Category: English

  • The Orphanage of Nightmares

    At seven years old, my parents were taken from me in a carefully orchestrated car crash. My older brother, steeling his heart against my desperate cries, sent me to an orphanage. He told me, “Aurora, it’s too dangerous to be with me. Once I’ve taken care of everything, I’ll come back and bring you home.” What my brother didn’t know was that he had sent me to a place of nightmares, a corrupt orphanage where I struggled to survive, where I often wished for death. But the thought of my brother, alone and grieving, was the only thing that kept me going. I couldn’t bear to cause him more pain. On my eighteenth birthday, he finally came for me, bringing his adopted sister, Cici, with him. He held Cici’s hand, his face etched with guilt as he looked at me. “Aurora, Cici has been through so much with me, wandering from place to place. She hasn’t had a stable, comfortable life like you have these past years. Please, be more understanding with her.” I smiled and nodded, but inside, a single thought echoed: My brother has someone to keep him company now. I can finally die in peace. Later, my brother would weep until his voice was gone at my hospital bedside, begging me to just look at him. But by then, I could no longer open my eyes. 1 The year I turned eighteen, I finally received the news I had been waiting for: my brother was coming to take me home. I was so excited I couldn’t sleep a wink. The next morning, I stood in front of the mirror for what felt like hours, scrutinizing every detail of my appearance. The clothes I wore were new and beautiful, without a single hole or patch—a luxury I had never known. The director, a woman with a fleshy, cruel face, waddled over, her smile never reaching her eyes. She placed a heavy hand on my shoulder. “Our little Aurora is so pretty.” My body began to tremble reflexively, my pupils constricting. I instinctively moved to curl into a ball and cover my head. Her grip tightened on my wrist, a drilling pain shooting up my arm, stopping my movement. “You know what to say and what not to say, don’t you, Aurora? You know the consequences…” I nodded, my heart pounding with terror. Only then did she release me, humming a cheerful tune as she turned and left. I bit my lip, the joy I’d felt in my new clothes completely gone. I was standing at the orphanage gates before seven in the morning, craning my neck in anticipation. My brother had said he would be there at eight. But the clock ticked past nine, and there was still no sign of him. A look of smug satisfaction spread across the director’s face. “Just as I expected. The brother you’ve been dreaming of all these years doesn’t seem to care about you that much, does he?” I was terrified of the director, but on this one subject, my stubbornness was absolute. “You’re wrong. My brother loves me more than anyone. He’ll come.” The sun grew hotter. Just as the clock was about to strike noon, a fleet of sleek, black cars pulled up to the orphanage. The door of the second car opened, and a man stepped out. He had sharp features, a cold expression, and a tiny, crimson mole just beside his lips. His face was both familiar and strange, but my gut told me this was him—my brother, Matt, whom I hadn’t seen in a decade. My only family in the entire world. My legs moved on their own, first in a brisk walk, then breaking into a run. “Matt…” The smile had barely bloomed on my face when I saw the man, who had looked so aloof a moment ago, bend down. His expression softened into one of doting affection as he reached into the back seat and helped a young woman out. She seemed to be pouting. He gently stroked her hair, a helpless, loving smile on his face. The scene was so warm, so perfect. “…Matt?” I stared, frozen, at the tender moment. The hopeful lilt in my voice fell flat. I was rooted to the spot, unsure whether to step forward or retreat. The girl who was now clinging to my brother’s arm was beautiful, dressed in clothes that looked like they were made of sunshine. A butterfly clip sparkled in her hair, and gold-leaf earrings danced in the breeze. She was a princess from one of the fairytales my brother used to tell me. I looked down at myself, a wave of shame washing over me. I felt like an ugly duckling who had stolen a princess’s dress. “Aurora?” A magnetic, beautiful voice called my name. I snapped my head up and saw my brother’s eyes, now red-rimmed, fixed on me. As if confirming it was really me, his voice trembled as he said my name again. “Aurora.” A lump formed in my throat, and my eyes began to sting. All my complicated thoughts vanished. “Matt,” I whispered. The next second, I was pulled into a powerful embrace. I heard my brother’s choked voice in my ear. “Aurora. My Aurora. I’ve finally found you.” I couldn’t hold back any longer. I clung to him and wept. “I… I missed you so, so much, Matt…” In that moment, my heart was overflowing with a bittersweet mix of joy and sorrow. I thought, Thank God for my brother. Thank God he remembers me. Thank God I didn’t give up all those times the abuse pushed me to the brink of death. A clear, feminine voice cut through our embrace. “Alright, alright! Let her go, Matt. You’re going to squeeze the life out of her. It’s embarrassing!” The girl pried at my brother’s arms, and I was released from his warm hug. Her gaze fell on me, her eyes filled with a practiced guilt. “I’m so sorry, Aurora. We were supposed to be here at eight, but my stomach started hurting on the way. Matt got so worried he insisted we go to the hospital. That’s why we’re so late.” A small smile played on her lips. “When I was little, I had a fever that almost killed me. Ever since then, he gets paranoid whenever I feel even a little sick. He acts like such a baby, it’s ridiculous.” My brother looked flustered at her teasing. He awkwardly ran a hand through his hair, then turned and gently flicked her forehead. “Hey, you’re not supposed to make fun of your big brother.” She giggled, covering her mouth like a cat who had just stolen a treat. My brother’s attention was completely captured by her. When he finally remembered me, he gave me an awkward glance. Then, he took the girl’s hand, his expression softening with affection. “Aurora, this is Cici. She’s our sister. Cici has been through so much hardship with me. She hasn’t had a stable, comfortable life like you have these past years. You need to be more understanding with her.” Sister? I stared blankly at Cici. Sensing my confusion, Matt explained gently, “Cici is my adopted sister. I met her about a month after you went to the orphanage. Her gambler father had beaten her half to death. When I saw her, I thought of you…” He didn’t finish the sentence, but I understood. A month after sending me away, he found Cici, and in her, he saw me. And so, he allowed another sister to stay by his side, to be his constant companion, to never be separated from him. If he could have a sister with him, why didn’t he come back for me? I wanted to scream, to demand an answer. But seeing the happy, doting look on his face, the words died in my throat. I forced my stiff lips into a smile. “That’s good. It’s good that you had someone with you, Matt.” When we got into the car, Cici pulled Matt into the back seat. I was about to follow, but the driver stepped in front of me, shutting the rear door. He looked at me with a hard expression, as if he were defending some sacred principle. “Miss, please take the front seat. Miss Cici isn’t comfortable with strangers in the back seat with her and Mr. Lee.” I froze, my eyes searching for my brother, but the heavily tinted windows were like a black mirror, reflecting nothing, sealing the inside world from the out. I lowered my gaze and turned towards the passenger door. “Thank you,” I said softly. The driver glanced at me. “We’ve watched Miss Cici grow up. She’s suffered a lot following the young master. We all feel for her. After all, those hardships… they were meant for someone else.” I understood his meaning perfectly. The suffering Cici endured was meant for me. I should be grateful. I shouldn’t dare to have a single negative thought. Matt wanted to throw a welcome party for me, but Cici’s mood had been sour for days. That afternoon, I followed an online tutorial and, after several failed attempts, managed to make a strawberry cream cake. It used to be my favorite. Matt had said Cici was a lot like me, so I thought she must love sweet cake too. Maybe it would cheer her up. I wanted to tell her that I wouldn’t be with Matt for much longer. I had only held on for so long because I was afraid he would be lonely without any family. Now that he had her, I could let go. I just… I just hadn’t seen my brother in so long. I wanted to look at him a little longer. I had no intention of taking her place. That evening, I carried the carefully prepared cake towards Cici’s room. The housekeeper had given me a room on the first floor. Matt and Cici both lived on the second. The housekeeper had explained that the second floor was their private space, off-limits to outsiders. So, she had naturally prepared a guest room for me on the ground floor. At the time, I told myself it was fine. We hadn’t seen each other in years. It was normal that he wouldn’t want me invading his territory. But now, in the dead of night, my thoughts drifted back to the brother I knew before I was nine. In the spring, he would share the wishing tree he had planted with me. In the summer, he would place a birthday crown on my head and tell me his only birthday wish was to make all of mine come true. He was the best brother in the world. He never set boundaries with me. The light from the study was warm and inviting. I heard familiar yet distant voices. I stopped, peering through the partially open door. I saw Matt and Cici. He was comforting her, his expression full of remorse. “I know throwing a welcome party for Aurora has upset you. But she is my sister, after all. And I promised her I would come back for her.” The person being comforted had the courage to be petulant. “I know I have no right to be jealous, but you’ve been so busy with her lately, you’ve barely paid any attention to me… Before she came back, you only had eyes for me.” Cici looked so pitiful, her voice so wounded, that Matt relented. I knew how he was. He could never resist anyone he had taken under his protection. It used to be me. Now, it was Cici. “Alright, alright. I’ll take you out tomorrow, just the two of us. How’s that?” “Just you and me. No one else.” Matt couldn’t help but laugh. He reached out and stroked her hair. “Okay, I get it, you little jealous thing.” A drop of cream slid from the top of the cake in my hands, like a teardrop. I looked down, confused. Does cake cry, too? There was a sound from the study. Like a startled rat in a sewer, I spun around, desperate to hide. But before I could escape, my brother’s voice called out behind me. “Aurora?” I froze, my feet glued to the floor. I turned back, forcing a practiced smile. “Matt. I made a cake for Cici.” His gaze shifted from my face to the cake in my hands. His brow furrowed, and his tone became sharp. “Cici is allergic to strawberries. How many times have I said it? No strawberries are allowed in this house.” I swayed, the world blurring around me. Matt’s tall figure became a hazy outline. “If Aurora likes them, then when I grow up, I’ll build a whole house made of strawberries just for her.” A nine-year-old boy, full of grand promises for his beloved little sister. Ten years later, the same person said, “Cici is allergic. No strawberries in this house.” I hung my head, ashamed, not wanting him to see the tears welling in my eyes. “I-I didn’t know. I’m sorry, Matt. I’ll… I’ll eat it. I won’t let it go to waste…” I reached out, grabbed a handful of cake, and shoved it into my mouth. The cloying sweetness of the cream mixed with the tartness of the strawberries, creating the most bitter taste in the world. I stuffed another piece into my mouth, and another, the bile rising in my throat. But just as I had learned to do at the orphanage, I looked up at him with a bright, placating smile. “See, Matt? I’m eating it all. Please don’t be angry…” As I reached for another piece, my hand was slapped away, hard. The back of my hand, where it was struck, immediately turned red. The familiar scene, the pain that was etched into my bones, triggered my defense mechanism. I instinctively covered my head and dropped to my knees, begging for forgiveness. “I’m sorry, I’m sorry, I didn’t mean to. Please don’t hit me… Please, have mercy… don’t hit me…” “Aurora… Aurora… calm down. What’s wrong?” A voice pulled me back from the hazy fog of terror. The expected blows never came. The overwhelming fear began to recede. My face was a mess of tears and snot. My clothes were sticky with white cream and red strawberry juice. I was still on my knees, a pathetic, broken figure. In the doorway of the study stood Cici, her eyes wide with a mixture of shock and horror. The warm light bathed her in a golden glow, making her look like a pristine princess in a castle. A wave of shame and self-loathing, more intense than anything I had ever felt, washed over me. I shoved the person holding me away and scrambled to my feet, running blindly down the hall. I heard my brother calling my name, but I couldn’t bear to look back. His childish voice seemed to echo in my ears. “My sister… I’m going to raise her to be the most beautiful and happiest princess in the world.” He had kept his promise, after all. In the past ten years, he had raised Cici very, very well. I hid in my room, in the pitch-black darkness that reminded me of the basement where I was often locked away. My wrist was raw and bloody from where I had been gnawing on it, but I felt no pain. All I could see was the scene from moments ago. Matt knew now. He had seen me break. Would he be disappointed? Disgusted? Would he abandon me again, just like he did ten years ago? The more I thought, the harder I bit down. My eyes scanned the room, and in the faint moonlight, I saw the fruit knife on the nightstand. I had always been afraid that if I died, my brother would be sad. But now… a version of me that caused him so much trouble would be better off dead. If I died, Cici wouldn’t be upset anymore. The people around him wouldn’t have to keep warning me away from her. And Matt wouldn’t have to be bothered with any of it. I pressed the sharp blade against my wrist. Blood began to seep out. Suddenly, the door was kicked open. The knife was snatched from my hand. Blood dripped onto the floor. Not just mine, but my brother’s too. My heart stopped. A suffocating feeling gripped my chest. I scrambled to grab the knife from his hand, my voice frantic with disbelief. “Matt, you’re hurt! Let me see, please…” But he held the knife in a death grip. No matter how hard I pulled, he wouldn’t let go. Tears streamed down my face. I looked up and met his gaze. It was so cold it froze me to the spot. “Aurora Lee, you’ve got some nerve now, haven’t you? Daring to hurt yourself?” The familiar words sent a jolt of déjà vu through me. When I was six, I was being mischievous and fell, chipping my front tooth. The dentist said no candy while it healed. But I couldn’t resist. I snuck two caramels during the day. That night, the toothache was so bad I cried my eyes out. Matt held me, his heart aching for me, but he was so angry. He had used the exact same words then, his face set in a stern expression. “Aurora Lee, you’ve got some nerve now, haven’t you? Daring to sneak candy behind my back!” My wrist was gently lifted, pulling me back to the present. The knife was thrown to the floor with a clatter. Matt brought in the first-aid kit and began to bandage my wound in silence. I tried to smile, to tell him that this kind of pain was nothing to me now. But my mouth felt like it was glued shut. I couldn’t smile. I couldn’t speak. A single, crystalline tear fell from my eye, landing on the gauze and spreading into a dark, wet patch. I panicked, trying to comfort him through my own confusion. “Matt, don’t cry. I’m… I’m fine. It doesn’t hurt. It really doesn’t…” The next moment, I was pulled into a warm embrace. “How could it not hurt?” he whispered, his voice breaking. “You used to be so afraid of pain…” I looked at my grieving brother and blinked. But Matt, I thought, I’m used to it now. The person who needed your comfort was the seven-year-old girl who was beaten for the first time. The eighteen-year-old version is already so broken, comfort can’t fix her. Matt didn’t say anything else, just held me silently. My rigid body slowly began to relax in his arms. I closed my eyes, savoring this fleeting moment of warmth. I’ll live a little longer, I thought greedily. Just this once. I knew I had to say a proper goodbye before I left. And there was the orphanage. I was gone, but there were other children still suffering there. I wanted them to have a chance at happiness, a life that wasn’t like mine. I took a breath, full of a fragile hope. “Matt, I…” Before I could finish, the frantic voice of the housekeeper came from the doorway. “Young Master, Miss Cici was frightened. She has a slight fever and is having nightmares. You…” Matt shot to his feet, knocking the first-aid kit to the floor. Its contents scattered everywhere. My unfinished sentence lay shattered among them. He paused at the door for a second but didn’t look back. “You get some rest,” he said quickly. “I’ll spend time with you later. I need to check on Cici. Her situation is more urgent.” I watched his back as he left, and in a daze, I was transported back to that rainy night ten years ago, when he had walked away and left me behind. Someone once said that once a crack forms, it can never be truly repaired. Once a lie begins, it never ends. In that moment, ten years ago, my brother had shown me his back for the first time. And it seemed that ever since, all he had ever shown me was his back. Cici’s illness lingered, and the welcome party was postponed again and again. Matt looked at me with guilt in his eyes. “Aurora, just a little longer. Cici can’t handle any stress right now.” I nodded obediently. “It’s okay, Matt. Cici’s health is more important.” Cici was sick for over a month. She only started to feel better a few days before her birthday. And so, my welcome party was transformed into her birthday party. “Aurora,” Matt said, “this is Cici’s birthday. It wouldn’t be right to introduce you then. Just wait a little longer. I’ll introduce you to everyone soon.” I didn’t want to make things difficult for him. I smiled, pretending not to care. “It’s fine, Matt. Just having you bring me home is enough to make me happy. As for the party, let’s just cancel it. It’s not fair to Cici. She suffered so much with you all these years.” I could see the relief wash over his face. He reached out and patted my head, his eyes full of pity. “You’re right. Cici is different from you. I couldn’t give her a stable, happy environment. I dragged her into my troubles.” I lowered my head, the bitter sting of tears rushing to my eyes. I still didn’t understand. Why could he take Cici with him, but not me? At least with him, I wouldn’t have been beaten every day. I wouldn’t have had to wash clothes in freezing water in the dead of winter until my hands were covered in sores. I wouldn’t have had to wear thick winter clothes in the sweltering heat and be sent out onto the streets to beg like a fool, stripped of all my dignity. Everyone said I had lived a comfortable life for ten years. Everyone pitied the wealthy Cici for being kidnapped once. Maybe the director was right. Maybe my life was worthless, so my suffering didn’t count as suffering. I remembered what the director had said to me on my sixteenth birthday. “It’s amazing how different two lives can be. Both are sisters. One is a pampered princess, showered with riches. The other is a timid, worthless creature that anyone can step on.” At the time, I was trembling too much to think about her words, terrified of the beating that was sure to follow. But she had been in a talkative mood. She showed me a photo from a birthday party. In it, a man whose face was hidden was placing a crown on a little princess’s head. The scene was lavish, opulent, filled with the kind of doting love I didn’t dare to even dream of. Just looking at it felt like being burned. I thought, That girl is so lucky. But it’s okay. I have my brother. If he were here, he would do even more for me. The thought of him made me smile. The director’s eyes were full of scorn. “Different. So very different… hahaha…” I didn’t understand her words then. But now, I understood everything. I looked up at my brother, who was rushing off to share the good news with Cici, and my vision blurred with tears again. It really was different. Her sixteenth birthday party, and my eighteenth homecoming party. Matt, are you still my Matt? But then I thought, maybe this is for the best. If he doesn’t care, then when I die, he won’t be sad. When I cut my wrist again, my brother slapped me across the face. “Aurora Lee, what in the world do you want?”

