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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1: The First Death

Setting: The Blackwood Estate, Kent, England. A rain-lashed midnight. The interior is a minimalist, cold glass-and-steel mansion overlooking a jagged cliffside.

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The taste of copper was the only thing Elara Von Steiger had left of her dignity. It pooled under her tongue, thick and metallic, a souvenir from the backhand her father had delivered an hour ago.

"You should be grateful, Elara," her father, Dietmar, had whispered, his German accent cutting through the humid English air like a scalpel. "Most girls are sold to satisfy a debt. You are being sacrificed to build an empire."

Now, Elara knelt on the cold Italian marble of the foyer, her white silk gown—the one her sister, Annalise, had picked out—soaked through with rainwater and grime. The front door was heaved open, and the storm screamed into the house, bringing with it the scent of wet earth and expensive cologne.

Julian Blackwood walked in.

He didn't look like a husband. He looked like a reaper. Tall, encased in a bespoke charcoal suit that cost more than the cafe Elara had worked in for three years after her father forced her out of university. His eyes were the color of a winter Atlantic—grey, turbulent, and utterly devoid of warmth.

"Is it done?" Julian's voice was a low baritone that vibrated in Elara's chest, sparking a treacherous, involuntary shiver.

"The documents are signed," Dietmar said, stepping out of the shadows of the library. "She's been framed for the embezzlement of the Charity Fund. The police will be here in twenty minutes. Unless, of course, she 'disappears' first."

Elara looked up, her vision blurred by tears she hated herself for shedding. "I did everything you asked," she croaked, her voice cracking. "I stayed silent when Annalise took my designs. I worked the shifts you told me to. I married this man because you said it would save the family name!"

Annalise appeared at the top of the grand staircase, swirling a glass of vintage Riesling. "Oh, Elara. You really were the perfect little martyr. Did you actually think we'd let you keep a share of the inheritance? You're a liability. A boring, pathetic liability."

Julian stepped closer to Elara. He reached down, his gloved fingers catching her chin, forcing her to look at him. For a second, just one heartbeat, Elara thought she saw a flicker of something in his gaze—agony? Regret? But then his grip tightened, bruising her skin.

"Stand up," Julian commanded.

Elara stood, her legs shaking. She expected him to lead her to a car, to exile, perhaps to a private prison. Instead, Julian reached into the inner pocket of his coat and pulled out a suppressed Walther PPK.

The silence in the room became vacuum-tight.

"Julian?" Elara whispered, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. "What are you doing?"

"Ending the cycle," Julian said. His voice was flat, dead.

He leveled the gun at her chest. Elara didn't scream. She didn't have the breath for it. She looked past the barrel of the gun at her father, who was checking his gold watch. She looked at her sister, who was smiling.

"You should be grateful," Julian repeated. It was the line she heard most in her life. It was the line that finally broke her.

Pop.

The sound was underwhelming—a dry, mechanical sneeze.

The heat bloomed in Elara's chest first. It was a searing, white-hot coal that bloomed outward, stealing the oxygen from her lungs. She stumbled back, her heels skidding on the marble. Her back hit the glass wall, and she slid down, leaving a thick, ruby-red smear against the transparency of the window.

The last thing she saw was Julian Blackwood kneeling over her, his face hovering inches from hers. He wasn't cold anymore. He looked terrified. He leaned in, his lips brushing her ear as the world turned grey.

"Find the ledger in the study, Elara," he hissed, his voice trembling. "Don't sign the papers. Burn the house down. I'll find you in the next one."

Then, the darkness claimed her.

Setting: A sun-drenched bedroom, The Von Steiger Villa, Munich, Germany. Twenty-four hours earlier.

Elara gasped, bolting upright in bed.

Her hand flew to her chest, clawing at the thin cotton of her nightgown. There was no hole. No blood. No searing heat. Only the frantic, rhythmic thumping of a heart that shouldn't be beating.

She turned her head, her breath coming in ragged hitches. She was in her room in Munich. The heavy velvet curtains were half-drawn, allowing a sliver of the morning Bavarian sun to stripe across her duvet. On her nightstand sat a cold cup of tea and a stack of accounting ledgers her father had ordered her to "verify"—a euphemism for "forge."

"I'm dead," she whispered, her voice rasping. She touched her throat, feeling the pulse. "He killed me."

She remembered the weight of the bullet. She remembered the smell of Julian's cologne—sandalwood and rain. But she also remembered his last words. Don't sign the papers. Burn the house down.

A sharp knock at the door made her jump so violently she nearly fell off the bed.

"Elara? Are you awake?"

It was Annalise. Her sister's voice, usually so sweet and melodic to the public, held that jagged edge of impatient authority.

"Father wants you in the study. Now. The lawyers from the Blackwood Group are arriving early, and you still haven't finished the reconciliation for the 2024 accounts. Move it, you lazy brat."

Elara looked at the door. In her last life—the one that ended an hour ago in her mind—she had scrambled out of bed, apologized for her tardiness, and spent the next six hours squinting at numbers to hide her father's crimes.

Not today.

The fear that had paralyzed her for twenty-four years began to curdle. It turned from a cold, damp weight into something sharp and jagged. It felt like glass in her veins. It felt like fire.

She stood up, walking to the full-length mahogany mirror. She looked at herself. She looked younger, softer. The bruises from the night before hadn't happened yet. The hollowed-out look of a woman who had given up was gone, replaced by a frantic, manic energy in her eyes.

"You want me to be grateful?" Elara whispered to her reflection.

She reached for the heavy glass carafe of water on her nightstand and smashed it against the edge of the dresser. She picked up a long, wicked shard of glass, testing the edge against her thumb until a single drop of blood blossomed.

"I'll show you how grateful I am."

She didn't put on the modest, high-necked dress Annalise had picked for her. She went to the back of her closet and pulled out a silk slip dress in a shade of deep, bruised plum. She didn't do her hair in a neat bun; she let it fall, wild and messy, over her shoulders.

She walked to the door and flung it open. Annalise was still standing there, checking her fingernails.

"Finally," Annalise snapped, not looking up. "Father is in a foul mood, so try not to be your usual stuttering self. And for God's sake, change that dress. You look like a—"

Annalise stopped. Her eyes traveled up from the hem of the plum silk to Elara's face.

Elara didn't flinch. She didn't look down. She stepped into Annalise's personal space, the shard of glass hidden in the folds of her dress.

"Good morning, sister," Elara said. Her voice was steady. It was the voice of a woman who had already been through the worst thing life could offer. "Tell Father I'll be down in a moment. I just have to finish burning something."

"What?" Annalise frowned, her brow furrowing in confusion. "What are you talking about?"

Elara leaned in, her lips inches from Annalise's ear, mimicking the way Julian had leaned into her as she died.

"I'm done giving, Annalise. From now on, I only take."

She pushed past her sister, leaving Annalise frozen in the hallway. As Elara headed toward the stairs, her heart wasn't racing with fear anymore. It was racing with the thrill of the hunt.

She had twenty-four hours to dismantle an empire. And she knew exactly where the matches were hidden.

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