Chapter 5

Fiona dragged her suitcase across the grand foyer. The party had resumed its low, buzzing hum of conversation, but the moment the plastic wheels clattered against the marble, the guests scattered. They pulled their expensive silk dresses and tailored jackets out of her path, treating her like a walking contagion. The physical isolation was absolute.

She reached the massive front entrance. She raised her bruised hand and wrapped her fingers around the heavy brass handle. She pressed down, ready to pull the door open and step out into the freezing night. Before the latch could click, a voice echoed through the massive hall.

"Dr. Eleanor Albright."

Cecil's voice was low, smooth, and deadly. The name hit Fiona's ears and sent a violent, paralyzing shockwave through her nervous system. Her fingers locked around the brass handle. Her lungs seized, completely forgetting how to pull in oxygen.

Fiona whipped her head around. Her pupils dilated in pure, unadulterated panic. Cecil was standing halfway down the sweeping staircase.

"What do you want?" she demanded, staring at him, her chest heaving. Her voice shook with a terrifying rage.

Cecil descended the remaining stairs with agonizing slowness. He reached up and casually adjusted his diamond cufflink, his posture radiating absolute, arrogant control.

"The exclusive, high-end care facility housing your beloved acting coach is entirely funded by my accounts," he mentioned casually.

He stopped a few feet away from her. He looked down his nose, a cruel smirk playing on his lips.

"If you turn that brass handle and walk out, I will call the facility and cancel Dr. Albright's experimental targeted therapy by morning," he told her.

The threat was a surgical strike to her heart. The blood drained from Fiona's face, leaving her skin ice-cold.

Her breathing turned into rapid, shallow gasps. Her chest rose and fell violently beneath her thin jacket. The hatred she felt for the man standing in front of her was so intense it made her vision blur. She clamped her teeth down on her lower lip, biting down so hard that the metallic taste of blood flooded her mouth.

Cecil watched the panic wash over her face. His cruel smile widened, his eyes gleaming with the sick satisfaction of a predator cornering its prey. He slowly raised his hand, reaching out to stroke her cheek, fully expecting her to break down and beg for his mercy.

The second his warm fingertips brushed the cold skin of her jaw, Fiona violently jerked her head away. The physical revulsion was instantaneous. The panic in her eyes vanished, instantly replaced by a deep, terrifying void of absolute blackness.

She looked him dead in the eye and let out a dark, humorless laugh.

"I will scrub toilets, sell my blood, and sleep on the concrete before I ever let you pay another dime for my mentor," she told him.

The absolute refusal to break made the smug smile slide right off Cecil's face.

Fiona took a step closer, invading his space. She lowered her voice to a lethal, guttural whisper.

"If anything happens to Dr. Albright because of you, I will burn the entire Ellison empire to the ground with you inside it," she promised him.

The raw, feral intensity in her eyes made Cecil physically shudder.

Without waiting for a response, Fiona spun around. She grabbed the brass handle and yanked the heavy oak door open with brutal force. A violent gust of freezing wind, thick with the season's first snow, whipped into the foyer. The icy air slapped her face, instantly chilling her skin.

She stepped over the threshold and plunged into the dark, freezing night. She didn't look back at the golden light spilling from the doorway. She abandoned the suffocating warmth of the mansion, letting the brutal cold swallow her whole.

The heavy oak door slammed shut behind her with a deafening boom. The sound severed the jazz music and the murmurs of the wealthy guests instantly. The world was plunged into an eerie, dead silence, broken only by the howling wind.

Fiona dragged her suitcase down the long, winding driveway. The crushed gravel crunched loudly under her boots. The wet snowflakes landed on the thin canvas of her jacket, melting instantly and soaking through to her skin. Violent shivers racked her body, her teeth chattering so hard her jaw ached.

She pulled her outdated, cracked smartphone from her pocket. When she was released from prison, the facility had returned the personal belongings she’d been booked with—her old phone, a flash drive, and a few other items. The battery had barely survived three years in storage, but it still held a charge. Her fingers were so numb they felt like blocks of wood. She tapped the screen, but the signal bar hovered desperately at a single, weak line. Instead of fumbling with a ride-sharing app that required a credit card, she trudged to the main road and raised her arm, flagging down a passing yellow cab. The driver slowed, eyeing her rumpled appearance and the battered suitcase. She didn't care.

She climbed into the backseat and gave the driver the address of a cheap, run-down motel deep in the heart of Manhattan. The address was a world away from the Hamptons, both physically and financially.

