Alex POV:
In the days that followed, Dwight and Charity put on a public spectacle. They were photographed kissing outside posh restaurants, their hands intertwined. The tabloids exploded with the news of the tech mogul' s new, younger lover and their miracle baby on the way. The narrative was clear: Dwight Adkins, the long-suffering saint, had finally moved on from his toxic, barren wife.
I became a pariah, a caricature of the bitter, crazy ex-wife. Online comments were brutal. 'She' s lucky he didn' t leave her years ago.' 'He deserves happiness after what she did.' 'Good riddance.'
Dwight, in a gesture of what he probably considered magnanimity, insisted I stay at the penthouse until after my father' s funeral. It was a power play, a way to keep me under his roof, under his control. I agreed, but only because it was the last place my father had ever visited me, the last place we' d shared a laugh. I needed to be there, surrounded by his ghost, for a little while longer.
The funeral was as grand and impersonal as Dwight had promised. A cavernous, cold hall filled with flowers that smelled cloyingly sweet, suffocating me. I stood beside the open casket, staring at my father' s peaceful face, feeling nothing but a vast, hollow emptiness.
The service was about to begin when the heavy oak doors at the back of the hall swung open.
A figure stood silhouetted against the bright afternoon light. My breath caught in my throat.
It was Charity.
She was wearing a wedding dress.
A magnificent, custom-made gown of white silk and lace, it trailed behind her like a royal train. A veil covered her face, but there was no mistaking the triumphant smile beneath it.
A collective gasp rippled through the mourners. Dwight, standing beside me, went rigid.
She glided down the aisle, not like a bride, but like an avenging angel, her eyes fixed on me. She stopped beside my father's casket, her white dress a blasphemous stain against the somber black of the funeral.
"Surprised?" she chirped, her voice echoing in the stunned silence. "Dwight and I decided, why wait? This venue is already paid for, all these beautiful flowers... it' s the perfect setting for a wedding."
She gestured around the hall. "And everyone is already here to celebrate."
My blood ran cold. This was a level of cruelty I couldn't have imagined. To hijack my father's funeral, to turn my deepest moment of grief into her ultimate triumph.
She looked down at my father' s body, her nose wrinkling in distaste. "Such a somber mood, though. We'll have to liven things up."
Before I could react, she leaned over the casket. She pulled a tube of bright red lipstick from a hidden pocket in her dress and, with a flourish, drew a grotesque, smiling clown mouth on my father's face.
Something inside me snapped.
A primal scream of pure, undiluted rage tore from my throat. I launched myself at her, my hands clawing for her face, her dress, anything I could get ahold of. We went down in a tangle of limbs and white silk, right at the foot of my father's desecrated coffin.
I saw nothing but red. I punched, I scratched, I pulled at her hair, my only thought to destroy the mocking, triumphant face beneath the veil.
"ALEX! STOP!"
Dwight' s voice was a roar of fury. He and two of his bodyguards pulled me off her. They dragged me back, my arms pinned behind me, as I thrashed and screamed.
"I'll kill you!" I shrieked at Charity, who was being helped to her feet, her dress torn, her veil askew. "I'LL KILL YOU!"
"You see, Dwight?" Charity sobbed, pointing a trembling finger at me. "You see how crazy she is? She's trying to ruin our special day!"
"Get her out of here," Dwight snarled at his men. He wouldn' t even look at me. His eyes were only for Charity, his face a mask of concern and fury directed entirely at me. He strode over to her, trying to smooth her dress.
"Don't you dare," I spat, my voice dropping to a low, venomous growl. "Don't you dare touch her."
He finally turned to look at me, his eyes cold and hard as diamonds. "You're pushing me away, Alex. Every time you do something like this, you push me further and further away."
His words should have hurt. They should have been a knife in my heart. But I felt nothing. The part of me that cared about being close to him was dead and buried, colder than the body of my father lying in the casket a few feet away.
I remembered a time, years ago, when he' d been sick with the flu. I' d stayed up with him for three nights straight, holding his hand, wiping his brow, whispering, "I' ll never leave you." He' d looked at me with fever-bright eyes and said, "I know. We' re forever, you and me."
Another lie. All of it.
My struggles ceased. I stood perfectly still in the grip of his men, a sudden, chilling calm descending over me.
From the sleeve of my black dress, I slid a small, thin blade. It was a letter opener from Dwight's desk, razor-sharp. In one swift movement, I twisted free, the blade flashing as I brought it to Charity' s throat.
The room fell silent again, the only sound Charity' s terrified gasp.
Dwight froze, his hands in the air. "Alex... don't."
"Let's get married, Dwight," Charity whispered, her eyes wide with a mixture of terror and insane determination. "Right now. Don't let her win."
And to my horror, Dwight nodded. "Okay," he said, his eyes locked on mine. "Okay, baby. We'll get married."
He thought he could control me. He thought he could break me.
"You'll have to get on your knees first," Charity said, her voice shaking but laced with triumph. She looked at me, a cruel smile playing on her lips. "Both of you. Kneel and serve us tea, like the servant you are. Wish us a happy marriage."
Dwight looked at me, his expression unreadable. Then, he gave a slight, almost imperceptible nod to his bodyguards.
They moved to grab me, to force me to my knees, to humiliate me in front of the world, at the foot of my father' s defiled coffin.
As their hands reached for me, a sound split the air.
Not a scream. Not a sob.
A gunshot.
It was sharp, clean, and professional. It didn't come from my hand. It came from the back of the hall.
One of Dwight's bodyguards, the one reaching for my right arm, crumpled to the ground, a neat, dark hole in his thigh.
Everyone froze.
The heavy oak doors swung open again. This time, it wasn't a bride who stood there.
It was a dozen men, dressed in tactical gear, armed with military-grade rifles, their faces grim and impassive. They moved into the room with terrifying speed and efficiency, surrounding us, their weapons trained on Dwight and his remaining bodyguard.
And then, a figure stepped through their ranks.
He was young, maybe not even twenty, with sharp, beautiful features and eyes the color of a stormy sea. He wore a simple, impeccably tailored black suit. He moved with a quiet, lethal grace that made the armed men around him seem clumsy.
His eyes found mine across the room, and a flicker of something-relief, pain, fierce protectiveness-passed through them.
He walked directly to me, ignoring everyone else. He gently took the blade from my hand, his fingers cool against my trembling skin. He shrugged off his suit jacket and draped it over my shoulders.
Then he turned to face Dwight.
His voice was quiet, but it carried an authority that made the air crackle.
"Touch my sister again," Eliot Martin said, his eyes turning to chips of ice, "and I will burn your entire world to the ground."