
Breaking Free from Possession
Chapter 1
The crystal chandelier cast fractured light across the marble floor of the Hamilton estate's grand ballroom, where tomorrow's wedding guests mingled with champagne flutes and cruel anticipation. I stood at the threshold, my hands trembling as I clutched the invitation that had summoned me here—not as a guest, but as tonight's entertainment.
"Ah, there she is." Rosalie's voice cut through the elegant murmur of conversation like a blade wrapped in silk. She glided toward me in her rehearsal dinner gown, a vision of ivory perfection that made my simple black dress feel like sackcloth. "Ladies and gentlemen, our special guest has arrived."
Every head turned. Every conversation stopped. The weight of their stares pressed against my skin like hot coals, and I wanted nothing more than to disappear into the marble beneath my feet.
"What is this, Rosalie?" I whispered, though I already knew. The predatory gleam in her eyes, the way Gideon stood silent by the fireplace with his jaw clenched—this was my punishment for six years of loving him.
"Entertainment, darling." Her smile was razor-sharp. "You see, everyone's been simply dying to meet the woman who's been warming my fiancé's bed all these years. I thought we should give them a proper show."
My cheeks burned with shame, but I lifted my chin. "I won't do this."
"Oh, but you will." She snapped her fingers, and two servants appeared carrying a silver tray with crystal decanters. "Because if you don't crawl across this floor on your hands and knees to serve each of our guests, if you don't recite all the reasons why you're unworthy of Gideon's love, then perhaps everyone here should know exactly what kind of woman you really are."
The room held its collective breath. I could feel Gideon's eyes on me, but when I looked toward him, he turned away. The man who once promised to protect me from the world was now feeding me to the wolves.
"Please," I whispered, hating how my voice broke. "Don't make me do this."
"Make you?" Rosalie laughed, a sound like breaking glass. "Darling, you have a choice. You can leave right now and preserve what's left of your dignity. But then again..." She paused, savoring the moment like fine wine. "You might want to reconsider."
She clapped her hands twice, and the ballroom doors opened. My heart stopped as two more servants entered, carrying between them an ornate urn that I recognized with every fiber of my being. My parents' ashes. The last tangible piece of them I had left in this world.
"No." The word tore from my throat like a sob. "No, you can't. Those are—"
"Your parents, yes. Such a tragic accident, wasn't it? A car crash, if I remember correctly." Rosalie's fingers traced the urn's surface with mock reverence. "You know, I've been thinking this ballroom could use some... redecorating. Perhaps we should scatter these somewhere more appropriate. The ocean, maybe? Or the garden where the dogs relieve themselves?"
The room spun around me. My knees buckled, and I had to grip the doorframe to keep from collapsing. "Please. Please don't do this. I'll leave. I'll disappear. You'll never see me again, I swear."
"Oh, but that's not enough anymore, is it?" Her voice dropped to a whisper that somehow carried to every corner of the silent room. "You see, Giuliana, you've been a thorn in my side for far too long. Tomorrow, I marry the man you thought was yours. Tonight, I want everyone here to see exactly what you are—a pathetic little nobody who mistook charity for love."
My legs gave out. I fell to my knees on the cold marble, my hands pressed flat against the floor as tears blurred my vision. Around me, I could hear the rustle of silk and the clink of jewelry as the guests leaned forward, hungry for my degradation.
"That's better." Rosalie's heels clicked as she circled me like a predator. "Now, crawl to the first guest and tell them why you're unworthy of breathing the same air as decent people."
I looked up one last time at Gideon, silently begging him to stop this nightmare. But his face was stone, his eyes fixed on some point beyond me, as if I were already dead to him.
So I crawled. Across the marble floor that scraped my palms raw, past the forest of designer shoes and judgmental whispers, carrying my shattered dignity like broken glass in my chest. And with each humiliating word I was forced to speak, each reason I had to give for my own worthlessness, I felt something inside me die.
But Rosalie wasn't finished with me yet.
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