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Reborn From Ashes: The Vengeful Heiress Novel Cover

Reborn From Ashes: The Vengeful Heiress

I was the heiress to a real estate empire, celebrating my engagement to Douglas at our Manhattan penthouse. But when I stepped into the master bedroom, I caught him sleeping with my best friend, Krystle. Before I could even react, Douglas forced me to sign away my family's entire trust fund. He held up a tablet and forced me to watch a live feed of my parents being burned alive in our Hamptons estate. "The fire hasn't reached the main house yet, sign it and I'll call them off," he lied. As soon as the ink dried, he beat me to the ground and locked me in the soundproof study. He poured twenty-three-year-old whiskey on the carpet and dropped a lit cigar. "You could have walked away with nothing, but alive," he sneered. He left me to burn to death while he and Krystle went back to our engagement party to drink champagne. As the flames melted my skin and my bones shattered against the bulletproof glass, I couldn't understand it. How could the man who promised me forever brutally exterminate my entire family just for money? But I didn't die in that fire. Three years later, with a reconstructed face and a new identity as the mysterious global designer Alice Moreau, I returned to New York. Watching Douglas and Krystle flaunt the wealth they stole from my family's ashes, I smiled behind my black veil. It was time to make them pay with everything they had.
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Chapter 1

Karolyn Yates raised her crystal champagne flute toward the cluster of Wall Street investors gathered near the floor-to-ceiling windows. The Manhattan skyline glittered behind them, seventy stories down, but she kept her smile fixed on the men in thousand-dollar suits who controlled her family's debt instruments.

"For the future," she said.

They echoed her. The crystal rang against crystal.

She felt Douglas's hand settle on the small of her back before she saw him. His palm was warm through the silk of her gown. His thumb traced the curve of her spine in that proprietary way he had, the gesture that had once made her feel claimed and now, tonight, simply made her feel his.

"Martin's about to start the speeches," Douglas murmured against her ear. His breath smelled of the Macallan 25 he'd been nursing all evening. "You look pale."

"I'm fine."

"You've barely eaten."

She turned to face him. The ballroom's chandeliers caught the planes of his face, the jawline she'd traced with her fingertips a thousand times, the mouth that had promised her forever in this same apartment six months ago. Douglas Jefferson. Thirty-four. Chief Operating Officer of Yates Group. Her fiancé.

Her finger found her engagement ring without her permission. The five-carat Asscher-cut diamond rotated under her thumb, a nervous habit she'd developed in the three weeks since he'd slid it onto her finger. The metal was still unfamiliar. Cold, then warm. Cold, then warm.

"Karolyn."

"I'm fine," she repeated. "Just the champagne. Too much excitement."

His right eye twitched. Almost imperceptible. She'd learned to watch for it in the eight months they'd been together-the tiny spasm that appeared when he was negotiating a deal he knew was shaky, when he was telling her he was working late and his phone later showed a Midtown hotel charge.

Tonight, she ignored it.

"Miss Yates!" Martin Fields, their PR director, materialized at her elbow with a microphone in his hand. The device squealed feedback. "We're ready for Douglas's toast. Five minutes."

Douglas squeezed her waist. "Go freshen up. I'll handle the crowd."

"I don't need-"

"You're flushed." His thumb pressed harder into her spine, not quite painful. Insistent. "Take your allergy pill. I'll send someone to check on you if you're not back in ten minutes."

She wanted to argue. The words formed in her throat-I'm not a child, I can stand through a speech-but then the room tilted. Just slightly. The chandeliers became starbursts. She gripped Douglas's forearm, felt the wool of his tuxedo sleeve, the muscle beneath.

"See?" he said softly. "Go rest. I'll come find you."

She believed him. That was the thing she would remember later, in the hours and years that followed. She believed him completely.

Karolyn gathered the skirt of her Valentino gown in both hands. The silk whispered against her legs as she moved through the crowd, past the bar where Krystle Rowe was laughing too loudly at some banker's joke, past the string quartet playing something by Vivaldi that her mother had loved. She didn't stop to speak to anyone. The vertigo was building now, a slow accumulation of pressure behind her eyes, a narrowing of her peripheral vision that felt almost like looking through a tunnel.

