Chapter 21 – Chains of Vengeance
Clarissa’s POV
I could still hear the sound of the wine glass breaking. The way it shattered on the marble floor of the dining room echoed in my mind like a cruel reminder of what had just happened.
Brian walked out on me.
Me.
Clarissa stone.
No one walks out on me.
I stood in front of the mirror in my room now, my evening dress still clinging to me, a perfect sapphire silk that shimmered under the lights, but all I could see was how pathetic it looked. I had chosen this dress with him in mind. I had styled my hair into loose waves because I knew he liked it that way. I smiled, laughed, touched his hand at the table, God, I had done everything right.
And yet, when the time came, he looked at me with those cold, unyielding eyes and ended it. Just like that.
My hands clenched into fists at my sides. The mirror reflected not the flawless woman I had been trained to be, but someone undone, someone vulnerable. And I hated it.
With a furious cry, I snatched the vase from my nightstand and hurled it across the room. The porcelain shattered against the wall, shards scattering across the floor. My chest rose and fell, my breath ragged, but the rage inside me didn’t ease. I wanted to scream until the walls themselves cracked.
How dare he.
How dare he throw me aside for… for what?
Her.
Alice.
The name slithered into my mind like poison, bitter and burning.
I remembered the way she looked at him, those quiet stares she thought no one noticed. I noticed. I noticed everything. She had always been there, lurking in the shadows, the poor little scholarship girl who thought she could breathe the same air as us. I should have crushed her the moment I saw the way Brian’s gaze lingered. I should have ended her chances before they even began.
Now it was too late for prevention. Now it was about war.
I paced across my room, heels clicking sharply against the polished wood. My hands shook, not from weakness but from the fury clawing at me. Alice thought she was clever. Sweet. Untouchable because she had Sophie by her side, with that sharp tongue and influential family. But Sophie’s jokes wouldn’t save Alice from me.
Not anymore.
Brian’s voice echoed again in my head, calm but firm as he pushed his chair back and rose from the dinner table. I can’t do this anymore, Clarissa. This arrangement, this facade, it’s over.
Over.
The word cut deeper than a blade.
I had given him everything. My loyalty, my time, my love. Love that had stretched since we were teenagers, since the first time I realized he wasn’t just another boy but someone worth chasing. I had fought for his attention, molded myself into the perfect daughter, the perfect fiancée, the perfect woman.
And he threw me away for her.
I stopped pacing and gripped the edge of my vanity until my knuckles whitened. The face in the mirror was streaked now, makeup smudged from angry tears I hadn’t realized had fallen. I swore under my breath and reached for a tissue, scrubbing at my cheeks. I would not let him reduce me to this.
He could choose her. He could humiliate me. But he would regret it.
I moved to my wardrobe, flinging the doors open, the soft scent of expensive perfumes and fabrics wafting out. My fingers trailed over dresses, silk, satin, lace—all weapons in their own way. My mother always told me appearance was half the battle. “Power,” she said, “is as much about perception as it is about reality.”
And I knew exactly what reality I wanted Alice to face.
She thought she could walk around school with that innocence, pretending she wasn’t involved, pretending she wasn’t seducing him with her doe-eyed stares. Well, innocence only works if no one is looking for the dirt beneath it. And I would make sure the entire campus saw her for what she was.
A homewrecker.
A nobody who thought she could play in our world.
I reached for a fresh dress, slipping into something more comfortable, something that let me move freely. Then I tore the sapphire silk from my body and threw it to the floor, grinding the heel of my shoe against the fabric. “You were supposed to be my victory,” I hissed at it, like the dress could answer for my pain.
For a moment I just stood there, staring at the mess I had made. Shards of porcelain on the floor, the ruined gown, my reflection still trembling with fury. And yet beneath it all, there was something else. Something sharper than rage.
Resolve.
Brian could think he was done with me. He could tell himself he didn’t care about the partnership between our families, about the decades of power and influence that bound us. But he was lying to himself. He would care when everything he worked for crumbled. He would care when Alice was dragged through the mud so deep she’d choke on it.
He’d come back.
They always came back.
And if he didn’t… then at least I would destroy the little distraction that had stolen him away from me.
I sank onto the edge of my bed, pulling my knees up for a moment. The tears came again, unwanted and hot, but I didn’t fight them this time. They weren’t weakness. They were fuel. Every tear was another promise, another vow carved into my bones.
Alice was going to regret the day she crossed me.
And Brian…
he was going to regret underestimating me.
The knock at the door barely registered at first. My hands were still shaking from the fury that had consumed me, and the room was littered with the evidence of my chaos, the shards of the vase, the torn sapphire silk dress, the overturned chair. I didn’t want company. I wanted solitude. I wanted to scream until the walls themselves shivered in fear.
But the knock came again, firm and deliberate. A presence I could not ignore.
“Clarissa, are you in there?” My mother’s voice, calm but authoritative, filtered through the door. Vivienne. Always poised, always in control. The kind of woman who could enter a room and silence it with nothing more than a glance.
I wiped my face roughly, trying to erase the evidence of tears and rage, and called back, my voice tight. “Yes, come in.”
