
Chapter 1
The sterile, chemical scent of the ICU was still burning the back of Clara Vance’s throat.
*Beep. Beep. Beeeeeeeeeeep.*
The sound of her own heart monitor flatlining echoed in her skull, a deafening siren that heralded the end of a pathetic, wasted life. In those final, agonizing moments, her lungs had refused to draw air, her vision tunneling into darkness. But even over the rushing sound of her own death, she had heard him.
Julian Thorne. The man she had loved, the man she had bled for, standing over her hospital bed with a clipboard in his hand and a callous smile on his lips.
*"Don't worry about the press conference, darling,"* his voice had slithered through the cold room. *"I'll make sure everyone knows Serena designed the Skyline. You were just the draftswoman. You’d want her to be happy, wouldn't you?"*
Clara gasped, her eyes snapping open as she violently inhaled a lungful of air.
There was no hospital bed. There were no IV tubes piercing the bruised skin of her arms. The suffocating scent of antiseptic was gone, replaced by the rich aroma of freshly brewed espresso and the expensive, sandalwood cologne that always made her stomach flutter.
Or, rather, the cologne that *used* to make her stomach flutter. Now, it just made her want to vomit.
"Clara! Are you even listening to me? For God's sake, stop staring at the wall like an idiot."
Clara blinked against the harsh, morning sunlight streaming through the floor-to-ceiling windows of her private architectural studio at Thorne Enterprises. She looked down at her hands. They were unblemished, free of the dark, purple needle marks of her final days. She flexed her fingers, feeling the familiar calluses from years of gripping drafting pens.
Her gaze darted to the digital calendar glowing on her sleek desk monitor.
*May 14th.*
Three months before the wedding. Three months before the aneurysm that would rupture in her brain after working ninety straight hours to finalize the Skyline project. Three months before Julian would watch her die and hand her life’s masterpiece to his mistress.
She wasn't dead. She was reborn.
"Clara!" Julian Thorne snapped his fingers an inch from her nose, his handsome face twisted into an ugly sneer of impatience. He was dressed impeccably in a bespoke navy suit, his dark hair perfectly styled. To the rest of the city, he was the charming, billionaire heir to Thorne Enterprises. To Clara, in this moment of pure, crystalline clarity, he was nothing but a parasite.
"I asked you a question," Julian demanded, leaning over her drafting table and carelessly planting his hand on a stack of preliminary sketches. "Where is the master drive for the Skyline blueprints? I told Serena she could pick them up before noon so she has time to review them before the board meeting."
Clara slowly sat back in her ergonomic chair. The sheer audacity of the demand, exactly as it had happened in her past life, washed over her. In the past, she had argued, cried, and eventually surrendered the files, desperate to keep the peace and secure his love. She had believed his lies that it was just a temporary PR move.
She looked at him now, really looked at him, and felt nothing but a glacial, absolute contempt.
"No," Clara said. Her voice was quiet, steady, and entirely devoid of the warmth she usually reserved for him.
Julian blinked, his hand pausing on her desk. He let out a short, incredulous laugh. "Excuse me? What did you just say?"
"I said no, Julian," Clara repeated, her tone hardening. She stood up, smoothing the wrinkles from her tailored pencil skirt. "Serena Blake is not getting my blueprints. Not today, not tomorrow, not ever."
The amusement vanished from Julian’s face, replaced by the entitled fury of a man who was rarely told no. "Clara, we’ve already discussed this. The board is hesitant about Serena’s role in the company. She needs a massive win to legitimize her position as Creative Director. The Skyline project is guaranteed to win the city's apex bid."
"Yes, it is guaranteed to win," Clara agreed smoothly, walking around her desk to face him. "Because *I* designed it. I spent the last eight months working eighty-hour weeks. I calculated the tensile strength, I designed the cantilevered terraces, I perfected the wind-resistance models while you were out at charity galas and Serena was getting her nails done. It is my masterpiece. Not hers."
"Don't be so dramatic," Julian scoffed, waving his hand dismissively. "You're acting like I'm asking you to cut off an arm. You work for Thorne Enterprises. Everything you design belongs to the company, and as the future CEO, I am assigning the credit to Serena. You’ll still get your salary, Clara. Don't be greedy."
"Greedy?" Clara laughed, a sharp, bitter sound that echoed off the glass walls of her studio. "I am the Lead Architect. I am the only reason Thorne Enterprises hasn't gone bankrupt under your father's outdated management. Serena Blake couldn't draft a doghouse without it collapsing under its own weight. She is a fraud, Julian, and you want to use my blood, sweat, and tears to build her a throne."