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  • The Ghost at the Table

    The ten-year reunion was a predictable sea of muted business attire and forced smiles. Julian Hayes, our class’s golden boy turned tech millionaire, was holding court, a scotch swirling in his hand. “Come on, Julian,” someone called out from the circle of admirers. “We’re all pushing thirty. Most of us are married, some even have kids. How is a guy like you still on the market?” A practiced, melancholy smile touched his lips. “Some of us are haunted,” he said, his voice just loud enough to carry. “Cursed to spend a lifetime chasing the ghost of the one that got away. I’d rather be alone than settle.” As if on cue, his gaze drifted past the crowd, landing on the woman beside me. On my wife, Seraphina. His eyes were a storm of unspoken history. The air crackled. A wave of excited whispers went through the group. “He’s talking about Sera, isn’t he?” “Oh my god, they were the couple everyone rooted for in college! I was heartbroken when he left and she ended up with Ethan.” “Let’s be real, Ethan just saw an opening. Julian and Sera were the real deal.” Amid the rising chatter, I leaned in, my lips brushing against my wife’s ear. Her skin was cool. “Darling,” I murmured, my voice a low rumble only she could hear. “They’re saying I stole you. What’s your take?” 1 “Wait, Ethan, you and Seraphina are married?!” The exclamation cut through the noise, followed by a ripple of shock. Julian’s head snapped up, his eyes locking onto Sera with raw disbelief. A few of the old classmates laughed awkwardly. “Seriously? You guys never said a word! We’ve known each other for over a decade, that’s cold.” “Yeah, unless… Sera didn’t want anyone to know.” “Well, she was a wreck when Julian left for his fellowship in London. I heard she spiraled into a deep depression.” “So, it makes sense she’d fall back on Ethan. He was always there, lurking.” “Don’t defend him. We all know Julian only left because his family had nothing. Ethan’s family might have been struggling, but they had a name. He took advantage…” I tuned out the noise, placing a piece of seared salmon—her favorite—onto Seraphina’s plate. Five years. Three years of dating, two of marriage. Not every ghost gets to write a sequel. Besides, Sera and I grew up together. We were history long before Julian was a chapter. If I hadn’t insisted she come tonight, he wouldn’t have even laid eyes on her. But she hadn’t touched the salmon. Her fork lay beside her plate, untouched. Her eyes were still fixed on Julian, a locked, silent conversation I wasn’t privy to. The warmth of the evening suddenly felt like a chill on my skin. I put my own fork down, a cold knot tightening in my stomach. Don’t tell me he still has a hold on her. I’d almost managed to forget how completely she’d once been consumed by him. Back in college, Julian was the brilliant, brooding scholarship kid from the wrong side of the tracks. Seraphina, the daughter of a real estate tycoon, had fallen for him, hard. She’d helped him, supported him, only for him to push her away with a snarl. “You’re just like the rest of them,” he’d spat, his pride more fragile than glass, “looking down on me from your ivory tower.” It took her a year to break through that wall. They were together, and then, in their junior year, he was gone. A single letter left on her pillow was his only goodbye. You deserve better than me. I won’t hold you back. She raced to JFK, but only saw the silver glint of his plane climbing into the clouds. The breakdown that followed was real. I was the one who found her on the edge of her balcony, a ghost in the city lights. I was the one who pulled her back from the brink. “He doesn’t want you, Sera. But I do,” I’d whispered, holding her trembling body. “What was it you loved? His ambition? His struggle? I can learn to be that man. Let me be the one who stays.” From that day on, I molded myself into a reflection of the man she’d lost, but with a promise to never leave. My family’s construction business, teetering on the edge of bankruptcy, found a lifeline with a timely investment from her father. Then came the ultimatum from her parents: marry the heir to a rival firm or be cut off. I was prepared to step away, to release her. But that night, she came to me, wrapping her arms around me as if she were drowning. She cried, begging me not to abandon her too. “If you leave,” she sobbed into my chest, “it will kill me.” I smoothed her hair. “No one dies from a broken heart, Sera.” “But I love you.” “And Julian?” I asked, my own heart a stone in my chest. She pulled my head down, her lips finding mine in a desperate, searching kiss. “I hate him,” she breathed against my mouth. “From now on, all I want is Ethan.” My hands clenched at her waist, and I pulled her closer. By morning, her parents had accepted me as their son-in-law. The whispers in our social circle were brutal. They called me a climber, the man who saved his family’s failing company by seducing a vulnerable heiress. They were all just waiting, watching for the day she’d inevitably discard me. But she didn’t. For five years, we built a life. We were the power couple, our love a fortress. Until tonight. Until the ghost walked back in and I saw the look in her eyes. My heart gave a sharp, painful jolt. “How utterly pathetic.” Seraphina’s voice, sharp and cold as ice, sliced through the reunion’s buzz. Julian’s smile froze on his face. “I married Ethan because I love him,” she declared, her voice ringing with authority. “Who didn’t fall for a manipulative asshole in college? Don’t you dare try to tarnish my husband’s name with your revisionist history.” She turned the full force of her scorn on Julian. “And you, Julian. All that time in London, and this is what you’ve become? Have you even broken eight figures? A staff of ten?” The last of his smile evaporated. Then, she turned to me, her entire demeanor softening as she looped her arm through mine. “Honey, I told you we shouldn’t have come. This is such a bore.” “You’re not wrong,” I murmured back, my voice low and steady. “Anyone who upsets you deserves whatever you give them.” A stunned silence fell over the room. The party was, for all intents and purposes, over. As we left, the gossipers from before mumbled apologies, wishing us a long and happy life. Julian remained at the table, his head bowed, a solitary figure in his designer suit. As we stepped out of the ballroom, I felt it: Sera glanced back over her shoulder. He looked broken, a portrait of regret. Her hand, intertwined with mine, tightened for a fraction of a second. Then she faced forward again, a bright smile on her face as if nothing had happened, and we walked to the car. Back in our penthouse, the city lights sprawling beneath us, the evening’s events settled like a poison in my gut. I loosened my tie, my voice hoarse. “Sera… if you want to be with him again, we can talk about a divorce—” Before I could finish, she shoved me back onto the velvet sofa, hiking up her cocktail dress to straddle my lap. Her fingers silenced my lips, then traced a path down my throat, the touch electric against my skin. Her cool, composed face was inches from mine, a stark contrast to the fire in her eyes. “Don’t you ever say that,” she whispered, her breath warm against my cheek. “Now carry me to bed. I want you.” She kissed me, a hungry, claiming kiss that left no room for ghosts or doubts. We were a tangle of limbs and whispered words, moving from the living room to the bedroom. For a moment, all the ugliness faded. A genuine smile touched my lips. And then her phone rang, buzzing on the nightstand. Acting on instinct, I reached over and hit answer. Heavy, ragged breathing came through the speaker. Then Julian’s voice, thick with alcohol and choked with emotion. “Sera… why couldn’t you just wait for me? It’s only been five years…” He sobbed. “You call me a monster, but you have no idea… I’ve only ever loved you.” I let the silence hang for a beat, then spoke, my voice devoid of emotion. “It’s three in the morning, Julian.” Another pause. “Sera just fell asleep. She had a… strenuous evening. Should I wake her?” The line went dead. I looked over at my wife, her face serene in sleep. Her eyelashes fluttered, and I saw the faintest glimmer of a tear track at the corner of her eye. A nightmare, perhaps. Pulling her into my arms, I held her close, trying to banish the ghosts for both of us as I drifted into an uneasy sleep. 2 Two hours later, I woke to an empty bed. The space beside me was cold. Where did she go? A low murmur of voices drifted from the living room. My first thought was a break-in. I slid out of bed, not bothering with shoes, and crept to the bedroom door, cracking it open just enough to see. The scene in the living room froze the blood in my veins. The cool air from the vents felt like a polar vortex under my bare feet. Julian was on our sofa, his face a mask of anguish, clutching the sleeve of Seraphina’s silk robe. “I’m sorry, Sera, I was a fool. Please, just give me one more chance.” Sera stood stiffly, pulling her arm away. She had Julian’s phone in her hand and was speaking into it with cold fury. “Get over here and collect your boyfriend. He’s making a drunken scene outside my apartment building.” A few minutes later, hurried footsteps echoed in the hallway. I widened the crack in the door. The woman who rushed in was instantly recognizable: Claire Thorne. The sole heiress to the Thorne hospitality empire, a family whose fortune dwarfed even Sera’s. She lived in our building, a few floors up. Her eyes were red-rimmed with panic as she fussed over Julian. I almost had to admire his talent. In college, he had the heiress of the city’s top development firm ready to die for him. Now, after a few years abroad, he had the undisputed princess of New York’s high society wrapped around his finger. I closed the door silently as they left. My phone buzzed. It was a text from my best friend, Mark. [You see this? That scumbag Julian was at The Carlyle bar, crying to some gossip columnist about how he still loves Sera. The video is already going viral!] [What a pathetic loser. Sees you two are happy and suddenly he’s full of regret.] I ignored his rant and sent him the photo I’d discreetly snapped of the scene in my living room. [Looks like he has a girlfriend. Claire Thorne.] Mark’s reply was instantaneous. [WTF?! Is there a brain-eating amoeba attached to that guy? What does Claire Thorne see in him?!] I slipped back into bed just as the first light of dawn was breaking. The chaos, however, was just beginning. I was jolted awake later that morning by the sound of shouting. I stumbled out of the bedroom to find Sera’s parents, Robert and Eleanor Vance, sitting ramrod straight on the sofa, their faces like thunderclouds. They’d seen the news. “Get that boy out of New York!” Robert’s voice boomed. “That pathetic video from last night… I’ve had three calls from board members this morning! This is a PR nightmare.” Eleanor turned to her daughter. “He’s the one who abandoned you, Seraphina. Don’t be a fool. He’s using these disgusting tactics to ruin your marriage, to ruin us.” “If you don’t handle this,” Robert finished, his voice a low threat, “the full weight of Vance Realty will come down on him. We will bury him.” He stormed out without another word. Seraphina stood biting her lip, her eyes red. She turned and saw me standing there. “Ethan,” she said, a flash of panic in her eyes. “It’s not what it looks like. And Julian is engaged to Claire Thorne now. I don’t know why he’s doing this.” She took a deep breath. “I’ll fix it.” And she did. Sera, who had been taking over the reins of her family’s company, went on the offensive. We did a series of high-profile interviews and photoshoots, positioning ourselves as the unshakable power couple. She used the positive press to launch an aggressive campaign, poaching contracts and deals right out from under the Thorne empire. It was a declaration of war. A month later, the war came to us. We were leaving a gala at The Met when Julian stumbled out from a darkened alcove, lurching towards us. His white shirt was askew, a smear of blood at the corner of his mouth. “Sera, help me… please…” The scene was so eerily familiar, it was like a scene from a movie I’d seen a thousand times. He was the wounded hero, the noble soul beaten down by a cruel world. He grabbed for her sleeve, his eyes locking on me. He flinched, snatching his hand back as if burned. “Mr. Vance… Ethan… I’m sorry,” he stammered, shrinking back. “I’ll leave the city. I promise. You’ll never… you’ll never have to see me near her again.” His voice cracked. He clenched his fists, squeezed his eyes shut, then turned and limped away, a solitary, tragic figure disappearing into the New York night. I almost had to laugh. The performance was flawless. He had perfectly staged it to look like I, the jealous husband, had sent thugs to teach him a lesson. He was painting me as a violent monster, all while playing the victim to win Sera’s sympathy. The problem was, he was Claire Thorne’s fiancé. Making a move on him would be corporate suicide. I would never be that stupid. I shot a glance at Sera. Her face was an unreadable mask. “I heard Vance Realty blacklisted him,” she said, her voice cool as she took my arm. “His company is about to go under. He’s been begging for a lifeline.” She smiled, a cold, sharp thing. “Not my problem.” In the car, I tested the waters. “Sera… you don’t actually think I had anything to do with that, do you?” She leaned her head on my shoulder. “I know you didn’t,” she said softly. “I trust you.” I nodded, letting out a breath I didn’t realize I’d been holding. She knew me. She knew how hard I’d fought to rebuild my family’s name, how much I valued our stability. She knew I wouldn’t risk it all on such a reckless act. The next morning, five hundred million dollars vanished from our primary corporate account. It was the seed money for our IPO. Without it, my company, my family’s legacy, was dead in the water. I called Sera. No answer. Panicked, I drove to her office, storming past her assistant and throwing open the door. And there he was. Julian, sitting on the plush sofa, looking pale and fragile, a fresh bandage on his cheek. Seraphina was beside him. Her head snapped up, her eyes meeting mine. “Five hundred million. It’s gone from the account, Sera. Was it…” I needed to hear her say it. “I took it,” she said, her voice flat. “Why?” Her eyes were chips of ice. “Julian’s company was five hundred million in debt. I paid it off for him.” Julian himself looked stunned, fumbling for his phone to check his company’s accounts. I stared at her, uncomprehending. She stood, grabbing his hand and pulling him behind her, shielding him like a mother protecting her child. “You owe him this, Ethan!”

