
Chapter 1
The Cathedral of St. Jude was bathed in the blinding, artificial daylight of a dozen television broadcast spotlights. Gold leaf gleamed on the vaulted ceilings, and fifty thousand white orchids cascaded from the altar in fragrant, suffocating waves. In the front pews sat the most powerful titans of the tech industry, their eyes fixed on the spectacle unfolding before them.
Desmond Vance stood at the center of it all, looking every inch the conquering king.
His bespoke charcoal tuxedo fit him flawlessly, his jawline sharp and his smile radiating the practiced, benevolent charm that had made him the darling of Wall Street. Opposite him stood Sloane Mercer, swathed in half a million dollars of custom Vera Wang lace, her face veiled. This was not just a wedding. It was a coronation. The live broadcast was currently streaming to over four million viewers, the highly publicized union that would officially merge Mercer Holdings with Croft Industries, cementing Desmond as a billionaire twice over.
Standing between them on the raised marble dais was the officiant.
Draped in the heavy, traditional black velvet robes and deep cowl requested by the Mercer family’s archaic religious traditions, the officiant had remained silent, head bowed, an anonymous vessel for the holy sacrament.
Desmond cleared his throat, his voice projecting smoothly through the hidden lapel microphone. "I, Desmond Vance, take you, Sloane, to be my wife. To honor, to cherish, and to protect. From this day forward, everything I have built is yours, just as my heart is yours."
A collective, quiet sigh rippled through the pews. It was picture-perfect.
The officiant slowly raised her head. The heavy velvet hood completely obscured her features in shadow, but when she spoke, her voice echoed through the cathedral’s state-of-the-art sound system. It was not the low, gravelly baritone of the elderly priest Desmond had hired.
It was a woman’s voice. Silken. Cold. And painfully familiar.
"To harbor and protect," the officiant said, the words cutting through the reverent silence like a blade. "Just as you harbored my family’s legacy after you slipped a paralytic into my Darjeeling tea, Desmond?"
Desmond froze. The flawless, charismatic smile curdled on his lips. His eyes darted to the hooded figure, his brow furrowing in irritation. He let out a breathless, confused chuckle, glancing at the cameras. "I'm sorry, what is this? Who authorized this change in the script?"
"There is no script, darling," the officiant replied, stepping forward. "Only the truth. And a thousand days of me learning how to breathe on my own again just so I could stand here and ask you a question."
Murmurs erupted in the front pews. The board of directors exchanged bewildered glances.
"Security," Desmond snapped, his voice dropping its warm veneer. "Get this lunatic off the altar. Now."
"The question, Desmond," the officiant continued, her voice rising, commanding the massive space. She reached up with two gloved hands and gripped the edges of the heavy velvet cowl. "Do you take this woman to be your lawfully wedded wife, or did you forge her signature too?"
With a sharp pull, the hood fell back.
A collective gasp tore through the cathedral. Several women in the second row shrieked. A billionaire hedge-fund manager dropped his champagne flute, the crystal shattering loudly against the marble floor.
Vivienne Croft smiled.
It was not the soft, radiant smile of the heiress who had purportedly died of a sudden, tragic brain aneurysm three years ago. This smile was a razor-thin curve of lips that had spent months relearning how to move. A faint, silvery surgical scar traced the edge of her jawline—a souvenir from the black-site clinic in Switzerland where she had been locked away in a medically-induced, locked-in nightmare. Her cheekbones were sharper, her eyes devoid of the naive warmth that Desmond had so easily exploited.
She was a ghost, resurrected in high definition.
"Vivienne?" Desmond whispered, all the blood draining from his face. He stumbled back a half-step, nearly crushing the train of Sloane’s wedding gown. His mouth opened and closed like a dying fish. "No. No, that's impossible. You're dead. I buried you."
"You buried an empty casket filled with paving stones," Vivienne corrected smoothly, turning her face slightly so the sweeping camera crane could capture her profile. She wanted the world to see the scar. She wanted them to see the unbreakable monster Desmond had forged. "And you paid Dr. Aris in Geneva three million dollars to keep me breathing, but entirely paralyzed. A living corpse. It was a brilliant plan, Desmond. Truly. But you always were terrible at tying up loose ends."
