"Crown of Malice: A Second Life of Ashes" Chapter 2

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Chapter 2: A Ghost’s Second Breath

The room felt too small. The air, heavy with the cloying scent of lilies and beeswax, tasted like a tomb.

Isolde sat at her vanity, her reflection staring back at her with eyes that looked painfully young.

The woman in the mirror had not yet seen the executioner’s axe, nor had she spent three years rotting in the damp, rat-infested dungeons beneath the High Temple.

Her skin was supple, her hair a cascade of dark, glossy silk, and her neck… her neck was whole.

No jagged, phantom memory of steel, only the soft pulsing of a vein.

She reached out, her hand hovering over a silver-backed hairbrush. She didn't pick it up. Instead, she stared at the glass, forcing her erratic pulse to slow.

The panic of the scaffold was receding, leaving behind a cold, sharp-edged clarity that felt like a surgical blade.

I am alive.

She repeated it to herself, not as a prayer, but as a tactical assessment. She had been sent back—to the eve of the engagement ball.

The night her fate had been sealed by a dance, a smile, and a poisoned cup.

The door creaked open, and Elara entered, carrying a heavy, embroidered gown of ivory and gold.

The maid’s head was bowed, her movements practiced and subservient. Isolde watched her through the mirror, her eyes narrowing as she recalled the exact moment Elara had slipped the sedative into her tea in her previous life.

"The Duke has sent word, My Lady," Elara whispered, not meeting her eyes.

"He says he is counting the minutes until he sees you in the ballroom. He’s requested you wear the sapphire necklace he gifted you."

The sapphire.

The necklace hadn't been a gift; it had been a shackle, laced with a slow-acting nerve agent that had dulled her senses just enough for Valerius to maneuver her into signing away the Vane family’s mining rights.

"The sapphire is... too heavy," Isolde said, her voice sounding strange to her own ears—softer, lighter, stripped of the jagged exhaustion she had worn for years. She stood, the movement graceful, calculated.

"Bring me the emeralds instead. The ones from my mother’s estate."

Elara hesitated, a flicker of genuine confusion crossing her face.

"But, My Lady, the Duke insisted—"

"I am the one who will be dancing, Elara," Isolde cut her off. Her voice wasn't loud, but it possessed a weight that caused the maid to recoil.

"I suggest you see to the emeralds immediately."

As Elara hurried out, Isolde walked to the window.

The capital sprawled beneath her, glittering like a pile of spilled jewels. It was a beautiful, decadent lie.

She felt a phantom chill on her skin, a reminder of the crowd’s roar. They had loved her, then loathed her, and finally, they had cheered for her blood.

Never again.

She reached into the folds of her robe, pulling out a small, jagged piece of metal she had hidden beneath the floorboards of her closet. It was a seal—the signet ring of Captain Thorne.

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He was currently stationed at the Northern Watch, a man of iron-willed integrity whom Valerius had ordered ‘relocated’ just days before the execution to ensure there were no guards left in the palace who might attempt a rescue.

If she could get word to Thorne, he would be her foundation. He was the only man in this entire rotten city who valued honor over gold.

She turned back to the vanity, her heart beating with a rhythm of cold, methodical malice.

She needed to craft a trap. Not a clumsy, desperate attempt at survival, but a surgical strike. If Valerius wanted a ball, she would give him a funeral for his reputation.

She pulled a heavy, cream-colored invitation from the desk—the official guest list for the ball. Her fingers traced the elegant calligraphy of the Duke’s name.

A thought struck her, sudden and jarring.

In her previous life, the guest list had been finalized three days before the ball.

Tonight, however, she noticed a name she didn't recognize: Lord Vane of the Southern Isles. Her father had been an only child. There was no Lord Vane of the Southern Isles.

Her brow furrowed. A discrepancy. Was this merely a shift in the timeline caused by her return? Or was there another presence here—a ghost like herself, tugging at the threads of fate?

The idea that she might not be the only one playing with fire sent a shiver of excitement, not fear, down her spine. If someone else was resetting the pieces, they were either her greatest ally or her most dangerous competitor.

She didn't have time to ponder it. She had a ball to attend, and a reputation to dismantle.

Isolde picked up a silver quill, her grip firm. She flipped the invitation over to the blank, heavy cardstock on the back.

She didn't write a message. Instead, she pressed her thumbnail into the paper, dragging it in a sharp, brutal stroke that left a jagged, white-edged line—a mark that looked eerily like the scar she had expected to find on her throat.

It was a sign—the mark of the Vane family’s secret defiance, a code Thorne would recognize as an immediate summons.

She stared at the mark, her reflection in the mirror appearing alien. She wasn't the girl who loved Valerius anymore.

That girl had been an accessory, a decoration for his mantle. This woman was the hand that held the match.

"Everything," she whispered to the empty room, her voice a low, dangerous vow, "will be burned down to the roots."

She stood, adjusting the velvet robe, her posture radiating a lethal grace. The engagement ball was meant to be the start of her ascension. Instead, she would ensure it was the beginning of Valerius’s long, agonizing descent.

She could almost feel the weight of the crown she would eventually take—not the one he had tried to put on her head, but the one she would carve out of the ashes of his ruin.

Elara returned, her breath hitched, the emeralds clutched in her hands like stolen treasure.

"My Lady, the dress is ready. The carriage is waiting."

Isolde turned, her eyes burning with a cold, terrifying fire. She took the emeralds, her touch lingering on the maid’s wrist.

She saw the maid shudder under her gaze, a primal reaction to the sudden, predatory sharpness radiating from the Lady she thought she knew.

"Good," Isolde said, a smile pulling at her lips—a smile that didn't reach her eyes.

"Let us go and greet our guests. I wouldn't want the Duke to wait a second longer than necessary to see his own demise."

She walked past the maid, the fabric of her robe swishing against the floor with the sound of a closing trap.

The path ahead was dark, and the ghosts of her past were screaming, but for the first time in two lifetimes, Isolde was finally, truly, free.

The ball began tonight.

And she was going to tear the mask off the world, one piece of skin at a time.

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