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Chapter 1

2:47 PM. Millfield County Courthouse.

The wooden benches groaned under the weight of broken dreams.

Judge Harrison adjusted his wire-rimmed glasses, voice echoing through the courtroom: "Ms. Carter, for the final time—do you believe your marriage to Officer Henderson is irretrievably broken?"

Emily's gaze locked onto Jake's sleeve.

That dark crimson stain he'd missed while washing up.

Blood.

Sarah's blood.

Memory exploded like a dam bursting—gunshots echoing through this very courthouse parking lot, Sarah's body crumpling to the asphalt, those bright eyes dimming forever as Jake stood over her with his service weapon still smoking...

Emily thought, "I'm back. Holy Christ, I'm actually back."

"This is the second time I've sat in this exact courtroom. The second time Judge Harrison has asked me this exact question. The second time I've seen that bloodstain on Jake's sleeve."

"But last time, I was too broken to notice. Too terrified to look. I said yes—yes, the marriage was broken—and walked out to find Sarah waiting by her car with evidence that could have saved us both."

"Last time, Jake put three bullets in Sarah's chest before I could even scream."

"Last time, I died knowing I'd failed her."

Emily's heart hammered against her ribs. The same ribs Jake had cracked two weeks ago—or was it two weeks ago in another life?

Time felt fluid, reality shifting like quicksand.

She remembered dying. The cold spreading through her chest as Jake's final bullet found its mark. The taste of blood in her mouth. The regret that burned brighter than the pain.

But somehow, impossibly, she was here again. Given a second chance.

This time would be different.

"Ms. Carter?" Judge Harrison's voice sharpened with impatience.

Emily slowly raised her head, voice trembling but steel-cold underneath: "Your Honor, I'm just thinking... about how to make him pay."

The courtroom fell silent as a grave.

Judge Harrison blinked, clearly misunderstanding: "I appreciate your concern regarding asset division. The court will ensure equitable distribution."

Jake smiled smugly from the defendant's table, thinking she'd buckled under pressure again.

Emily's hand instinctively moved to her ribs where Jake had kicked her last Tuesday. The bruises were hidden beneath her long-sleeved blouse, but the rage was burning bright and clean.

"Wrong, you bastard. So fucking wrong."


Fifteen years earlier. Rain hammering the trailer's thin roof.

Six-year-old Emily crouched in the bedroom closet, watching through the crack as her stepfather Robert—drunk again in his deputy's uniform—raised his nightstick above her mother's cowering form.

"Please, Bobby, Emily's sleeping—"

The nightstick came down with a wet thud.

"Don't you ever embarrass me in front of the sheriff again, you worthless bitch!"

Another blow. Her mother's scream cut short.

Emily bit her lip until it bled, desperate not to make a sound that would draw his attention.

Three days later, as her mother lay dying in the county hospital, she gripped Emily's small hand with surprising strength.

She said, "Emily... don't be like me... don't give up..."

Emily responded, "Mommy, I don't understand..."

"Promise me..." Emily's mother whispered. "Never... give up... fight back..."

The memory dissolved as Judge Harrison's gavel cracked like a gunshot.

Emily murmured, "I understand now, Mom. Finally, I understand."


"Given the apparent reconciliation attempt, this court will postpone proceedings pending counseling. Dismissed."

Outside the courtroom, afternoon sunlight streamed through tall windows, casting long shadows across the marble floor.

Jake stood surrounded by his fellow officers, basking in their congratulations.

"Jake, you're a goddamn saint. Most guys would've walked away by now."

"She's just been through a lot," Jake replied with practiced humility. "Emily needs support, not abandonment."

What a performance.

Sarah Williams waited near the courthouse steps, professional composure cracking to reveal raw disappointment. She'd driven three hours from the county social services office, thinking this was Emily's moment of freedom.

"Em, please tell me you didn't just..." Sarah's voice broke slightly.

Emily approached slowly, gripping Sarah's hand: "Sarah, I know how this looks—"

"If you're going to forgive him again, I honestly don't know how else to help you." Sarah's frustration was palpable.

But Emily squeezed tighter: "Trust me. This time is different."

Sarah stared, startled by the fierce determination blazing in Emily's eyes—something she'd never seen before.

Without another word, Sarah pressed a folded paper into Emily's palm, shaped like a origami star: "Emergency contacts. And... other things. Just in case."


Sunset painted the sky blood-orange. Windows rolled up tight, creating a sanctuary of silence.

Emily carefully unfolded the paper star with trembling fingers.

[Evidence inventory:

Photo file numbers. Medical record dates. Names of other victims. Audio recordings of Jake threatening colleagues. Bank records showing financial abuse patterns.]

"Jesus Christ, Sarah..." Emily whispered. "You've been building a case."

"Emily, you okay? You look... I don't know, different somehow," Sarah asked, worry etched across her face.

"I'm better than okay. I'm awake," Emily responded, tears streaming but voice steady as granite.

Sarah said, "You're scaring me a little. What are you planning?"

"Something my mother couldn't do." Emily stared toward the distant mountains.

She turned to face Sarah directly: "If I told you I know exactly how to destroy Jake Henderson, would you help me?"

Sarah's eyes widened: "Emily, what are you talking about? What do you mean 'destroy'?"

Emily replied, "I mean expose him for what he really is. Not just to save me—to save every woman in this town he's terrorized."

She clutched the evidence list like a lifeline: "You've been preparing for war, Sarah. Now I'm ready to fight."

Sarah nodded slowly, hope sparking in her expression: "Tell me what you need."

Thunder rumbled across the darkening prairie sky.

Emily watched Jake's patrol car pull out of the courthouse lot, his silhouette visible through the rear window. Her gaze shifted from victim to predator in the span of a heartbeat.

She whispered: "This time, I write the rules."

Last lifetime, she was the prey.

This lifetime, she'd be the hunter.

Let the reckoning begin.

Emily pressed her mother's dying words into her heart like a blade: Never give up. Fight back.

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