(Abigale POV)
Dominique' s scream ripped through the ballroom. It wasn't just a scream. It was the sound of a woman watching her future shatter.
On the table, nestled between the other two perfect pairs of sixes, lay my dice. Not two. But three sixes. A trick I' d learned years ago, a slight of hand, a carefully weighted roll. It was a secret, a reflex, a phantom limb of my past life I' d thought I' d amputated.
The room exploded. Whispers turned into shouts. People craned their necks, trying to see.
"How is that possible?" "Three dice?" "She cheated!"
I smiled. A slow, cold smile. A predator' s smile.
They never said two dice, I thought. They just said 'a roll'. And I have unusually small hands. It' s an old trick. A trick I hadn't used in years. But tonight, it felt as natural as breathing.
"The rules were simple," I stated, my voice calm, cutting through the chaos. "Highest roll wins. Three sixes. Eighteen. I believe that makes me the winner."
My gaze swept over them. Holden. Dominique. The stunned faces of the guests. They wanted to cry foul. But the signed agreement, witnessed by lawyers, was ironclad.
I had tried to be the good fiancée. The understanding woman. The one who overlooked the blatant disrespect, the emotional infidelity, the constant devaluing of our relationship in favor of his "best friend." I had endured years of this slow, agonizing bleed. But tonight, they had crossed a line. They had touched something sacred, something irreplaceable. My grandmother' s bracelet. My past. My dignity.
They wanted to play games? Fine. I would show them how a real game was played. And tonight, they were the pawns.
Holden pushed Dominique away with a violent shove. He rushed to the table, his eyes wide with disbelief. He stared at the dice. Then his gaze snapped to me, full of accusation. "Abigale! What did you do?!"
Dominique, looking like a crazed banshee, scrambled to her feet. Her face was contorted with rage. She lunged at me. "You cheated, you bitch! You tricked us!"
I moved without thinking. It was instinct. A slight shift of my body, a graceful turn. Dominique, off balance and fueled by alcohol, missed me completely. She stumbled, tripped over her own feet, and landed in an undignified heap on the opulent ballroom floor. Her expensive dress bunched around her, revealing too much.
I adjusted the cuff of my sleeve, smoothing out an imaginary wrinkle. I looked down at her, a cool, detached gaze.
"Funny," I said, my voice dangerously soft. "When you were winning, it was 'all in good fun.' Now that you've lost, it's 'cheating'? It seems your definition of 'fair play' is rather… flexible."
I didn' t wait for her response. She was a broken doll, thrashing on the floor. I had no time for her theatrics.
I turned to Evelyn, my lawyer. "Evelyn, please initiate the asset transfer immediately. I want Holden's family inheritance, Dominique's business, her Hamptons property, and everything else they foolishly put on that table, transferred into my name by morning."
Evelyn, ever professional, nodded crisply. "Consider it done, Ms. Bennett." She was already making calls, her voice low and efficient.
"And the minor items," I added, looking at the diamond necklace, the sports car keys, and Holden's antique pocket watch. I even glanced at my grandmother's champagne-stained bracelet. "Those can be returned to their original owners. I have no use for trinkets." My eyes lingered on the bracelet. I'll clean you later, Grandma.
"Within twenty-four hours, Evelyn. I want the preliminary transfers complete."
"Yes, Ms. Bennett."
Holden's voice was a raw, choked sound. His face was pale, his eyes hollow. "Abigale... you planned this all along, didn't you? This entire night... was a setup."
I met his gaze. A slow, chilling smile spread across my face. It wasn't a smile of joy, but of cold, hard satisfaction.
"You called it a joke, Holden," I said, my voice devoid of emotion. "A drunken mistake. My feelings were always 'too sensitive,' 'too dramatic.' You stood by while she tried to strip me of every last shred of dignity. You watched her defile my grandmother's memory."
I took a step closer to him. "Did you ever once consider how I felt? When you forgot our anniversary to go to her charity gala? When you left me sick at home to take her to a last-minute concert? When you mocked my dreams, while building hers up? When you left me stranded on the highway on my birthday, because she 'needed' you?"
He flinched with each accusation. His face crumbled.
"I didn't plan for any of this, Holden," I said, my voice rising slightly, a hint of raw emotion finally breaking through. "I simply played the hand I was dealt. You and Dominique, you created this game. I merely won it."
My eyes hardened. "You pushed me. You chose this path. Now, face the consequences. A deal is a deal. You gamble, you lose. Wish I could say it was a pleasure playing with you."
I turned my back on them. On the ruins of my past. I walked away, my heels clicking purposefully on the marble floor.
Behind me, Dominique' s hysterical sobs mingled with Holden' s anguished cries. The murmuring crowd parted for me, their eyes wide, a mixture of shock and awe. The game was over. For them, the real nightmare had just begun.
I took a deep, shuddering breath. My spine was ramrod straight. The air in my lungs felt clean, exhilarating.
The game is over, I thought, a fierce sense of liberation washing over me. But the revenge is just beginning.





