
Christmas Eve, My Fiancé Pushed Me into the Lake
Chapter 2
The ambulance ride blurred into fragments—flashing lights, urgent voices, the weight of oxygen masks pressing against my face. My body shook uncontrollably, not just from the cold that had seeped into my bones, but from the shock of what Chris had done. What he'd tried to do.
The emergency room was a chaos of white coats and beeping machines. Someone kept asking my name, my age, what had happened. I tried to answer, but my voice came out as barely a whisper, my throat raw from swallowing lake water and screaming for help that almost never came.
"Severe hypothermia," a doctor was saying to someone I couldn't see. "Core temperature dangerously low. We need to warm her gradually, monitor for cardiac complications."
Through the haze of medical activity, I caught glimpses of a tall figure in the waiting area—my rescuer, I realized, still wearing a damp shirt beneath a hospital blanket. He spoke quietly with the nurses, his voice carrying an accent I couldn't quite place. European, maybe. When our eyes met briefly through the treatment room's glass partition, his expression was unreadable but somehow reassuring.
The next few days passed in a fever dream. Pneumonia, the doctors explained. My lungs, already compromised from the near-drowning, had succumbed to infection. I drifted between sleep and wakefulness, my body burning with fever one moment and shivering with chills the next.
My parents arrived from the Hamptons, their faces etched with worry and confusion. Mother sat beside my bed, smoothing my hair with trembling fingers, while Father paced the small room like a caged animal.
"What happened, darling?" Mother whispered when I was lucid enough to focus on her face. "The man who brought you in—Mr. Vanderbilt—he said you fell into the lake during the party?"
I closed my eyes, unable to form the words. How could I explain that their carefully orchestrated future son-in-law had tried to murder me? That the golden boy of the Vanderbilt family was a monster wearing a beautiful mask?
"She needs rest," Father said quietly, though I could hear the steel beneath his gentle tone. "We'll discuss this when she's stronger."
By the third day, the fever had broken enough for me to think clearly, though my body still felt like it had been shattered and poorly reassembled. I was dozing fitfully when voices in the hallway outside my room jolted me awake.
"—lucky she didn't die out there." The voice was unmistakably Chris's, casual and conversational.
"She's got nine lives, this one," came his reply, and I heard the cruel amusement threading through his words. "Always has."
My blood turned to ice. They thought I was unconscious. They thought I couldn't hear.
"Shame she didn't drown," another voice chimed in—Marcus Webb, one of Chris's closest friends. "Would've saved you the trouble of making her pay for Primrose."
I pressed my face deeper into the pillow, forcing my breathing to remain steady and slow while my heart hammered against my ribs. They were right outside my door, speaking as if I were already dead.
"Oh, but this is better," Chris said, and I could picture that cold smile spreading across his perfect features. "Her surviving just delays the real fun. Once we're married, I'll have all the time in the world to make her understand what she cost me. What she cost Primrose."
"Still think you're being too generous," Marcus muttered. "If it weren't for precious Jennifer here, Primrose would still be alive. You wouldn't have been stuck picking up your fiancée from the airport instead of your actual girlfriend."
The casual cruelty of their words hit me like physical blows. Chris laughed—actually laughed—at the mention of Primrose's death.
"Trust me, the wedding is just the beginning," he said, his voice dropping to that intimate tone I'd once thought was reserved for tender moments between us. "Once she's legally mine, I'll destroy her piece by piece. Her, her family, everything the Livingstones have built. It's what Primrose deserves."
"And if she tries to leave?"
"She won't." The certainty in Chris's voice made my skin crawl. "She's too much of a good little soldier. Too afraid of disappointing Daddy and ruining the family alliance. She'll take whatever I give her and thank me for it, just like she always has."
Their laughter faded as they moved down the hallway, leaving me alone with the devastating truth. Every moment of tenderness I'd imagined, every sign of softening I'd clung to—it had all been my desperate imagination. He didn't just dislike me. He hated me with a passion so pure it had driven him to attempted murder.
And Primrose—beautiful, vibrant Primrose who'd died in that horrible car accident four years ago. Chris blamed me for her death because he'd been obligated to pick me up from the airport instead of her. As if I'd somehow orchestrated the timing of my return from boarding school. As if I'd known about their relationship, when he'd kept it completely secret from me.
I lay perfectly still until I was certain they were gone, then let the tears come. They burned hot tracks down my cheeks as the full scope of my situation crystallized. Chris intended to marry me solely to have legal and social power over me. He planned to systematically destroy not just me, but my entire family, as some twisted form of revenge for an accident that had nothing to do with me.
The worst part was knowing he was right about one thing—I would have gone through with it. Even after tonight, even after he'd tried to drown me, some part of me had been ready to make excuses for him. To convince myself it had been an accident, a moment of madness, anything but the calculated cruelty it actually was.
But not anymore.
With shaking hands, I reached for the phone beside my bed. My fingers trembled as I dialed my parents' private line, and when Father's voice answered, crisp and alert despite the late hour, I nearly broke down again.
"Jennifer? Sweetheart, what's wrong?"
"I need you to find a replacement groom," I said, my voice barely above a whisper but steady with newfound resolve. "I won't marry Chris Vanderbilt."
Silence stretched across the line, heavy with shock and confusion.
"Jennifer, darling, you're not thinking clearly. You've been through a terrible trauma—"
"I need you to find someone else," I repeated, cutting through Mother's gentle protests. "Anyone else. I don't care who, but it cannot be Chris. Promise me."
"But the alliance, the contracts—" Father began.
"Promise me," I said again, and this time there was steel in my voice that surprised even me. "Or I'll disappear the moment I'm discharged, and you'll lose both the alliance and your daughter."
Another pause, longer this time. When Father spoke again, his tone had shifted to the one he used in boardrooms, all business and calculation.
"We'll discuss this when you're well enough to come home."
"No." The word came out sharper than I'd intended. "Promise me now, or I hang up and you'll never see me again."
I heard them whispering to each other, urgent and worried. Finally, Father's voice returned, heavy with resignation.
"All right, Jennifer. We promise. But you'll need to explain—"
"When I'm ready," I said, and gently placed the phone back in its cradle.
I closed my eyes and tried to imagine a future that didn't include Chris Vanderbilt's beautiful, murderous smile. For the first time in years, the thought didn't terrify me.
It felt like freedom.
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