The cab accelerated, pulling away from the curb. Fiona turned her head and looked out the window. The massive silhouette of the Ellison estate slowly faded into the dark, snowy night. She pressed her forehead against the cold glass and swore to herself that she would take back everything they stole from her.

An hour later, the cab dropped her off in the city. She paid the fare with most of her remaining cash, leaving only a few crumpled bills in her pocket. She dragged her suitcase down the wet, neon-lit sidewalk until she reached a 24-hour post office. Her legs felt like lead, her muscles screaming in exhaustion, but her mind was buzzing with frantic energy.

She walked up to the automated kiosk in the empty lobby. The machine hummed loudly in the quiet room. She pulled the flash drive from her pocket—the same drive she had hidden inside a hollowed-out book in the prison library, smuggled out upon release. On it was the divorce agreement she had drafted during her final year inside.

A bitter memory surfaced: In her first months of incarceration, she had dreamt night after night of returning home, of Cecil wrapping his arms around her, of Jefferey running into her embrace. But as the truth of the accident and Kimberly’s betrayal slowly crystallized, those dreams turned to ash. By the second year, she had stopped hoping. By the third, she had started planning. She had even called a lawyer from the prison phone—a high‑powered divorce attorney who had sounded eager until she mentioned Cecil Ellison’s name. The lawyer’s tone had shifted instantly; a week later, his office stopped taking her calls. She was on her own.

She inserted the drive and printed the document. The warm paper slid out of the slot, smelling of fresh ink.

Fiona grabbed a cheap pen chained to the counter. She flipped to the last page and signed her name. She pressed down so hard the ballpoint tore through the paper, leaving a deep, physical scar on the document. There was no hesitation.

She shoved the papers into a priority envelope, sealed it, and dropped it into the metal outbox. The heavy thud of the envelope hitting the bottom of the bin echoed in the empty room. That sound was the final nail in the coffin of her marriage. A massive weight lifted off her chest.

She left the post office and walked two blocks to the motel. The neon sign buzzed erratically above the glass door. She pushed it open. The lobby smelled strongly of cheap pine cleaner and stale cigarette smoke. The harsh fluorescent lights made her eyes water.

She dug into her pocket and pulled out the last few crumpled dollars—exactly enough for one night in the cheapest room. She slid the bills across the scratched counter. The man behind the plexiglass stared at her bruised face and wet clothes with blatant suspicion, but he took the money and handed her a heavy, rusted brass key. Fiona snatched it without a word.

She hauled her suitcase up the exterior concrete stairs to the second floor. She found her room, shoved the key into the lock, and twisted hard. The door stuck, requiring a hard shove with her shoulder to open. The room inside was tiny, featuring a stained carpet and a sagging mattress.

Fiona didn't care. She dropped her suitcase, walked to the bed, and collapsed face-first onto the mattress. The old springs shrieked in protest under her weight. The bed was hard and smelled faintly of mildew, but to Fiona, it felt like a cloud. It was hers.

She rolled onto her back and stared up at the water-stained ceiling. A single, hot tear slipped from the corner of her eye and tracked down her temple, disappearing into her hairline. The adrenaline finally crashed, leaving behind a deep, profound sense of peace.

Chapter 6

Fiona was jolted awake by the violent, grinding roar of a garbage truck directly outside her window. The cheap, thin glass of the motel window did absolutely nothing to block the noise. The sound vibrated right through her skull, making her temples throb. She groaned, her stiff muscles protesting as she pushed herself up from the sagging mattress.

She dragged herself into the tiny, mildew-scented bathroom. She turned the plastic knob, splashing freezing tap water onto her face. The icy shock forced her nervous system awake. She gripped the edges of the cracked porcelain sink and stared at her reflection. Dark circles bruised the skin under her eyes, but the look in her pupils was sharp and unyielding.

She opened her suitcase and pulled out her thin, faded canvas jacket—the same one she had worn when she stepped out of the prison gates. It was still damp from last night’s snow, but it was all she had. She shook it out, slipped her arms into the sleeves, and pulled the collar tight against her neck. She took a deep breath, steeling herself, and pushed the motel door open.

Fiona stepped out onto the bustling Manhattan sidewalk. The bitter winter wind whipped down the concrete canyon, carrying the harsh smell of exhaust fumes and hot asphalt. She shoved her bare hands deep into the pockets of her jacket, hunching her shoulders against the biting cold as she walked purposefully toward the theater district. She needed to find an old contact, someone who might still owe her a favor from her glory days.

As she passed a corner diner near the Screen Actors Guild office, the rich, buttery scent of roasting coffee beans and frying bacon hit her nose. Her stomach violently contracted, letting out a loud, painful rumble. She slowed her pace, her mouth watering, but her fingers brushed against the flat, empty leather of her wallet. She swallowed the hunger and kept walking.

