Chapter 4

ELIA PARKER POV:

The next few days were a blur of paperwork, the final bureaucratic steps to officially close the book on Jillian Henry' s fictitious life. Each signature, each filed document felt less like a chore and more like a ritual, cleansing the last vestiges of a past I had willingly shed. I handled it all with a detached efficiency, my emotions carefully walled off. There was no grief, only a quiet satisfaction in severing the final threads.

After the last document was signed, I found myself in a high-end boutique, surrounded by shimmering silks and sparkling jewelry. My new family. My real family. They deserved something special. Javier, for his unwavering love; Daisy, for her bright, innocent joy; Gabriel, for his profound kindness; and Derrick, for his quiet, steadfast protection. Shopping, once a trivial distraction, had become a quiet balm, a way to anchor myself in the present, in the abundant happiness of my current life.

As I considered a delicate silver bracelet for Daisy, my phone buzzed with an incoming text. An unknown number. My fingers, accustomed to the subtle hum of impending trouble from my past life, hesitated. But something compelled me to open it.

The message was brief, impersonal, yet immediately recognizable. The tone, the casual assumption of familiarity, screamed "Wells Family." My stomach clenched, a familiar wave of nausea washing over me.

"Hope you' re doing well after your little cemetery visit. Benson wants to see you. We' re having dinner at the Grand Regency Ballroom tonight. Don' t be late."

No signature, but the implied sender was clear: Kolby. The Grand Regency. My smile was bitter. It was the same ballroom where Wells & Associates had hosted its annual corporate gala, the very event where I was supposed to present my groundbreaking designs, before they framed me. And it was also where Javier and I had attended a charity event just last month. The irony was a cruel twist of the knife.

I read the message again, the words grating against my nerves like sand. "Cemetery visit." "Benson wants to see you." "Don' t be late." A command, not an invitation. A demand, born of their entitlement and delusion.

My thumb hovered over the delete button. This was a trap. Another attempt to drag me back into their toxic orbit. I pictured Kolby, his face a mixture of desperation and veiled threat. He wouldn' t relent. They never did.

I pressed delete. Responding would only acknowledge their twisted game. I finished my shopping, my heart beating a little faster, the metallic taste of apprehension lingering in my mouth. My inner calm fractured, replaced by a subtle hum of unease.

The moment I stepped out of the boutique, the harsh afternoon light blinding me for a split second, a sleek black Bentley silently pulled up to the curb, blocking my path. My heart pounded. It was one of their cars. The custom tinted windows, the specific model-Wells & Associates.

Before I could react, the passenger door flew open. A large hand clamped around my wrist, yanking me forward with brutal force. My shopping bags, filled with gifts for my beloved family, tumbled to the pavement, their contents spilling onto the dirty concrete. A delicate silk scarf, meant for Daisy, fluttered away like a dying bird.

I gasped, stumbling, my body colliding with the plush leather seats of the Bentley. The door slammed shut, plunging me into a suffocating darkness. The car surged forward, leaving my scattered belongings, and the last shred of my composure, behind.

"What the hell, Kolby?!" I snapped, my voice sharp with shock and fury. My eyes, still adjusting to the dim interior, confirmed my assailant's identity. Kolby Wells, his face grim, his grip still tight on my arm.

He glanced at me, his eyes dark. "Jillian. It's been a while, hasn't it?"

"Too long," I retorted, shaking off his hand. "And it seems you've learned nothing about personal space, or consent. Is this how you conduct your business now? Kidnapping?"

He flinched, but quickly recovered. "Don't be dramatic. Uncle Benson needs to see you. He insisted. You didn't respond to my texts, so I had to take matters into my own hands."

"My shopping is ruined," I said, a cold edge to my voice. "Those were gifts for my daughter. I hope you're prepared to replace them. With interest."

"You can buy new things," he scoffed, waving a dismissive hand. "This is more important. Uncle Benson isn't well. He's been asking for you."

"Oh, has he?" I leaned back in the seat, crossing my arms. "And what does his precious Caitlyn have to say about that? Last I checked, she was his favorite. The 'brilliant' architect who stepped into my shoes, remember? The one who supposedly brought Wells & Associates out of the scandal I caused?"

Kolby's jaw tightened. "Caitlyn is very successful. She's revitalized the firm. But she's also sensitive. This whole situation with you... it's upsetting her."

"Upsetting her?" I laughed, a bitter, hollow sound. "That woman thrives on upsetting people. She manipulated you, Kolby. She played Benson like a fiddle. She stole my designs, then framed me, all while batting her pretty little eyelashes and feigning fragility. She's a snake, Kolby, and you're too blind to see it."

"That's enough!" Kolby barked, his knuckles white on the steering wheel. "You always said terrible things about Caitlyn. She's a good wife, a good mother, and she's done wonders for the company."

