The telegram arrived on a gray Tuesday morning, delivered by a boy whose hands shook as he passed it to Faith. I watched from the drawing room window as she read it, saw her shoulders crumple like paper in flame.
"Miss Winter." Her voice was barely a whisper. "Your father... he's gone."
The words reached me as if through water. Gone. The single syllable echoed in the hollow space where my heart used to be. "What do you mean, gone?"
"Heart failure, they say. In his cell last night." Faith's weathered face was streaked with tears. "The prison doctor... he won't allow visitors. Says the body's already been prepared for burial."
I stood frozen by the window, watching carriages roll past in their endless parade of normalcy while my world crumbled to ash. Father was dead. Dead before he could clear his name, before the truth could emerge from whatever web of lies had trapped him.
The coldness in my veins turned to ice, spreading through every fiber of my being. This was no coincidence. The timing, the convenient heart failure, the refusal to let me see him—it reeked of the same calculated cruelty that had orchestrated his arrest.
"I need to go to the courthouse," I said, my voice strange and distant to my own ears.
"Miss, you're in no condition—"
"Now, Faith."
The courthouse steps were cold marble beneath my knees, but I barely felt them. What was physical discomfort compared to the agony tearing through my soul? I had dressed carefully in black silk, my father's watch pinned to my breast like armor, and now I knelt before the pillars of justice that had failed him so completely.
"I demand an investigation into my father's death," I called to the magistrates passing by. "Marcus Montgomery was murdered to silence the truth."
Most hurried past, averting their eyes from the spectacle of a society lady kneeling in the street. But I remained, my voice growing hoarse as I repeated my plea hour after hour. The sun traced its arc across the sky, shadows shifting around me like the hands of a clock marking my vigil.
By evening, my knees were numb, my throat raw. Faith appeared with a shawl and a cup of tea, but I waved them away. "I won't eat or drink until they listen," I whispered. "Until they reopen his case."
"Miss Winter, please. You'll make yourself ill."
"I'm already dying, Faith." The truth fell from my lips like drops of poison. "Whatever they've done to me, it's killing me slowly. But I won't let Father's name remain tarnished. Not while I still draw breath."
The second day brought rain that soaked through my dress and chilled me to the bone. Court officials stepped carefully around me, their polished shoes splashing through puddles that reflected my pale face. Some whispered among themselves—that poor Montgomery girl, driven mad by grief. Others simply pretended I didn't exist.
But I remained. Through the downpour and the curious stares of passersby, through the growing weakness in my limbs and the terrible cold spreading through my chest. My father's watch ticked steadily against my heart, each second a promise I would not break.
It was during the third evening that Rosalie struck.
I had been kneeling for nearly seventy-two hours when Faith brought word of a gathering at the Ashford estate—some charity function where New York's elite would display their wealth while pretending to care for the less fortunate. Under normal circumstances, I would have attended. Now, the very thought of their false smiles and whispered gossip made my stomach turn.
"You should go," I told Faith. "Someone needs to represent the Montgomery name with dignity."
What I didn't know was that Rosalie had been waiting for exactly this opportunity.
The next morning brought Vincent Shaw, the courthouse magistrate, his round face creased with concern as he approached my vigil. "Mrs. Williamson, there's been... an incident. At the Ashford gathering last night."
I raised my head, every muscle screaming in protest. "What kind of incident?"
"Your husband's sister, Miss Jensen. She claims you attacked her. Pushed her into the fountain when she tried to offer you comfort about your father's passing." His eyes were kind but troubled. "Multiple witnesses saw the altercation."
The words hit me like physical blows. "That's impossible. I've been here for three days. Faith can attest—"
"Miss Jensen says it happened before your vigil began. That you've been... unstable since your father's arrest. Acting violently toward anyone who tries to help."
I stared at him, understanding dawning like a cold sunrise. Rosalie had planned this perfectly. While I knelt here fighting for my father's honor, she had been weaving a web of lies to paint me as a madwoman, a violent wife who couldn't be trusted or believed.
"Magistrate Shaw," I said, my voice steady despite the tremor in my hands. "I give you my word as Marcus Montgomery's daughter—I have not left these steps. Whatever Miss Jensen claims happened is a fabrication designed to discredit me and silence my demands for justice."
He studied my face for a long moment, taking in my hollow cheeks, my rain-soaked dress, the determination burning in my eyes despite my obvious frailty. "Three days," he murmured. "You've truly been here three days?"
"Three days and three nights. Ask anyone who works in this building. They've seen me here, refusing food and water, demanding only that you investigate the circumstances of my father's death."
Something shifted in his expression—doubt giving way to a grudging respect. "Very well, Mrs. Williamson. Your... dedication has been noted. I'll order a review of your father's case and the circumstances surrounding his death."
The victory felt hollow, tainted by Rosalie's latest manipulation. But it was a start. As I finally allowed Faith to help me to my feet, my legs shaking like a newborn foal's, I knew the battle was far from over.
Rosalie had shown her hand, revealing the depths of her cruelty and cunning. But she had also made a mistake—she had underestimated my will to survive, to fight, to expose the truth no matter the cost.
The war for my father's honor, for my own survival, had only just begun.
