The rain in Seattle doesn’t wash things clean. It just slicks them over, sealing the grime under a layer of deceptive shine. Through the tinted, bulletproof glass of the SUV, the Grand Hyatt’s entrance blurred into streaks of gold light and gray pavement. My heart hammered against my ribs—a frantic bird throwing itself against a cage. My palms were damp, not from the humidity, but from the memory of a basement floor, cold concrete, and the suffocating dark.
"Genevieve." The voice was low, a rumble of thunder that promised shelter rather than a storm. A large, warm hand covered my trembling fingers, squeezing once. Firmly. "Breathe."
I turned to look at Rhodes. In his dress blues, medals gleaming under the passing streetlights, he looked like a fortress made of flesh and bone. His jaw was set, the muscles feathering near his ear, but his eyes—crinkled at the corners, the color of storm-tossed seas—held only patience. He wasn't looking at the hotel; he was watching me, gauging my structural integrity.
"I can do this," I whispered, though the words felt like glass shards in my throat.
"You don't have to," Rhodes said, his thumb brushing the gold band on my ring finger. My anchor. "We can turn the convoy around. Let the lawyers handle the paperwork. You never have to see his face again."
"No." The refusal was instant. Sharp. "He thinks I'm ash in an urn, Rhodes. He thinks he won. If I don't walk through those doors, part of me stays in that basement forever."
In the backseat, Iris shifted in her car seat. "Mama? Are we at the party?"
I twisted around, forcing a smile that didn't quite reach my eyes. My daughter, three years old and already braver than I ever was, clutched her stuffed rabbit. Her dark curls were a chaotic halo, a stark contrast to the rigid order of the military convoy surrounding us. "Yes, baby. Just a quick stop. Then we go home."
"To the beach?" she asked, hopeful.
"To the beach," Rhodes answered for me, his voice softening into that special cadence he reserved only for her.
The car stopped. The heavy door swung open, admitting the damp chill of the evening. Flashbulbs erupted immediately—a blinding staccato of white light. The paparazzi were here for the "Vow Renewal and Business Gala" of Seattle’s golden couple, Clayton O'Brien and Charli Chapman. They weren’t expecting a ghost.
I stepped onto the pavement. The emerald silk of my gown whispered against my legs, a stark cry from the rags I’d worn three years ago. I felt the air rush into my lungs—real air, not the stale, moldy drafts of my prison. Rhodes was beside me instantly, offering his arm. It was solid rock. I looped my hand through the crook of his elbow, feeling the hard line of his bicep.
"Head up, Mrs. George," he murmured, his breath ghosting my ear. "Let them see you."
We moved toward the entrance. The doormen, expecting polished socialites, faltered at the sight of Rhodes’s stars and the grim-faced security detail flanking us. They pulled the heavy brass doors open, and the sound of the ballroom spilled out—clinking crystal, forced laughter, the hum of expensive lies.
Inside, the ballroom was a nauseating display of excess. Crystal chandeliers dripped light onto tables laden with towering floral arrangements. And there, at the center of the room, stood Clayton.
He looked exactly the same. The same expensive Italian suit, the same perfectly coiffed hair, the same predator’s smile plastered on his face as he held a champagne flute aloft. Beside him, Charli preened in white lace, her hand resting possessively on his chest. She was laughing, her head thrown back, exposing the long line of her throat. I saw the diamond choker around her neck—my mother’s diamonds. The heat in my chest flared, burning away the fear.
"...to three years of building an empire together," Clayton was saying, his voice amplified by the microphone. "And to moving forward, leaving the tragedies of the past where they belong."
The announcer near the door saw us first. He choked, the name on his lips dying before it could be spoken. The silence started there, at the entrance, and spread like a contagion, ripple by ripple, until it reached the stage.
Clayton frowned at the sudden quiet. He followed the gaze of the room. He looked at Rhodes, confusion knitting his brow. Then his eyes slid to me.
The glass slipped from his fingers.
