
BORN TO RUIN LUCIAN KINGSTON
Chapter 5
ELIZABETH
This time, I knew what was coming.
That was the difference. The only difference, I told myself, as I stood at the mirror in my childhood bedroom and applied my lipstick with a steady hand. Same gold dress I had chosen it deliberately, had taken it from the garment bag with something close to ceremony. Same party. Same room full of people who were about to watch my life come apart.
But this time, I knew.
I had spent six weeks preparing for tonight. Not preparing to stop it I had considered that, had turned it over in my mind for the first two weeks, examining it from every angle. I could go to Lucien. I could show him what I knew, lay out the evidence of what Selene was building, and ask him to believe me over his own eyes.
But I had thought about it carefully, and I had realized something.
He wouldn't.
Not yet. Not with Selene's work only half-done and no visible motive for her to destroy me, and Lucien still operating under the assumption that the woman who loved him was exactly who she appeared to be. He had never looked at Selene and seen what was underneath. He had never needed to. That was, in fact, the entire point.
If I went to him now with accusations and warnings, what he would see was a woman who was paranoid, and unstable. A woman starting to crack under the weight of an engagement she couldn't handle. Selene would have used it. She would have used it beautifully.
So I had made a different calculation.
I let it happen.
I let it because I needed witnesses. I needed a public record of exactly what was done and exactly who did it. I needed the photographs to appear on that screen and the messages to scroll past and every important person in our lives to be standing in that room when they did because in five years, when I came back, I needed all of them to remember, I needed the evidence to be so complete, so public, so undeniable, that when the truth finally surfaced there would be nowhere for Selene to hide.
I also let it because some part of me the part I was still learning to trust understood that the woman Lucien needed to lose was the one he had been taking for granted for two years. The woman who would have burst into tears and begged him to believe her. That woman couldn't build what I needed to build. That woman couldn't become what I needed to become.
She had to die tonight. That was the thing I hadn't fully understood until I was standing here in the gold dress with the lipstick in my hand.
She had to die, and what came after had to be built from the ground up.
I pressed my lips together and looked at myself in the mirror.
I had not told Lucien about the pregnancy. I had thought about it extensively, had lain awake at three in the morning turning it over and over. But telling him tonight would only become a weapon in Selene's hands something else to be twisted, to be made ugly. And I could not afford to have my child used as a weapon. Not tonight.
Tonight the baby was mine. The only thing that was entirely mine.
I set the lipstick down. I pressed my hand briefly against my stomach just briefly and then I picked up my clutch and walked out of the room.
****
I arrived twenty minutes after the party started. I had timed it that way.
Selene found me before the first drink. Of course she did. She appeared at my elbow in her red dress, all warm eyes and soft hands, and told me I looked beautiful, and I smiled and said she did too, and meant neither thing and knew she didn't either.
"You seem calm tonight," she said.
"Should I not be?"
"No, of course. Her hand on my arm. You just seem different"
"I'm happy," I said simply. It's my engagement party.
Something moved in her eyes. The faintest recalibration.
I found Lucien at the bar. He looked at me and I looked at him and for one moment just one I let myself feel it. All of it. Two years of something real, or something that had been real on my side, at least, before I had understood what he was and wasn't capable of. I looked at him and I felt the grief move through me like weather.
Then I filed it away.
"You look beautiful," he said.
"Thank you." I touched his arm lightly. "You seem tense."
"I'm fine." His eyes moved over my face. "I'm fine."
He wasn't fine. He was already carrying whatever Selene had given him, whatever seed she had planted. I could see it in the set of his jaw, in the way he was looking at me like a man trying to match two things that didn't quite align.
I smiled and excused myself to speak to the Hargroves, and I did not look back.
The screen flickered at 9:47 PM.
I was mid-conversation when it happened. I felt the shift before I heard it the collective intake of breath, a hundred small conversations suspended at once. I turned, slowly, like a woman who had no idea what she was about to see.
I let my face do exactly what Selene needed it to do.
It wasn't entirely performance. That was the thing I hadn't accounted for, in all my weeks of careful preparation. I had known it would hurt. I had not known it would hurt like this standing in a room full of people turning away from me, one by one, while the man I loved looked at me with dead eyes.
Knowing it was coming changed nothing about the feeling.
When they took my arms, I didn't fight hard. I let them move me through the room. I let the cameras find me. I let Selene lean in close as I passed, and I looked directly into her eyes when she said it.
Goodbye, big sister.
"I'll see you again," I said.
Quietly. Only for her.
I watched something flicker across her face something she didn't have time to identify before the doors swallowed me whole.
I hit the pavement. The rain came down.
And I lay there in the gold dress and I did not fall apart, I did not lose myself to grief. I lay there and I felt everything the cold, the pain, the sharp terrible thing my body was beginning to do and underneath all of it, running through it like a current, was something clean and purposeful and entirely mine.
Not rage this time but purpose.
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