She opened the door gracefully, her silk scarf trailing behind her. Even in her casual evening attire, she radiated authority, an aura I had inherited but never perfected. Vivienne’s eyes swept the room, taking in the destruction with a sharp, assessing glance.
“Hmm,” she said softly, tilting her head. “Looks like someone has had a rough evening.”
“Rough?” I scoffed. “Rough doesn’t even begin to cover it.”
Her lips curved slightly, not in amusement but in understanding. She had a way of listening without judgment, yet reading every line of a person’s pain as if it were a book she had memorized. “Tell me,” she prompted, her tone gentle but commanding.
I fell onto the armchair, exhausted from my outburst, and finally let the words tumble out. I told her everything, Brian walking out, the dinner, the humiliation, Alice’s interference, the way my control over the situation had collapsed. And through it all, mom’s eyes never wavered. No gasp. No flinch. Just that calm, penetrating gaze that made me feel seen in a way no one else ever could.
When I finished, she didn’t speak immediately. She paced slowly, a hand resting lightly on her chin. “I see,” she said at last, her voice even but edged with steel. “It seems you’ve underestimated the stakes.”
I looked up at her, defiance still raw in my chest. “Underestimated? I’ve handled everything before. I’ve always won. And now he throws it all away for that little nobody, Alice. He doesn’t even realize what he’s losing.”
Mom’s lips pressed into a thin line. “Sometimes, my dear, men are blind to the obvious. But a blind man can be made to see, and a fool can be taught his place. That is where strategy comes in.”
“Strategy?” I repeated, the word dripping with venom. “I’m beyond strategy. I want her gone. I want Brian back. I want everyone to understand that he is mine and mine alone.”
Her gaze softened slightly, but the edge remained. “Vengeance without plan is folly. Emotions are powerful, yes, but they are also dangerous if left unchecked. You have the fire; you need the direction. That is why I am here.”
I frowned, sensing the weight of her words. “You mean… you’ll help me?”
Mom smiled faintly, a slow, deliberate curve of lips that promised both comfort and calculated power. “Of course, my child. You have always had the skill, the intelligence, and the resolve. Now you need guidance. Let us turn your fury into precision. Alice may have interfered today, but she has no idea what is coming.”
I felt a surge of hope and excitement mingled with the lingering anger. “What do we do first?”
She walked closer, lowering her voice to a conspiratorial whisper, though the authority in it made my pulse quicken. “First, we observe. Learn her habits, her routines, her weaknesses. Then we manipulate perception. Make her feel exposed without her knowing why. Social ruin can be more devastating than confrontation. People like Alice rely on appearances. We will dismantle them piece by piece.”
Her eyes locked onto mine, and I felt a shiver of admiration and fear. Vivienne’s calm control was intoxicating. “And Brian?” I asked cautiously, aware that even discussing him with my mother carried risks.
“He will come to understand where his loyalties lie,” mom said with certainty. “He may resist, he may be tempted, but a man who has been shown consequences and clarity rarely strays long. Our goal is twofold: remove Alice and reclaim Brian. The latter will be simple once the former is set in motion.”
I nodded, feeling the fire rekindled within me. I could see it now, my plan, guided by mom’s wisdom, sharper than any I had ever conceived on my own. Every slight from Alice, every stolen glance, every step she took in our territory would be cataloged and used against her.
“And Sophie?” I asked, almost reluctantly. “She’s… influential too. Could complicate things.”
Mom’s eyes glimmered. “Complications are opportunities in disguise. She is clever, yes, but she lacks your ruthlessness. Remember, the stronger the opponent believes themselves, the more spectacular their fall will be.”
I smiled, the kind of smile that was dangerous, predatory even. The rage and pain from earlier had transformed into focus, into a plan. Alice would regret ever thinking she could interfere. Brian would be mine. And together with mom, I was unstoppable.
We spent hours plotting, outlining every detail, every potential encounter. Mom guided me through subtle manipulations, teaching me how to bend perception, how to strike without leaving evidence, how to ensure that when the time came, Alice would be isolated and vulnerable.
By the time the night deepened, I felt almost… calm. Not weak, not defeated, but potent, armed with purpose. The storm of my anger had been channeled, refined into a weapon more dangerous than any raw fury could ever be.
Mom rested a reassuring hand on my shoulder. “Tomorrow, the plan begins. Patience is crucial. You will watch, learn, and strike only when the timing is flawless. This is not just about Brian. It is about establishing dominance. Do not let your emotions dictate your moves.”
I nodded, feeling the weight of her words settle over me like armor. Finally, I felt in control again. For the first time since that dinner, I felt capable of breathing without the suffocating fear of loss.
“Thank you,” I whispered, though my voice held steel as well as gratitude.
“You are welcome,” Vivienne replied softly. “And remember, Clarissa, power is not taken, it is claimed. And tomorrow, we claim everything.”
The night stretched long, and I lay in bed staring at the ceiling, visualizing Alice’s every move, predicting reactions, and imagining my victory. My mind raced with possibilities, every scenario ending with me victorious, with Brian back where he belonged, and Alice reduced to a cautionary tale of overreaching ambition.
Tomorrow, I thought, t
he game begins. And I will win.





