Chapter 4

The delivery arrived under the cover of a moonless night. I stood at the edge of the estate’s dense pine forest, my breath pluming in the frigid air, waiting for the mechanical hum. It came low and steady—a black quadcopter drone weaving through the skeletal branches like a oversized insect. It hovered, dropped a small, padded canister into the dead leaves, and vanished back into the dark.

Back in the sanctuary of my bathroom, with the faucet running to mask any sound, I unscrewed the canister. Inside lay a single vial of clear liquid and a syringe. The label was handwritten in Levi’s sharp, angular script: *Lazarus.*

It was a neurotoxin derived from pufferfish and synthesized to mimic death—stopping the heart, cooling the skin, inducing rigor mortis. It lasted four hours. Any longer, and the mimicry became reality.

I needed to know I could endure it. I drew a micro-dose, a droplet barely visible in the barrel, and pressed the needle into my thigh.

The reaction was instantaneous. Fire raced through my veins, followed immediately by a crushing, paralyzed weight. My lungs seized. I collapsed onto the bathmat, unable to draw breath, unable to blink. My heart hammered a frantic, erratic rhythm against my ribs before slowing to a terrified crawl. For thirty seconds, I was a corpse trapped in a screaming mind.

Then, the heat faded. I gasped, air rushing into my starved lungs, my body trembling violently.

**[System Note: Pain threshold exceeded. Host resolve confirmed. Ready for extraction.]**

"Good," I wheezed, wiping a line of cold sweat from my forehead. If this was the price of freedom, I would pay it.

***

Two days later, the devil came for tea.

Josephine Ray swept into the estate’s drawing room, bringing the scent of ozone and expensive malice. She wore a tailored crimson suit, a vibrant slash of color against the room's dreary greys. I sat in a wheelchair by the window, a prop I didn't strictly need but used to sell the narrative of my decline.

"You look... peaceful, Madison," Josephine lied, settling onto the velvet sofa opposite me. She placed her phone on the low table between us, screen down. "Lucien tells me you're adjusting well to your confinement."

"It’s quiet," I murmured, keeping my eyes lowered. My hands rested in my lap, trembling slightly—a calculated affectation.

"It's for the best," she said, pouring tea with the grace of a viper uncoiling. "The city is too harsh for someone of your... constitution. Here, you can fade away with dignity."

She took a sip, her eyes scanning the room, assessing her victory. "Excuse me a moment. The drive up was interminable."

As soon as the heavy oak door clicked shut behind her, the trembling in my hands vanished. I didn't run; I moved with the precision of a surgeon. I pulled a thin, black card from my sleeve—a cloning device Levi had provided.

I placed Josephine’s phone on top of the card. A small LED on the device blinked red, then amber.

*Come on.*

The toilet flushed down the hall.

The light turned green.

I slid the card back into my sleeve and returned the phone to its exact position just as the doorknob turned. When Josephine re-entered, I was staring vacantly out the window at the grey sky.

"Lovely tea," she remarked, picking up her phone without a second glance. She had no idea she had just handed Levi the keys to her offshore vaults.

***

A storm battered the Hudson Valley that weekend, rain lashing against the windows like handfuls of gravel. Lucien arrived with the thunder, shaking off a wet trench coat in the foyer. He looked tired, the lines around his eyes deeper, his ruthlessness tempered by exhaustion.

He found me in the library, reading a book I hadn't turned the page of in an hour.

"I brought you something," he said softly, placing a velvet box on the table. Inside sat a diamond necklace, cold and heavy. "For the anniversary."

I didn't touch it. I looked up at him, studying the face I had once loved, searching for any trace of the man I thought I married.

"Lucien," I said, my voice steady. "I need to ask you one thing. And I need the truth."

He stiffened, sensing the shift in the air. "Madison, we don't need to rehash—"

"That night," I interrupted. "When she poisoned me. When I was bleeding on the floor. If you could go back... would you have called the police? Would you have saved our child instead of the stock price?"

The silence stretched, heavy and suffocating. The rain pounded against the glass. Lucien looked at the necklace, then at me. I saw the conflict war behind his eyes—the man versus the CEO. The husband versus the puppet.

"The merger was finalized the next morning," he said quietly, his voice devoid of emotion. "If Josephine had been arrested, the board would have ousted me. We would have lost everything."

He stepped closer, his hand reaching for my shoulder. "I did it for us, Madison. To build a kingdom for us."

He didn't regret it. He would do it again.

I let him touch my shoulder, feeling nothing but the phantom chill of the Lazarus drug in my veins. The last thread of hesitation snapped. The husband was dead. Only the target remained.

"I understand," I whispered, closing the book. "Thank you, Lucien. For making it clear."

He mistook my resignation for forgiveness. He didn't see the grenade pin I had just pulled in my mind.

Chapter 5

The East Wing of the Sanctuary smelled of lavender and impending violence. It was a scent I had carefully curated—dozens of dried floral arrangements soaked in accelerant, masking the sharp chemical tang of the gasoline Amy had painted along the baseboards. Outside, the wind howled through the Hudson Valley, a chaotic symphony that would drown out the initial crackle of destruction.

