Chapter 4

Kallie POV

The limousine ride home with Dennie was a suffocating silence, thick with unspoken accusations and simmering resentment. The luxurious leather seats felt like a velvet trap.

Dennie punctuated the quiet with exaggerated coughs, her hand fluttering to her chest. Through the car window's reflection, I saw her eyes, sharp and calculating, watching me. The mask of fragile victim slowly began to slip, revealing the true predator beneath.

Feigned concern oozed from her voice. "Kallie, are you truly going through with this? Marrying Kolton? He's so... broken. How could you choose him over Austen?"

She leaned closer, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "Austen is worried, you know. He thinks you're just doing this to get back at him. That you'll take everything from him."

I didn't turn to look at her. Instead, my mind drifted to Kolton. In my past life, I had barely noticed him, a phantom presence in the background, a silent reminder of tragedy. Now, I saw his quiet dignity, his sharp mind, his unwavering kindness. He was the only one who had ever truly looked at me, not as Austen's shadow, not as a means to an end, but simply as Kallie.

My voice remained flat, devoid of emotion. "Austen has more than enough to worry about himself, Dennie. Perhaps you should remind him of that."

Dennie gasped, genuinely shocked. She had expected a furious defense of Austen, a tearful confession of my undying love. My cold indifference, my refusal to engage in her usual games, threw her off balance. She thrived on my emotional reactions, using my anger as leverage to play the victim. Without it, she was lost.

She tried again, her voice taking on a sharper, more desperate edge. "Austen never loved you, Kallie! He only wanted the shares! He promised me he would take care of me, get rid of you once he had control! You'll be alone, Kallie, even in your marriage."

I finally turned to her, a small, knowing smile playing on my lips. It wasn't the sweet, innocent smile of my past. This was a smile born of fire, of rebirth.

"Why, Dennie," I said, my voice soft but laced with steel, "why aren't you happy for me? A lonely life? Why, that's precisely what I've always dreamed of."

Dennie's jaw dropped. Her eyes widened, horrified, unable to comprehend. She had expected pleas, tears, self-pity. My declaration of freedom, my utter disinterest in Austen's manufactured drama, utterly disarmed her. She couldn't refute what she couldn't understand. She had always relied on my predictable despair.

As the car pulled up to the mansion, Austen was already waiting on the porch, a smug, triumphant look on his face. He quickly opened Dennie's door, completely ignoring me.

"Dennie, my love," he cooed, overtly helping her out, his hand lingering on her waist for a moment too long. "You must be exhausted. Go straight to bed. I'll come check on you later." He shot a pointed glance at me. "Some people, it seems, have no regard for family."

I stepped out of the car, calmly smoothing the elegant fabric of my dress. Without a word, I walked past them, my head held high, disappearing into the house.

Behind me, I heard Austen's teeth grind. He wanted a fight, a confrontation, a chance to reject me and my emotions again. But I wouldn't give it to him. My need for his validation, for his attention, had died a long time ago.

The next few days were a whirlwind of preparations for the formal engagement. Whispers and snickers followed me everywhere. The family gossiped, convinced I was still hopelessly in love with Austen, desperate to cling to his power. They mocked Austen' s absurd "independent life" clause, believing I had foolishly accepted it.

"She'll never tolerate Dennie," one cousin whispered, barely concealing her amusement.

"How will she handle Austen being with other women?" another tittered.

"Oh, she'll probably just beat them away like she used to!" a third laughed, recalling my past, desperate attempts to scare off Austen's flings.

Chapter 5

Kallie POV

The snickers and whispers followed me, a constant, irritating hum. "She'll never tolerate Dennie," one cousin hissed, eyes darting in my direction. "How will she cope when Austen flaunts his affairs?"

Another chimed in, a smirk playing on his lips, "She'll probably just clear out any woman who dares to get close to him, like she used to!" Laughter erupted around them.

My past self would have felt a hot flush of shame. I remembered those days, a lifetime ago. The desperate, pathetic girl who believed that if she just loved him hard enough, fought hard enough, he would finally see her. I had even taken self-defense classes, fantasizing about physically fending off his numerous flings. I had screamed at innocent women, threatened them, all for a man who saw me as nothing more than a convenient accessory. The memory made me cringe. My old self had been a fool.

The laughter in the room swelled, echoing the derision in my mind.

Then, Austen strode towards me, cutting through the crowd like a shark through water. His eyes held a familiar, cold contempt.

"Frederick is about to make the formal announcement, Kallie," he said, his voice laced with thinly veiled disgust. "Just a reminder of our... arrangement. No shared accounts. No shared bedroom. And certainly, no questions about my life. My freedom, my choices, are non-negotiable."

He leaned in, his voice a condescending drawl. "I'll even overlook your utterly evil and unbearable nature. Consider it my magnanimity. Just sign the prenuptial agreement."

I simply stared at him. He truly believed he was doing me a favor. He saw himself as the sun, the center of the universe, and I was merely a satellite, orbiting around him, grateful for the light he granted. He thought giving me his name, the Griffin name, was an act of grace, and that my unquestioning acceptance of his sordid affairs was a small price to pay for such a gift.

"Independent life," I repeated, the words tasting bitter on my tongue. "Is that because you're afraid, Austen? Afraid I'll discover just how utterly inadequate you are?"

The laughter in the room abruptly died. Silence, thick and heavy, descended.

Austen's face flushed crimson. "Inadequate? I am the chosen heir, Kallie! Frederick is officially handing over the reins tonight!" he roared, wounded pride flashing in his eyes. "Your five years of pathetic begging, your desperate attempts to win my affection, they paved my way, you fool! Your obsession made me victorious!"

He stepped closer, his breath hot on my face, reeking faintly of whiskey and self-importance. "Don't you dare ruin this, Kallie. Sign the agreement. No joint accounts. No shared bed. No questions. You get the title, I get my freedom. It's a win-win."

I glanced around the room. His cronies watched, expectant, eager to see me fold. Dennie stood nearby, her eyes glittering with triumphant anticipation. She thought she had won, that she had secured Austen, while I was left with an empty shell of a marriage. The entire assembly was convinced of my foolish desperation.

"And what if," I said, my voice dangerously calm, "what if Frederick didn't choose you tonight, Austen? Would your 'freedom' still be worth the cost?"

He scoffed, adjusting an invisible cufflink. "There's no other choice, Kallie. Who else? Kolton, the cripple? Or any of those other talentless, grasping relatives? I am the superior Griffin. The only one that matters."

"You chose me years ago, Kallie. Your devotion cleared my path."

A wave of nausea washed over me. The sheer audacity, the self-serving delusion of this man. How had I wasted so much of my past life on such a mediocre human being?

My gaze drifted towards the wide, ornate doors at the end of the ballroom. My heart began to quicken, a thrill of anticipation shooting through me. The moment was almost here.

Frederick's stern-faced assistant appeared first, clutching a leather-bound folio. Then, the patriarch himself, Frederick Griffin, emerged, his eyes sweeping across the assembled faces. His gaze settled on mine for a brief, meaningful moment, and he gave a subtle, almost imperceptible nod.

Austen, oblivious to the silent exchange, puffed out his chest and strode forward, extending his hand as if to graciously accept a kingdom. He beamed, a peacock displaying his plumage, and over his shoulder, he winked at me, a final, mocking gesture of victory.

Then, the entire ballroom erupted in gasps and frantic whispers.

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