Sera's eyes darted around the VIP suite.
Her tactical training kicked in instantly, overriding the lingering grogginess. In less than three seconds, her brain logged the single wooden door, the sealed reinforced window, the heavy metal IV pole, and the lack of visible security cameras.
She attempted to sit up, pushing her weight onto her elbows. She moved too quickly. The IV line taped to the back of her hand pulled taut, sending a sharp, stinging pain through her vein.
She hissed, freezing in place.
"Keep your arm still."
The deep, resonant baritone voice came from the shadows near the door.
Sera's head snapped toward the sound. Kian stepped out of the dim corner and into the clinical light. His movements were completely silent, devoid of the heavy, clumsy footsteps most men possessed.
Sera finally got a clear, unobstructed look at his face.
She instantly recognized him. The sharp jawline, the intense blue eyes, the dark hair. Kian Sinclair IV. The global A-list actor. The man whose face was plastered on billboards across the world.
A jolt of shock hit her stomach, but she ruthlessly suppressed it. Her facial muscles snapped into a cold, unreadable mask. She stared at him, rapidly assessing his threat level.
Kian walked forward slowly, deliberately keeping a wide, respectful physical distance between them. He picked up a sealed plastic bottle of spring water from the bedside table and held it out to her.
Sera reached out with her free hand. She snatched the bottle, unscrewed the plastic cap with her thumb, and took a small, cautious sip. She never let her eyes leave his face.
"Why is an Oscar winner playing Florence Nightingale for a stranger in a private clinic?" Sera asked. Her voice was blunt, raspy, and completely devoid of the fawning admiration he was undoubtedly used to.
Kian didn't blink. He slipped his hands into his trouser pockets.
"I dislike messy hotel hallways," Kian replied smoothly. "I prefer to keep my living spaces quiet."
He paused, letting the silence stretch for a second.
"Your 'problem' in Room 402 has been sanitized," Kian continued, his tone entirely casual. "No police. No press. The hotel has no record of you being on that floor."
A massive, physical wave of relief washed over Sera's chest. The tight knot in her lungs finally loosened. She wouldn't have to fight a corrupt legal battle or deal with industry cover-ups while she was physically compromised.
"Thank you," Sera said. It was a curt, professional statement. Nothing more.
Kian nodded once. He didn't ask about the blood. He didn't ask about her knuckles. He turned around and quietly exited the room, the heavy door clicking shut behind him.
The moment the latch engaged, Sera dropped her defensive posture. She slumped back against the stiff hospital pillows, her muscles aching.
The absolute silence of the room acted as a catalyst. Without the distraction of a physical threat, the horrific memories of her past life fully surfaced, crashing into her mind like a tidal wave.
She remembered the freezing dampness of the concrete warehouse. She remembered the metallic clinking of the chains around her wrists. She remembered the cruel, mocking laughter of the Eastern European traffickers.
She remembered the exact moment they shoved the transfer documents in her face. She saw Ethan Vance's messy, familiar signature on the bottom line. He had sold her to cover his massive underground gambling debts.
She remembered staring at a small, dirty television screen in her cell. It showed her adoptive mother, Patricia Beaumont, giving a tearful, highly produced press conference. Patricia had dabbed her dry eyes, falsely claiming Sera had stolen family funds and run away with a secret lover.
Sera's breathing accelerated. Phantom pains flared up across her ribs and legs, ghost injuries from a past life burning in her current, unblemished body.
She forcefully curled her fingers inward. She dug her manicured fingernails deep into the soft flesh of her palms. She pressed until the skin broke and a sharp, grounding pain shot up her arms. The physical sting anchored her to the present reality.
She turned her head and looked at the red digital clock mounted on the white wall.
The date flashed beneath the time. A cold dread washed over her, followed immediately by a sharp, electric jolt of realization. It was the spring of five years before her death. She hadn't just survived; she had been given five entire years to rewrite her destiny.
A profound, chilling realization settled over her. The universe had violently ripped her backward through time. It had given her a second chance to rewrite the entire board.
She replayed Lars Donovan's blurted confession in the hotel room. Ethan promised.
It mathematically confirmed Ethan's involvement. Ethan had deliberately sent her to Room 402 under the guise of an exclusive audition, knowing exactly what Lars did to young actresses.
The residual fear in Sera's chest completely evaporated. It was replaced by a terrifying, hyper-focused resolve.
She wasn't going to hide. She wasn't going to run.
She began mentally cataloging her current assets. Her bank balance was controlled by her toxic family. Her industry contacts were shallow. But her combat skills, honed in secret before her death, were fully intact in her muscle memory.
She realized her current public persona-a brainless, spoiled, useless Hollywood socialite-was the absolute perfect camouflage. No one would ever see her coming.
She wouldn't just kill them. Death was too quick. She was going to systematically dismantle their careers, drain their finances, and shatter their sanity.
Sera looked at her pale reflection in the dark glass of the windowpane. A cold, predatory smile slowly stretched across her lips.
