Crystal chandeliers glittered overhead, their light scattering across champagne glasses and polished marble floors. A thousand murmurs rose and fell in the grand ballroom, a symphony of wealth and gossip, but none of the voices belonged to her. Elara stood frozen near a towering ice sculpture of a swan, her heartbeat a frantic drum against her ribs, loud enough to drown out the string quartet.
The scent of expensive perfume and roasted canapés was overwhelming. She clutched a delicate flute of champagne, her knuckles white. Just a moment ago, she had been in her cramped apartment, falling asleep over a particularly frustrating draft of her thesis. Now, she was drowning in silk and suffocating under the weight of a thousand judging eyes.
[Ding!]
A sound only she could hear, sharp and intrusive, sliced through her panic.
"Mission initialized. Primary Objective: Survive. Death countdown: 24 hours."
The voice was cold, mechanical, and utterly merciless. It held no emotion, only a finality that made her blood run cold.
Her breath hitched. This wasn't a dream. The sensations were too vivid—the cool brush of air conditioning on her bare shoulders, the heavy weight of diamonds at her throat, the prickling awareness of being the unspoken center of attention. Memories that weren't hers crashed into her mind, jagged and sharp.
She was Elara Vance, the sole heiress to the Vance fortune, obscenely rich, notoriously spoiled, and utterly, hopelessly in love with her fiancé, Liam Sterling. Liam—the man who owned the room without even trying, the CEO of a empire that dwarfed her own family's, the male lead of this damned story.
And tonight, at this very gala held in her family's honor, he would walk onto that stage, take the microphone, and publicly annul their engagement. He would coldly list her flaws, her tantrums, her inadequacies. He would reveal how she had harassed his true love, a sweet and kind-hearted employee at his company named Sophia.
In the original story, the villainess—her—had screamed. She had clawed at his jacket, begged, thrown her champagne in Sophia's face, and ultimately been dragged out by security, a sobbing, hysterical mess. Her family's reputation had tanked, and within a year, she was dead—a tragic, forgotten footnote in the glorious love story of Liam and Sophia.
That was the script. The guaranteed path to a grisly end.
Not today, Elara thought, a strange calm settling over her initial terror. I didn't transmigrate just to follow the script to my own grave.
Her fingers tightened around the stem of her wine glass. Her pulse still raced, but her lips curved into the faintest, most determined smile. If the only mission was to survive, then crying and begging were death sentences. The key was to change the narrative. She had to remove herself from the center of the scandal before Liam could even launch his first attack.
A ripple of anticipation went through the crowd. Elara's eyes, now sharp and analytical, tracked the movement. There he was. Liam Sterling was moving toward the central stage, a tall, imposing figure in a tailored black tuxedo. He moved with an innate authority that made people instinctively step aside. He was devastatingly handsome, with sharp cheekbones, dark hair swept back from a commanding brow, and eyes the color of a winter storm—cold and distant.
Target identified, she thought wryly. And he's locking on.
His gaze swept over the crowd and, for a chilling second, met hers. There was no warmth there, only a flicker of icy resolve. This was it. The moment of execution.
The master of ceremonies, a jovial man with a too-loud voice, beamed. "And now, a few words from the man of the hour, Mr. Liam Sterling!"
Polite applause filled the room, but it was edged with a hungry curiosity. Everyone knew. They had all come for the show.
Liam took the microphone. His voice, when he spoke, was a low, resonant baritone that commanded silence. "Thank you all for coming tonight to celebrate the Vance family's legacy." He didn't even look at her family's section. His eyes were fixed on a point somewhere near the back, where a young woman in a simple, elegant white dress—Sophia—stood looking concerned. "It is on occasions like these that we must reflect on truth… and on the future."
Elara didn't wait for the next sentence. This was her window. The moment he started talking about "difficult decisions" or "following his heart," the trap would be sprung. She had to act first.
Setting her champagne flute on a passing waiter's tray with a steady hand she didn't feel, she smoothed the skirts of her emerald green gown. She held her head high, the picture of serene grace, and began walking toward the stage. A path cleared for her instantly. The whispers intensified, a buzzing hive of excitement. They thought she was going to confront him, to make a scene preemptively.