"Wonders, you say?" I challenged, a smirk playing on my lips. "Like convincing you that my architectural plans were hers? Or charming a network of clients you couldn't land yourself? She's a master illusionist, Kolby. And you're her most loyal assistant."

He fell silent, his knuckles still white. I remembered a time, long ago, when Kolby and I were children. We'd built sandcastles together on the beach, innocent dreams of towering structures. He'd always been envious of my natural talent, even then, but there was a flicker of something else, too-a shared past, a bond of childhood.

"Remember that treehouse we built?" Kolby said, his voice surprisingly soft, breaking the tense silence. "You drew up the blueprints, even then. I just handed you the nails."

A sudden, sharp pang hit me. A memory of laughter, of scraped knees, of a genuine connection. But that Kolby was long gone, replaced by this bitter, opportunistic stranger.

"I remember," I replied, my voice devoid of warmth. "And I remember you watching silently as Benson tore it down to build a new guest house for Caitlyn's parents. You didn't say a word when I cried."

His face hardened again. "That's unfair, Jillian. I was a kid. You were always so intense." He paused, taking a deep breath. "Look, we used to be close. We were family. Can't we just... talk? About the good old days?"

"There are no 'good old days' with you, Kolby," I said flatly. "Just a long road of your mediocrity and my eventual betrayal."

His shoulders slumped slightly, an almost imperceptible shift. "Where are you taking me?" I asked, my voice cutting off his silent contemplation.

"To the Grand Regency," he said, his eyes meeting mine in the rearview mirror, a defiant glint in them now. "Uncle Benson wants you there. He wants to talk. And Caitlyn... she's very keen to see you."

Chapter 5

ELIA PARKER POV:

The Bentley pulled up to the Grand Regency Hotel, its polished facade gleaming under the evening lights. Valets in crisp uniforms bustled around, oblivious to the drama unfolding within the sleek black car. Kolby, his face a tight mask of forced calm, opened my door, urging me out with a firm hand on my back. It felt less like an invitation and more like an eviction. My feet, still aching from the earlier run-in with Aunt Martha, moved with a reluctant stiffness.

As I stepped onto the plush red carpet leading into the opulent lobby, my gaze immediately snagged on a familiar figure. Benson Wells. My uncle. He stood near a towering floral arrangement, his usually imposing frame now slightly stooped, his once-vibrant hair thinner, streaked with more gray. He looked older, more tired, the lines etched around his eyes deeper. But the glint of self-importance, the air of entitled authority, remained.

My mind involuntarily flashed back to the many times he had dismissed my ideas, lauded Kolby's mediocre contributions, or subtly undermined my confidence, all while claiming it was "for my own good." He was a master of the backhanded compliment, the veiled critique. He had always prioritized his son, his firm, his reputation, over any genuine love or loyalty he might have once felt for me.

Kolby, ever the theatrical one, cleared his throat loudly. "Uncle Benson! Look who I found!" His voice resonated through the grand lobby, drawing immediate attention.

Benson turned, his eyes unfocused for a moment, then widening in shock as they landed on me. His jaw went slack, a silent gasp escaping his lips. It was the same look Kolby had given me at the cemetery. The ghost made real.

A wave of murmurs rippled through the scattered groups of elegantly dressed guests. Whispers of "Isn't that...?" and "I thought she was..." filled the air, mingling with the soft music from a string quartet. I even caught a glimpse of a distant cousin, Aunt Carol, clutching her pearls, her eyes wide with scandalized delight. This was exactly what they wanted, wasn't it? A public spectacle.

"Caitlyn will be so surprised," Kolby stage-whispered to Benson, a smug satisfaction in his tone as he nudged me forward.

"Uncle Benson," I said, my voice deliberately flat, devoid of any warmth. "Kolby insisted I come. Against my better judgment, clearly." My eyes darted around, noting the opulent decor, the carefully curated atmosphere of old-money wealth. A perfect stage for their performance.

I started to turn, a plan forming to simply walk out, ignore them all. But Kolby's hand was on my arm again, a vise-like grip. "Now, Jillian, don't be difficult. Just say hello properly."

Benson, finally finding his voice, glanced around nervously, acutely aware of the curious stares. "Jillian! My dear girl! You're... you're alive! Oh, the shock! The absolute shock!" He put on a show of emotional distress, though his eyes darted from me to the onlookers, clearly more concerned with appearances than with my actual well-being.

"After all these years, to return like this," a shrill voice cut through the air. Aunt Martha, her face a mask of outrage, pushed through the small crowd that had gathered. "Faking your own death! What kind of monster are you? Your poor mother would be spinning in her grave! You disgraced her memory, Jillian!"