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  • The Practice Girl

    I’d picked one of the two boys I’d grown up with. Waking up, I saw the comments scrolling across my vision, a strange, spectral feed only I could see. 【Guess the side piece is finally awake. The screen’s been black all night. So much for the male lead being pure, sigh.】 【It’s fine, you guys. The main character has high standards. She only wants a guy who can go for an hour, minimum. The male leads have to practice on the side piece to get their stamina up.】 【Both of them have been ‘practicing’ on her for ages. Damn, she’s eating well. Wish I could sub in!】 【Her name’s Lane? More like the fast lane.】 I processed that for a moment. Then I nudged the man sleeping beside me. “Hey. Are you bad in bed?” His eyes fluttered open. “You only lasted, like, twenty minutes last night.” 1 After the screen went black again, the words started flooding the feed. 【OMG, she’s good. Got him right back into bed with one sentence. Can I please get cast for a couple of episodes?!】 【Let her have her moment. She’s going to lose it when both male leads ditch her for the Siren. They’ll be falling all over themselves for the real main character.】 I kicked Caleb’s back lightly with my foot. “I’m wiped. Carry me to the shower.” He caught my ankle, his voice a low growl. “Lane. Did you get there?” In the bathroom, the sound of the shower eventually faded. Caleb walked out, a vaguely apologetic look on his face. “Hey, Lane, something came up. I can’t give you a ride today.” The feed laughed. 【’Something came up,’ LOL. He’s running off to worship at the altar of the Siren, obviously.】 【And the side piece thinks she’s irresistible. He’s just finishing his warmup before heading to the main event. In a bit, he’ll be holding the main character’s face, kissing her like she’s the only woman on earth.】 【Wait, hold up. Didn’t his hand just touch the side piece’s foot?】 【OMG DOES SHE HAVE ATHLETE’S FOOT?! AHHHHH!!!】 The feed was screaming. I paused, halfway through pulling on my dress, and offered him a placid smile. “Go ahead. I can get home on my own.” I didn’t get it. We were two adults scratching an itch. Why did the disembodied voices of the internet think I’d “lose it”? Standing alone in front of the hotel, a new model Porsche, the color of a stormy sky, purred to a stop in front of me. A refined, almost severe face looked out. “Why are you calling me at this hour?” I smiled at him. “Missed you, I guess.” The feed shrieked. 【HOLY SHIT, ISN’T THAT THE MAIN CHARACTER’S UNATTAINABLE CRUSH?! WHAT IS HE DOING HERE!!!】 What they didn’t know was that I didn’t have two childhood best friends. I had three. Besides the other two, there was the man now driving with quiet focus beside me. Every summer and winter break of my childhood was spent with him. The time we’d had together was no less than with the others. The feed was in a frenzy. 【The Siren’s one true obsession is Grant! Every time she gets near him, she’s completely captivated by his presence! Why does Grant even know Lane?!】 【I can’t. I just scrolled ahead in the spoilers—the Siren can see Grant’s stats and he’s a NINE. That number! A NINE! AHHHH!】 I studied him. His hands, with their long, elegant fingers, rested on the steering wheel. The top button of his dress shirt was fastened, giving him an air of impeccable, restrained class. He was staring straight ahead, yet the tips of his ears were slowly turning a deep red. Behind us, a chorus of impatient horns began to blare. He seemed not to hear them, turning his head to look at me. “What is it, Lane?” I asked him, “Are you… a nine?” He looked almost disappointed. He put the car in gear with a soft sigh of resignation. “Lane, I’m twenty-seven.” The air conditioning was blasting. I looked away, grasping for something to say. “You’re not at the office. Why button your shirt up all the way? It’s so formal.” The consequences of an all-nighter were catching up to me. I slept it off, waking up to find it was already three in the afternoon. My phone was blown up with messages from Rhys. 【Lane, you busy?】 【Silas just rolled out a new tasting menu. Everything’s flown in fresh. Want to go tonight? My treat.】 I didn’t reply. The feed was back. 【Stupid side piece. She has no idea she’s just a pawn in the main characters’ game. She actually thinks both guys are into her.】 【Too bad. The two male leads don’t even know they have the exact same idea: find a practice partner who’s safe and they know well, all to get ready for the main character.】 【Heehee, and when they find out they’ve both been ‘practicing’ with the side piece, that’s when they’ll finally team up to practice with the Siren!】 【OMG! Can we fast forward? I can’t wait!】 【Girl, your thirsty is showing!】 【Whatever! This is the part! The side piece goes to the restaurant and runs into the main characters. She’ll run off crying, and that’s when Rhys makes his move and they have their big ‘practice’ session!】 My fingers paused over the screen. My phone rang. Hearing Rhys’s gentle voice, I let out a soft breath. “Rhys, give me a minute.” “I just need to do my makeup, okay?” Have you ever felt the air in a room turn to ice? Rhys was peeling a prawn for me when they arrived. Caleb, with her. Caleb placed her handbag on the chair beside him, its metal clasp making a soft, expensive click. The next second, our eyes met. All four of us. The feed erupted in a dense wall of text. 【Oh damn, is the legendary pissing contest about to start?!】 【The Siren is here! The two male leads can’t even see the side piece. Stupid girl, still trying to compete with the main character for Caleb’s attention.】 【I just want to tell her to stop trying. The Siren’s allure is something no man can resist. God, this author writes such perfect wish-fulfillment. This setup is everything!】 My gaze landed on the ‘main character’s’ face. I was just curious. What made a species I’d only ever read about in novels different from a regular person? Stella’s skin was luminous. Under the soft restaurant lighting, it seemed to glow. The ends of her wavy hair cascaded over her pale shoulders, exuding an effortless sensuality. I had to hand it to her. A main character like this was, objectively, a masterpiece. Luckily, knowing I couldn’t compete on hardware, I had gone with a clean, no-makeup makeup look. Her eyes met mine, and in them was a faint flicker of hostility that only another woman would recognize. “Rhys, and this is—?” Before Rhys could answer, I widened my eyes innocently. “Oh, me? I’m basically the little sister he never had.” The feed exploded. 【HOLY MOTHER, WHAT IS SHE DOING?! I thought this was a showdown! What is this saccharine, fake-ass response? I’m gonna puke!】 【Seriously, does she actually think she’s pretty or something?!】 Beneath the scrolling text, I saw Stella’s expression freeze for a fraction of a second. Three beats later, she produced a gentle, warm smile. “Oh, a little sister. Rhys hardly ever mentions you…” She paused, her tone playful. “Keeping you a secret. We should punish you for that.” I didn’t take the bait. I turned to Caleb. “Caleb, honey, are you on a date with your new girlfriend?” At the two adjacent tables, every face, except for mine, was a mask of complex emotions. Caleb frowned. “Lane, you’re taking this too far.” Caleb’s response was strategically vague. He hadn’t confirmed his relationship with Stella, but he hadn’t confirmed mine, either. He was leaving all his options open. Even the feed was buzzing that, according to the plot, Rhys was supposed to use this opportunity to get me into bed, and then Caleb would come back later to smooth things over, explaining his words meant nothing. But here’s the thing. There is no childhood friend more considerate than me. As the waiter approached, I tapped the table. “Excuse me? Could you push our tables together?” I pointed at Rhys and smiled brightly. “He’s paying.” The table merger went off without a hitch. My two childhood friends immediately focused all their attention on Stella. When the abalone appetizer arrived, it was cut into two perfect halves. Both men offered their plates to her. Stella looked up, catching my eye. Every gesture was laced with charm. “Rhys and Caleb are so sweet. But I can’t possibly eat all of this. Little sister, you can have the extra one.” I tilted my head, looking at her. “The extra abalone? No, I’ll pass. Someone’s picking me up later to get something else to eat.” Caleb froze, his hand hovering in mid-air. “Lane, stop with the passive-aggressive act.” Rhys’s brow furrowed as well. “Lane, can you just drop it and eat your dinner?” 【Ooh, the two male leads defending their queen! So hot! They know they still need the side piece to practice on later, but when the Siren is around, everything else comes second!】 【*’Someone’s picking me up to get something else to eat’ ~*】 【Who is she kidding? Both of her guys are right here, and they won’t even give her a second glance for the Siren’s sake. She’s bluffing about being picked up. How is she gonna walk this back?】 【Get ready for the side piece’s most epic moment of public humiliation.】 I dabbed my lips with a napkin. I smiled sweetly back at Rhys. “I’m afraid I can’t. “The person picking me up? He’s here.”

