Earlier that day, Ashley had considered ignoring Marshal’s invitation to dinner.
Was it out of character for him to reach out to her personally? Of course. He had never done so before.
But as his daughter, Ashley already understood the reason. It might not have been as important as it seemed.
If anything, he probably wanted to gauge whether he still had even the slightest bit of control over her. Or perhaps he simply wanted to remind her where she came from. Remind her of the chains around her.
So Ashley went home and asked Lucian to have dinner with her.
Afterward, once she had gathered enough courage—and digested enough food—she finally went to face that damned family.
Now, Lucian glanced sideways and found her staring out the passenger-side window.
"You okay?" he asked, returning his eyes to the road as he carefully drove them home.
A soft hum answered him.
"I’m okay," she whispered. "I’ve always been okay."
Silence settled over the car once more.
Lucian opened his mouth, then closed it. He wasn’t sure whether he should let her sit with her thoughts or keep talking.
Before he could decide, Ashley spoke first.
"Lucian." Her voice was quiet.
"Hm?"
"Do you regret it?"
His brow rose slightly. "Which one?"
"What you did to your mother." The question hung between them. "Do you regret it?"
"No." The answer came immediately. "Not for a second."
Ashley’s lips curled faintly. The passing streetlights flashed across the side of her face.
"Right?" She lowered her eyes. "I probably wouldn’t regret it either."
Her eyelids drooped. "If I just did it..." A bitter smile appeared. "...the way he taught me."
After all, the first kill was always the hardest.
The second came easier.
And the third.
And everyone after that.
Especially once she convinced herself she had enough reasons to stain her hands with blood.
Ashley bit the inside of her cheek.
The muscles in her neck tightened when Lucian asked:
"Then why haven’t you?"
The question lingered in the air. Lucian didn’t rush her; he simply waited.
Why hadn’t Ashley killed Marshal?
She was capable of it.
She had every reason.
Hatred.
Freedom.
Justice.
For someone forced to live as Marshal’s bastard daughter, his death should have been the key to everything she wanted.
Freedom.
Peace.
An end to her suffering.
"I don’t know." Her voice was so quiet that, if not for the silence inside the car, Lucian might have missed it. "I don’t know..."
She swallowed. "And I’ve always hated myself for not having an answer."
Ashley let out a heavy breath.
She couldn’t bring herself to look anywhere else.
The thought had always paralyzed her. It felt as though invisible strings were attached to her heart, mind, and body. Strings controlled by someone she could never see.
It was a feeling she hadn’t experienced in a long time. Not since her rebirth.
Isabella and Carmella were one thing.
Marshal was another.
Even at Shyaan’s charity ball, she had barely interacted with him.
But hearing his voice, receiving his call, sitting across from him again...
That was different.

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