Vincent Shaw stood before me on those courthouse steps, his round face etched with something I hadn't seen in days—genuine respect. The morning sun cast long shadows across the marble, and I could feel every bruise on my knees, every ache in my bones from three days of kneeling.
"Mrs. Williamson," he said quietly, "your dedication has moved me. I will order a full investigation into your father's death and the evidence used against him."
Relief flooded through me, so powerful I nearly collapsed. Faith steadied my elbow, her weathered hands warm against my frozen skin.
"And the divorce?" My voice cracked on the word. "I filed the papers before I came here."
Shaw's expression shifted, sympathy mixing with concern. "I'll expedite the proceedings. However..." He hesitated, pulling a folder from beneath his arm. "Your husband has filed counter-claims. He's alleging mental instability, citing the incident at the Ashford estate and your current... state."
Of course Scott had. Every move calculated, every escape route blocked before I could even find it. "Magistrate Shaw, I am many things right now—grieving, angry, desperate for justice. But I am not insane."
"I believe you." His words were simple but carried weight. "The divorce will proceed. But be prepared for Mr. Williamson to fight this with everything he has."
Faith helped me into the carriage, my legs barely supporting my weight. As we rolled through the streets toward the Montgomery estate—my father's house, now mine alone—I felt the cold in my chest pulse with renewed intensity, as if something knew I was getting closer to freedom and refused to let me have it.
The estate loomed before us, its familiar stone facade now seeming foreign and hostile. Something was wrong. I could sense it before we even reached the door.
The lock had been forced, wood splintered around the brass mechanism. Faith sucked in a sharp breath, but I pushed past her into the entrance hall.
Chaos greeted us. Drawers pulled from Father's study desk, papers scattered like autumn leaves across Persian rugs, shelves emptied and their contents strewn about with deliberate violence. But this wasn't random destruction—someone had been searching for something specific.
"Miss Winter, we should leave. Call the police—"
"No." I moved through the wreckage, my trained eye catching the pattern beneath the chaos. Father's financial ledgers were gone. His personal correspondence, vanished. But lying prominently on his desk, as if waiting to be discovered, were documents I'd never seen before.
I picked up the top sheet with trembling fingers. It was a ledger entry in handwriting that looked disturbingly like Father's, detailing transfers of funds to offshore accounts. Below it, more papers—falsified contracts, forged signatures, a meticulously constructed web of lies designed to prove every accusation against him.
"This is what they wanted," I whispered. "Not to steal evidence, but to plant it."
Faith stood in the doorway, her face pale. "But miss, who would—"
"The same people who killed him." The truth sat heavy as stones in my stomach. "They staged this break-in to make it look like I did it. Another sign of my supposed instability, another piece of evidence Scott can use to discredit me."
I thought of Rosalie's triumph at the Ashford estate, her calculated lies about my attack on her. This was her work, her poison spreading through everything I had left.
The confrontation with Scott came that evening. I found him in his study, surrounded by leather-bound books and expensive whiskey, looking every inch the respectable gentleman. The sight of him made bile rise in my throat.
"The Montgomery estate was broken into today," I said without preamble. "How convenient that it happened just as the investigation into Father's death was approved."
He didn't even pretend surprise. "These things happen, Winter. Perhaps you should increase security."
"Stop." The word came out sharp as broken glass. "Stop pretending. Stop lying. I know what you're doing."
Something flickered in his dark eyes—calculation giving way to something colder, more honest. He set down his whiskey glass with deliberate care.
"Do you?" He studied me the way one might examine an insect pinned to a board. "Do you truly understand what's happening here?"
"You're destroying me. You and Rosalie. For what? Money? My father's business connections?"
Scott laughed, the sound devoid of warmth. "Your blessed fortune, Winter. That's what this has always been about." He moved toward me, and I forced myself not to retreat. "You were born with something precious, something rare—a fortune so blessed it practically glows. Did you think I married you for love?"
The casual cruelty of it stole my breath. "Then why go through with the wedding at all?"
"Because the ritual requires a bond of marriage. Blood ties, sacred vows—they anchor the magic that will transfer your fortune to someone who truly deserves it." His voice dropped to something almost tender. "Rosalie is dying, Winter. She has been since we were children. Your blessed fortune is the only thing that can save her."
"So you're killing me instead." The words fell between us like stones into still water. "My suffering, my father's death—all of it just... necessary sacrifices?"
"For true love." Scott's expression held no remorse, only grim determination. "Yes. You'll understand someday, when you love someone enough to do anything—sacrifice anything—to keep them alive."
I stared at this monster wearing my husband's face, finally seeing him clearly. "I already loved someone that much," I whispered. "My father. And you murdered him."
Scott turned back to his whiskey, dismissing me with the gesture. "Your divorce will be denied, Winter. I've made certain of it. You're my wife, and you'll remain so until the ritual is complete. Fighting only prolongs your suffering."
I left his study on unsteady legs, the cold in my chest spreading like frost across glass. But beneath the chill, something else was growing—not warmth exactly, but a burning determination that refused to be extinguished.
They had taken everything from me. My health, my father, my freedom. But they hadn't taken my will to survive, to fight back, to make them pay for every moment of suffering they'd inflicted.
The war wasn't over. It had barely begun.