It shattered on the marble floor with a sound like a gunshot. Champagne foamed over his polished shoes, but he didn't move. He couldn't. His face drained of blood, turning the color of old parchment. His mouth opened, then closed, a fish gasping for water.
Charli followed his gaze, her smile freezing into a grotesque rictus of horror. She gripped his arm, her nails digging into the fabric of his suit, as if to anchor herself against a hallucination.
I didn't stop. I walked forward, the heels of my shoes clicking a steady rhythm of judgment against the floor. Every step was a reclamation. One for the hunger. One for the cold. One for the child he stole from me.
The crowd parted. Whispers ignited like dry tinder. *Who is that? Is that...? It can't be.*
We stopped ten feet from the stage. Rhodes stood tall, his presence dominating the room, a silent threat wrapped in military discipline. I squeezed his arm, drawing strength, then released him to stand on my own.
Clayton’s eyes were wide, terrified, darting between my face and the urn that sat on a pedestal behind him—a prop for his sympathy narrative.
"Hello, Clayton," I said. My voice wasn't loud, but in the dead silence of the ballroom, it carried like a verdict. "You look like you've seen a ghost."
The silence in the ballroom wasn't empty; it was heavy, pressurized, like the air before a lightning strike. Hundreds of eyes bored into me, but I only saw two. Clayton stood frozen on the riser, his knuckles white around the stem of a second champagne flute someone had blindly handed him. Beside him, Charli looked like a porcelain doll that had been dropped—cracked, pale, her mouth a perfect ‘O’ of horror.
I didn't stop walking. My heels clicked against the marble floor, a steady, rhythmic countdown. *Click. Click. Click.* With every step, the basement receded. The cold concrete floor of my memory was replaced by the polished stone beneath my feet. The smell of mold and despair was overwritten by the scent of expensive perfume and Rhodes’s sandalwood cologne drifting from behind me.
Rhodes was a warm, solid wall at my back, his presence a silent promise of violence if anyone dared to touch me. But he let me lead. This was my battlefield.
The crowd parted for us, a sea of black ties and designer gowns retreating like a receding tide. I saw confusion in their faces, then recognition dawning like a slow, terrible sunrise. Whispers ignited around us, sharp and frantic.
*"Is that...?"*
*"My God, look at her eyes."*
*"But the funeral... the urn..."*
I stopped ten feet from the stage. The distance felt immense, yet intimate. I could see the sweat beading on Clayton’s upper lip. I could see the pulse jumping in Charli’s throat, fluttering like a trapped moth.
"Hello, Clayton," I said. My voice wasn't loud, but in the acoustic perfection of the hall, it carried to the back corners. It was steady, stripped of the trembling fear that used to define me. "You look like you've seen a ghost."
The color drained from his face so completely he looked gray under the stage lights. For a second, I thought he might faint. But Clayton was a survivor, a cockroach in a bespoke suit. His survival instinct kicked in, ugly and desperate.
A jagged, nervous laugh ripped out of him. It sounded wet and wrong. He grabbed the microphone stand, his fingers slipping on the metal. "Ladies and gentlemen," he stammered, his voice cracking, then booming too loud as he leaned in. "Please, stay calm. This is... this is clearly some kind of sick prank."
He gestured wildly toward me with his free hand, spilling champagne onto Charli’s lace dress. She flinched but didn't look away from me. Her eyes were wide, terrified, fixed on my face.
"Security!" Clayton roared, his charm dissolving into panic. "Get these trespassers out of here! It’s a corporate hit job. My competitors have no shame! Hiring an imposter to—to desecrate the memory of my late wife on this night? It’s disgusting!"
Two burly men in dark suits stepped off the wall, moving toward us. Rhodes shifted. It was a subtle movement, just a slight squaring of his shoulders and a step forward, placing himself between the approaching guards and me. He didn't raise a hand. He just looked at them—a General staring down hired muscle. The security team faltered, stopping dead in their tracks.
