Franco lunged for her arm. Kalea sidestepped, her movement fluid despite her exhaustion.
Franco's momentum carried him forward. He slipped on the wet stone, his arms flailing, barely catching his balance before he hit the water. The guests watching from the doorway laughed nervously.
Eleanor didn't laugh. She snapped.
She rushed forward and slapped Kalea across the face.
CRACK.
The sound was sharper than the breaking glass. Kalea's head snapped to the side. Her lip split against her teeth, the taste of copper flooding her mouth.
The music inside had stopped. The only sound was the wind and the hum of the pool filter.
Kalea slowly turned her head back. She looked at her mother. There was no pain in her eyes. Only a deep, terrifying void.
She leaned in close to Eleanor. Haleigh was standing right next to her mother.
"If you touch me again," Kalea whispered, her voice a thread of ice, "everyone will find out what really happened on that yacht last summer. I will burn this family to the ground with your secrets, starting with Haleigh's."
Eleanor stopped breathing. Her face went slack with horror.
Haleigh heard it. "You bitch!" she screamed. "You wouldn't dare!"
Haleigh threw herself at Kalea, claws out, aiming for her eyes.
Jennie, seeing an opportunity to play the hero for Franco, ran forward to help shove Kalea.
Kalea didn't cower. She didn't block.
She lifted her right leg and kicked Haleigh square in the stomach.
It was a solid, satisfying impact.
Haleigh gasped, doubling over. She stumbled backward, colliding with Jennie.
Their limbs tangled. Gravity took over.
SPLASH.
A massive plume of water erupted as both women fell into the pool.
"Help!" Eleanor screamed, her voice shrill. "My baby! Save her!"
Aidan didn't hesitate. He sprinted from the shadows and dove into the water, swimming toward Haleigh with desperate urgency.
Franco dove in a second later, swimming toward Jennie.
Kalea stood on the edge, looking down at the chaos. The water churned. Everyone was screaming. Everyone was saving someone.
No one was looking at her.
She felt incredibly tired. The rage was gone, replaced by an unnerving clarity. This was the end of a chapter. To start the next, the old Kalea Alexander had to die. Publicly. Dramatically.
She looked at the dark sky.
I'm done, she thought.
She closed her eyes. She leaned back.
She let gravity take her.
She hit the water. The cold shock was instant. She sank.
Down. Down.
She opened her eyes underwater. The pool lights turned the world into a hazy blue dream.
She saw Aidan hauling Haleigh to the surface, his arms wrapped tight around her.
She saw Franco pushing Jennie toward the stairs.
They were all leaving her behind.
She didn't fight. Her dress was heavy, pulling her down to the bottom. Her lungs screamed for air, but a strange calm settled over her. She watched the bubbles escape her lips, each one a prayer for a different life. Through the shimmering, distorted surface, she saw it—a tall, dark shadow eclipsing the party lights at the edge of the pool. A lifeline. Or a different kind of cage. Her vision started to fade to black, a new plan crystallizing in the void. Let them think I'm broken, she thought, a final, defiant spark before the darkness took her. Let them think I'm gone.
The last bubble escaped her lips, and the hazy blue dream dissolved into nothing. The world contracted to a single point of light, then winked out. The cold gave way to a profound, silent blackness, and Kalea knew no more.