"This is a stunt!" Desmond shouted, his panic spiking. He turned frantically to the audience, his hands raised. "This is a deepfake! A prank! Turn off the cameras! She’s an imposter!"
"An imposter?" Vivienne laughed, the sound sharp and theatrical. "Feel my pulse, Desmond. Come here. Touch my wrist. It is beating a hell of a lot stronger than it was the night you kissed my forehead and told me my empire was in good hands."
"Shut up!" Desmond roared, the veins in his neck bulging. The handsome, composed CEO was rapidly disintegrating. He lunged forward, pointing a trembling finger at her. "I don't know who you are or how much plastic surgery you've had to look like my late fiancée, but you are trespassing!"
"Your late fiancée," Vivienne mused, stepping down from the officiant’s block. She moved with deliberate, terrifying grace, her heels clicking against the marble. "The fiancée who supposedly left you all her voting shares in a handwritten will the night before she died. A will that was legally ratified by the very judges sitting in the fourth row right now. Hello, Judge Harmon."
Judge Harmon, a stout man in his sixties, turned an ashen shade of gray and shrank back into his pew.
Vivienne turned her attention back to Desmond. "I spent the last three years trapped in my own body, Desmond. I could hear everything. I could feel everything. I just couldn't move. I listened to the nurses talk about how Croft Industries’ stock was soaring under your brilliant leadership. I listened to them gossip about your new engagement to the beautiful Sloane Mercer. It gave me a lot of time to think. A lot of time to plan."
"Security!" Desmond screamed, his voice cracking hysterically. He looked wildly around the cathedral, but the heavy-set men in earpieces stationed at the aisles were not moving. "Why aren't you moving?! Arrest this crazy bitch!"
"They aren't moving because they don't work for you anymore," Vivienne said calmly. "I bought out your private security firm at eight o'clock this morning. They are currently on my payroll. And I pay significantly better than you do."
Desmond stared at the guards, horror dawning in his eyes as they stood completely motionless, their hands folded neatly in front of them. He was entirely exposed. The millions of people watching at home, the reporters, the board members—they were all witnessing his unraveling in real-time.
"Cut the feed!" Desmond barked at the broadcast crew stationed in the balcony. "I said cut the damn feed right now! We are experiencing a security breach! This wedding is postponed!"
"I don't think so," a new voice chimed in.
Desmond whipped around.
Sloane Mercer, his beautiful, supposedly brainless socialite bride, was calmly lifting the delicate lace veil over her head. Her face was perfectly made up, her expression utterly bored. She reached into the center of her massive, cascading bouquet of white orchids and pulled out a small, black remote control.
"Sloane, what are you doing?" Desmond demanded, his voice shaking. "Tell them to cut the feed!"
Sloane offered him a devastatingly pragmatic smile. "Why would I do that, Desmond? The lighting in here is fantastic. I look amazing."
She pressed the single red button on the remote.
A heavy, mechanized *thud* echoed through the massive cathedral, followed by the grinding sound of metal gears. The massive, twenty-foot oak doors at the back of the nave slammed shut with a deafening boom. The loud, definitive *clack* of magnetic deadbolts locking into place reverberated through the air.
Panic immediately flared among the guests. Several people stood up, rushing toward the side exits, only to find the heavy brass handles completely unyielding.
"What did you just do?" Desmond hissed, grabbing Sloane by the arm.
Sloane looked down at his hand gripping her lace sleeve. Her sharp-tongued demeanor flared to life, her eyes flashing with pure opportunistic venom. "Let go of me, Desmond, or I will break your fingers."
Desmond snatched his hand back as if he had been burned.
"I locked the doors," Sloane announced, her voice carrying easily through the microphone hidden in her floral arrangement. "And I gave Vivienne the master broadcast codes. The network literally cannot cut the feed unless someone physically climbs the transmission tower downtown and takes an axe to the cables. We're live, darling. And we're going to stay live."
Desmond stumbled backward, his gaze darting between the two women. The ghost of the woman he murdered, and the bride he thought he owned. The trap had been sprung, and the jaws had just snapped completely shut.
Vivienne smoothed the front of her dark robes, her ruthless eyes locking onto Desmond's terrified face.
"You always did love an audience, Desmond," Vivienne said softly. "So let's give them a show."