Chapter 7
Over the next three days, Eddie popped up now and then—usually on his way to see Glenna. Rhea was just a detour.
The hospital buzzed about how the Bowie CEO was babying his fiancée. Glenna got a tiny scratch, and Eddie freaked—demanded a trauma specialist on standby 24/7.
Rhea couldn't care less. Even seeing him didn't faze her anymore.
He thought she was just being dramatic. Figured once he patched things up with Glenna, he could sweet-talk Rhea back like always.
But this time? She was out. Whatever shred of hope she had died the night he didn't come home.
While a nurse changed her bandages, Glenna waltzed in like she owned the place. Glowing. Clearly Eddie was spoiling her.
Rhea didn't even blink. Eyes stayed glued to her phone.
Her grandpa had already handled everything—her stuff moved.
The apartment? It had been sold and signed over to the new owner.
It was time to go.
Glenna stepped closer, smug grin locked in place.
"Still chasing Eddie, huh? God, you're stubborn. We're getting married in Bali in three days. You knew that, right?" She clicked her tongue. "Oh, wait—you can't hear. My bad."
Rhea glanced up, face blank. Glenna's words didn't land. None of it mattered. She was already halfway gone.
But then Glenna grabbed her hair and yanked hard.
"Think you can beat me? First the stage, now Eddie? You're nothing."
Pain ripped through her scalp. Rhea snapped, grabbed Glenna's wrist, and shoved her off.
That's when she smelled it—smoke.
Her head whipped toward the door. Thick gray clouds were already rolling in. Flames licked the doorway.
No time to think. She soaked the bedsheet, tossed it over herself, and bolted.
But Glenna, coughing and half-conscious, latched onto her leg like a maniac.
Rhea kicked, but Glenna wouldn't budge.
Then came the whisper of a smile. "Tell me—who do you think Eddie's gonna save?"
Rhea's stomach dropped.
This wasn't some freak accident.
Glenna was completely unhinged.
"It's Eddie's choice now. Today, you die."
The smoke was choking. Rhea's body was shot, her strength draining fast. She hit the floor, the black closing in, panic twisting deep in her chest.
Time blurred. Seconds? Minutes? No clue.
Then the door slammed open.
Eddie charged in with the rescue team.
"Glenna!"
He spotted her out cold and rushed over, scooping her up like it was muscle memory. Didn't even glance at Rhea, who was barely hanging on.
Rhea tried to speak, but just sucked in more smoke.
Through the haze, she saw him vanish down the hall—never looked back.
She clenched her teeth, yanked the damp sheet over her face, trying to stay upright.
Third floor.
No time to think. The fire was already here.
She shoved herself up and hurled toward the window.
Pain snapped her fully awake. Her leg—definitely wrecked.
One last look at the flames, then she crawled through, dragging her busted leg behind.
The hospital was in the suburbs— No help in sight.
Everything started going black again—
Until arms caught her.
She blinked up. Stranger. Strong grip.
He didn't say a word, just carried her to a car.
"To the Cliburn Hospital."
Then the calmest voice: "I'm Hank Truhart. Grandpa Leopold sent me."
And that was the last thing she heard.
***
Eddie had Glenna moved into a luxe hospital suite, doctors and nurses swarming like she was royalty.
After the check-up, one of them stepped forward. "She's fine. Just needs rest."
Glenna fluttered her eyes open. Eddie rushed to her side.
"How do you feel?"
She shook her head, tears spilling like she'd barely escaped a horror movie. "Eddie, I was terrified. I tried to run, but Rhea stopped me. She wouldn't let me go. If you hadn't shown up, I—"
Eddie's jaw tightened.
He turned to ask where Rhea was—then froze.
His face went ghost-white.
Next second, he was sprinting.
But the room was already burning. Fire had swallowed it whole, and the nearest crew was five minutes out.
"Rhea! RHEA! Are you in there?!"
No reply.
He lunged forward, but bodyguards grabbed him.
"Mr. Bowie, it's too late. Even if she was inside—"
"Shut up! She's alive! She has to be!"
As Eddie cracked, a doctor sprinted over, waving a chart.
"Mr. Bowie! About Miss Smith's test results—her hearing's fully restored. Test was from last week..."
Eddie stared at the report.
Last week. His birthday.