"I wouldn't," Rhodes said. His voice was a low rumble of thunder, authoritative and final. "Unless you want federal charges added to your employer's list."
Clayton was sweating profusely now, the makeup on his forehead streaking. "Don't listen to him! Remove them! This woman is a fraud! Genevieve is dead! I held the urn!"
"You held ash, Clayton," I cut in, my voice slicing through his hysteria. "Wood ash from the fireplace. You were in such a rush to cremate me, you didn't check if there was a body to burn."
Gasps rippled through the room. I reached into my clutch, my fingers brushing the cool metal of my new ID before pulling it out. I held it up, the holographic seal catching the light.
"I am Genevieve Dunn George," I declared, the new name tasting like victory. I lowered the card and looked past Clayton, scanning the front row of VIP tables. I found who I was looking for. An elderly woman in navy silk sat frozen, her hand pressed to her chest, her face a mask of shock.
"Aunt Margaret," I said softly.
Margaret Dunn blinked, tears spilling over her lashes. She looked from me to the massive portrait of the "late" Genevieve that Clayton had displayed near the entrance.
I stepped closer to her table, turning my head slightly to the left, sweeping my hair back to reveal the small, star-shaped birthmark behind my ear. It was a mark only family knew about. A mark Clayton had once kissed while whispering lies about forever.
"It's me, Auntie," I whispered. "I'm sorry it took so long."
Margaret let out a sound that was half-sob, half-scream. The champagne flute in her hand tilted, forgotten. "Genny?" she choked out, her voice trembling. "My Genny?"
"It's a trick!" Clayton screamed from the stage, his voice shrill. "It's makeup! It's—"
Margaret ignored him. She scrambled up from her chair, knocking it backward with a clatter. She didn't walk; she ran, stumbling in her haste, her arms outstretched.
I met her halfway. When her arms wrapped around me, frail but fierce, the dam inside me finally cracked. She smelled of lavender and old paper—the smell of safety, of childhood, of before. She sobbed into my shoulder, her grip bruising, as if she could anchor me to the earth by force of will alone.
"You're warm," she wept, her hands patting my back, my hair, my face. "You're real. You're real."
I looked over Margaret’s trembling shoulder, straight at Clayton. The blood had left his face entirely. He slumped against the podium, the microphone feeding back with a high-pitched whine that matched the ringing in my ears. He looked at Charli, seeking an ally, but she had backed away from him, her hands covering her mouth, shaking her head slowly.
The room had gone deadly silent again, save for Margaret’s weeping. But the energy had shifted. The confusion was gone. In the eyes of the Seattle elite, I saw the reflection of the truth. The ghost had returned, and she had brought hell with her.
The ballroom was a suspended breath, a vacuum of shock that Aunt Margaret’s sobbing finally punctured. I held her frail frame, feeling the tremors racking her body, but my eyes remained locked on the stage. I couldn't afford to look away. Not when the predators were cornered.
Charli recovered first. Of course she did. She was a creature of social survival, a chameleon who had painted herself into my life with layers of deceit. She stepped away from the frozen Clayton, her hands smoothing the lace of her gown—a nervous, jerky motion that betrayed her composure. She didn't retreat; she advanced to the edge of the stage, her face twisting into a mask of righteous indignation.
"How dare you?" Her voice started low, trembling with a theatrically perfect vibrato, before rising to a shriek that clawed at the crystal chandeliers. "You let us mourn you! You let us bury you!"
She pointed a manicured finger at me, the diamond on her hand catching the light—a harsh, glittering accusation. "Three years, Genevieve! We grieved. We suffered. And you were just... playing dead? Abandoning your family to run off with some soldier?"
Murmurs rippled through the crowd. The tide of sympathy was fickle; Charli was trying to turn it, painting me as the cruel deserter rather than the victim. I felt the heat rise in my cheeks, not from shame, but from a rage so pure it felt like cold water in my veins.
"I didn't run, Charli," I said, my voice cutting through her performance. "I was erased. There’s a difference between leaving and being disposed of."
