year later. He had stood before a crowd of reporters, his arm around his assistant, Sophia, and declared our marriage a political sham. He announced that Sophia was his true love, the only woman he had ever wanted.

The next day, Sophia vanished without a trace.

Ethan turned his grief into a weapon and aimed it all at me. He was convinced I had something to do with her disappearance. He made my life a living hell. He brought a new woman home every week, each one with the same soft brown hair and gentle eyes as Sophia. He would parade them in front of me, in our home, forcing me to watch, to serve them, to endure his endless, cruel reminders of the woman he loved and the woman he despised.

The last thing I remembered was his face, cold and unfeeling, as the paramedics pulled my broken body from the wreckage of my car. The brakes had failed. It wasn't an accident. I knew it then, and I know it now.

"Chloe?" my father's voice pulled me back to the present.

I blinked, the ghost of burning metal fading from my senses. I looked at the list again. I would not choose Ethan Miller. I would not walk that path again. My finger traced down the page, past his name, and landed on the last one.

Liam Thorne.

Heir to a smaller, innovative tech firm. Quiet, often overlooked, a minor player compared to the titans on the list. But he was kind. I remembered that much. In a world of predators, he was... decent.

"I'll think about it, Dad," I said, my voice steady. "I'll give you my answer tomorrow, at the party."

He nodded, satisfied. He trusted me to make a smart choice, a powerful alliance. He just didn't know my definition of smart had changed. It was no longer about power or passion. It was about survival.

The pre-announcement party was a sea of champagne flutes and fake smiles. I felt a hundred pairs of eyes on me, all whispering, all speculating. Will she finally get her man?

Then I saw him.

Ethan Miller stood across the room, a king in his domain. He was laughing, a perfectly tailored suit clinging to his broad shoulders. He looked exactly the same. The same charming smile that hid a cruel heart. The same dark eyes that had once looked at me with such utter hatred.

My breath caught, but not from adoration. It was the instinct of a prey animal spotting its hunter.

He saw me, and his smile widened. He began to move through the crowd, a path parting for him as he made his way toward me. I squared my shoulders and kept my expression blank. The trembling, lovesick girl he knew was dead. I had to remember that.

"Chloe," he said, his voice a low purr. He stopped just in front of me, his presence overwhelming. "You look beautiful tonight. Trying to impress someone?"

His arrogance was suffocating. He believed this was all for him. He believed I was still his to command, to play with.

"I dress for myself, Ethan," I replied, my tone flat.

He chuckled, a rich sound that used to make my heart flutter. Now, it did nothing. "Still playing hard to get? I have to admit, it's a new look for you. But you don't need to. We both know how this story ends."

My blood ran cold. We both know.

Did he remember? Was it possible he was reborn, too? The thought was terrifying. A second chance for me was one thing, but a second chance for him? It meant he wasn't just a bad memory, he was a present danger.

Before I could process it, he gestured to a young woman who was hovering nearby. "Come here, Ava."

A woman with soft brown hair and wide, innocent eyes stepped forward. She looked like a ghost. She looked like Sophia.

"Chloe, this is my new assistant, Ava," Ethan said, draping a possessive arm around her shoulders. "Ava, this is Chloe Reed. An old... friend."

He was already starting the same sick game. He was showing me her replacement, testing my reaction.

I looked at Ava, who gave me a nervous little smile. I felt a flicker of pity for her. She had no idea what she was getting into.

I held out my hand. "It's a pleasure to meet you, Ava."

My composure seemed to annoy Ethan. He wanted a reaction. He wanted tears, jealousy, a scene. I gave him nothing. I just watched them, a silent observer to his tired, predictable cruelty.

My eyes drifted down to the collar of Ava's dress. Pinned there was a small, diamond-and-sapphire brooch, designed in the shape of a starling.

My stomach clenched.

I knew that brooch. In my past life, I had spent months designing it. It was a one-of-a-kind piece, a birthday gift for Ethan's mother. After she passed, he had kept it.

And now, it was pinned to the dress of his new pet project. It was a message, loud and clear. Nothing you have is truly yours. I can give it to anyone I please.

I met his gaze, and for a second, I let him see the flicker of recognition in my eyes. I let him know I understood his message.

Then, I smiled. A small, cold, empty smile.

And I turned and walked away, leaving him standing there with his prize. The game had changed, Ethan. This time, I wasn't playing.

            
            

COPYRIGHT(©) 2022