The hallway stretched before her, lined with the abstract expressionist paintings her father had collected in the nineties. Pollock. de Kooning. Rothko. Millions of dollars of pigment and canvas, and she couldn't focus on any of them. Her heels-Louboutin, red sole, a gift from Douglas-clicked against the marble floor with a sound like a countdown.

She passed the guest bedrooms. The library. The private cinema where she'd watched Casablanca with Douglas on their third date, his arm heavy across her shoulders, his heartbeat steady against her cheek.

The master bedroom door stood ajar.

A thin line of amber light cut across the dark hallway carpet.

Karolyn stopped. Her hand went to her throat, found the diamond pendant Douglas had given her for her twenty-sixth birthday. The metal was warm from her skin. She could hear music from the ballroom, distant and muffled, something with a bass line that vibrated through the floorboards.

She pushed the door open.

The bedroom was dim, lit only by the bedside lamp she'd left on that morning. The mahogany screen her mother had imported from Macau stood between her and the bed, its lacquered surface reflecting the lamplight in distorted ripples. She could see shadows moving behind it. Two figures. The rhythm was wrong for conversation.

A woman's laugh. High. Breathless.

Krystle's laugh.

Karolyn's fingers went numb. The sensation started in her hands and traveled up her arms like an injection of ice water. She took one step forward. Another. Her heels sank into the carpet, made no sound. The screen's edge was three feet away. Two feet.

She stepped around it.

Douglas sat on the edge of the bed, his tuxedo jacket unbuttoned, his bow tie undone. Krystle straddled his lap, her back to Karolyn, her Versace gown rucked up to her thighs. Douglas's hands were at her shoulders, his fingers hooked under the strap of her dress, pulling. The fabric stretched. Snapped.

Krystle's head fell back. Her throat was white and exposed. "Tell me," she gasped. "Tell me how much we made today."

Douglas's mouth found her collarbone. "The shorts cleared at 4:15." His voice was thick, unrecognizable. "Your father's margin call hit at 3:47. He's finished, Krystle. They're all finished."

Karolyn's hand opened.

Her clutch purse-python skin, gold hardware, a gift from her mother last Christmas-slipped from her fingers and hit the carpet with a sound like a muffled heartbeat. Neither of them turned. Neither of them heard.

"And the old man?" Krystle asked. She was moving now, grinding against him, her fingers tangled in his hair. "The Hamptons house?"

"Taken care of." Douglas's hand slid down Krystle's back, found the zipper of her dress. "The team went in at 8:00. By the time anyone smells smoke, it'll be too late."

Karolyn's phone buzzed in her fallen purse. The screen lit up the dark carpet with a color she knew too well from her father's desk, from the trading terminals she'd grown up watching.

Red.

URGENT: YATES FAMILY TRUST – Margin call failed. Position liquidated. Estimated loss: $847 million.

She stepped backward. Her heel came down on something sharp-a piece of the crystal ashtray Douglas kept on the nightstand, knocked to the floor in their urgency. The glass shattered with a sound like a gunshot.

Douglas's head snapped up.

His eyes found hers across the dim room. For a fraction of a second, she saw nothing in them-no recognition, no guilt, no humanity. Then the mask slid back into place, the charming smile, the concerned furrow of his brow, all the gestures she'd mistaken for love.

"Karolyn-"

She ran.

The hallway stretched endless in both directions. She glanced back, saw Krystle scrambling off Douglas's lap, blocking the way back through the bedroom suite, and veered left down the main hall-her only path to escape. She chose left, toward the private elevator, the one that required her fingerprint and retinal scan, the one that would take her down to the lobby, to the street, to anywhere but here. Her lungs burned. The vertigo was gone, replaced by a clarity so sharp it felt like violence. Every sensation amplified-the silk of her gown tangling between her legs, the air conditioning cold against the sweat on her upper lip, the sound of Douglas's footsteps behind her, heavy and unhurried.