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  • No Makeup, No Problem

    I was in a rush to change out of my sewage-splashed clothes, but the sales associate blocked my way to the fitting room. “I’m so sorry, ma’am, but you can’t try on a white blouse with makeup on. It would be a shame if you got foundation or lipstick on it.” I frowned but understood the policy. “Fine. I’ll just buy it, then. I’m in a hurry.” She quickly snipped off the tag but then made no move to take my card. Losing my patience, I tried to grab the blouse to change, but she blocked me again. “I’m so sorry, ma’am, but you haven’t paid yet!” I shoved my credit card in her face, my voice rising. “Well, maybe you could actually take my money, then?!” Her face remained a mask of professional courtesy. “I’m so sorry, ma’am, but I don’t have the authorization to process payments. If you could please wait for about forty minutes…” … 1 While waiting at a red light, a speeding car hydroplaned through a puddle right at the crosswalk. I was standing at the very front. I took the full force of the splash. My white silk blouse was instantly a mess of splattered ink, and even the hair on the left side of my head was dripping. “What the hell!” “Jerk must be late for his own funeral!” “This is insane! Every time it rains, I get splashed at this intersection!” “Son of a… did anyone get the license plate? Let’s report that bastard…” The other pedestrians who’d been hit started cursing a blue streak. My own blood was boiling. But my client’s flight was about to land, and I was in a rush to get to the airport. I didn’t have time to chase this down. Going home to change was out of the question. Luckily, there was a boutique just ahead. I walked over, dabbing at my hair with a tissue. I had barely stepped over the threshold when a young woman in a sharp black suit greeted me warmly. “Welcome, ma’am. My name is Angela, your personal sales consultant. How may I help you today? Would you like a recommendation—” “No, thanks. I’m in a hurry. I can manage on my own.” Angela’s smile tightened at being cut off. I paid her no mind, grabbing a white blouse off the rack and heading for the fitting room. But Angela stepped in front of me, blocking my path. “I’m so sorry, ma’am, but you can’t try on a white blouse with makeup on. It would be a shame if you got foundation or lipstick on it.” I frowned. “It’s a button-down, not a pullover. It won’t touch my face. Besides, I’m in a rush. If it fits, I’m wearing it out of the store. I’m not just trying it on for fun.” “I’m afraid that’s not possible, ma’am.” Seriously? My first instinct was to turn and leave. But a quick glance around revealed… there were no other clothing stores nearby. As I hesitated, I met Angela’s eyes. They held a hint of a smirk. “Ma’am, you’re quite dirty, and your hair is still dripping. You’ll definitely stain the new clothes if you go in like that. And if you came out and claimed the blouse was already dirty, well, I’d have no way to defend myself, would I?” The corner of her mouth twitched downward. The anger that had been simmering inside me all morning finally erupted. “Well, yeah! The only reason I’m here buying a new shirt is because mine got ruined! I’m trying to give you my business!” “And obviously, I’d clean myself up before I change, but first you have to let me into the fitting room! Or what, you want me to stick my hands up my shirt and wipe myself down in the middle of your store? You want me to strip right here? Huh?!” Angela just smiled, not saying a word, continuing to block my path. Furious, I threw the blouse down. “Okay, fine! I won’t buy it. I’m leaving. Happy now?” “Wait…” Angela’s hand landed on my shoulder. I slapped it away instinctively. “Don’t touch me! What is this, a hostage situation?” “Ma’am, you’ve misunderstood me. That’s not what I meant…” “I don’t care what you meant! Get out of my way!” I stormed out, pulling out my phone to call a cab. Suddenly, a hand gripped my wrist. Angela was blocking me again. “What is wrong with you?” I seethed, wrenching my arm free and turning to let her have it. But Angela let out a little cry and collapsed onto the floor. In her hand was a hairdryer. “You…” When she looked up, her face was a mask of tearful vulnerability. “Ma’am, you misunderstood. I was trying to tell you that we have towels and a hairdryer. You could dry your hair here first…” I froze. Angela scrambled to her feet and solicitously guided me to a chair, ready to blow-dry my hair herself. Snapping out of my daze, I quickly stopped her. “I’m so sorry, I completely misunderstood. I can do it myself.” 2 The drone of the hairdryer couldn’t drown out my embarrassment. Maybe I was just so on edge that everything seemed like an attack. I took a few deep breaths, silently calming myself down. Once my hair was dry, the mud on my blouse had hardened into an ugly cement-gray. I handed the hairdryer back to Angela, apologizing again for the misunderstanding, then picked up the blouse and headed for the fitting room. But once again, Angela grabbed my wrist. “I’m so sorry, ma’am, but store policy prohibits trying on white garments with makeup on.” My heart sank, and my expression hardened. Angela seemed not to notice, continuing with a cheerful explanation. “It’s a store rule, there’s nothing I can do. This blouse is a hundred dollars. As a simple sales associate, I can’t afford to take that risk. I hope you can understand.” Fine. I exhaled slowly. For the sake of the hairdryer, I’d let it go. I pushed the blouse toward her. “Okay, I’ll pay for it first. Can you please hurry? I’m in a rush.” “Of course.” Angela agreed sweetly, took the blouse, swiftly snipped the tag, and started to put it in a shopping bag. “Wait, don’t bag it. I’m going to change into it now.” “Of course.” I raised my phone to scan the QR code for payment. A hand suddenly covered it. Angela smiled. “I’m so sorry, ma’am, that code is no longer in use. We’re currently only accepting credit cards via the POS terminal.” “…Fine.” I pulled out my credit card and held it out. But Angela didn’t take it. She just kept fiddling with the computer. A minute passed. “Is there a problem?” I asked. “Is your internet always this slow?” She gave a weak smile. “Yes, it can be a little sluggish.” Two more minutes passed. Angela remained glued to the screen, the sound of her mouse clicking away like a time bomb in my head. I had run out of patience. I reached for the blouse. “You keep working on that, I’m just going to go change…” “You can’t.” Angela’s hand shot out, pressing down on the blouse. She looked up, her eyes locking with mine. “I’m so sorry, ma’am. You haven’t paid yet.” A vein throbbed in my temple. I waved the credit card I’d been holding for the last five minutes. “Well, then maybe you could actually take my money?!” “I’ve been standing here this entire time with my card out! Am I the one who’s not paying?!” Her voice remained infuriatingly calm. “If you could just be patient for a few more moments, ma’am.” More frantic clicking. Fine. I’d wait. I watched the second hand on my watch go around, and around, and around. Finally, I snapped. I spun the computer monitor around to face me. “Let me see this. What kind of ancient computer and dial-up internet are you running that it takes this long to process a simple—” The moment I saw the screen, I almost choked on my own rage. It was covered in the classic, green-felt background of a game of Spider Solitaire. I stared at Angela, dumbfounded. “You’ve just been sitting here, clicking away, playing a game this whole time?! Are you messing with me?” Unfazed, Angela maintained her polite smile. “I do apologize, ma’am. I truly don’t have the authorization to process payments. You’ll have to wait for the store manager to return to assist you.” 3 I almost laughed. “Are you insane? Or do you just not understand English? I keep telling you I’m in a hurry! If you can’t take my payment, why didn’t you say so from the beginning?” Angela looked wounded. “Well, you didn’t ask…” Ha. This was absurd. I was the crazy one for even engaging with her this long. Angela continued her robotic soothing. “The manager will be back shortly. If you could please just wait a little longer. Would you like a cup of chamomile tea to calm your nerves? We also have lemon water, rosehip…” I glanced at my phone. “How long is ‘shortly’?” “Hmm… if you could please wait for about forty minutes,” she said with a bright smile. I turned and walked away. Angela scrambled out from behind the counter and grabbed my arm. “Wait! Ma’am, you can’t leave! You haven’t paid!” “I don’t want the blouse anymore. Get off me.” “No, the tag has been cut! You have to buy it!” I scoffed, pulled my arm free, and strode toward the door. “Don’t you move! If you leave now, that’s theft! I can call the police!” “Go ahead,” I said with a sneer, grabbing the handle and pushing. Huh? It wouldn’t budge. The glass door rattled in its frame but remained firmly shut. Angela was no longer in a hurry. She strolled leisurely up behind me. “I’m so sorry, ma’am. The tag on the blouse has been removed. You cannot leave the premises until payment has been made.” Something inside me snapped. My God! It wasn’t that I didn’t want to pay! It was this psycho who wouldn’t let me! “I must have been cursed to walk down this street and into this store…” I muttered, running a hand through my hair in frustration. Just as I was about to unleash a tirade, a flicker of movement in the corner of my eye caught my attention. Angela had darted a quick glance toward the upper right corner of the room. A faint red light glowed from a security camera. I paused. When I met Angela’s dark eyes again, a chill shot up my spine. She was deliberately trying to provoke me. Perhaps disappointed that I hadn’t exploded yet, she took two steps closer, her voice dripping with provocation. “You don’t seem to be in that much of a rush. Surely forty minutes won’t make a difference. Please, just be patient. The moment our manager returns, I promise you’ll be the first person she helps.” My voice was a little hoarse. “So, if I pay, you’ll open the door and let me leave?” “Of course.” I put my phone away and dug through my purse, pulling out a wad of cash from a birthday card. “Fine. The blouse is a hundred dollars, right? Here. Cash. You must be able to take cash. Now open the door and let me out!” But Angela just smiled and pushed the money back. “I’m afraid not, ma’am. I truly, truly do not have authorization to process any payments. Please don’t make this difficult for me.” Enraged, I threw the money at her. “What is wrong with you? I’ve given you the money! Why won’t you let me go? What do you want?” Just as I suspected. The more agitated I became, the more triumphant she looked. She raised an eyebrow, her smile unwavering. “I’m so sorry, ma’am. Even with cash, you’ll have to wait for the manager. For now, you cannot leave.” I clenched my jaw. “So you don’t have authorization to take my money, but you do have authorization to illegally detain me?” “Why have you locked the door? Why are you forcing me to wait for your manager? Are you doing this on purpose? Or… are you a human trafficker?” “What?” Angela’s fake smile froze on her face. I feigned a sudden realization, dramatically knocking over a clothing rack. “That’s it! It all makes sense now! You’re traffickers, and this is your den! That’s why you were stalling, making excuses, trying to keep me here! You’re waiting for your accomplices to come and kidnap me! You monsters, where are you planning to sell me? How many other victims are there? I’m calling the police! I have to get out of here!” Angela stared at me, her face a mask of disbelief. “What are you talking about? Are you delusional? No, what are you doing?! Put down the fire extinguisher! Ma’am, stop—”

