The engine of the Porsche 911 roared, a deep, guttural growl that vibrated through the steering wheel and up Isabella's arms.
She slammed her foot on the gas pedal. The tires screeched against the wet asphalt as she merged onto the winding Long Island coastal highway.
Outside, a violent thunderstorm raged. Sheets of heavy rain battered the windshield. The wipers thrashed back and forth in a frantic, losing battle against the downpour. The sky was pitch black, lit only by the jagged flashes of lightning that illuminated the treacherous cliffs to her right.
Isabella gripped the leather steering wheel. Her knuckles ached. The bandage on her forehead was damp with sweat and fresh blood.
Suddenly, the interior of her car lit up with a blinding white glare.
She glanced up at the rearview mirror. Two high-beam headlights were riding her bumper, inches away.
It was a red Ferrari. Kaylie's Ferrari.
Isabella's heart slammed against her ribs. She gritted her teeth and jerked the steering wheel to the left, trying to accelerate out of the lane.
The Ferrari swerved with her, matching her speed perfectly. It lurched forward, the front bumper kissing the rear of the Porsche. The impact sent a violent shudder through Isabella's spine.
Up ahead, the road curved sharply to the left, hugging the edge of a steep, guardrail-less cliff that dropped straight into the churning Atlantic Ocean.
Isabella pressed her foot down on the brake pedal.
Nothing happened.
The pedal sank all the way to the floorboard with zero resistance. It felt like stepping on empty air.
Panic, cold and absolute, seized her lungs. She pumped the brakes frantically. Once. Twice. Three times.
Nothing. The hydraulic fluid was completely gone.
The Porsche hit a slick patch of rain-soaked asphalt. The rear tires lost traction. The car began to fishtail violently, spinning out of control toward the edge of the cliff.
The Ferrari surged forward. It slammed directly into the driver's side door of the spinning Porsche.
The sound of crunching metal was deafening. The massive kinetic force threw Isabella to the left. Her head smashed brutally against the side window, shattering the safety glass.
The Porsche spun wildly, skidding sideways toward the black abyss of the cliff edge.
She had purposefully chosen this treacherous route because it bypassed the city's main traffic grids, but also because it ran directly parallel to the sprawling, heavily fortified Wells family estate. She had hoped the private security patrols in the area might deter Kaylie. She was wrong.
Suddenly, from a hidden dirt crossroad on the left-an unmarked private access road she recognized from high society property maps-a massive black armored SUV shot out into the rain.
Through the rain-streaked glass, Isabella saw the driver. Christian Wells. The billionaire heir. His jaw was clenched tight, his eyes locked onto her spinning car with terrifying intensity. He must have been returning from his late-night board meetings, his route intersecting with her desperate flight at the exact, fatal moment.
Christian didn't hit his brakes. He slammed his foot on the gas.
The heavy, bulletproof SUV T-boned the red Ferrari, violently shoving it away from Isabella. But the momentum carried the SUV forward. It acted as a steel shield, absorbing the fatal secondary impact meant for the Porsche.
The SUV hit the wet embankment, flipped into the air, and rolled three times before smashing upside down against the solid rock face of the mountain.
Isabella's Porsche, thrown off its trajectory, slammed head-on into the opposite side of the mountain wall.
The airbags deployed with an explosive punch to her face. The dashboard crumpled inward, pinning her legs.
Isabella gasped. A sharp, agonizing crack echoed in her chest. Several ribs snapped, the jagged bone ends piercing straight into her left lung.
She tried to breathe, but only a wet, bubbling sound came out. Blood filled her mouth, tasting like hot iron. She was trapped in the crushed metal cage of the driver's seat, unable to move an inch.
The driver's side door of the Ferrari popped open.
Kaylie stepped out into the storm. She held a large black umbrella over her head. Her pristine white dress was completely spotless. She wasn't hurt at all.
Kaylie's high heels clicked against the wet pavement as she casually strolled over to the mangled wreckage of the Porsche.
She stopped right outside the shattered driver's window. She crouched down, the umbrella shielding her from the rain, and peered inside at Isabella's dying body.
Kaylie smiled. It was a wide, genuine smile.
"The mechanic was quite expensive," Kaylie said, her voice easily cutting through the sound of the rain. "But cutting the brake lines was worth every penny."
Isabella stared at her, her vision darkening at the edges. She tried to speak, but blood spilled over her lips.
"Oh, don't look so surprised," Kaylie laughed softly. "Who do you think hired the dark web hackers to make those deepfake videos of you? Who do you think paid the hotel staff to look the other way?"
Kaylie leaned in closer, her eyes gleaming with malice. "You thought you could fight back with that NDA you signed? Daddy's legal team altered the clauses yesterday. You never had a chance, Isabella. You were dead the moment I stepped into that house."