The next morning, the clinic doctor walked into the suite. He checked Sera's vitals, removed the IV needle from the back of her hand, and officially cleared her for discharge.
Sera changed out of the hospital gown. She pulled her torn silk dress back on, covering the ripped shoulder with a dark blue medical scrub jacket a nurse had quietly provided.
She walked out of the suite and headed straight for the private VIP elevator bank in the clinic lobby. She stood in the quiet hallway, watching the digital numbers descend.
The heavy stainless steel doors slid open.
Kian Sinclair IV stood inside the small metal box. He was dressed in casual dark jeans and a black henley, holding a cup of black coffee.
Sera stepped into the elevator. Her posture immediately stiffened. She moved to the far opposite corner, maintaining a strict, calculated physical distance between them.
Kian noticed her defensive stance immediately. He didn't crowd her. He casually leaned his back against the cool metal wall, giving her maximum space.
"Do you have a safe ride back to Los Angeles?" Kian asked. His tone was polite, but entirely detached.
"I called an Uber Black," Sera replied curtly, staring straight ahead at the doors. She shut down any further avenue of conversation.
The elevator arrived at the ground floor with a soft ding. Kian nodded slightly. He gestured with his coffee cup for her to exit first.
Sera walked out into the bright California sun without looking back. Kian stood in the elevator, his eyes narrowing thoughtfully as he watched her retreating figure.
An hour later, the black SUV dropped Sera off at her luxurious Los Angeles penthouse. It was a massive, sterile property paid for by the Beaumont family to keep her out of their main estate.
She walked inside and immediately headed to the master bathroom. She turned the shower on scalding hot, scrubbing the remnants of the hotel, Lars, and the clinic off her skin until it turned pink.
She stepped out, wrapping herself in a thick robe.
The front door of the penthouse banged open.
Meg Foster, Sera's aggressive, high-strung Hollywood agent, barged into the living room. She was wearing loud designer heels and clutching a thick stack of manila folders.
"Where the hell have you been?" Meg yelled, pacing the glass-and-steel living room. "You missed three of my calls! Lars Donovan's office said you never showed up for the audition!"
Meg didn't wait for an answer. She marched over to the glass coffee table and slammed a thick contract down on the surface.
"Sign this," Meg demanded. "It's a new dating reality show. The network loves your 'spoiled brat' angle."
Sera stared at the paper. She recognized the logo. In her past life, she had signed that exact contract. The show's producers had maliciously edited her footage, painting her as a homewrecker and destroying her public image, making her an easy target for Ethan's later abuse.
Sera walked over to the table. She picked up the contract. She flipped directly to the final signature page.
Without a word, she gripped the top and bottom of the thick paper stack and calmly tore it entirely in half.
The loud, sharp sound of ripping paper echoed in the large room.
Meg gasped. Her jaw dropped open in absolute shock. She stared at the shredded pieces of paper falling onto the glass table.
"Are you insane?" Meg shrieked, her face turning red. "Your mother will cut off your funding if you don't cooperate! You are nothing without the Beaumont money!"
Sera slowly raised her head. She fixed Meg with a dead, unblinking stare. The temperature in the room seemed to plummet. Her aura shifted instantly, radiating the heavy, terrifying menace of a seasoned cartel boss.
"I am done playing my family's obedient little puppet," Sera said. Her voice was a low, dangerous whisper that cut straight through Meg's screaming. "Do not ever threaten me with them again."
Meg physically stepped back. Her high heel caught on the rug. She was genuinely intimidated by the sudden, chilling shift in her usually whiny, submissive client. Meg swallowed hard, her mind racing frantically to process the threat. This wasn't the easily manipulated girl she knew. For a brief, desperate moment, she considered calling Patricia Beaumont to force Sera into line, but something in Sera's dead, soulless eyes told her that would be a catastrophic mistake that could cost Meg her own career.
"Open your briefcase," Sera ordered, pointing at the leather bag in Meg's hand. "Show me the alternative casting calls you hid."
Trembling slightly, Meg fumbled with the brass latches. "Fine," Meg snapped, trying to regain some pathetic semblance of control as she opened the bag. "You want career suicide? Here it is." She pulled out a thin, rejected pitch folder.
"It's a global travel survival show," Meg stammered, holding it out like a shield. "Called 'Global Challenge.' It's grueling. Underfunded. They only want you as a 'Team Manager' to cause friction and act like a diva. It's career suicide."
Sera snatched the folder. She scanned the printed guest roster.
Her eyes locked onto a specific name halfway down the page: Ethan Vance.
A slow, predatory smile spread across Sera's face. It was a smile that promised absolute violence. A cold shiver ran violently down Meg's spine.
Sera grabbed a pen from the table. She signed the "Global Challenge" contract with sharp, decisive strokes, pressing so hard the ink nearly bled through the page.
She shoved the clipboard back into Meg's chest.
"Tell production," Sera said, her eyes gleaming with dark anticipation, "their new manager is ready to work."
Meg stumbled out of the penthouse in a daze, wondering if her client had suffered a secret, severe head injury.
