They saw a vacant, docile shell, not the woman who spent every waking moment meticulously planning their ruin. They thought they had extinguished the fire.
At a party meant to celebrate their victory, Kelly held up a dog collar studded with cheap rhinestones.
"Wear this," she cooed, "and you can have your mother's watch back."
I dropped to my knees and barked. They thought it was my final, crushing humiliation; it was the beginning of their end.
Chapter 1
My fiancé' s screams were the sweetest sound I had ever heard as the Hamptons beach house exploded behind me, painting the night sky with a brutal, orange glow.
The heat licked at my back, but it felt like a caress compared to the ice in my veins. Elias McIntosh stumbled out onto the sand, his expensive suit singed, his face contorted in a mask of disbelief and pain. Kelly Klein, my adopted sister, was right behind him, her designer gown ripped, her perfect blonde hair smoking at the ends. They looked like creatures from a nightmare, and for the first time in years, I felt awake.
The guests, once laughing and clinking champagne glasses, were a frantic scattering of shadows against the inferno. Their shrieks blended with the roar of the fire, a symphony of chaos that suited my mood perfectly. Elias looked at me, his eyes wide with a terror that was almost comical.
"Christy! What have you done?" he shrieked, his voice raw.
I watched him, my breath coming in short, even bursts. The salty air filled my lungs, carrying the scent of burning wood and regret. I had loved him. I had given him everything.
"What I had to," I said, my voice barely a whisper, yet it cut through the din.
He took a step towards me, then another, his hands reaching out as if to grab me. His face was a contorted mess, fear warring with anger.
"You're insane! You burned it all down!" he accused, pointing a trembling finger at the raging fire. The flames illuminated his panic, making his handsome features ugly.
Kelly finally found her voice, a sharp, piercing sound that grated on my nerves. "She's sick, Elias! She needs help! She always has!" Her words were laced with a false concern that I recognized immediately. It was the same tone she used when she wanted something for herself, wrapped in a sugary coating of false sympathy.
My eyes narrowed, the heat from the fire doing little to warm the coldness that had settled deep within me. My heart hammered, not from fear, but from a fierce, exhilarating sense of release. This was the opening I needed. This was the beginning of their end.
Elias, forever the manipulator, was already shifting gears, his fear quickly replaced by a calculated rage. "She's unstable! A danger to herself and others!" he yelled, turning to the horrified guests, some of whom were pulling out their phones, ready to record the spectacle. "She had a breakdown! A complete psychotic episode!"
The emergency sirens began to wail in the distance, a fitting soundtrack to the destruction. Elias saw his opportunity, his eyes glinting with a familiar, predatory light. He gestured wildly towards the burning mansion, then back at me, a picture of a distraught fiancé trying to protect society from his deranged bride-to-be.
"I tried to help her! I tried to get her treatment!" he shouted, his voice cracking with feigned emotion. "But she refused! Now look what she's done!"
My gaze swept over the faces in the crowd. Disbelief, fear, pity. None of them, not a single one, saw the truth. They only saw the daughter of Norton Dynamics, surrounded by flames, looking utterly unhinged. I let them. It was all part of the plan.
When the paramedics and police arrived, Elias was already there, playing the grieving victim. He held Kelly close, whispering frantically in her ear. She nodded, her eyes wide and tearful, a perfect picture of innocent shock.
"She's been struggling for a long time," Elias told the officers, his voice dripping with sorrow. "Deep-seated trauma. My heart breaks for her, truly. But she needs professional help. Immediate, intensive care."
He pulled out a stack of papers from his inside pocket, miraculously untouched by the fire. "I have power of attorney. She signed it, right before... before things got really bad. She trusted me to do what was best for her."
He passed the documents to the bewildered officer, who glanced at them, then at me. My name, Christy Norton, was clearly visible on the papers. The officer looked back at Elias, then at my blank face. I offered no resistance, no explanation. Just a vacant stare.
They escorted me away, not in handcuffs, but with a gentle, firm grip on my arms, like a child being led to time-out. The world blurred around me, the flashing lights of emergency vehicles, the hushed whispers of the onlookers, Elias's sorrowful gaze. It was a performance, and I was playing my role perfectly.
My "treatment" began almost immediately. The "wellness" facility was a private institution, hidden deep in the woods, far from prying eyes. They called it a sanctuary, a place for healing. It was a prison. A gilded cage where they systematically stripped away everything that made me Christy Norton.
The first few months were a haze of sedatives, forced therapy sessions, and a relentless assault on my mind. They told me I was broken, that my memories were delusions, that my anger was a symptom of my illness. They tried to rewrite my past, to make me believe that Elias and Kelly were my saviors, not my tormentors.
But deep inside, a tiny, unyielding ember still glowed. It was the memory of their betrayal, of Elias's cold eyes when he told me he never loved me, of Kelly's smirk when she confessed to stealing everything I held dear. That ember was my truth, and it burned hotter with every indignity, every lie.
Four years. Four years of silence, of forced smiles, of learning to play the part of the compliant patient. Four years of planning. Four years of honing the monster they thought they were creating.
When the day finally came for my release, I walked out a phantom of my former self. My clothes hung loosely on my frame, my skin was pale, and my eyes, once bright with ambition and joy, were now opaque, devoid of any discernible emotion. I looked docile, broken. Exactly what they wanted to see.
Elias and Kelly were waiting for me, their faces carefully composed into expressions of relief and tenderness. They stood by a sleek black limousine, an emblem of the life they had stolen from me. Elias, looking even more polished and arrogant than I remembered. Kelly, radiating a smug satisfaction she barely bothered to hide.
"Christy, sweetheart," Elias said, stepping forward, his arms open. His words were a sickeningly sweet melody of deceit. "We're so glad you're back. We missed you."
I offered him a small, vacant smile, a perfected gesture of a woman stripped of her will. I didn't return his embrace, just stood there, letting him pat my shoulder awkwardly.
Kelly stepped in then, her arm linked through his, her gaze sweeping over me with a possessive air. "It's been so long, sis," she cooed, her voice saccharine. "We've been so worried about you."
Her eyes flickered down to my hand, then back up to my face, a triumphant gleam in them. On her left ring finger, sparkling like a stolen star, was my engagement ring. The one Elias had given me, the one that had been passed down through generations of Norton women. She wore it like a trophy.
"You look so much better, Christy," Kelly continued, a slight, knowing smile playing on her lips. "The facility really did wonders. Remember all those... episodes you used to have? All that anger?" She paused, letting the implication hang in the air. "Now you're so calm. So... manageable."
My gaze remained fixed on the ring, then slowly lifted to meet Kelly's eyes. I saw the triumph, the gloating, the certainty of her victory. She thought she had won. They both did. They thought they had extinguished the fire they had started.
I looked at Elias, then at Kelly, a silent promise forming in the depths of my mind. They had taken everything. My company, my reputation, my sanity. They had carved me up and left me for dead. But they forgot one thing. A phoenix doesn't die in the flames. It's reborn from them.
My silence stretched, a carefully constructed void that they mistook for compliance. Inside, a storm was brewing, cold and precise. Every insult, every hour of forced medication, every tear I couldn't shed, had been meticulously cataloged, each a fuel for the inferno I was about to unleash.
They wanted a broken woman. They had one. A broken woman with a plan so intricate, so brutal, it would make their betrayal look like a child's prank. This was not the end of my suffering; it was the beginning of theirs. And I, Christy Norton, was ready to conduct the symphony of their ruin.
"I just want to go home," I said, my voice soft, almost childlike. It was a lie. I wanted to watch their world burn. And I would.