She reached the elevator. Slapped her palm against the scanner. Waited for the green light, the familiar chime.

The screen flashed red.

Manual override was performed. System was locked.

"No," she whispered. "No, no, no-"

Douglas's hand closed in her hair. He yanked backward, and her scalp screamed, and her feet left the ground for one sickening moment before he threw her forward through a doorway she hadn't seen, hadn't chosen. The door slammed behind them. She heard the deadbolt engage, the electronic seal pressurizing.

The private study. Her father's study, though her father had never set foot in this apartment, though everything in it was Douglas's selection, Douglas's taste, Douglas's control.

Karolyn scrambled backward on the carpet. Her hand found the leg of the desk, pulled her upright. Douglas stood between her and the door, adjusting his cuffs. His bow tie was still undone. She could smell Krystle's perfume on him, something citrus and cloying that she'd always associated with brunches and spa days and friendship.

"You're being dramatic," Douglas said. "Sit down."

"My parents-"

"Are fine. For now." He moved to the desk, opened the hidden safe behind the Rothko print. "The fire hasn't reached the main house yet. The alarm system is... delayed. We have time to discuss this like rational adults."

Krystle entered through the side door, the one that connected to the master bedroom suite. She'd straightened her dress, reapplied her lipstick. She looked, Karolyn thought with a detachment that frightened her, exactly as she had in the ballroom twenty minutes ago. Exactly as she had at every lunch, every shopping trip, every late-night phone call where she'd listened to Karolyn's fears about Douglas's late hours and said, "You're overthinking, Kar. He adores you."

Krystle locked the door behind her. The click was very loud in the soundproofed room.

Douglas dropped a stack of papers on the desk. The top page read IRREVOCABLE TRUST TRANSFER. Karolyn could see her name, her father's name, the names of the shell companies Douglas had established in the Caymans six months ago. She'd signed the incorporation documents herself, trusting him, believing they were restructuring for tax efficiency.

"Sign it," Douglas said. He placed a Montblanc fountain pen beside the documents. The pen was her father's, engraved with his initials, rescued from his desk after the first board meeting where Douglas had been named COO. "Sign it, and I'll call off the team in the Hamptons. Your parents walk out. You walk out. We all pretend this never happened."

Karolyn's hand found her engagement ring again. She twisted it. The diamond caught the lamplight, threw prisms against the wall. "You're insane. I'll go to the police. I'll tell them everything-"

"What? That your fiancé cheated?" Douglas laughed. "That's not a crime, Karolyn. Unfortunately for you, what I'm about to show you is."

He picked up the tablet from his desk. Swiped twice. Turned the screen toward her.

The image was grainy, cellular transmission, but she recognized the gabled roof of her parents' Hamptons estate. Recognized the rose garden where her mother walked every morning at six. Recognized the bedroom window on the second floor, the one with the lace curtains her grandmother had brought from Ireland.

Flames licked at the frame.

Not smoke. Not warning. Full, orange, devouring flame.

Karolyn's knees hit the carpet. The sound that came out of her wasn't human. It was the sound of an animal caught in machinery, something being torn apart from the inside. She reached for the tablet, but Douglas held it high, out of her reach, and she could still see, could still see the fire reaching the second floor, could still see the shape of a person-her mother, her father, she couldn't tell-passing behind the curtain before the glass shattered outward.

"Every second you hesitate," Douglas said, "the fire spreads. Sign the document, Karolyn. Sign it now."

He pressed the pen into her hand. The metal was warm from his grip. The nib was already extended, already wet with ink.

On the screen, the roof collapsed.

Karolyn Yates, twenty-six years old, heir to a real estate empire that no longer existed, fiancée to a man who had never loved her, daughter to parents who were burning alive sixty miles east, looked down at the signature line where her name was already typed in twelve-point Times New Roman.

Her hand moved.

The pen touched paper.

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