Three days later, Sera arrived at the Los Angeles International Airport VIP lounge. It was the designated assembly point for the production crew before meeting the cast.
She walked through the sliding glass doors wearing oversized black sunglasses, a sleek designer trench coat, and carrying a single, highly practical canvas duffel bag.
Dominic Wells, the show's stressed-out lead director, looked at her bag in genuine surprise. He had fully expected the notorious Sera Beaumont to arrive with a mountain of Louis Vuitton luggage and a screaming assistant.
Dominic cleared his throat and handed her a thick, heavy binder. "This is the Team Manager handbook. It contains all the logistical nightmares, budget constraints, and emergency protocols."
Sera took the binder. She flipped through the dense pages, her eyes rapidly scanning the text. Her brain automatically memorized the daily budget limits, the emergency contact numbers, and the hotel layouts.
A nervous production assistant named Brenda rushed over. She clipped a small wireless microphone to the lapel of Sera's trench coat. The tiny red light blinked on. The behind-the-scenes cameras were officially rolling.
Dominic crossed his arms, looking directly into the camera lens. "Your job, Ms. Beaumont, is to serve the guests. You manage their schedules, you handle their luggage, and you ensure everything runs smoothly. Understood?"
Sera turned to face the camera. She tilted her head and offered a sweet, completely fake, plastic smile.
"Of course, Dominic," Sera chirped, her voice dripping with artificial enthusiasm. "I'm going to be very, very helpful."
The crew boarded a short domestic flight to a luxury desert resort in Nevada, the staging ground where the cast would gather tonight before flying to Europe.
During the flight, Sera sat in the window seat. She pulled out her encrypted tablet, shielding the screen from the cameras. She ran a rapid, deep-dive background check on Ethan Vance's current financial status.
The data loaded quickly. Ethan had heavily leveraged his personal assets to invest in a tech startup. He was drowning in hidden debt. His public image on this reality show wasn't just for fame; it was a desperate bid to secure more investors.
She then accessed the production team's unsecured scheduling server, a laughably simple task for someone with her background. With a few rapid keystrokes, she altered a single entry on Ethan Vance's digital call sheet, cleanly changing his assembly time from 5:00 AM to 6:00 AM without leaving a digital footprint.
Sera locked the tablet. Her mind immediately began formulating a dozen different, highly effective ways to trigger a catastrophic public relations disaster for him.
The production team arrived at the Nevada hotel by late afternoon. As they checked in, the grand lobby lights flickered ominously for a long moment, a clear sign of the aging hotel's occasionally unreliable power grid, before buzzing back to full brightness. They converted a section of the lobby into a chaotic command center.
Dominic tossed Sera a master keycard. "You have access to the entire fifth floor. The guests arrive tonight. Your first job is managing their 5:00 AM wake-up calls tomorrow."
Sera reviewed the final guest roster on her phone. Felicity "Fifi" Lowell. Diana Lane. Sterling Rhodes. And Ethan Vance.
At the bottom of the list, a fifth name was heavily blurred out, simply labeled: Surprise A-List Guest.
Sera ignored the blurred name entirely. Her focus was locked onto Ethan's room assignment: Suite 504.
Sera took the staff elevator up to the fifth floor. She needed to scout the hallway layout, memorize the blind spots, and locate the security cameras before tomorrow morning.
The carpeted hallway was dead quiet. She walked slowly, her eyes tracking the black domes of the cameras mounted on the ceiling. She spotted an unattended room service cart piled high with used dishes and discarded linens. Tucked discreetly on the bottom shelf was a large, industrial metal ice bucket, half-melted but absolutely perfect for her needs. With a quick, tactical glance to ensure no one was watching, she lifted it from the cart and smoothly stashed it in a nearby alcove just outside Suite 504 for later.
Gary, the cameraman assigned to shadow her every move, was loudly complaining about a dead battery pack and had just gone back down to the lobby to get a new one. This gave Sera a precious window of absolute privacy. As she passed the elevator bank, she noticed another large room service cart left unattended against the wall. It was cluttered with dirty plates and several half-empty glasses of red wine.
The elevator bell chimed softly.
The metal doors slid open. Kian Sinclair IV stepped out. He was wearing a dark baseball cap pulled low over his eyes, attempting to stay incognito.
Sera froze. The pieces clicked together instantly. Kian was the network's "Surprise A-List Guest."
But something was horribly wrong.
Kian's face was unusually pale, a sickly gray color. He took one step out of the elevator and stumbled heavily. His broad shoulder crashed into the room service cart.
A half-empty wine glass tipped over, shattering loudly against the floorboards. Kian didn't even flinch at the noise.
He collapsed back against the wall, his hands flying to his throat. He clawed at his collar. His chest heaved violently, but no air was entering his lungs.
Sera's tactical instincts flared. She recognized the immediate, terrifying signs of severe anaphylactic shock. It wasn't intoxication. He was suffocating.
Sera dropped her aloof, fake persona instantly. She sprinted down the hallway toward him as his knees buckled and he slid down the wall to the floor.