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  • My Stolen Future

    The moment I was about to be swapped at birth and doomed to a life of poverty, I was jolted awake by a stream of live comments flooding my vision. 「Wow, the male lead is so clever. He’s going to secretly switch his sick sister with the billionaire’s daughter. Now his sister’s heart condition can be cured!」 「My heart breaks for him. He has to send his own sister away and then go home to a drunk mom and a gambling-addicted dad. He’s carrying the weight of the world on his tiny shoulders.」 「Don’t feel too bad for him! He’s got our girl Lucy. She’ll wash his clothes and cook his meals when they’re kids, and after the big reveal, she’ll give up her fortune to marry him and be his devoted housewife. He’s totally winning.」 A lifetime of misery flashed before my eyes. A piercing wail escaped my lips, waking everyone in the room. 1 The quiet hospital nursery erupted into chaos. A young boy, Jordi, frantically clamped a hand over my mouth, his childish face etched with panic. Beads of cold sweat trickled down his pale forehead. My father, who had been in an office next door, burst into the room. His eyes locked on me, nestled in Jordi’s arms, and his expression darkened instantly. “Kid, what do you think you’re doing with my daughter?” My dad stood at a towering six-foot-three, built like a linebacker. His presence alone was enough to make most people tremble. But Jordi, after a brief moment of shock, quickly composed himself, his composure unnerving for a five-year-old. “Sir, I’m a patient here. I saw that her sleeping position looked like it would hurt her neck. I was just trying to adjust her.” The comments went wild with praise. 「I stan a genius king! Jordi is so smart to come up with that on the fly. Who would ever suspect a five-year-old?」 「LOL, our boy is a certified genius. If it weren’t for his trash family holding him back, he’d be famous by now.」 「Ugh, Lucy’s crying is so annoying. What’s the big deal? That’s her future husband. Soon enough, she’ll be dying to be in his arms 24/7.」 「She needs to get used to his embrace. He didn’t succeed today, but he’ll find another way. It would be a shame if she ruined his hard work again.」 My dad stared at Jordi, his expression a mixture of suspicion and confusion. The more I read the comments, the more terrified I became of this little psycho. I wailed louder, spitting and gurgling, trying desperately to roll my eyes toward my dad. Finally, he got the message. He slapped his thigh, pointing a finger at Jordi. “Wait a minute. Something’s not right here.” He immediately ordered a full investigation. Jordi was just a child, and his methods were clumsy. The trail of evidence was obvious. In less than half an hour, his plan was exposed: he had intended to kidnap me and replace me with his sister, Lily, so she could receive treatment for her congenital heart disease. The entire hospital was in an uproar. My father was incandescent with rage. I just sucked on my pacifier, watching the blood drain from Jordi’s face as I took long, satisfying gulps of milk. Dad called security to have him removed. As they dragged him away, Jordi’s eyes were fixed on me, a look of bitter resentment and longing in them. Just before he left, a call came through on his cheap smartwatch. The doctor’s voice was grim. “Your sister is dying. It’s time to come take her home.” Through the speaker, I could hear the faint, heartbreaking cries of a baby girl. Jordi’s eyes welled with tears. He turned to my father, his voice cracking. “Please, sir, please save my sister, Lily.” I took a deep breath. The absolute nerve of this kid. My dad just scoffed and told him to get lost. Jordi’s small fists clenched. Suddenly, his fear was replaced by a strange, unnerving determination. “Sir,” he said, his voice steady, “I wasn’t just taking Lucy to save my sister.” “Everything I’m about to tell you is the absolute truth.” 2 Jordi’s gaze softened as he looked at me, his small face filled with an unsettling tenderness. “Sir, I can see the future,” he declared. “And in that future, I’m Lucy’s husband.” “She will fall completely in love with me, so much that she’ll give up her life as an heiress just to be my wife.” “And I love her more than anything. I was only taking her because I miss her so much.” He lowered his long, dark lashes, a picture of manufactured vulnerability. To prove his point, he began reciting a string of deeply personal secrets about my family, things no outsider could possibly know. My father’s eyes grew wider with each revelation, his face a mask of disbelief. What he didn’t know was that I could see Jordi’s cheat sheet. The comments were scrolling frantically. 「Go, Jordi, go! He’s using our chat history to trick his future father-in-law! So smart!」 「Keep going, scare the old man straight! LMAO, I’ve got a whole folder of the Vance family’s dirty laundry right here.」 「My turn! My turn! Tell him his wife is a total softie behind closed doors!」 「Delete that, you idiot! He’ll get him killed! Jordi, Jordi, the password to the Vance family’s Swiss bank account is 123456. It’s all part of Lucy’s dowry.」 I choked on my milk, coughing until my face turned beet red. So that’s what it was. I wasn’t just seeing random comments; I was seeing his comments. My dad patted my back anxiously, his brow furrowed as he studied the strange little boy. Jordi, sensing an opportunity, pressed his advantage. “So, can you treat my sister now?” he pleaded. “She’s Lucy’s sister, too. In the future, Lucy will adore Lily.” The comments eagerly agreed. 「He’s right! The FL doesn’t even resent Lily for stealing her identity. She insists that Lily stay with the family and be raised as her sister.」 「Poor little Lily. She grew up with every luxury, but she was so frail and sick. Not like our Lucy, who was strong enough to haul water barrels for work by age three.」 「But Lily is a good sister! She never looks down on Lucy for being a country bumpkin, and she even offers to share the company shares with her. She even lets Lucy have her amazing brother. Their love is a two-way street!」 I stared at the comments, wondering if I was hallucinating. How could they twist a vicious story of a cuckoo in the nest and call it a beautiful act of sisterly love? This chat was seriously disturbed. After I settled down, my dad actually began to consider Jordi’s request. I could see it on his face—father-daughter telepathy. The boy’s information was too accurate to ignore. And what was saving one life to a man like my father? He was one of the richest men in the world; money was no object. But I refused to let my dad be played for a fool. I let out a scream so piercing it could have shattered glass, startling my mother awake. 3 My dad quickly placed me in my mother’s arms and whispered the whole bizarre story to her. My mom, still recovering from childbirth, listened intently and then delivered a swift, stinging slap across my father’s face. He stared at her, dumbfounded. “Are you insane?” she hissed. “This kid tries to kidnap our daughter, and your first thought is to pay for his sister’s medical bills?” “‘Future husband’? At his age, he’s already plotting to swap out his own sister for a wife. The boy is a manipulative little monster.” “If he really loved our daughter,” she continued, her voice rising, “he wouldn’t be planning a life where she has to suffer for him!” My dad, a gentle giant built like a bear, let out a wounded whimper. Jordi knew the game was up. He glared at my mother, his voice dripping with a chilling mix of scorn and hatred. “Ma’am, I can guarantee you, one day your daughter will be madly in love with me.” “You refuse to save my sister now. But in the future,” he snarled, “I will make your daughter pay for your cruelty. I’ll make her hate you, just as much as I hate you right now.” With that, he slammed the door and was gone. My parents exchanged a worried glance. Dad ran a hand through his hair, his voice laced with anxiety. “What if she really does grow up to hate us?” Mom gently pinched my chubby cheek, her voice fierce. “If she turns into some love-obsessed idiot, then she’s no daughter of mine.” But her hands were trembling, and a deep-seated fear clouded her eyes. I wriggled in their arms, patting their hands to comfort them and blowing bubbles with my mouth. Don’t worry, Mom and Dad. I’m not going to be a fool for love. I’m not going to suffer for anyone. I had suffered enough in my last life. I was an orphan, fighting for scraps in an overcrowded orphanage. When it closed, I became a child laborer and died before I turned fifteen. I don’t know why I retained the memories of that life. But I was grateful. This time, I had been born into the life I’d always dreamed of, with a mountain of wealth and parents who adored me. I wasn’t about to throw that away for some boy. When my grandparents heard about the near-kidnapping, they nearly had heart attacks. My paternal grandfather, a titan of industry, gifted me a subsidiary of his company. The skyscraper that housed its headquarters made me the youngest billionaire CEO in the Guinness World Records. My grandmother adorned me with so many heavy gold bracelets and jade necklaces that I could barely breathe. My maternal grandfather, a political giant and a “founding father” of our modern nation, assigned me a 24/7 security detail. My grandmother, a brilliant scientist, gave me her black card, linked to the royalties from her patents. It had a string of zeros I’d only ever seen in astronomy textbooks. Surrounded by the scent of old money and the sound of my family’s laughter, I drifted off into the most peaceful sleep of my life. The next time I saw Jordi Croft was three years later. I had accidentally cut my wrist with a fruit knife and was rushed to the hospital. As we arrived, the familiar stream of comments flickered back into view. 「Our ML works so hard. He should be in school, but he’s here at the hospital, taking care of his sister day and night.」 「He’s smart enough to be in the sixth grade already, but at eight years old, he hasn’t even started first grade. My heart aches for him. He’s so thin, he’s nothing but skin and bones.」 「If only Lucy were here. She adores him. She would find a way to make money to support his education. She’d starve herself just to make sure he had enough to eat.」 「God, Lucy is so annoying. And selfish. If she hadn’t cried that day, Jordi wouldn’t be suffering like this. It’s all her fault.」 … A cold laugh escaped me. So, Jordi’s miserable life was my fault now? How had I ended up with the blame for that? As the comments grew clearer, Jordi himself came into view. He was tall for his age, lean and wiry, with sharp, monolidded eyes that held a chilling indifference. He didn’t even glance in my direction, rushing past me to a small, worn-out cot in the hallway. A pale, fragile-looking girl lay on it, her tiny hand bruised purple from countless IV needles. She looked as if a strong gust of wind could blow her away. The coldness on Jordi’s face melted into a sea of tenderness, his eyes overflowing with a fierce, protective love. The Chat was ecstatic. 「What is Lucy even staring at? Talk about unrequited love. Our boy won’t even give her the time of day.」 「Serves her right for crying back then. Now, even if she’s fallen for him at first sight, he has no time for her.」 「Don’t be so harsh, guys. She was just a baby, she didn’t know any better. We should give her a chance to make it up to him. She’s the real heiress now; she can help him a lot.」 「We’re just teasing! She’s his future wife, after all. Even if we don’t give her a chance, he’ll find a way to let her atone for her sins.」 The moment that last comment appeared, Jordi stood up from his sister’s bedside. His gaze fell on my bandaged wrist, and he slowly walked towards me. His tone was far from polite. “Hi. My sister has a serious heart condition. You just have a little cut on your wrist. Can you give her your private suite?” I blinked, momentarily stunned. I tilted my head, half-wondering if robbery and extortion had suddenly become legal. Why else would someone so brazenly demand I give up the expensive VIP room my parents had paid for? But the sour, entitled tone of the comments confirmed I hadn’t misheard. 「Awww, the ML is already going easy on her! Just asking for the room and that’s it?」 「He’s the only one who truly feels for her. He knows she suffered for three years because of him, so he’s letting her off easy. Lucy, you should just drop dead and let me take your place!」 「Seriously, what is she just standing there for? He’s practically gift-wrapped an apology for her. Just move your stuff already!」 Jordi was growing impatient. He forced a smile that didn’t reach his eyes. “Lucy Vance,” he said, his voice dripping with sarcasm, “you’re not going to be so selfish as to say no, are you?” He leaned in closer. “You should know, there’s nothing I hate more than selfish people.” Was he trying to guilt-trip me? Oh, I was done being polite. I looked up at him with wide, innocent eyes. “Wow,” I sighed dramatically. “I really envy your skin.” He was momentarily confused. “What do you mean?” I let out a sharp, exaggerated laugh. “It’s thicker than a castle wall.” His face instantly contorted, flushing a deep, furious red. 5 The Chat exploded with outrage before he could even speak. 「Is Lucy insane? How could she say that to him? Does she not want to be his darling wife anymore?」 「My poor, sweet boy! He was already willing to forgive her and build a future together, and she just tramples all over his heart. I think I can hear it shattering.」 「Everyone calm down. Our girl loves him more than anything. She would never hurt him on purpose. This has to be a tactic. Playing hard to get!」 「That makes sense! She missed out on three precious years with him. She must feel so guilty and unworthy. She’s probably too scared to believe he’d forgive her, so she’s taking the ‘bad girl’ route to get his attention. A forced romance is still a romance, right?」 After reading their twisted analysis, I secretly rolled my eyes. Jordi, however, seemed to have an epiphany. A wave of relief washed over his face. He stopped pressuring me for the room and returned to Lily’s bedside, his eyes fixed on me with a thoughtful, calculating expression. I had a bad feeling about this. I slammed my door shut, cutting off his probing gaze. Back in my luxurious room, I flopped onto the soft bed, kicking my feet in the air and propping my chin on my hands as I video-chatted with my parents. They were in Europe for a massive business deal and had been frantic when they heard I’d been hurt. My father was so distraught he was practically sobbing into my mother’s shoulder. My mother carefully inspected my bandaged wrist through the screen before letting out a sigh of relief, though her face remained stern. “Lucy Vance, you are forbidden from playing with knives ever again.” I nodded obediently. Ever since the incident at my birth, my parents had been hyper-vigilant about my safety, terrified that I would get hurt or, worse, be taken from them. I was their precious treasure. With parents who loved me this much, how could I ever follow the script and abandon them and this life of incredible privilege for a poor boy with a persecution complex? But even though I wanted nothing to do with Jordi, it was clear he wasn’t done with me. Just as I was drifting off to sleep, dreaming of my bright, CEO-filled future, a series of frantic knocks echoed from my door.

