The Amnesia Gambit

1290 Words
Chapter 5: The Amnesia Gambit POV: Lina Hale The heartbeat was wrong. Thump-thump. Thump-thump. It was too slow for a panic attack and too heavy to be mine. I’ve lived inside my own ribs for twenty-three years, and I know the rhythm of my own heart. This felt deep, weighted, like there was more mass behind it than I’d ever had. I tried to lift my arm, but it moved like it was underwater. Sluggish. Heavier than it should be. When I finally got my hand in front of my face, I stopped breathing. Those weren't my hands. My hands are a mess—scarred knuckles from the diner, skin like sandpaper, and nails bitten down to the quick because I can’t help myself. These fingers were long, pale, and perfectly smooth. The nails were shaped like glass. They were the kind of hands that had never scrubbed a floor or ducked a punch in their life. I didn't scream. Screaming is just a loud way of telling people where to find you. I lay perfectly still and listened. Wind whistling through a c***k in the masonry. Rain hitting stone outside with a heavy, rhythmic *thwack*. Footsteps downstairs—two sets, one heavy and deliberate, the other light. It was like someone had turned the volume knob on the world up to eleven. Every sound was sharp enough to cut. I opened my eyes. The ceiling was vaulted stone, draped in silver silk that looked like it cost more than I’d made in a year. I sat up, my head swimming, and dragged myself to the tall mirror in the corner. I needed to see the damage. The woman looking back wasn't me. Long, pale hair. Eyes the color of a winter sky. A face that looked like it had been sculpted out of fine china—composed, delicate, and entirely alien. I touched my jaw, feeling the heat of my fingertips on skin that belonged to a stranger. Okay. Okay. Lina Hale went into the river, and some cosmic glitch sent her out wearing a different body. Then the smell hit me. Lavender from the sheets. And underneath that—cedar, cold rain, and a heavy, dominant scent that made my inner alarm bells go off. A man had been here. Recently. There was a third scent, too, buried under the lavender. Jasmine, but with a sour, rotten edge to it. The smell of a grudge that had been left out in the sun too long. Cedar. Danger. Jasmine. Tension. I didn't know how I knew that. The information just clicked into place like I’d been born with it. The door handle turned. I didn't flinch. I just stood there, my weight balanced on the balls of my feet, waiting. A girl in a grey dress hurried in, carrying a basin. She almost dropped it when she saw me standing by the mirror instead of huddled in the bed. "My Luna!" She dropped into a shaky curtsy, the water in the basin sloshing over the side. Her face went white. "You're awake—you should be in bed. If the Alpha sees you up before the healers come, he'll—" Luna. Alpha. Healers. I was at the top of a food chain. And apparently, I was supposed to be fragile. I let my eyes go a little glassy, tilting my head like I was trying to solve a puzzle. "Who are you?" She froze. Like a deer in headlights. "My Luna. It's me. Elara. I’ve been your maid since we were kids. Since... since before your first shift." "Elara," I repeated. I let the word sit on my tongue, testing it. I let my gaze wander around the room, looking confused. I needed a cover, and I needed it before someone with a bigger title than a maid walked through that door. The river had handed me the perfect lie. "Where am I?" I made my voice thin, reedy. "Everything is so loud. It hurts. Like the world is too bright." She set the basin down and rushed to me, grabbing my arm. She smelled like lye soap and pure, unadulterated fear. "You're in the palace, My Luna. You fell into the river. Kael brought you back himself. Don't you remember?" I let my shoulders slump, making my breath shallow and hitching. "I remember water. Cold, black water. But everything else is... smoke. I looked in that mirror and I didn't know who that was." I paused, letting the silence get heavy. "I think I’ve lost something, Elara. A lot of things." "Oh mercy," she whispered, steering me back toward the bed. "The healers said the river's blessing could be heavy, but to forget your own face—" "I know the name," I said, because *Selene* kept popping up in the back of my head like a prompted search result. "Selene. I know that’s me. But I don't know the rules. I don't know who this Alpha is, or why I can hear the rain like it’s inside my head." "Kael is your betrothed." She said it softly, like she was talking to a glass doll. "The Alpha King. The coronation is in three days. You were doing the ritual walk with Lyra when you slipped." Kael. Betrothed. King. Cedar and rain. He was the center of the world. And Lyra—the one who smelled like jasmine and old grudges—was the one who said I "slipped." I filed it all away. Amnesia is the ultimate cheat code. I could ask all the dumb questions I wanted. I could watch everyone without them wondering why I was staring. I could learn the layout of this trap from the inside out, and they’d just think I was a "poor thing" who’d hit her head. "Three days," I said, rubbing my temples. "If the Alpha sees me like this—if he knows I can't remember—what happens?" Elara’s hands shook as she tucked the blankets around me. "He is a hard man, My Luna. He cares about duty. Only duty." She paused, her eyes darting to the door. "But he is your mate. He’ll protect you." I caught it. The tiny shift in her scent. The way her voice went hollow. She didn't believe a word of that last part. She was just saying what she was programmed to say. I looked her dead in the eye. Not like a queen, but like a woman making a back-alley deal. "Then help me. Don't tell the healers yet. If anyone asks, I'm just exhausted. Give me time to figure this out." She stared at me. For a second, I saw her weighing the risk. "I’ll do it, My Luna." Whatever loyalty she had for the girl I was replacing, it was stronger than her fear of the King. For now. "I’ll get food. You need to be strong before he gets here." "Thank you, Elara." She slipped out, clicking the door shut. I leaned back against the headboard and let my mind race. I had no idea how I’d ended up in this body, or where the real Selene was. I didn't know the laws of this place or what a "Luna" actually did. In three days, I was supposed to stand in front of a whole nation and fake my way through a coronation. But I knew how to survive in a room full of people who had more power than me. I'd been doing that since I was six years old. Shut up. Watch. Listen. Wait. I closed my eyes, focused on the sound of the rain against the stone, and waited for the smell of cedar to tell me the King had arrived.
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