Let them think what they want.
She reached the steps to the stage just as Liam was saying, "...and so, regarding my current engagement—"
"Liam," Elara interrupted, her voice clear and carrying, yet perfectly polite.
He stopped, startled. His stormy eyes narrowed in suspicion. He hadn't expected this. The script was already broken.
"May I?" she asked, gesturing gently toward the microphone.
For a moment, he seemed frozen, caught off guard by her calm demeanor. After a tense second, he handed it to her, his fingers brushing against hers. A jolt, cold and electric, passed between them. His frown deepened.
Elara turned to face the sea of eager, predatory faces. She could feel her parents' anxious stares from the front row. She offered them a small, reassuring smile before addressing the crowd.
"Ladies and gentlemen," she began, her voice not betraying the frantic beating of her heart. "I believe my fian—Mr. Sterling—was about to make an announcement concerning our families. I'd like to spare him the awkwardness."
She took a shallow breath. This was it. Do or die.
"The world changes. People change. The union between the Sterling and Vance families was conceived with the best of intentions, a symbol of partnership and strength." She paused, letting her gaze travel over the audience, meeting their eyes one by one. "But sometimes, symbols must evolve to reflect new realities."
She turned to Liam. He was watching her intently, his expression unreadable, but his body was coiled tight with tension. He was trying to figure out her game.
"Liam," she said, her tone softening into something that sounded like genuine respect. "We have both grown into people our younger selves might not recognize. The pressures, the expectations… they are a heavy burden. It has become clear to me that the promise we made as children cannot, and should not, chain us as adults."
She saw a flicker of pure shock in his eyes. This was not the screaming harpy he had prepared for.
"Therefore," Elara announced, turning back to the microphone, her voice ringing with finality. "Before any rumors can fly, I wish to announce, of my own free will, that I, Elara Vance, am hereby dissolving my engagement to Liam Sterling. Our paths have diverged, and it is only right that we both seek futures that bring us genuine happiness, unencumbered by a dated obligation."
The silence in the ballroom was absolute. You could have heard a pin drop. Jaws were slack. Champagne flutes hung suspended halfway to mouths.
She had done it. She had taken his weapon, his moment of public humiliation, and turned it into her moment of dignified exit. She had given him exactly what he wanted, but on her terms. There would be no scene. No dragging her out. She would walk out of here with her head held high, and hopefully, her life intact.
She handed the microphone back to a utterly stunned Liam. "I wish you all the best, Liam. Truly."
With a graceful nod to the audience, she descended the stage steps. The crowd parted for her once more, but this time, the looks were not of mockery but of stunned admiration and confusion. She walked, back straight, towards the grand double doors, not too fast, not too slow. Every step was an agony of control. She just had to make it outside.
[Ding!]
The system's voice echoed in her mind.
"Calculating… Plot deviation significant. Survival probability increased to 30%. Congratulations, Host."
Elara almost sagged with relief. Thirty percent! It was still abysmally low, but it was better than zero. She had bought herself a fighting chance. She pushed through the doors, the cool night air a blessing on her flushed skin. She had survived the first hurdle. Now, she just needed to lay low, avoid the main characters, and wait for the 24 hours to pass.
But the system wasn't done.
"Warning: Hidden plotline detected. Anomaly registered."
A new screen, glowing with red text, materialized in her vision.
"Male Lead's Attention +10."
Elara froze on the top step of the mansion, her blood turning to ice. Attention? That was the last thing she wanted. The plan was to become invisible, forgotten.
A deep, familiar voice spoke from directly behind her, cutting through the quiet night.
"That was a remarkable performance, Elara."
She slowly turned. Liam Sterling stood in the doorway, his broad silhouette framed by the golden light from the ballroom. He had followed her. His expression was no longer coldly dismissive. It was sharp, calculating, and filled with an intense, predatory curiosity that was far more dangerous than his earlier contempt.
"But I can't help but wonder," he continued, taking a step closer, his wintery eyes locked on hers. "What game are you really playing?"
The system's final, chilling words echoed in her mind. Her plan to stay unnoticed had failed. Catastrophically.