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  • The Ravioli Alibi

    When I came back to life, the first thing I did was order fifty pounds of ground meat and gather my family to make ravioli. I did this because, in my last life, my stepmother, Brenda, had an affair and got pregnant by another man. To hide her betrayal from my father, she orchestrated a public spectacle. She went to a chaotic Black Friday sale, intentionally got into the scrum for a discounted coffee machine, and let herself be knocked to the ground, inducing a miscarriage. When she came home, she collapsed into my father’s arms, sobbing. “It was Mia,” she cried. “She’s so cheap, she insisted we go fight for that stupid sale. If she hadn’t dragged me there, I wouldn’t have fallen. I wouldn’t have lost our son…” I tried to explain, but my own fiancé, Caleb, stepped forward to drive the nail into my coffin. “Mia, I am so disappointed in you,” he said, his face a mask of disgust. “I’ve tolerated your cheapness—scamming free meals, shoplifting snacks from the bulk bins—but this? Forcing your stepmother into a dangerous crowd just to save a few bucks, causing her to lose a child? I can’t do this anymore. The engagement is off.” My father exploded. He chased me through the house, his rage a storm of slaps and curses. Afterward, he had me committed to a corrupt psychiatric facility upstate. I was locked away, mistreated, and left to die from a septic infection after a botched medical procedure. It was only after I died that I learned the truth. Caleb had been sleeping with my stepmother all along. Our engagement was just a convenient cover for their affair. When I opened my eyes again, I was back. Back on the morning of the day Brenda went to the Black Friday sale. 1 I was curled up in bed, tears soaking my pillow, when the phone rang. I answered it instinctively. It was Brenda. “Morning, sweetie,” she chirped. “It’s Christmas Eve, so I’m going to do a little shopping, treat myself. I won’t be home to cook today, so you can handle the housework and make dinner for your dad and grandparents, okay?” She said it not as a request, but as a statement of fact, giving me no room to refuse. “And don’t tell your dad where I am. You know how he hovers. A girl needs her breathing room.” Her voice was syrupy sweet. “You’re such a good girl, Mia. You’re my little helper. I’ll bring you back something nice!” Then she hung up. I tried calling her back—five, six times. Every call went straight to voicemail. She’d already blocked my number. The repeated dial tone shocked me back to the present, and a cold sweat broke out across my skin. I was back. I had been given a second chance. In my last life, Brenda had married my father thinking he was wealthy. She was sorely disappointed to find out he was just a retired tradesman with no pension. All the nice things he’d shown off during their courtship—the car, the apartment—were actually mine. She felt trapped, but she stayed, her resentment simmering just beneath the surface. Last time, on Christmas Eve, she had made the same call. I’d agreed to her request, but then got called into the office to handle a crisis. I worked all day, only getting home late for dinner. I walked into a house thick with a terrifying silence. My father stood in the living room, his face a thundercloud, while Brenda wept at his side. “Mia, it’s all your fault,” she’d sobbed. “If you hadn’t been so cheap, if you hadn’t dragged me to that horrible sale, I wouldn’t have been pushed. I wouldn’t have lost the baby.” I was floored. “What are you talking about? I was at work all day. I have timestamps, emails…” Before I could pull out my phone, Caleb snatched it from my hand, threw it to the floor, and stomped on it. “I can’t believe you,” he’d spat. “I’m done. We’re done.” His betrayal was all the proof my father needed. He saw the loss of his unborn son as the ultimate failure, and I was the one to blame. He dragged me out of the house that night. I now knew the child she’d lost wasn’t my father’s. It was Caleb’s. They’d been careless, and this elaborate, cruel performance was their way of erasing the evidence. Brilliant, really. Utterly monstrous, but brilliant. This time, things would be different. A cold smile touched my lips. I wasn’t going anywhere. I ordered fifty pounds of ground meat for delivery. Then I sent a text to my boss. Family emergency. Requesting to work from home for the holiday. I was the backbone of my company. My boss trusted me implicitly. The reply came back in minutes: Approved. Take care of things. With my alibi established, I got up and took a long, hot shower. By the time I was sitting at the breakfast table, the doorbell rang. The butcher delivered the meat. My father and grandparents stared at the massive containers in disbelief. “Where on earth did all this come from?” my grandmother asked. I passed the buck to my boss. “A client defaulted on a payment, so they paid the company in product. They’re a meat distributor.” I shrugged. “So, instead of a cash bonus this year, my boss just gave us all a share of the meat. Said we should all go home and make ravioli for Christmas.” “Fifty pounds?” my grandma gasped. “We’ll be making ravioli until New Year’s!” “Well, there go my plans for chess with the guys,” my grandfather sighed. I turned to my father. “Dad, we can’t let all this meat go to waste. Grandma and Grandpa are in. You’re not going to sit this out, are you? Go wash your hands.” Muttering curses about my boss under his breath, my father rolled up his sleeves and started chopping onions and garlic, soon sweating with the effort. On Christmas Eve, while other families were decorating trees and wrapping presents, ours was an assembly line of misery. My father, the strongest among us, chopped, mixed, and kneaded dough until he was panting like a dog. By noon, everyone was starving. My father remembered his absent wife. “It’s twelve-thirty. Where’s your stepmother? Why isn’t she here making lunch?” I feigned innocence. “I don’t know. I tried calling her this morning, but I think she blocked me.” I put on a worried expression. “Do you think she’s mad at me? Maybe you should try calling her, Dad.” He frowned and dialed Brenda’s number. He tried three times. No answer. His temper flared. “Did you two have a fight? Why isn’t she answering my calls?” He glared at me. “You’re twenty-five years old, Mia. Stop acting like a child and provoking your mother.” I put on my best wounded expression and played the call recording from that morning. “Dad, you’re blaming me again. But this time, you’re the reason she’s not home.” The whole family listened as Brenda’s cheerful voice filled the room, ending with the line about needing “breathing room” from my hovering father. His face went dark. He lit a cigarette and smoked it down to the filter in silence. While my grandparents tried to soothe him, I ordered four large pizzas. “Mom’s not here and we’re busy,” I said brightly. “Let’s just get takeout.” My grandparents praised me for being so thoughtful. My father just sat there, stewing in a black mood that lasted the rest of the day. By evening, all fifty pounds of meat had been turned into countless trays of ravioli. Our hands were cramping. My dad went out for another pack of cigarettes while my grandparents started boiling the water for dinner. I sat on the sofa, scrolling through my phone, and allowed myself a small, satisfied smile. I hadn’t left the house. I had been with my family all day. There was no way Brenda could pin her “miscarriage” on me this time. Just as I thought that, the front door burst open. Caleb was supporting a pale, weeping Brenda. The moment she saw me, she let out a wail. “Mia! You monster! After I treated you like my own daughter, how could you do this to me?” Before I could even speak, Caleb joined in. “I can’t believe your cruelty, Mia. You are a heartless snake. I am so disappointed in you. We are through!” I looked at them, my face a mask of pure confusion. “What are you talking about? Brenda, you were pregnant? When did this happen? Why didn’t I know?” My feigned ignorance only made Brenda cry harder. “So this is how it is! All those times you were sweet to me, it was all an act! You’ve hated me all along!” She pointed a shaking finger at me. “I told you the good news last night, and what do you do? You drag me to that sale this morning, you push me into that crowd, and you get me trampled!” Her voice rose to a hysterical shriek. “I barely survived, and you stand there acting like you know nothing? How could you be so cruel?” Our old house was in a tight-knit courtyard community. On Christmas Eve, the shared yard was full of neighbors building snowmen and lighting firecrackers. Hearing the commotion, they all started to gather at our doorway. Brenda, ever the performer, made sure to stand right on the threshold, her voice carrying across the entire courtyard. The neighbors began to murmur, their eyes turning on me. “I can’t believe it. Mia seems so sweet, but she intentionally caused her stepmother to have a miscarriage?” “You never know what’s in a person’s heart. We watched her grow up, and this is what she becomes?” One woman shook her head. “I’m telling my son to stay away from her. Who knows what she’s capable of.” The murmurs grew into a chorus of condemnation. I felt tears welling in my eyes. But this time, they weren’t tears of helplessness. They were tears of pure, unadulterated excitement. The show was about to begin. Seeing my tears, Brenda thought she had me cornered. She doubled down, regaling the neighbors with more fabricated details of my cruelty. Caleb, meanwhile, grabbed me by the shoulders and tried to force me to my knees. “Children are meant to respect their parents! You will get on your knees and you will apologize to Brenda for the child you murdered!” He tightened his grip. “As your fiancé, it’s my job to teach you some discipline!” He shoved my head down, forcing me to bow again and again until my forehead was scraped and bleeding. “That’s not enough,” he declared. “An apology can’t bring back a child. You need to compensate her.” He looked at me, his eyes cold and greedy. “Give Brenda your year-end bonus so she can buy supplements. And sign over your new apartment to her, so she has a quiet place to recover. That is the only way to show you are truly sorry.” I almost laughed out loud. It was so absurd, so brazen. And suddenly, it all made sense. This wasn’t just about covering up their affair. It was about getting rid of me and taking everything I had. No wonder Caleb had suddenly started pursuing me so intensely, right after Brenda realized my father wasn’t her ticket to a life of luxury. I looked up at Caleb and spit directly in his face. “You want my bonus and my apartment for a bastard child you knocked up? In your dreams.” They were both stunned, then furious. “Caleb, don’t,” Brenda sobbed, playing the victim. “She’s never liked me. It’s no use.” She turned dramatically. “A stepmother is never welcome. The world hates me, my own family tries to kill me… I might as well be dead!” She made a show of running towards a tree as if to bash her head against it. Caleb rushed to stop her. “Don’t worry, Brenda. I’ve already called Frank. He’s on his way. He’ll make this right.”

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  • The Doormat Wife

    Everyone calls me a pathetic doormat. When my husband Tristan gets intimate with other women in front of me, I just hurry over like a puppy and hand them a condom. “Use this,” I say with concern. “It’s safer.” Eventually, even Tristan sneered, “Moria, is this really love?” I’d nod, then shake my head, finally whispering, “Tristan, you’re mine.” That only made him call for more “takeout.” Their moans filled the air right before me. Afterward, he’d ask, “Am I still yours?” “Of course,” I’d reply, as if it were obvious. He’d scoff, “You’re a master of self-deception.” Later, while he slept, I’d gaze at his handsome face and lick my lips. “Delicious,” I’d whisper. “So delicious.” “The more wicked, the better they taste.” He doesn’t know I’m a succubus with a damaged bloodline. I can’t gain energy from sex—I have to eat promiscuous men. Their corrupted energy repairs my bloodline and restores my power. Tristan? He’s the prize hog I’ve been fattening for slaughter. … When Tristan woke up, I was curled up in his arms, studying a cookbook. The human world had its flaws, but the sheer variety of recipes was mind-boggling. He pushed me away. “What are you looking at a cookbook for?” I looked up, my smile innocent and pure. “To make you breakfast.” He just chuckled and got up to dress, not even glancing around the room. He didn’t need to. After every one of his… sessions, I meticulously cleaned everything and tied up all the loose ends. The “takeout” girls had already left; I’d even paid their final fees. As they were leaving, their faces were etched with contempt. “I’ve never seen a wife who orders escorts for her own husband.” I just offered a placating smile and bowed repeatedly. Once they were gone and I was sure Tristan wouldn’t be disturbed, I scurried after them, my posture subservient, my expression fawning. “Could I get your contact info? For next time.” They stared at me, dumbfounded, but gave it to me anyway. As they walked away, I heard one of them mutter, “Takes all kinds, I guess.” Back inside, I scrolled through my phone, calculating. Five more times. That’s all it would take. Then Tristan would be ripe for the picking. He’d cheated 9,995 times. The quality of his essence was about to reach its absolute peak. One more time after that, and he’d turn sour and rotten. Tristan noticed me zoning out and sighed with impatience. He’d always found me boring. A woman who never fought back was no different to a man than an inanimate toy. He held out his arms, and I stood to help him with his jacket and tie. After smoothing out the lapels of his suit, I felt a surge of satisfaction. My prize hog looked exquisite. The quality of his essence was practically radiating off him—firm, juicy, perfect. My mouth began to water. Tristan’s brow furrowed in disgust. He always assumed my drooling was some pathetic form of lust. “I’m going out,” he said, his voice low. “I won’t be back tonight.” I nodded. “Are you going to see Selene?” Selene was his mistress, the one he claimed to truly love. They were a perfect match—equal in status, looks, and background. A match made in high-society heaven, everyone said. Tristan, for all his wild behavior, was only ever reckless in front of me. He’d given me strict instructions: “Playtime is playtime, but no one, and I mean no one, is to ever upset Selene.” I had nodded vigorously, patting my chest in a solemn promise. “Don’t worry. I’ll keep a close eye on them for you.” One of his friends had been there and burst out laughing. “Why don’t you just divorce him and let Selene have him? Maybe then he’ll finally settle down.” But I had just shaken my head stubbornly. “Tristan is mine.” And so, the story spread throughout the city: I was hopelessly, tragically in love with Tristan. Willing to let him turn my world into his personal playground. Whenever I heard the rumors, all I could think was that a wild horse, allowed to run free, makes for better meat. The same was true for Tristan. “Wild thing… you make my heart sing…” I hummed a human tune as I started cleaning. Human songs were interesting. I felt like the horse tamer, and Tristan was my wild stallion. He might run wild and free, but in the end, every stallion must return to the ranch. Suddenly, there was a knock at the door. I peeked through the peephole and saw a young college student, her face streaked with tears. Another one of Tristan’s messes, no doubt. I opened the door. The student sobbed, her words coming in hiccuping gasps. “Are you… Mrs. Thorne?” I nodded, my eyes drawn to her swollen belly. Damn it. He didn’t use a condom again. This must have happened when I wasn’t there to supervise. The student clutched her stomach. “Ma’am, I had no one else to turn to. I’m pregnant.” She sniffled. “Tristan blocked my number. He just told me to come find you.” I sighed internally. That was Tristan all over—leaving me to clean up his filth. I ushered her inside, expertly brewing a cup of tea and setting out some pastries. The girl eyed the teacup suspiciously. I took a sip from my own cup. “It’s not poisoned.” She gave a weak, embarrassed smile but still didn’t drink. Human women were so strange. So guarded against other women, but so utterly defenseless against men. She pulled a wad of tissues from her purse and started crying again, a heart-wrenching display. “Mrs. Thorne,” she choked out, “what am I going to do?” I took a tissue of my own and wiped the spittle that had sprayed onto my face. This was a real headache. They never asked for my help when they were in bed with him, but as soon as their bellies started to swell, they came crying to me. Seeing that she was about to unleash another flood of tears, I pulled out a credit card. “There’s ten million on this. You can have the baby, you can get rid of it—your choice. Just don’t ever bother Tristan again.” As for keeping her mouth shut, it didn’t matter. Tristan’s reputation was already ground meat. She snatched the card and stuffed it into her pocket, but her words were dripping with melodrama. “It’s not about the money! I love Tristan! I just want to be with him! Please, I’m begging you, let us be together.” Every one of them thought I was the one standing in their way. If only they knew how little I cared. I shook my head and pulled out my tablet. “It’s not me, sweetie. He’s just bored of you.” I scrolled through page after page of names until I found hers. “There were five other girls at the same time as you. Tristan’s always like this. He plays with his toys, and then he throws them away.” The color drained from her face. “Are we just playthings for you rich people?” she whispered, her voice trembling with rage. She grabbed her teacup to throw it at me, but it wouldn’t budge. After 99 near-misses with flying liquids, did she really think I wouldn’t be prepared? She stared at the immovable cup, then grabbed a throw pillow from the sofa to hurl at me instead. That didn’t move either. I had spent a whole night sewing the pillows to the couch. And besides, why was she yelling at me? I wasn’t the one who’d played with her. In the end, she left in a storm of tears, clutching her millions and her broken heart. I touched my cheek, still baffled. Humans were so bizarre. Their hearts screamed for money, but their mouths declared, “I want love.” Yet, if you offered them a life of love in poverty, they’d run for the hills. As a succubus, I could see the greedy delight sparkling in her soul. Just as I was clearing the table, a text from Tristan came through. “Get to the hospital. Now.” “Something’s happened to Selene.” … When I arrived at the hospital, Selene was pale as a ghost. Blood was trickling from a long gash on her delicate wrist, and a team of doctors was scrambling to treat her. “She’s lost too much blood,” one of them announced. “She needs a transfusion.” All eyes turned to me. Everyone knew that Selene and I shared the same rare blood type. A fact I had, of course, fabricated. I was regretting that little lie now, but it was too late. Tristan grabbed my arm and threw me to the floor. “Take her! Drain her!” he roared. Spoken like a true alpha CEO. So commanding, especially with helpless women. A doctor pinned me down, and a needle slid into my arm. I was about to fight back, but then I saw it. The number above Tristan’s head had ticked over to 9,999. Wow. An afternoon with his true love, and he’d managed to get it on four times. Impressive. Since he was ripe for the eating anyway, I relaxed and let them take my blood. They transfused it into Selene, and she recovered almost instantly, a healthy flush returning to her cheeks. She opened her eyes, her gaze shattered and tragic. Tristan knelt by her side. “Selene, I’m so sorry. Please, forgive me. I’ll never mess around again.” Oh, this is getting good, I thought, scrambling to my feet to get a better view of the drama. Who had spilled the beans about Tristan’s escapades to Selene? Selene’s voice was a weak, choked whisper. “Don’t. I’m not your wife. I have no right to tell you what to do.” Aaaand here we go, I thought. Back to me. Tristan clutched her uninjured hand, his voice thick with emotion. “As soon as you’re better, we’ll get married. You’ll be my wife, officially and publicly. Selene, I’ll do anything, just don’t leave me.” My eyes widened. How was this my fault? Selene closed her eyes, a single, perfect tear tracing a path down her cheek. A much more effective angle than the standard 45 degrees, I noted. As expected, Tristan dissolved into a blubbering mess. “I was wrong! I was so, so wrong!” They clung to each other, sobbing, and within minutes, all was forgiven. The next time I looked, they were cooing at each other like lovebirds, Tristan feeding Selene pieces of fruit from a platter. The sharp click of dress shoes announced the arrival of his assistant. “Sir, we’ve traced the anonymous tip. It was sent from inside your villa.” Tristan’s head snapped around, his eyes like daggers. And just like that, the hunter became the hunted. That clever little college student had played me. She had come to me feigning helplessness, all while secretly sending the evidence to Selene to frame me. Smart girl. Tristan didn’t even bother to ask for my side of the story. He just kicked me to the ground. I scrambled back up and gave him a thumbs-up. “Nice kick! Great form!” He froze, a flicker of something that looked suspiciously like exasperated disappointment in his eyes. I must have imagined it. Selene’s expression was one of profound sorrow. “Why would you send me those things?” I leaned over the assistant’s shoulder to look at the phone. Wow. High-definition. A big-budget production. All of Tristan’s greatest hits were there: one-on-ones, group battles, team competitions—the works. I stroked my chin thoughtfully. “Honey, your quality and speed seem to be declining.” The room fell silent. The doctors quietly slipped out the door. The assistant stood frozen, holding the phone like a hot potato. Selene’s face was ashen as she stared at Tristan with utter disillusionment. Tristan’s eyes were spitting fire. He lunged at me, his hands closing around my throat. He squeezed, and I stopped breathing, just for effect. Then I remembered—I didn’t actually need to breathe. He choked me for a full minute, my face remaining perfectly calm and composed. The assistant finally snapped out of his trance and grabbed Tristan’s arm. “Sir, stop! You’ll kill her!” Tristan let go with a cold snort. “I told you, no one upsets Selene. I can’t believe I ever thought you were harmless. Moria, if you don’t want to be Mrs. Thorne anymore, then you’re fired.” He pulled out his phone to call his lawyer and file for divorce. I clutched my neck, coughed dramatically a few times, and then shouted at the top of my lungs. “Oh, heavens above, judge the innocent and the guilty!” A clap of thunder rattled the window, and a flash of lightning illuminated my grief-stricken face. “Darling, it wasn’t me! I’m completely devoted to you! Why would I ever stand in the way of you finding happiness with others?” The assistant looked like he’d been struck by the lightning himself. Even Tristan seemed at a loss, pressing a hand to his forehead. Selene, who was meeting me for the first time, just stared, utterly dumbfounded. She had heard of my reputation, but she had never witnessed a live performance. I dropped to my knees, snot and tears streaming down my face, and began my tale of woe. “A college student came to the house today! It must have been her!” The assistant nodded. “That’s right, sir. I was just about to say that.” My performance came to a screeching halt. I shot him a murderous glare. Didn’t his mother ever teach him to get to the point? Tristan looked uncomfortable, a rare flicker of guilt in his eyes. But all he said was a dismissive, “Oh.” I understood. Alpha CEOs don’t apologize. He reached into his jacket, pulled out a credit card, and tossed it at me. “This is for your trouble.” I was ecstatic. “Your divorce settlement,” he added. Years from now, I’d be sitting in my rocking chair, telling my grand-demons, “I was just one away from a full meal. If I’d eaten him, you’d all be high-level succubi by now.” Just kidding. If I didn’t eat Tristan, I wouldn’t have any grand-demons. So, I immediately dropped back to my knees, tears erupting from my eyes like geysers. “Darling, don’t leave me! I was wrong! Next time, I’ll be more careful! You can run the background checks, and I’ll check their phones!” Tristan’s face turned beet red. He glanced nervously at Selene, who was now glaring at me, all traces of her fragile vulnerability gone. The assistant covered his ears and stared at the ceiling. “Darling,” I wailed, “can’t we just wait until you’ve cheated one more time? At least let me catch you in the act!” That was the last straw for Tristan. “Get out!” he roared, kicking me away. I obediently rolled a few times, right back to his feet. For a good meal, a little humiliation was nothing. He gritted his teeth and had the assistant drag me out of the room. From the hallway, I could hear him on his knees, begging and pleading with Selene. Then came the sound of her soft sobs, and the fateful words, “Let’s break up.” The assistant lowered his voice. “Ma’am, do you really love him that much?” My eyes filled with tears. “Of course. I’ve watched him grow up, after all.” From 0 to 9,999—I had put in so much effort. Suddenly, I heard the sound of a struggle from inside the room, followed by a muffled grunt and a soft moan. The assistant’s face turned bright red as he pulled out a pair of earplugs. My eyes lit up. I pressed my ear to the door, listening intently. This was it. It couldn’t be more than one. Just one was all I needed. Selene’s moans grew louder, culminating in a final, sharp cry and a low male growl. Then, silence. I tried the door. It was locked. Focusing my energy into my leg, I kicked it open. There, shimmering above Tristan’s head, was the glorious, golden number: 10,000. I saw the two of them on the bed, preparing for round two, and I rushed over, pulling them apart. Taking a deep breath, I delivered the line I had been rehearsing for five years. “Tristan, you have disappointed me for the last time!” “You cheated on me!” They stared at me, stunned, clutching the sheets to cover themselves. I whipped out my phone and started snapping pictures, uploading them to the internet. As the flood of negative comments transformed into streams of corrupt energy and flowed into Tristan’s body, I could see the quality of his essence changing, ripening. I stretched out my hand. “Tristan, you have hurt me and betrayed me. Now, it’s time to pay your debt.” Silence. Then, a low growl from Tristan. “What kind of crazy act are you pulling now?”