A violent surge of hatred ripped through Isabella's chest. It burned hotter than the pain of her crushed bones. She coughed, violently expelling a mouthful of dark blood onto the deployed airbag.
She forced her heavy eyelids to stay open. She locked her eyes onto Kaylie's face, burning every feature, every smirk, into her soul.
The pain suddenly vanished, replaced by a freezing, numbing cold that started in her toes and rushed up to her heart.
The oxygen stopped flowing. The blackness swallowed her vision.
Inside the crushed metal tomb, Isabella's heart beat one final time, and then stopped completely.
Isabella gasped.
Her lungs expanded violently, sucking in a massive gulp of air. It felt like she had just broken the surface of a freezing ocean.
Her hands shot out and clamped around a leather steering wheel. Her manicured nails dug so deeply into the material that her fingertips ached.
She blinked rapidly. The world was too bright. The violent thunderstorm was gone. The deafening sound of crunching metal was gone.
She was sitting in the driver's seat of a stationary car. Sunlight poured through the windshield, warming her skin.
She looked down at her chest. No blood. No crushed ribs. She took a deep breath. Her lungs expanded smoothly, without the agonizing puncture of broken bones.
She looked out the windshield. Directly in front of her bumper was a classic yellow New York taxi cab. The two cars were touching, a minor fender-bender in the middle of a bustling Manhattan street.
Isabella's breath hitched. She slowly raised her eyes and looked into the rearview mirror.
Staring back at her was a young, flawless face. There was no thick medical gauze on her forehead. There were no dark circles of exhaustion under her eyes. Her skin was glowing, her hair perfectly styled.
Her hands shook uncontrollably as she reached over to the passenger seat. She grabbed her phone.
She pressed the power button. The screen lit up.
The date displayed in bold white numbers. It was exactly four years ago.
The day of the minor car crash. The exact day Kaylie used the distraction of this accident to show up at the Conrad estate and claim her place.
The memories hit Isabella like a physical blow. The flashbulbs in the hotel room. The cold voice of Dorman cutting her off. The terrifying feeling of the brake pedal hitting the floor. The metallic taste of her own blood. Kaylie's smiling face under the black umbrella.
A violent tremor of pure disbelief racked her entire body. She stared at her unblemished hands gripping the steering wheel, then back at the rearview mirror, her chest heaving as she sucked in greedy, desperate breaths of air. A wave of hysterical, broken laughter threatened to bubble up in her throat, choking her. Dead. She had been dead. She had felt her ribs snap and her lungs fill with blood. And now... now she was not. The sheer absurdity of the situation felt like a razor's edge balanced precariously between absolute madness and a chilling, newfound reality.
The blood in Isabella's veins slowly turned to ice. The frantic terror in her eyes evaporated, hardened by the crucible of betrayal she had just relived, and was replaced by a dark, bottomless abyss of absolute cold.
She was back.
A sharp tapping sound came from the glass beside her head.
Isabella turned. Brenda, her personal maid, was standing on the Manhattan sidewalk, peering through the window with an expression of exaggerated panic.
"Miss Isabella! Miss Isabella, are you hurt?" Brenda shouted through the glass, her hands fluttering nervously.
Isabella didn't move. She stared at Brenda. In her past life, she had thought Brenda was just a clumsy, loyal servant. Now, she remembered how Brenda had systematically leaked her schedule to Kaylie for four years.
Isabella pressed the silver button on the armrest. The window rolled down with a smooth mechanical hum.
She turned her head slowly. She locked eyes with Brenda.
Isabella's gaze was devoid of any human warmth. It was the stare of a predator looking at a very small, very stupid insect.
Brenda's frantic babbling died in her throat. She physically took a step back, her shoulders hunching under the sudden, crushing weight of Isabella's stare.
Isabella pushed the heavy car door open. She stepped out onto the pavement. Her designer heels clicked sharply against the concrete.
She walked to the front of the car and looked down. The bumper had a scratch no longer than her pinky finger.
A slow, chilling smirk curled the corner of Isabella's mouth.
This pathetic little scratch. This was the butterfly that flapped its wings and started the hurricane that killed her.
Isabella turned around. She leaned her lower back against the car door and crossed her arms over her chest. She looked down at Brenda, utilizing her height advantage to physically dominate the space.
"Call the estate," Isabella ordered. Her voice was perfectly calm, smooth as silk, and hard as titanium.
Brenda blinked, confused by the lack of tears or panic. "M-miss? Shouldn't we call the police first?"
"I said," Isabella's voice dropped an octave, vibrating with undeniable authority, "call the estate. Tell them I've been in an accident. Tell them to send a car for me immediately."