A dull ache throbbed behind my eyes. The sheer exhaustion of it all. It was the same tired script, the same judgmental accusations, the same twisted moral compass. I wanted to scream, to lash out, but I simply felt a profound weariness. I yanked my arm free from Kolby's grip, a surge of adrenaline momentarily overcoming my fatigue.

"Jillian, please, don't," Benson pleaded, stepping forward, his hands outstretched in a placating gesture. "Let's not make a scene. This is a family matter."

"A family matter?" I scoffed. "You decided that when you abandoned me, Uncle Benson. When you left me for dead in a hospital bed, more concerned with Kolby's wedding than my life." The words, once a whisper of pain, were now a cutting declaration.

Kolby stepped in front of Benson, trying to block my view. "Jillian, you're upsetting him! He's not well. Just let it go."

"Let go," I demanded, my voice low and dangerous, my eyes fixed on Kolby.

"No," he said, his grip tightening on my arm as he tried to steer me further into the ballroom, away from the prying eyes. "You need to talk to him. He needs closure."

My patience, already worn thin from the cemetery, snapped. With a guttural cry, I shoved Kolby, hard. He staggered back, tripping over his own feet, nearly falling into a waiter carrying a tray of champagne flutes.

Aunt Martha, her eyes blazing with fury, saw her opening. Her hand shot out, her nails raking across my cheek, leaving a stinging red mark. "You ungrateful bitch! How dare you lay a hand on my nephew!" she shrieked, her voice echoing through the stunned silence that had fallen over the lobby.

The sudden, sharp pain flared across my face, an unwelcome reminder of the physical vulnerability they had always exploited. A trickle of blood warmed my skin.

"Look at her!" Aunt Martha wailed, pointing a trembling finger at me. "Always the troublemaker! The one who brought shame upon our family! Disrupting everything with her dramatic antics, just like she always did!" I remembered her words after my mother's funeral, "She's always been too intense, too emotional. Just like her mother, always making a fuss."

I scanned the faces of the other relatives, frozen in various states of shock and morbid curiosity. Not one of them moved, not one offered a hand, not one voice rose in my defense. They were all silent spectators, complicit in their inaction.

A cold, hard fury began to build inside me, simmering just beneath the surface of my carefully constructed calm. I picked up a forgotten champagne glass from a passing tray. It felt heavy, solid in my hand.

"That's assault," I stated, my voice dangerously quiet, each word precisely articulated. The glass glinted ominously in my hand. "And I assure you, Aunt Martha, I will press charges. My new legal team is far more formidable than anything you've ever dealt with."

Aunt Martha gasped, her furious expression replaced by a sudden, dawning terror. She stumbled back, clutching at Benson's arm. "Benson! She's threatening me! Do something!"

Benson, pale and flustered, tried to intervene. "Jillian, please, this is not the way-"

Kolby, ever the opportunist, chimed in. "Just calm down, Jillian. We can talk about everything. Uncle Benson has been so worried. He genuinely missed you."

"Missed me?" I scoffed, my gaze piercing Benson. "Did you miss me when you cut me off? When you publicly denounced me? When you let them spread lies about me, knowing full well they were false?"

"Now, now, Jillian," Kolby tried to interject, grabbing my arm again.

I shook him off. "Don't you dare touch me again, Kolby." My eyes were locked on Benson. "You sent me away, Uncle Benson. You told me I was dead to you. You chose convenience over blood, ambition over integrity. You chose Kolby and Caitlyn over me."

"Jillian, your mother-" Benson began, attempting to use the ultimate guilt trip.

"Don't you dare speak of my mother!" I roared, my voice echoing through the silent ballroom, a raw, primal cry of pain and rage. The champagne glass slipped from my hand, shattering on the marble floor with a sharp crack. "You never cared about her! You cared about her inheritance, her firm, her name! And you certainly didn't care about her daughter when you let them destroy my life!"

I took a deep, shuddering breath, forcing myself to regain control. My eyes swept over their horrified, stunned faces. "Jillian Henry died five years ago," I declared, my voice now calm, lethal. "And she died because of all of you. I am Elia Parker. And my family now, my real family, is not here. My husband, my daughter, my mentor, my brother-they are the people who saved me, who loved me when you threw me away."

Just as the last word left my lips, a tall, imposing figure stepped into the hush of the Grand Regency. Javier Bates. His perfect tailored suit, his sharp, intelligent eyes, his entire presence radiated an authority that dwarfed even Benson's faded grandeur. He took in the shattered glass, my bleeding cheek, and the stunned faces of the Wells family. His gaze met mine, a flicker of concern, then a cold, dangerous fury.

"Is everything alright here, Elia?" His voice, though quiet, cut through the tension like a finely honed blade.

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