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  • The Final Call​​

    1 Three years ago, my daughter fell from the twentieth floor. She died instantly. My husband, Ethan, held her body for three days and nights, refusing to sleep. Chelsea, her godmother and my best friend, cried until she collapsed. I refused to believe my daughter, Lily, would go to the rooftop alone. I dedicated my life to uncovering the truth. But no matter how hard I looked, the security footage and every shred of evidence pointed to one conclusion: she had jumped. Until today, the anniversary of her death. I received a call from an unknown number. The voice on the other end was identical to my own. “Lily, sweetie, you be a good girl and wait for Mommy, okay? I’m coming home, and I’ll bring you your favorite strawberry cake.” I froze. Those were the last words I ever said to my daughter. … Before I could process what was happening, the voice on the other end called out again, laced with confusion. My own voice trembling, I whispered my name into the phone. “Amy.” Silence. The Amy from three years ago was stunned, her tone shifting to sharp suspicion. “Who is this? Why do you sound just like me? I was calling my daughter. How did I get you?” I struggled to keep my voice steady, my words rushing out. “I’m you, from three years in the future. Listen to me. Today is the day Lily falls to her death. You have to save her!” A cold, dismissive laugh came through the speaker. “If you’re going to lie, at least make it believable. My daughter is perfectly fine at home.” She sounded annoyed. “I can’t even hang up. What the hell do you want?” If I weren’t living this nightmare, I wouldn’t believe it either. “I know it sounds insane,” I said, my voice firm. “But it’s real, and I can prove it.” “At 1:15, Ethan, who’s supposed to be working late, is going to call and tell you he won’t be home this afternoon.” “You’ll get worried about Lily being alone and call Chelsea to ask her to watch her, but Chelsea will say she just left town for a trip.” “Then, at 1:20, your assistant will call, pressuring you to come in for a critical meeting, and you’ll give up on going home to Lily.” In my three-year quest for the truth, I had replayed that day countless times. Every detail was seared into my soul. As I finished speaking, the clock ticked over to 1:15. Right on cue, Ethan’s ringtone echoed faintly through the phone. This bizarre, time-spanning connection was so clear I could hear their entire conversation. “Honey, work is crazy today. I have to work late again…” Thirty seconds later, Amy hung up and dialed her best friend. Just as I’d said, Chelsea answered, full of regret, explaining she’d left on a trip that very morning. Immediately after, her assistant called, reminding her the meeting was about to start. “Turn the car around and go home right now,” I commanded. “Take Lily with you. The client for that meeting is going to bail at the last minute. The meeting is a waste of time.” A two-second pause, then the roar of an engine. “I’ll trust you this once,” she said, her voice tight with tension. “If there’s even a one-in-a-million chance my daughter is in danger, I’m not taking it.” A wave of relief washed over me. “I know,” I whispered. “We’re the same.” The image of my daughter’s broken body flashed in my mind, as vivid as if it were yesterday. Her tiny frame, twisted and unnatural, her little white dress stained crimson with blood that pooled from the back of her head. The memory was a physical pain, a knife twisting in my gut. I hated myself for not finding the person responsible and making them pay. But now, here it was. A chance to undo it all. A chance I had to seize. She floored it, turning a twenty-minute drive into ten. The moment she burst through the door, I heard Lily’s bright, familiar voice, brimming with life. “Mommy, you’re back so soon!” A lump formed in my throat. I could picture her perfectly, running into her mother’s arms, her eyes crinkling into a joyful smile. The past Amy’s voice was soft. “Sweetie, how about you come to the office with Mommy today? I’ll buy you a strawberry cake.” Lily, of course, cheered with excitement. But just as they were about to leave, I heard the faint click of another door opening, followed by Amy’s shocked voice. “Chelsea? I thought you were out of town!” I stiffened. Chelsea was there that day? I distinctly remembered her telling me she didn’t get back until the day after. But there was no mistaking the voice on the phone—Chelsea’s, laced with surprise and a hint of something unnatural. “You said Lily was alone. I’m her godmother, aren’t I? Of course, coming back for her is more important.” A thousand questions swirled in my mind. All I could manage was to urge Amy to keep Lily by her side before a new call beeped through, severing our connection. It was the Chelsea from my timeline, her voice as gentle as it had been three years ago. “Amy, are you still at the cemetery? I know how hard this is for you, but you have to keep moving forward…” My gaze was fixed on the distance, my voice flat as I cut her off. “The day Lily died, were you really on a trip?” Chelsea paused, a flicker of confusion in her voice. “Yes? I tried to come back, but my flight was canceled due to the weather. Don’t you remember?” Her tone grew heavy, laced with practiced concern and a hint of weary depression. “You haven’t given up on finding this… this ‘truth,’ have you? The police ruled it an accident. Lily was only five. It’s not impossible for a curious child to wander up to the roof.” “You’re going to drive yourself mad inventing enemies that aren’t there, torturing yourself over a tragic accident.” Her voice cracked. “And now… are you starting to suspect me? Amy, I cried until I passed out. They had to take me to the hospital…” I stared at the photograph of my daughter on the gravestone, my resolve hardening. Everyone thought I was crazy. And maybe I was, pushed to the very edge of sanity. This phone call with my past self felt like a fever dream. But I knew it was real. Just as I knew my daughter’s death was no accident. “Of course not,” I replied coolly. “You know I wouldn’t accuse anyone without reason. It was just a random thought.” After hanging up, I desperately tried to reconnect with my past self. When I finally got through, Amy told me she was about to leave with Lily. Chelsea had already gone. “I asked Lily about her day,” Amy added. “She said she hasn’t seen any strangers. Nothing seems out of place.” “So, there was no warning at all before it happened?” A bitter taste filled my mouth. That was the truth. If there had been even the slightest clue, I wouldn’t have spent three years chasing shadows. Amy took Lily to her office. As I’d predicted, the client canceled the meeting without warning. She was too preoccupied to care, delegating the fallout to her assistant while keeping Lily glued to her side. A few minutes later, she called me back, her voice strange. Even without seeing her, I could imagine the grim expression on her face. “You’re not going to believe this. Ethan never worked late today.” “I just called his office. The receptionist said he left early.” Now, my own expression turned to stone. 2 “Why would he lie about leaving work?” I muttered to myself, unable to comprehend his motive. In all our years of marriage, the two people I trusted most in the world had both lied to me on the worst day of my life. “Go home,” I told her. “Install hidden cameras in every corner of the house. Don’t tell anyone. Not Ethan. Not Chelsea.” After a few seconds of silence, she replied, “…I will. But I hope this has nothing to do with them.” I drove away from the cemetery. Just as I walked through my front door, Ethan arrived right behind me. “Amy,” he said gently. “Chelsea told me you went to the cemetery again. You were thinking about Lily, weren’t you?” I remembered the day it happened. When he got the call, he’d raced home, running thirteen red lights, arriving disheveled and frantic. He had knelt on the pavement, clutching our daughter’s body, his eyes raw and bloodshot. Now, as I met his gaze, it was the same as always—gentle, clear, focused only on me. But for the first time, I felt like I couldn’t see him at all. “Ethan,” I began, my voice hollow, “why do you think Lily went to the rooftop by herself that day? She never went up there.” A tremor ran through him, and his face contorted with a familiar agony. “If I hadn’t stayed late at work… if I had been home with her, she never would have gone to the roof. A fall from that high… it must have hurt so much. I’m a terrible father. It’s my fault.” His grief was so profound, so desperate. But then, his tone shifted. “Honey, Lily is gone, but we’re still here. I’m more worried about you than anything. I can’t stand to see you trapped in this shadow.” He pleaded, “Please, can’t you let it go? For her sake? Lily would be so sad to see you like this.” He’d said those words a hundred times. He’d even suggested we have another child to fill the void she left. But he didn’t understand. A thousand children could never replace my Lily. A surge of rage boiled inside me. I spun on him, my voice a raw scream. “What work was so damn important? You promised me you would take care of her! Tell me why, Ethan! Why?” He looked away, his face a mask of regret. “I didn’t know… I didn’t know she was in danger. That’s why I stayed to work…” Still lying. “Get out,” I said, my voice dangerously calm. “I don’t want to see you.” The moment Ethan left, the mask of grief fell from my face. Alone in the room, I opened a piece of software on my laptop. Because my past self had installed the cameras, I could now access three years of footage from inside my own home. But when I saw what the storage drive held, my eyes widened in disbelief. Before I could even react, my phone shrilled, breaking the silence. It was Chelsea. “Don’t be angry with him, Amy. Ethan was just trying to help. You know how clumsy he is with emotions.” Her voice was a soothing balm. “I’m on my way over to keep you company, okay?” Chelsea. Always so gentle, always unconditionally on my side. But this time, something felt deeply wrong. To confirm the sickening suspicion taking root in my heart, I answered flatly, “Fine. I’ll be waiting.” The second I hung up, another call came through—a familiar string of garbled numbers. It was my past self. I snatched up the phone. Amy’s voice was a panicked cry. “Lily’s gone!” 3 The world spun, and an icy dread crawled up from my feet. “What do you mean? You were supposed to keep her with you! How could this happen?” “She went to the restroom,” Amy choked out. “My assistant was waiting right outside the door. She was only gone for five minutes. When she went in, Lily was gone.” Five minutes. In a public space covered by security cameras, how could someone vanish into thin air? The background on her end was chaotic. Suddenly, someone shouted they’d seen Lily leaving the building. My mind recoiled—impossible. But when Amy pulled the security footage, it was true. Lily had walked out of the office by herself. The moment she stepped outside, she entered a blind spot. And then, she was gone. Amy’s voice was stretched thin with terror. “I don’t believe she would just walk away without telling me. Something is wrong!” I bit my lip, my thoughts a tangled mess. “Go home now! Check the rooftop, check the whole building for anything unusual!” She was already on her way, calling the police as she sped from the office. She burst into our apartment. It was silent, empty. Amy ran to the building’s security office, but the guard swore he hadn’t seen Lily return after leaving with her earlier. But she had fallen from our rooftop. Even with the newly installed cameras, there were no clues. The rooftop door, always locked, remained shut tight, with no sign of tampering. Amy went door-to-door, her voice low and pleading as she asked our neighbors if they’d seen her daughter. As expected, every answer was no. “How is this possible?” she cried into the phone. “Is she not going to fall this time? Is it something else? Could she have been kidnapped?” She tried calling Chelsea, but the calls went straight to voicemail. Then Ethan showed up, his face etched with worry, asking where their daughter was. Amy’s voice was sharp. “Ethan, do you honestly have no idea where Lily is?” His reply was a fraction too slow. “I just found out she was missing. How could I know where she is? Don’t worry, I’ll go to the police station. We’ll find her.” As he spoke, he took another call and left in a hurry. Listening on my end, the suspicion in my heart grew into a monstrous certainty. There were only thirty minutes left until the time of the fall. The image of my daughter’s mangled body filled my vision. My heart hammered against my ribs, and cold sweat beaded on my forehead. I dug my nails into my palm, trying to stop my hands from shaking. The questions circled relentlessly in my mind. Who lured her out of the office? What did it have to do with the fall? Why were both Chelsea and Ethan lying? Why had Lily gone to the roof that day, and why did she willingly leave the office now? Why did she fall from our building’s rooftop if there was no trace of her ever being there? Suddenly, a thought struck me with the force of a physical blow. “There’s one more thing you need to check,” I said urgently. “I’m certain it’s connected to her disappearance!” At the same time, I rushed back to my study, frantically re-examining the footage from my home cameras. A few minutes later, staring at my computer screen and listening to the clue Amy had just uncovered, I let out a long, shuddering breath. I finally understood. I knew the whole, twisted truth. And I knew how to save my daughter.