She pulled out her cracked phone, squinting against the harsh glare of the morning sun on the screen. She scrolled through a list of minimum-wage job postings, her eyes straining to read the tiny text while occasionally glancing up at the familiar agency logos on the glass doors around her. She was so focused on the screen that she didn't notice the figure stepping out of a nearby office building.

A man in a tailored suit, his head buried in a stack of manila folders, collided hard with her shoulder. The physical impact knocked Fiona off balance. The large paper cup in his hand crushed inward, sending a wave of scalding hot coffee splashing directly onto the front of her canvas jacket.

Fiona let out a sharp gasp, jumping backward. The heat of the liquid seeped instantly through the thin fabric, burning the skin of her chest. The man dropped his folders, frantically pulling a white handkerchief from his pocket, his voice overlapping in a rush of panicked apologies.

He stepped forward, raising his head to look at her face. The moment his eyes locked onto hers, he froze completely. The handkerchief slipped from his fingers and fluttered to the sidewalk. His jaw dropped.

"Fiona," he breathed out, the sound laced with absolute disbelief.

Fiona blinked, wiping a drop of coffee from her chin. She stared at the man's sharp jawline and familiar wire-rimmed glasses. It was Julian Thorne. Three years ago, he had been the most ruthless, brilliant talent agent in Hollywood—and he had been hers. A massive wave of emotion crashed into her chest, making it hard to breathe.

Julian stepped forward and grabbed both of her shoulders. His grip was tight, desperate. His eyes quickly scanned her pale face, the dark bags under her eyes, and the cheap, stained jacket. His eyes grew red-rimmed.

"Where the hell have you been for the last three years?" he demanded, his voice cracking.

Fiona glanced around. Pedestrians were beginning to stare at the intense reunion. The weight of their curious eyes made her skin prickle. She gave Julian a tight, humorless smile, shook her head, and pointed to the diner she had just walked past. She needed to sit down.

They slid into a narrow, sticky vinyl booth in the back corner of the diner. The cramped space forced them to sit close. Julian immediately flagged down a waitress and ordered a large pot of black coffee. His eyes never left Fiona's face, searching for the vibrant star he used to know.

Fiona wrapped her freezing hands around the thick ceramic mug the waitress dropped off. The heat seeped into her stiff joints. Taking a slow, deep breath, she looked Julian in the eye and told him everything. She told him about the car crash, Kimberly's tears, Cecil's manipulation, and the cold concrete of her prison cell. She spoke in a flat, dead monotone.

Julian's face turned a dangerous shade of purple. He slammed his fist down onto the Formica table with brutal force. The table shook, and hot coffee sloshed over the rims of their mugs, burning his knuckles. He cursed Cecil's name, his voice thick with a violent, protective rage.

He looked down at Fiona's hands wrapped around the mug. They were rough, calloused, and covered in tiny, healing cuts. He remembered how those hands used to hold golden trophies. The tragic waste of her raw, generational talent made a heavy sadness settle in his chest.

Suddenly, Julian reached into his breast pocket. He pulled out a sleek, matte-black business card and slid it across the table. He leaned forward, the sadness in his eyes replaced by a sharp, predatory gleam.

"I left the corporate agency. I started my own independent firm," he told her.

He stared at her, his gaze intense and unblinking.

"It is time to come back. I want you to return to Hollywood," he said.

The words hit Fiona like a physical jolt of electricity. Her heart slammed against her ribs, the sudden rush of adrenaline making her dizzy.

Fiona looked down. Her fingers nervously picked at the wet, sticky coffee stain on her jacket. The heavy weight of her criminal record pressed down on her chest.

"No studio will ever insure a convicted felon. I am completely ruined," she laughed bitterly.

Julian leaned further across the table, invading her space. He crossed his arms, slipping effortlessly into his ruthless agent persona.

"Hollywood doesn't care about morals; they care about money. Your scandal gives you an edge, a dark notoriety that the public will eat up," he told her.

He spoke rapidly, his words precise and calculated. He explained that the independent film circuit was currently obsessed with raw, gritty realism. They didn't want polished princesses anymore. They wanted women who looked like they had survived a war. He told her she was exactly what they were looking for.

Fiona's eyes slowly lifted from the table. The image of Dr. Albright's massive medical bills flashed in her mind. The crushing weight of her financial desperation collided with Julian's words, sparking a violent fire in her gut. She had absolutely nothing left to lose.

She straightened her spine, dropping her hands from the coffee stain. The dead look in her eyes vanished, replaced by the sharp, hungry glare of a predator.