"Liar!" She spat the word, looking out at the confused faces of Seattle’s elite, her eyes wide and wet with forced tears. "She’s unstable! Everyone knew she was struggling with her mental health before the accident. This is just another episode. She faked her death to hurt Clayton! Look at her, crashing our joy with her... her delusions!"
Clayton seemed to inflate at her words, finding his footing in her narrative. The color returned to his face in blotchy patches of red. He stepped down from the dais, abandoning the microphone. He didn't look like a grieving husband; he looked like a CEO whose merger was falling apart.
He marched toward me, his expensive shoes thudding heavily against the marble. "That’s enough," he snarled, his charm fully dissolved, revealing the rot underneath. "I don't know what game you're playing, or who this man is, but you are causing a scene."
He reached for me. His hand, large and manicured, stretched out—a claw meant to seize, to control, to drag me back into the dark. For a split second, the ballroom vanished. I was back in the basement, the air thick with mold, watching that same hand turn the lock.
My breath hitched. My lungs seized.
But the hand never reached me.
Rhodes moved. It wasn't a frantic lunge; it was a shift of tectonic plates—inevitable and crushing. He stepped between us, his dress blues creating a wall of midnight wool and gold brass. He didn't shove Clayton; he simply occupied the space where Clayton wanted to be, forcing the other man to skid to a halt or collide with a chest full of medals.
Clayton stopped, inches from Rhodes’s face. The height difference was negligible, but the difference in presence was staggering. Clayton was a man who bought power; Rhodes was a man who commanded it.
"Step aside," Clayton barked, though his voice wavered as he looked up into Rhodes’s eyes. "This is a family matter. I'm escorting my wife out."
"You have no wife here, Mr. O'Brien," Rhodes said. His voice was terrifyingly calm, a low frequency that vibrated in the floorboards. "You buried an empty box."
"Get out of my way!" Clayton tried to shove past him, reaching around Rhodes’s torso to grab my arm.
Rhodes caught Clayton’s wrist. He didn't twist it. He didn't strike him. He just held it, his grip absolute, freezing Clayton in place. I saw Clayton’s eyes widen, the realization of physical inferiority dawning on him. He tried to yank his hand back. He couldn't.
"Touch my wife again," Rhodes whispered, the words carrying more violence than a scream, "and you will answer to the United States Army."
*Wife.* The word hung in the air, heavy and absolute.
Clayton flinched as if struck. He ripped his wrist free as Rhodes released him with a disdainful shove. Rubbing his arm, Clayton stumbled back, his gaze darting frantically for an exit, a lawyer, a weapon—anything.
Then, he saw her.
Iris had been clinging to the back of Rhodes’s pant leg, burying her face in the fabric of his uniform. But the shouting had startled her. She peeked out, her dark curls tumbling over her forehead, her wide, terrified eyes scanning the angry man in front of us. She clutched her stuffed rabbit to her chest, looking so much like a miniature version of me that it made my heart ache.
Clayton froze. His eyes locked onto her. I saw the gears turning in his head—not the recognition of a father, but the calculation of an accountant.
He did the math. Three years gone. I had been three months pregnant when he locked me away. In his mind, the timeline was perfect. He didn't see a child; he saw the trust fund stipulations. He saw the heir clause in my grandfather’s will. He saw the money he had killed for, suddenly standing there in a velvet dress.
Greed cannibalized his fear. A sick, triumphant smile broke across his face.
"My God," he breathed, loud enough for the press to hear. He pointed a shaking finger at Iris.
"No," I whispered, stepping forward to shield her, but he was already shouting.
"That’s her!" Clayton roared, turning to the crowd, playing the victimized father with sickening ease. "That’s the baby she was carrying! That’s my daughter!"
Rhodes stiffened, his hand dropping to his side, fingers curling into a fist.
"You stole my child!" Clayton screamed, lunging forward again, his eyes manic with the promise of millions. "You faked your death and kidnapped my daughter! Give her to me!"