The CEO's Regret: You made me your lie, I become your Loss-Chapter 69: Homicide
The shock of the freezing water was absolute. It felt as if a thousand needles had pierced Amara’s skin, stealing the breath from her lungs before she could even scream. She sank, the heavy, numbing weight of the water dragging her deeper into the abyss of the mountain lake.
Everything was dark, silent, and suffocating. Her lungs burned with the primal need for air, but her body felt paralyzed by the cold. Just as the darkness began to close in, her hand, flailing blindly, brushed against something solid. A submerged root, jagged and icy, protrudes from the cliff face, hidden beneath the surface.
With a final, desperate surge of will, she clamped her fingers around it.
The current pulled at her legs, trying to suck her back into the deep, but she clawed at the rock, her nails tearing against the stone. Inch by agonizing inch, she pulled herself toward the shallows, gasping as her head finally broke the surface.
She crawled onto the icy shelf of the bank, her clothes frozen stiff, turning into a suit of glass. She was shivering so violently that her teeth chattered like stones. She couldn’t feel her feet. She couldn’t feel her hands. She was alive, but she was fading fast.
Above, Julian was already halfway down the cliff, his hands raw and bleeding as he gripped the frozen scrub and jagged rock. He didn’t care about his own life; he only cared about the silence below.
"Amara!" he screamed, his voice cracking. He saw the white silk of her scarf snagged on a branch halfway down, and his heart nearly stopped. He pushed himself harder, ignoring the way the shale gave way under his boots, ignoring the dizzying height.
He hit the bank with a heavy thud, sliding down the final embankment until he reached the water’s edge.
He saw her.
She was slumped against a rock, her lips turning a terrifying shade of blue, her eyes fluttering closed. She looked like a fallen angel discarded by the mountain.
"No, no, no," Julian sobbed, scrambling toward her. He tore off his coat and wrapped it around her shivering frame, pulling her into his chest to share his own warmth. Her skin was freezing, like touching marble.
"Amara! Look at me!" he begged, slapping her cheeks gently. "Don’t you dare leave me. I’m right here. I’ve got you!"
Amara’s eyes cracked open, blurred and unfocused. She saw him, her anchor, her Julian and a faint, fragile smile touched her lips. She couldn’t speak, but she leaned into his touch, her breath coming in shallow, shuddering wisps of white vapor.
Julian pulled out his phone, his fingers shaking so badly he almost dropped it into the snow. "Send help!" he screamed into the receiver, his voice echoing off the silent cliffs. "My wife... she’s barely breathing. We’re by the lake, at the base of the cliff!"
He held her tighter, tucking her head under his chin, rocking her back and forth.
High above, hidden in the dense pine trees, Elara watched. She saw the man cradling the body she thought she had discarded. She saw the help arriving. Her hands, still trembling from the act, tightened into fists. She had failed to finish it, and now, the rage was no longer just burning it was screaming.
—
Amara was rushed to the hospital. The hospital room was a sterile, humming blur of white lights and the sharp tang of antiseptic. Amara lay propped up against the pillows, her skin still translucent from the icy water, her breath rattling in her chest. Every muscle ached as if she’d been shattered and glued back together, but her eyes were burning with a cold, terrifying clarity.
Julian sat by the bed, his hand gripping hers so tightly his knuckles were white. He hadn’t left her side since they pulled her from the bank.
A detective stood at the foot of the bed, his notebook open, his expression grim. "Miss. Piers, the fall... the doctors say it’s a miracle you’re here. We found the footprints at the top of the cliff. They don’t match yours. Do you know who was there?"
Amara’s voice was a raspy, fragile ghost of its usual self. She looked at Julian, then back to the officer. She didn’t hesitate.
"It was Elara," she whispered, the name hanging in the air like a death sentence. "She followed us. She wasn’t just watching... she came for me. She pushed me, and she stood there and watched me fall."
The detective scribbled rapidly, his jaw tightening. "Elara? The woman from the Creed family? We have reports of her wandering the resort grounds. We’ll put out an APB immediately."
"Find her," Julian growled, his voice vibrating with a lethal, protective rage. "She tried to kill my wife. I want her behind bars before the sun sets."
As the police officers exited the room, the silence rushed back in. Julian leaned over, pressing his forehead against Amara’s temple. "She’s going to pay, Amara. I promise you, she will never get near you again."
But Amara barely heard him to correct the fact that she was not his wife, at least not yet. She was staring past him, toward the window where the storm was beginning to pick up. She felt a strange, chilling detachment. She had survived the ice, but she knew the war wasn’t over. Elara was a cornered animal now, and cornered animals were the most dangerous.
Miles away, in a cramped, dark rental car, Elara sat huddled in the driver’s seat. Her phone, which she’d been using to track the local news, pinged with an alert: "WANTED: ELARA LANGFORD. SUSPECT IN ATTEMPTED HOMICIDE."
Her heart didn’t race; it plummeted into a void. She looked over at the backseat, where little Seren was sleeping, her face pressed against the cold glass.
"They know," she whispered to herself.
She slammed the car into gear, her hands shaking so violently she could barely hold the wheel. She wasn’t just a scorned woman anymore.
She was a fugitive. And as she tore onto the highway, disappearing into the blinding white curtain of the mountain storm, she realized there was no going back.
She had started a fire she could no longer control, and it was going to consume them all.