"How fast can you get me in a casting room?" she demanded, looking Julian dead in the eye.

Julian's mouth curved into a slow, vicious smile. He reached down into his leather briefcase and pulled out a thin, bound script. He slid it across the table. The thick paper scraped against the Formica.

"It is a psychological thriller, casting for the female lead," he told her.

Fiona reached out and placed her hand flat on the cover of the script. The rough texture of the cardstock sent a thrill straight up her arm. For the first time in three years, she felt the intoxicating rush of having her hands firmly on the steering wheel of her own life.

Julian watched her face carefully. He lowered his voice and added one final detail.

"Kimberly's agency has been aggressively pushing for the exact same role," he said.

The mention of Kimberly's name sent a violent shockwave through Fiona's system.

Fiona's fingers curled inward, gripping the edge of the script so hard her knuckles turned white. The paper crinkled under her brutal grip. A dark, terrifying smile spread across her face.

"I will rip the role right out of Kimberly's manicured hands," she swore, looking at Julian.

Julian laughed, a sharp bark of approval. He stood up, threw a twenty-dollar bill on the table to cover the coffee, and pulled a thick wad of cash from his wallet. He held it out to her, offering it as an advance to get her on her feet.

Fiona hesitated, staring at the thick wad of bills. Her pride flared hot in her chest, a reflex from a past life where she relied on no one. "I don't take charity," she started to say, raising her hand to push it away.

Julian shook his head and aggressively pressed the cash into her palm, closing her fingers around it. "This isn't charity. It's a corporate advance for my new star. Consider it an investment, not a handout," he told her, his tone leaving no room for argument.

Fiona looked down at the money. The crushing reality of her empty stomach and Dr. Albright's looming medical bills heavily outweighed her pride. She tightly gripped the cash, nodding once. Julian looked at her, a deep, profound respect shining in his eyes, and put his wallet away.

They walked out of the diner together. As Fiona stepped onto the sidewalk, the thick gray clouds parted. A bright ray of winter sunlight hit her face, warming her skin. She clutched the script to her chest, her blood singing with the promise of war.

Chapter 7

Fiona walked briskly down the crowded Manhattan sidewalk, her hand shoved deep into her coat pocket, her fingers wrapped tightly around the rolled-up script. She held it like a lifeline, her knuckles aching from the force of her grip. The heavy foot traffic parted around her, but she didn't notice a single face.

Suddenly, the cracked phone in her other pocket erupted into a violent, buzzing vibration. The sudden mechanical shaking against her thigh made her jump, her heart skipping a beat. She stopped walking, pulled out the phone, and stared at the glowing screen.

The name "Cecil Ellison" flashed in bright white letters. The sight of his name acted like a physical poison in her bloodstream. The warmth and excitement she had just felt evaporated, instantly replaced by a cold, heavy knot of pure irritation in her gut.

Fiona stared at the screen and let out a short, derisive scoff. Without a single second of hesitation, her thumb swiped aggressively across the red icon. The call disconnected instantly. The screen went black, cutting off his electronic leash.

Less than three seconds later, the phone began to vibrate frantically again. The aggressive, relentless buzzing echoed loudly on the quiet street corner, drawing the annoyed stares of passing pedestrians. Cecil's suffocating need for control was radiating right through the cellular towers.

Fiona didn't decline it this time. She unlocked the screen, tapped into the settings menu, and hit the block caller button. Her thumb pressed the screen with enough force to bruise her own skin. The phone instantly went dead silent. The sudden absence of noise felt like a massive weight lifting off her shoulders.

She sucked in a massive gulp of the freezing city air, letting it burn her lungs. She shoved the dead phone back into her pocket and picked up her pace. Her boots hit the concrete with a renewed, aggressive rhythm as she headed straight back to the motel.

She pushed open the door to her dim, musty room. She didn't even bother taking off her trench coat. She walked straight to the small, wobbly wooden desk in the corner, dropped into the plastic chair, and slapped the script down on the surface. Dust motes danced in the air as she flipped open the cover.

The script centered on a deeply traumatized single mother fighting to keep her child. As Fiona read the first page, the character's desperate, suffocating pain mirrored her own so perfectly that it made her chest ache. The words pulled her in, wrapping around her mind until the dingy motel room completely faded away.

She grabbed a cheap plastic pen from the desk. The ink was completely dried out, but she didn't care. She pressed the metal tip hard against the paper, aggressively scoring lines under her dialogue. The sharp, scratching sound of metal tearing into paper filled the quiet room, a physical manifestation of her intense focus.

