
A violent storm hammered against the towering windows of the deserted Glacade executive suite, turning the view of Genoa City into streaks of distorted light. But the real tempest was inside.
Audra Charles stood rigid, her voice sharp enough to cut steel. “You really think you can wipe me off the map, Claire?” she hissed as she strode forward, heels cracking like distant gunfire. “Just because you’re a Newman now doesn’t make you invincible. I know the truth about Jordan’s training. You’re not royalty—you’re a weapon someone polished and pointed.”
Clair Grace didn’t retreat, though her grip on the desk behind her was tight enough to turn her knuckles white. The air smelled of rain, electricity, and Audra’s overpowering perfume. “I’m not that girl anymore,” Claire warned. “But keep pushing me, and you’ll regret it. You’re losing Kyle. You’re losing Glacade. You’re losing control. Don’t project that onto me.”
Audra let out a laugh—sharp, wild, and dangerous. She lunged suddenly, seizing Claire’s arm. “I clawed my way to the top while you stumbled into a dynasty by crying to Victoria!”
That touch was the spark that ignited everything. Claire ripped her arm away and shoved Audra with all her strength. Audra stumbled, recovered, and charged like an unleashed animal. They crashed together, fists flying—not a petty slap fight, but the eruption of months of hostility.
A crystal decanter shattered as they crashed into a side table. Audra slammed Claire against the wall, screaming, “You ruin everything!” Claire twisted, using her shoulder as a weapon, knocking the wind out of Audra.
But Audra’s hand blindly grasped a jagged bronze art piece—heavy, sharp, deadly. Running on adrenaline and fury, she swung. The metal smashed into Claire’s head with a horrifying thud.
Claire didn’t even cry out. Her body simply folded, sliding down the wall until she hit the floor, motionless amid shattered crystal and spilled liquor.
Silence swallowed the room.
Audra’s breath came in ragged bursts. The sculpture slipped from her trembling fingers. “Claire… get up. Come on. Stop it.” But Claire didn’t move. Audra felt for a pulse and found nothing but her own heartbeat pounding frantically. Blood seeped across the carpet—a dark, accusing stain.
Panic overtook her. She backed away until she hit the desk, shaking uncontrollably. She couldn’t go down for this. She wouldn’t.
In a frantic haze, she noticed the security camera—thankfully disabled earlier. Twisted luck. Acting through absolute terror, she dragged a heavy rug across the room, rolled Claire’s limp body inside, and struggled it to the service elevator. Minutes later, she drove through the storm, heart hammering, until she reached the cliff near the old construction site. The river below churned violently from the rain. She pushed the rug over the edge and watched it vanish into the darkness.
Hours later, she returned to the office, scrubbing the carpet until her hands were raw. But the stain refused to disappear completely. She rearranged furniture to hide it and fled the building at 3 a.m., feeling like a ghost.
But the river didn’t keep its secrets. Downstream, the rug caught on debris. The icy water revived Claire, snapping her back to consciousness. Injured, soaked, and barely able to stand, she crawled out of the riverbank. Her hand brushed the concealed emergency kit she always kept—a burner passport, untraceable money, a credit card. Claire Grace died tonight. Someone else would walk away.
Hours later, freshly disguised, she boarded a Greyhound bus under a new identity, watching Genoa City fade behind her.
Back home, panic spread. Claire’s family couldn’t reach her. Her car sat abandoned at Glacade. Victoria called the police.
Meanwhile, Audra spiraled. No sleep, constant paranoia, every sound feeling like doom. When she heard police were reviewing security footage, she nearly collapsed.
Two weeks later, in a dingy Chicago apartment, Claire watched Audra through a hidden camera she paid someone to plant. She sent a haunting message: “That rug was heavy, wasn’t it?”
Audra’s terror was instant. She crumpled, hyperventilating. Claire watched without a flicker of emotion.
Back at Glacade, Detective Chance examined the scene, uncovering blood traces, missing rugs, and a long blonde hair hidden under the baseboard. A warrant was issued for Audra.
As police pounded on her door, Audra received another chilling message from Claire: “Don’t worry. The river is cold—but you get used to it.”
Audra screamed.
Claire simply closed her laptop, stepped into the Chicago night, and vanished—reborn, liberated, and ready for whatever came next.