Julian’s jaw tightened. He took a menacing step toward her, using his height to try and intimidate her. It was a tactic that used to make Clara shrink into herself. Today, she didn't even flinch. She met his glare with eyes as cold as absolute zero.
"Watch your mouth, Clara," Julian warned, his voice dropping to a dangerous register. "Serena is my childhood friend. She is my muse. She has a vision that you, with all your technical, boring little numbers, simply lack. You are a workhorse. She is a star. You should be honored to help her shine."
"A muse?" Clara tilted her head, a mocking smile playing on her lips. "Is that what we're calling it now? Tell me, Julian, does your 'muse' know the difference between a load-bearing column and a decorative pillar? Because if you submit my designs under her name and the apex bid judges ask her a single technical question, she is going to freeze on that stage and embarrass this entire company."
"She won't, because you are going to write her a script and coach her," Julian fired back, jabbing a finger toward Clara's chest. "You are going to hand over the drive, you are going to write down every single detail she needs to know, and you are going to smile while she takes the stage. That is your job as my fiancée. Your success is my success, and right now, my success requires Serena to be at the top."
Clara looked at the man she had once prepared to spend the rest of her life with. She saw the deep-seated insecurity masking his lack of talent, the extreme arrogance that allowed him to use her so callously. He truly believed he owned her. He believed her devotion was a bottomless well he could draw from until she was dry and dead.
"My job as your fiancée," Clara murmured, testing the words on her tongue. "You think putting a ring on my finger gave you the right to strip-mine my intellect?"
"I think putting a ring on your finger elevated you from a nobody to the future Mrs. Thorne," Julian sneered, his true colors bleeding through the charming facade. "Do you have any idea how many women in this city would kill to be in your position? How many women would gladly hand over a few stupid blueprints to secure a billion-dollar marriage?"
"Then go marry one of them," Clara said effortlessly.
Julian froze. "What?"
"You heard me," Clara said, her voice ringing with absolute authority. "If you want a silent, obedient ghostwriter for your talentless mistress, go find one. But you are not taking the Skyline. The copyright is legally filed under my personal LLC, a little loophole your father agreed to when he begged me to stay three years ago. Thorne Enterprises only has the rights to the design if I remain the Lead Architect."
Julian’s face went pale, then flushed a violent, ugly red. "You wouldn't dare. You're bluffing."
"Try me," Clara challenged, crossing her arms over her chest. "Take the blueprints. I'll walk out that door, call a press conference, and announce to the entire architectural community that Thorne Enterprises is committing corporate plagiarism. Let’s see how the apex bid judges feel about your 'muse' then."
"You arrogant bitch," Julian hissed, losing the last shreds of his composure. He slammed his fist onto her drafting table, rattling the pen cups. "You think you can threaten me? You think you're indispensable? You are nothing without the Thorne name backing you!"
"I *am* the Thorne name right now," Clara shot back, her voice like a whip crack. "Without my designs, your stock plummets by Friday."
Julian glared at her, his chest heaving. He was panicking, trying to find a lever to pull, a way to force her back into the neat, obedient little box she had lived in for the past five years. He reached for the ultimate weapon, the one he always used when she showed the slightest hint of independence.
He straightened his suit jacket, pasting on a cold, indifferent mask. "Fine. You want to play hardball? Here is the reality, Clara. You give Serena the blueprints by noon, or I am calling the wedding planner and canceling the entire event."
He waited for the tears. He waited for her breath to hitch, for her to apologize, for her to crumble at the thought of losing him.
Instead, Clara smiled. It was a terrifying, brilliant smile that reached her eyes and illuminated the sheer, unadulterated relief flooding her soul.
She calmly reached over to her desk, picked up her half-finished cup of morning coffee, and brought it to the center of the table. Slowly, deliberately, she slid the massive, three-carat diamond engagement ring off her left hand.
Julian’s eyes widened in shock. "Clara, what are you doing?"
Clara held the ring over the dark, lukewarm liquid. "You want to cancel the wedding to appease your mistress, Julian?"
She opened her fingers. The heavy diamond hit the coffee with a dull *plop*, sinking instantly to the bottom of the ceramic mug.
Clara looked him dead in the eye, her voice practically purring with satisfaction. "Consider it canceled."