
The Heiress Came Back to Destroy
The Heiress Came Back to Destroy Chapter 1
I touched my face as I stared the figure in the mirror. Hard to believe what I saw.
But I was here. Alive. Whole.
The scent of lilies filled the air as I stood before the ornate mirror in my bridal suite, watching my reflection with hollow eyes. The elaborate white gown, worth more than most people's annual salary, felt like a burial shroud against my skin.
My hands trembled as I reached for the pearl necklace—my grandmother's heirloom, the last piece of jewelry that would truly belong to me.
Ten years. Ten years of hell stretched behind me like a blood-soaked trail… Was it just a dream?
But how possible?
I could still feel the phantom pain where Lachlan's wine bottle had connected with my skull, the warm wetness of blood trickling down my face as consciousness slipped away. The memory was so vivid I instinctively touched my temple, expecting to find a wound that no longer existed.
Yet here I stood. Feeling so real.
The morning light streaming through the tall windows was the same golden hue I remembered from that first wedding day—the day I'd walked into my own tomb with a smile on my face, believing love could conquer all. How pathetically naive I'd been.
"Mrs. Carlisle?" The soft voice of my lady's maid, Sarah, drifted through the door. "Your mother wishes to speak with you before the ceremony."
My mother. The woman who'd sold me like prize cattle to secure her place among the aristocracy. In my previous life, I'd sought her approval until the very end, desperate for some scrap of maternal affection. Not this time.
"Tell her I'm indisposed," I called back, my voice steady and cold. "I need a few more minutes alone."
Silence followed, then retreating footsteps. Good. Let them all wait.
I turned back to the mirror, studying the face that would soon be trapped in the Carlisle estate.
The same delicate features, the same dark hair that Margaret would later criticize as "too common," the same green eyes that would witness unspeakable cruelty. But something was different now—there was steel in my gaze that hadn't existed before.
The memories flooded back with crystalline clarity.
Margaret's cutting remarks about my "nouveau riche" background, delivered with that poisonous smile of hers. Lachlan's drunken rages, his fists connecting with my ribs when he thought the servants weren't looking. The way he'd stumble home reeking of Fiona's cheap perfume, not even bothering to hide his infidelity.
And Fiona—that calculating little opportunist who'd lived off my dowry for a decade while playing the devoted mistress.
I'd actually seen them together once, pressed against the garden wall like animals in heat, Lachlan's hands fumbling with her skirts while she moaned his name. The humiliation had burned through me then, but now it only fueled my resolve.
They'd taken everything from me. My money, my dignity, my very life. But they'd made one crucial mistake—they'd given me the gift of hindsight.
A sharp knock interrupted my thoughts.
"Emma, darling, you simply must come out now." My mother's voice carried that familiar note of barely contained hysteria. "The guests are arriving, and Lord Carlisle is asking for you."
Lord Carlisle. The old bastard who'd negotiated my bride price like I was livestock. In my previous life, I'd curtsied and smiled, desperate to win his approval. Today, he could wait.
"I said I need more time," I replied, louder this time. "The bride is entitled to a few moments of reflection, isn't she?"
The silence that followed was pregnant with shock. My mother wasn't accustomed to defiance from her perfectly trained daughter.
"Emma Charlotte Whitmore, you open this door this instant!" The use of my full maiden name—soon to be discarded forever—made my jaw clench. "What will people think if you're late to your own wedding?"
What would people think? The same people who'd whisper behind fans about my "unfortunate breeding" while accepting my family's generous donations to their charities? The same people who'd turn blind eyes to my bruises and pretend not to notice when I stopped appearing at social functions?
"Let them think what they will," I said, surprising myself with the venom in my voice. "I'm sure they'll survive the suspense."
Footsteps retreated again, more hurried this time. No doubt Mother was rushing to inform the Carlisles that their investment was experiencing technical difficulties.
I moved to the window, looking down at the manicured gardens where the ceremony would take place. White roses and baby's breath decorated every surface, creating a fairy tale setting for what would become my nightmare.
Guests in their finest attire milled about, champagne glasses glinting in the sunlight.
There—near the altar—stood Lachlan in his morning coat, looking every inch the aristocratic groom. Handsome, charming, the perfect English gentleman.
The mask he wore so well that even I had believed it once. But I knew what lurked beneath that polished exterior now.
The weak, vicious man who could only feel powerful when he was destroying someone smaller than himself.
And beside him, Margaret Carlisle held court among the other society matrons, her silver hair perfectly coiffed, her smile sharp as a blade. The woman who would make my life a living hell with her thousand tiny cruelties, who would systematically isolate me from every source of comfort and support.
But this time, I knew their game. This time, I would be ready.
I turned away from the window and walked to my jewelry box, pulling out a simple gold locket—a gift from my grandmother before she died.
Inside was a tiny photograph of her, the only person who'd ever loved me unconditionally. In my previous life, Margaret had "accidentally" broken the chain within my first week at the estate. This time, I fastened it securely around my neck, tucking it beneath my dress where no one could see it.
A talisman. A reminder of who I really was beneath all their attempts to break me.
Another knock, more insistent this time. "Emma, please." My mother's voice cracked with desperation. "Everyone's waiting. The photographer needs to—"
"I'm coming," I said, cutting her off. I took one last look in the mirror, straightening my shoulders and lifting my chin. The woman looking back at me was no longer the naive girl who'd believed in fairy tale endings.
I was Emma Whitmore—soon to be Carlisle—and I had a war to win.
As I reached for the door handle, a cold smile played at my lips. They thought they were getting a meek little lamb to fleece.
Instead, they were about to discover they'd invited a wolf into their fold.
Wish them good luck.
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