Chapter 1
The day I won the competition, my sister's heart "failed," and she could never stand again.
From that moment, she claimed all the favoritism.
Looking at my wall of honors, she sat in her wheelchair, heartbroken: "Chloe is so amazing, unlike me—just a burden who could die any moment."
My brother's heart ached for her. He grabbed a baseball bat and smashed all my trophies to pieces, defending her honor.
When I was selected as dance troupe captain, tears streamed down her face: "If I hadn't gotten sick, could I have shined on the Lincoln Center stage too?"
My parents turned to scold me for showing off, drugging me before the audition and ruining my chances.
Later, she had a breakdown and went live on Instagram, swallowing pills while sobbing that she didn't deserve love.
My childhood sweetheart, my fiancé, rushed to her side immediately. He dropped to one knee and slipped my diamond engagement ring onto her finger.
Later, I was killed by an armed robber. As I lay dying, I made one last desperate call for help.
He hung up impatiently:
"Mia needs me to hold her hand during her IV treatment. Stop being so fucking unreasonable!"
When I opened my eyes again, I was back to the day my sister's heart "failed."
…
The phantom burn of a .38 caliber bullet tearing through my chest vanished, replaced by a violent, desperate intake of air.
I choked, bracing for the hot, metallic taste of my own blood. Instead, I inhaled the sterile, lavender-scented oxygen of the Hastings estate living room. My hands slapped against the imported hardwood floor, trembling. No blood. No bullet hole.
"A useless girl in a wheelchair doesn't deserve a genius sister like Chloe," a voice whimpered.
I snapped my head up. Mia.
She buried her tear-streaked face into Mom’s pristine cashmere sweater, playing the ultimate victim. Mom stroked her hair, glaring at me from across the room.
My pulse hammered a chaotic, deafening rhythm against my eardrums. I knew this day. I knew the exact script. Today was the day the Juilliard acceptance letter arrived in my inbox. And today was the day Mia was scheduled to "collapse" from sudden, tragic heart failure.
My mind violently cycled through the fallout of my past life. Hours from now, the doctors would diagnose her with severe myocardial damage. They would hand her a death sentence that instantly became my lifelong prison. Mia weaponized every gasp of air she took.
She used to stare at my dance trophies, her eyes pooling with manufactured tears. "If I wasn't sick, Chloe... do you think I could stand on the Lincoln Center stage too?" she would ask, her voice trembling with calculated fragility.
The very next morning, my brother Tyler took a baseball bat to my glass display case. He smashed eighteen years of my blood, sweat, and torn ligaments into shattered glass and twisted metal. "You're constantly rubbing your health in her face!" he had screamed, standing over the ruins of my life's work.
It didn't stop there. When I made dance captain, my parents decided my spotlight was pushing Mia closer to the grave. The morning of my SATs, Mom slipped crushed Ambien into my breakfast smoothie. I blacked out at the testing center. My Ivy League prospects burned to the ground. My Juilliard dream was ripped from my hands.
And my family? They justified my destruction under the guise of morality.
"If you hadn't insisted on that stupid conservatory, Mia wouldn't have exhausted herself trying to support you!" Mom had shrieked at me. "You owe her your life!"
My fiancé, Liam, stood shoulder-to-shoulder with them. He looked at me with pure disgust, calling me a cold-blooded monster. He completely ignored the fact that Mia’s "exhaustion" came from popping Adderall and binge-watching Netflix until dawn.
I gave up everything to keep the peace. I quit dancing. I stayed home. And for my sacrifice, Mia took Liam.
She went on Instagram Live, holding a bottle of painkillers. "I'm just a burden to everyone," she cried to her thousands of followers, staring directly into the camera. "I don't deserve love."
Liam sprinted to her apartment like a rabid dog. He crashed her livestream, dropped to one knee, and shoved my diamond engagement ring onto her finger. In his frantic rush to play the white knight for the internet, he left my front door wide open.
That open door invited the armed robber inside.
I fought back. I clawed and kicked until the gun went off. Bleeding out on my own rug, my vision fading to black, I hit Liam’s number on speed dial.
He answered on the third ring. "Mia needs me to hold her hand for her IV, Chloe! Stop being so fucking unreasonable!"
Click.
I died staring at the ceiling, entirely alone.
But my consciousness didn't fade. I floated above my own mangled corpse, paralyzed in the sterile air, just in time to watch my killer pull a burner phone from his jacket.
"Transfer the fifty grand," the masked man grunted. "Flawless, just like last time."
"Perfect." Mia’s voice echoed through the tinny speaker. Crisp. Steady. Entirely alive.
There was no heart failure. There was no wheelchair. It was all a meticulously crafted medical fraud. She faked a terminal illness to steal my life, my fiancé, and my future, orchestrating my murder simply because she hated watching me shine.
My nails dug into my palms so hard they broke the skin. I blinked, the memory of my bleeding corpse fading into the reality of the present. I was eighteen again. I was alive.
Mia continued her pathetic sobbing in Mom’s arms. "I just... I just want Chloe to be happy. Even if I'm broken."
Rage, hot and blinding, surged through my veins. I didn't feel an ounce of sadness. I didn't care about their twisted family dynamics or their desperate need to tear me down. The pathetic guilt that chained me down in my past life evaporated, leaving behind a violent, crystal-clear hunger to rip their lives apart piece by piece.
I stared at Mia's shaking shoulders, a cold, sharp smile slowly creeping onto my face.
They wanted a villain? Fine. I would give them a nightmare.
