/1/121811/coverbig.jpg?v=5b5503903883f37887bf31fe22d12a8d&imageMogr2/format/webp)
ed through the darkness,
time with a heartbeat that was fading far too fast. Her wrist burned where the blade had gone deep. S
n swam in
ide, draped over the edge of the tub, and from the fresh gash on her wrist, blood still wept into the water in lazy, dark ribbons. Near the porcel
eight, unresponsive. Her body slid back down, and the bloody water rushebelong to her came. They hit her like shards
her Faye. On her knees. Clinging to a ma
l die if you leave
as he looked down at her w
just
p and merciless. He had said it. He had actually sai
al, ignited a spark
rv
gainst the slick porcelain rim of the tub. Her knuckles went white, the str
document he had shoved across the table at her just days ago. The heading at the top was printed in bold black le
rp as broken gl
ike you is
man who had taken everything she had given him, her strategies, her b
b at a café . The old man had struck up a conversation, and within an hour, he had seen something in her. A mind like a steel trap, he had called it. He asked her questions abo
have a family, a name, a future that her small-town life could never give her. To a girl who had grown up with nothing, it had sounded like a fairy tale
g. She had been s
ight in the study. A dozen pages of market analysis spread across the desk. Her fingers cramped from typing. Her
isition. Every boardroom victory. An
he company was still standing. But Walter was gone now-dead just a month ago, his last breath barely cold before Bowen started moving pi
irst love, Isabelle Sterling. For
and his cousin, Tiffany, echoed
Belt t
ry bum
, had chosen the only escape she could see. She had sliced open he
nother Fay
o end a life, not to beg for attention. The pills had done their work t
. I am
could not die. Not like this. Not while these monsters got to l
hauled her drenched, shivering body over the edge of the tub. She landed w
for support. The corner of the marble counter dug into her hip,
ooked up. Int
in heavy, garish makeup. Thick foundation. Exaggerated black eyeliner that swept toward her temples
ght find acceptable. Erased her own youth. She was only nineteen years old now,
ars turning herself into what he wan
ted face were not the eyes of a victim.
ve
ick terrycloth robe hanging on the door and wrapped it tightly around her
t knock rattled t
e family are waiting dow
ion of Marriage. The document that would legally erase her from his life. The same document
nto her face, washing away the tears and blood that were not entirely her own. Her f
gh to see the sharp, clear lines of her o
open. Inside, among expensive, barely used creams, sat a first-aid k
open wound was a welcome shock, a sharp, clean pain that cut through t
reflection, at the woma
last breath bubbling up through bloody water. But her name, Faye Barnes, belonged to this b
pered, her voice raspy
promised, "I wi
g the bloody water still pooled on the
stop
all chosen to match his taste, to make her invisible, to erase every trace of the vibrant, ambitious girl she
r. She swept an arm across a rack, sending a ca
ed to bu
it. A simple black dress. It was a dress the original Faye had bought before her ma
cut clean and severe. It was a dre
g just above her knees. It showcased a frame that was slender but not
the mirror, still smudged with the remnants of
bedroom door
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