didn’t recognize herself.
 
 “No,” she protested, even though her throat was so thick she
 
 could barely speak. “I tried to walk out the door. I’d found the
 
 necklace and I took it. I wanted to show it to my dad, but I
 
 never got a chance. When I got to the hospital, he’d already
 
 gone into a coma. I told him that I had it back. That you’d
 
 given it to me. That I was going to be fine. I thought I wasn’t
 
 going to get to say a proper goodbye, and I needed to lash out
 
 because I was going to die otherwise.” Giana couldn’t have
 
 winced. She was squinting, narrowing her eyes. That’s all it
 
 was. “When you called, I was so angry. I agreed to the
 
 marriage because I wanted to hurt you, but overnight I cooled
 
 off and I came to break things off and return the necklace. I
 
 wanted to get in and get out, but when I got here, the JP was
 
 already here. I wouldn’t have had a chance to put it back
 
 otherwise. I swore I thought we could just get an annulment.
 
 That I could just leave, and you’d be fine.”
 
 “The kind of fine that happens after you trick someone into
 
 marrying you legally?”
 
 “I’m sorry.”
 
 “I don’t think you are.” Giana crossed her arms and pursed
 
 her lips. Instead of diminishing the rage simmering below the
 
 surface, Coralyn only seemed to be adding to it the more she
 
 tried to deflate it. “No, there was something else. Something
 
  
 
 ; besides the necklace. You’re going to tell me what it was. Was
 
 it the money? The power? The control? Or were you still on
 
 your revenge trip? You cursed me and you wanted to follow
 
 through with it.”
 
 “Yes, I did. I did all of those things and thought all of them,