Amy moved with the silent efficiency of a shadow, her hands clad in latex gloves as she disabled the final smoke detector. She didn’t look at me. She couldn’t. If she saw the tremor in my fingers, she might hesitate, and hesitation was a luxury we could not afford.

I sat at the antique writing desk, the heavy cream stationery beneath my pen. This was the final stroke of the blade. A suicide note usually begs for forgiveness or offers a tearful goodbye. Mine was a curse.

*Lucien,*

*You wanted a kingdom. You sacrificed my father to build its walls and our child to pave its floors. You wanted a silent, compliant wife to adorn your throne. Now, you have her.*

*I leave you with the empire you love more than life. May it be as cold as the bed you made for us. Do not look for me. You are already living in the hell I leave behind.*

*— M*

I placed the pen down. The ink glistened like fresh blood in the dim lamp light.

"It's done," I said. My voice sounded foreign, hollowed out by the gravity of what came next.

Amy turned, her face pale in the gloom. She held the syringe. The liquid inside was clear, innocent-looking, yet it held the power to stop my heart just enough to fool the world.

"The cadaver samples are in the cooler by the servant's entrance," she whispered, her voice tight. "Levi’s team is three minutes out. You have to take it now, Madison."

I took the syringe. The needle felt heavy, a cold weight against my palm. This was the threshold. On one side, the tragic wife of a billionaire; on the other, a ghost seeking retribution.

I sat on the edge of the bed, the silk sheets cool against my legs. I didn't hesitate. I couldn't let the fear of the void stop me. I pressed the needle into the vein of my arm and depressed the plunger.

It didn't hurt. It felt like winter.

A sudden, absolute cold rushed through my bloodstream, seizing my extremities. My breath hitched, then shallowed. The room began to tilt, the edges of my vision blurring into a soft, gray static. My heart, usually a frantic bird in my chest, slowed to a heavy, rhythmic thud.

*Thud... silence... thud... silence.*

"Madison?" Amy’s voice seemed to come from underwater.

"Light it," I commanded, though the words were barely a slur against my numbing lips.

The strike of the match was deafening. A flare of orange erupted in my peripheral vision. The curtains caught first, the fire climbing the velvet like a starving animal. The heat hit my face, warring with the ice in my veins.

Then came the darkness. Not sleep, but a terrifying paralysis. I was a prisoner in my own decaying body.

Shadows moved in the room. Strong hands gripped me—not Lucien’s possessive touch, but the clinical, urgent grasp of extraction. I was lifted. The smell of smoke was acrid, choking, but my lungs refused to cough. I was dead to the world, a mannequin being smuggled out of a burning display window.

I felt the rough transition from the plush bedroom to the damp, cold air of the servants' tunnel. The roar of the fire faded, replaced by the scuff of boots on stone. Someone was running.

"Vitals are dropping too low," a male voice hissed. Levi. "Get the adrenaline ready, just in case."

"She needs to stay under until we clear the perimeter," another voice argued.

I wanted to scream that I was still here, that the cold was eating me alive, but I was drifting, untethered. The darkness swallowed the tunnel, the voices, and the pain.

***

I woke to the hum of an engine and the rhythmic sway of a car taking curves at high speed. My body felt like lead, heavy and unresponsive, but the ice had receded to a dull ache in my bones.

I cracked my eyes open. The interior of the SUV was dark, illuminated only by the dashboard lights. Levi was driving, his knuckles white on the steering wheel, his jaw set in a line of grim determination.

I turned my head, the movement costing me every ounce of strength I had left. Through the rear window, miles away, a stain of angry orange marred the night sky. The Sanctuary was burning. The prison was ash.

"You're awake," Levi said, his eyes flicking to the rearview mirror. He didn't smile. "Lucien’s security team just reported the structural collapse of the East Wing. They think you’re inside."

"Good," I rasped. My throat felt like it was filled with glass.

"He’s already on a helicopter," Levi continued, his voice devoid of triumph. "He’s going to land in the middle of an inferno. He’ll find the note. He’ll find... what’s left."

I closed my eyes, visualizing Lucien standing before the flames, the heat unable to melt the ice I had planted in his chest.

Suddenly, a sharp, mechanical dissonance rang in my skull, louder than the engine.

**[System Alert: Physical vessel compromised. Tether stability at 12%. Warning: Prolonged use of Lazarus compound accelerates detachment.]**

The voice was cold, indifferent.

**[Mission Critical: The Final Confrontation must occur within 72 hours. Failure to execute the Male Lead will result in permanent soul dissipation. You are running out of time, Host.]**

I stared at the roof of the car. I had escaped the fire, but the clock was ticking louder than ever. I wasn't just fighting for revenge anymore; I was fighting for the right to exist.

"Drive faster, Levi," I whispered into the dark. "We have a funeral to prepare for."

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