Brenda swallowed hard, intimidated by the sudden shift in her mistress's aura. "Yes, Miss Isabella. Right away."
Brenda fumbled in her apron pocket, pulled out her phone, and walked a few steps away to make the call.
Isabella turned her head and looked down the long, bustling avenue of Fifth Avenue. The yellow cabs, the rushing pedestrians, the towering glass skyscrapers.
She took a slow, deep breath of the exhaust-filled city air.
Kaylie wanted to play the victim. Dorman wanted a corporate pawn. Ivor wanted a convenient hole to hide his cowardice.
Isabella closed her eyes. Her fingers tapped a slow, rhythmic beat against her arm. She was going to give them exactly what they wanted. She was going to play the perfect, obedient, naive fake heiress.
And then, she was going to rip their lives apart, piece by piece, from the inside out.
The grand living room of the Conrad estate in Long Island was a monument to old money. Massive crystal chandeliers hung from vaulted ceilings, casting warm light over authentic Persian rugs and priceless Renaissance oil paintings.
Standing dead center on the most expensive rug was Kaylie.
She wore a faded, cheap floral dress that hung awkwardly on her frame. Her hair was frizzy, lacking the gloss of expensive salon treatments. Her eyes darted around the room, greedily drinking in the gold-leaf trim on the crown molding and the massive marble fireplace.
Footsteps echoed from the second floor.
Harriett Conrad hurried down the sweeping oak staircase. She wore a tailored Chanel suit, her neck draped in heavy pearls.
Harriett reached the bottom step and stopped. She stared at Kaylie. Her eyes instantly filled with tears.
"Oh, my god," Harriett gasped.
She ran across the room. She threw her arms around Kaylie, pulling the girl into a crushing embrace. Harriett buried her face in Kaylie's frizzy hair, sobbing loudly.
"My baby," Harriett wailed. "My real baby. You're finally home."
Kaylie stiffened for a fraction of a second. Then, she relaxed her shoulders and slumped against Harriett. She rested her cheek against Harriett's expensive silk shawl.
Kaylie bit down hard on her lower lip. The physical pain forced a rush of moisture to her eyes.
"Mom?" Kaylie whispered, her voice trembling perfectly. "Is it really you? The people at the foster home... they said nobody would ever want me."
Harriett pulled back. She cupped her face in her hands, her thumbs brushing over Kaylie's un-moisturized cheeks. Harriett's heart broke into a million pieces.
"They were monsters!" Harriett cried, her voice thick with guilt and rage. "I will give you the world, Kaylie. Everything in this house is yours. I promise you."
In the corner of the room, the shrill ring of an antique brass telephone shattered the emotional moment.
The head butler, standing stiffly by the wall, picked up the receiver. He listened for a moment, then walked over and bowed slightly, holding the phone out to Harriett.
"Madam. It is Brenda calling from Manhattan," the butler said softly.
Harriett wiped her eyes, her expression instantly shifting from maternal warmth to deep annoyance. She snatched the receiver.
"What is it?" Harriett snapped.
Through the earpiece, Brenda's nervous voice crackled. "Madam, Miss Isabella has been in a car accident. She requested a car be sent immediately."
Harriett rolled her eyes. Her fingers tightly clutched the edge of her silk shawl.
"A car accident? Or did she just scratch the paint on her bumper again?" Harriett scoffed loudly into the phone. "Tell her to take a cab. I don't have time for her pathetic attention-seeking games today."
Kaylie, standing just inches away, watched Harriett's face closely. She saw the irritation. She saw the lack of concern.
Kaylie hunched her shoulders, making herself look smaller. She took a step back, wrapping her arms around her own waist.
"Mom?" Kaylie asked, her voice a tiny, frightened squeak. "Is... is my sister mad that I'm here? If she doesn't want me here, I can go back to the foster home. I don't want to cause trouble."
Harriett's eyes widened in horror at the thought. She slammed the telephone receiver down onto the cradle with a loud clatter.
She turned and grabbed Kaylie's hands, squeezing them tightly.
"Don't you ever say that," Harriett said fiercely. "Isabella is nothing but a cuckoo bird who stole your nest. She has no right to be angry. You are the only mistress of this house."
Kaylie lowered her head, letting her messy bangs fall over her eyes. Beneath the shadow of her hair, the corners of her mouth twitched upward into a victorious smirk.
Harriett turned to the butler, her face hardening into a mask of aristocratic coldness.
"When Isabella arrives, bring her straight to the living room," Harriett ordered. "It's time she learned her actual place in this family."
Outside the heavy oak front doors, the deep, rumbling sound of a Lincoln Navigator's engine cutting off echoed through the courtyard.