Fiona pushed the chair back and stood up. She walked over to the bathroom and stood in front of the water-stained mirror. The glass was cloudy, distorting her reflection, but her eyes were burning with a terrifying, laser-like intensity.

She opened her mouth to deliver the opening monologue. The words came out thin, raspy, and weak. Three years of silence had caused her vocal cords to atrophy. The physical limitation frustrated her so deeply that she slammed her hand against the edge of the sink.

She closed her eyes. She forced her tense shoulders to drop. She pushed her consciousness deep into her diaphragm, remembering the grueling breathing exercises Dr. Albright had drilled into her. She pulled a massive breath deep into her belly, feeling her ribs expand against her coat.

She opened her eyes and spoke again. This time, the words tore from her throat with a raw, guttural power. The emotion was so thick and visceral it seemed to suck the oxygen out of the tiny bathroom. In that moment, she wasn't a convicted felon in a cheap motel; she was a master of her craft.

Hours bled away. The sun dipped below the skyline, plunging the room into darkness. Fiona didn't turn on the overhead light. The only illumination came from the orange glow of the streetlamp outside, casting long, distorted shadows across her face. She kept pacing, kept speaking, her body running entirely on adrenaline.

Her throat eventually grew so dry it felt like it was coated in sandpaper. She grabbed a plastic cup, filled it with cold tap water, and chugged it. The freezing liquid shocked her warm esophagus, causing a sharp, painful ache in her chest, but it cleared the hoarseness from her voice.

Her phone screen suddenly lit up the dark room. It was a text from Julian. The message was brief: Audition tomorrow. 5:00 PM. Midtown studio. The hard deadline sent a massive spike of adrenaline straight into her bloodstream, making her fingers tingle.

A second text popped up immediately after: Just confirmed. Kimberly is reading at 5:30. The name hit Fiona like a physical blow. Her jaw clamped shut so hard her teeth ground together. Her fingers tightened around the phone, the plastic casing creaking under the pressure.

Fiona typed back a single thumbs-up emoji. She stared at the screen, her eyes narrowing into dark, lethal slits. She wasn't just going to this audition to win a role. She was going to completely obliterate Kimberly's confidence.

She turned back to the mirror. The character required a specific, broken look. Fiona focused all her energy on the tiny muscles around her left eye, forcing a subtle, erratic twitch. The intense physical strain made her temple throb, but she held it, perfecting the physical manifestation of trauma.

She looked at her long, relatively neat hair. It was too soft. Too privileged. She opened her toiletry bag, pulled out a pair of cheap metal scissors, and raised them to her face. The cold steel brushed against her cheekbone, sending a shiver down her neck.

Without a single second of hesitation, she clamped the blades down. She hacked at her hair, cutting jagged, uneven chunks. The dark strands fell into the porcelain sink. When she was done, she looked like a woman who had been dragged through hell. It was absolutely perfect.

Suddenly, her stomach violently contracted. A wave of dizziness hit her so hard the room spun. Her blood sugar had completely crashed. She gripped the edges of the sink, her knuckles white, waiting for the black spots to clear from her vision.

She dug through her pockets and found three crumpled dollar bills. She stumbled out of the room and walked down the freezing exterior corridor to a glowing vending machine. The mechanical hum of the machine was the only sound in the dead of night.

She bought a stale peanut butter energy bar. She tore the plastic wrapper off with her teeth and took a bite. The bar was dry and tasted like sawdust. It scratched her throat as she swallowed, but she forced every last bite down, treating it like medicine to keep her body functioning.

She walked back to her room, collapsed onto the hard mattress, and threw the script over her face. She closed her eyes, running the blocking and the emotional beats through her mind on an endless loop. She completely shut out the reality of the motel, living entirely inside the character's head.

Miles away, in a sprawling Hamptons mansion, Cecil Ellison hurled his custom smartphone at a marble wall. The device shattered into pieces. The automated voice telling him the number could not be reached echoed in his mind, fueling a blind, destructive rage.

Back in the motel, Fiona finally fell asleep. But her mind never stopped working. Her lips moved silently in the dark, muttering dialogue. Her hands were clenched into tight fists, gripping the cheap polyester bedsheets as if she were holding onto the edge of a cliff.

The next morning, a sharp beam of sunlight pierced through the gap in the curtains and hit Fiona directly in the eyes. She gasped, her eyes snapping open. There was no grogginess. Her mind was instantly clear, sharp, and focused.

She threw off the thin blanket and swung her legs over the side of the bed. She grabbed the script from the nightstand. Her heart beat with a steady, powerful rhythm. The time for hiding was over. She was ready for war.

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