The cliffs of Big Sur have always felt like the edge of the world to me, a place where earth meets sky in a violent, beautiful collision that takes your breath away. Standing outside The Aerie that gray afternoon, watching white foam thrash against jagged rocks three hundred feet below, I understood why my sister had chosen this venue for her wedding. Vanessa had always mistaken violence for grandeur, chaos for power, cruelty for strength.
The wind whipped at the hem of my black silk dress—not the pastel shade that would blend with bridesmaids, not the floral print that would match the carefully curated hydrangeas lining the chapel aisle. Black. Severe, elegant, the color of mourning and judgment.
I adjusted my sunglasses, shielding my eyes not from sunshine—there was none on this overcast afternoon—but from the inevitable stares I knew were coming. Five years. It had been five years since the accident that was supposed to erase me from the Sterling family narrative.
Five years since my father, Marcus Sterling, had chosen which daughter deserved to live and which one could be left to gravity and fate. To the guests gathered inside that exclusive clifftop chapel—the senators, the CEOs, the society vultures who fed on scandal and champagne—I was a ghost, a tragedy that had been neatly resolved and buried in some expensive facility in Switzerland. They certainly didn’t expect me to walk through those heavy oak doors just as the organist began the wedding prelude.
I stepped inside, and the scent hit me immediately—Casablanca lilies, far too many of them, their cloying sweetness transforming what should have been a celebration into something that smelled more like a funeral parlor. How fitting, I thought, given that this wedding was built on the grave of everything my family had tried to bury about me. A hush rippled through the back pews, starting as a low murmur of confusion before sharpening into distinct whispers that carried in the acoustically perfect space.
“Is that Clara Sterling?”
“It can’t be. She’s supposed to be—”
“Look at the way she walks. That limp.
Oh my God, it’s her.”
I ignored them all, focusing instead on putting one foot in front of the other despite the ache in my right leg, where titanium pins held my reconstructed femur together. The damp ocean air made the metal protest, sending sharp reminders of that night five years ago shooting through my bones. But I didn’t let my stride falter.
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