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  • The Perfect Son

    The alert from my neighborhood Facebook group lit up my phone screen while I was in the kitchen, trying to scrape together some semblance of dinner. Someone was tagging me. Over and over. “@Clara Miller, unit 502. Your son took a key to my brand-new Rivian.” “What the hell are you raising over there? Does he want a head start on a juvenile record?” “This happens again, I swear to God, I’m breaking his fingers.” Then, the floodgates opened. Other neighbors chimed in. “My car got hit last week! A gash from the headlight to the trunk!” “Has he even left a single car in the garage untouched? Who are his parents? Do they even care?” “That explains it. I saw him walking with a key out the other day, just dragging it along the wall. I thought it was just a sound. He’s a little monster.” I turned off the stove, the motion feeling heavy, distant, as if I were moving through water. From the junk drawer, I pulled out the small black ledger. The one I kept just for this. This was the 56th time my son had keyed a car. The first time, it was our neighbor’s old Honda. I paid two hundred dollars. The tenth time, a BMW from the floor below us. Two thousand dollars. The thirty-sixth time, a Porsche in the reserved parking area. Ten thousand dollars. That was the last of our savings. Every payment since then had been made with money I’d swallowed my pride to borrow. I walked down to the garage. The gleaming electric truck sat under the fluorescent lights, a cruel white scar marring its side. My son, Leo, stood beside it, looking up at me with wide, innocent eyes. “Mommy,” he said, his voice perfectly guileless. “Didn’t you say that if I scratched the cars, I’d get a new toy? Why is that man so mad?” There it was again. That practiced, theatrical innocence he used every single time, designed to thrust me into the crossfire. The truck’s owner heard him. His face went from red to purple. He whipped out his phone and pointed it at me, the red light of the recording already on. He was live-streaming. “Everyone, get a look at this!” he yelled into the phone. “It’s the mother! She’s the one telling her kid to do it! This is the kind of trash poisoning our society!” The comment feed on his screen became an instant, waterfalling blur of judgment. In the reflection of his phone, I saw myself: wearing a stained sweatshirt, my unwashed hair plastered to my cheeks. I looked from my own haggard reflection to the jagged line on the car door, and a strange, broken sound escaped my lips. I started to laugh. 1 I’ve lost count of how many times I’ve stood like this, being screamed at by a stranger. The first time was three years ago. Leo was three. I was on our small balcony watering the plants. He had found my keys, which had fallen on the floor, and quietly slipped away. He used them to draw a wobbly, misshapen flower on our neighbor’s brand-new car. Faced with the owner’s fury, I felt a shame so hot it was physically painful. All I could do was apologize, over and over, and promise to pay for everything. Back then, I thought it was just curiosity. A toddler’s mistake. I taught him, again and again: you can’t touch other people’s things, and you certainly can’t break them. He would nod, his expression serious and understanding. I thought he’d gotten the message. But then it was other cars in the neighborhood. Cars in the mall parking garage. Cars parked on the street. Anywhere we went, if there was a car, he would leave his “masterpiece.” I apologized a thousand times. I paid out a fortune. I tried everything. Patient conversations. Stern punishments. Taking away his tablet. Time-outs. I even took him to a child psychologist. The verdict was always the same: he’s a perfectly normal, exceptionally bright child. Just a bit mischievous. But he never stopped. Every single time, he would look at me with those crystal-clear eyes and promise with all his heart, “I’ll never do it again, Mommy. I promise.” And the next time, he’d choose a more expensive car and carve an even deeper line. He’d look at me with an even more innocent expression. And then, just like now, he would pin all the blame squarely on my shoulders. He made me the villain, the target of everyone’s rage, the woman they could all point their fingers at. I don’t know why he does it. All I know is that I haven’t had a full night’s sleep in years. I wake up in a panic, checking his bed to make sure he hasn’t slipped out to create a new debt, a new humiliation for me to bear. Now, listening to the car owner’s furious ranting, watching the endless stream of insults and curses on his livestream, and seeing the woman in the reflection—hair a mess, clothes stained, clutching a cheap ledger like a bible—I laughed again. Is this really my fault? Why did the child I nearly died to bring into this world make me, a thirty-two-year-old woman, look and feel fifty-two? Before I got married, I was an illustrator with a bit of a name for myself. I had my own studio, my own ambitions. Now, my eyes are sunk in dark circles, my skin is sallow. My entire life revolves around scratch repairs and payment plans. Everywhere I go, people whisper and stare. I’m like a rat in the gutter, despised by everyone. My laughter only seemed to stoke the owner’s rage. “Your son destroys my car and you have the nerve to laugh?” “If I were as big of a failure as you, I’d have jumped off a bridge by now!” Other residents, drawn by the commotion, added their own fuel to the fire. “Exactly! Your kid looks smart enough. How hard is it to teach him not to destroy property?” “If you can’t even handle that one simple thing, what’s the point of you?” “You’re an embarrassment to women.” Just as the chorus of condemnation reached its peak, my husband, Graham, appeared. “What’s going on?” He was wearing a crisp, ironed button-down shirt. He jogged over, saw the glaring scratch on the car, and his face fell in perfect, practiced understanding. Then, he turned to the owner, his voice the epitome of grace and apology. “I am so, so sorry. My wife… she hasn’t been managing him well. She will cover all of your damages.” 2 I looked at Graham. He looked the same as the day I first met him. Clean. Put-together. Incredibly polite. And just like our son, he was an expert at shifting all the blame onto me. At the sight of him, the neighbors’ anger subsided slightly. “Mr. Miller, you see the mess this has become.” “Honestly, and we’re not trying to attack you, but you need to get your wife under control. She’s ruining this kid.” “Forget it, the guy has it hard enough. Imagine being married to a walking disaster, constantly having to clean up her messes.” I stood there like a criminal on trial, watching as everyone’s gaze toward Graham softened with pity. I watched as Leo ran to his father’s arms, playing the part of a poor, frightened boy who had been misled by his own mother. From beginning to end, I was the only villain in the story. Graham let out a heavy sigh, as if he were carrying the weight of the world on his shoulders. “I’m sorry, everyone. It’s my fault for not keeping a better handle on things at home.” Then, he looked at me, his voice laced with a familiar, weary disappointment. “When I’m with Leo, he never touches things that aren’t his. Why can’t you teach him that?” Yes. I’d like to know that, too. Why is it that when Leo is with his father, he’s a perfect angel? But the moment he’s in my care, he becomes a demon with a vendetta against expensive cars. I wanted to explain, but by the time the words reached my lips, they turned into a bitter smile. Forget it. I’ve said it all a thousand times before. And every time, the response from Graham is the same: “This is your issue, Clara. Stop trying to blame it on our son.” I said nothing more. I just quietly took out my phone to arrange the payment. Graham, holding Leo, turned and walked away without a backward glance. The next day was the 50th wedding anniversary for Graham’s parents. I woke up early, dressed Leo in a new outfit, and repeated the instructions carefully. “Leo, honey, Grandma and Grandpa have invited a lot of guests today. At the restaurant, you have to be on your best behavior. No running around, and absolutely no touching things that don’t belong to you, okay?” He blinked his big eyes and nodded enthusiastically. “I know, Mommy. I’ll be a good boy today.” Graham came out of the bedroom, shot me a look, and said coldly, “Do you have to be so dramatic? You act like you’re guarding a prisoner.” He added, with a dismissive wave, “If you just paid more attention on a daily basis, he wouldn’t need these constant lectures.” 3 It was always like this. When I was the one paying for damages and apologizing, he was in his home office with his noise-canceling headphones on, “working.” When I tried to gently reason with Leo, he’d tell me I was too soft, that I lacked authority. When I raised my voice and disciplined Leo, he’d say I was hot-tempered and giving our son a traumatic childhood. When I took Leo to a psychologist, he said I was overreacting and needed to look for the cause of the problem in myself. He always found a way to stand on the moral high ground, enjoying the peace and quiet I bought with my own sanity, only to critique my methods from a safe distance. He would push me until I became a hysterical, screaming mess. And then he would smile that calm, gentle smile. “See? You can’t even control your own emotions. How do you expect to raise a child properly?” I used to argue with him. I used to doubt myself. I used to break down and cry. Now, I don’t even have the energy to open my mouth. We arrived at the upscale hotel we’d booked for the party. His parents and all the relatives were already there. The moment they saw Leo, their faces lit up. “Oh, there’s my handsome grandson! You look so sharp today!” “He does. You can just tell he’s a smart, well-behaved boy.” And today, Leo was. He sat quietly beside me, eating his food in small, neat bites. The adults mingled, glasses clinked, and the atmosphere was warm and celebratory. They chatted and reminisced. After a while, Leo tugged on my sleeve. “Mommy,” he whispered, “I have to go to the bathroom.” The fact that he had asked so politely filled me with a small sense of relief. Graham smiled and ruffled Leo’s hair, then glanced at me. “See? What a good boy.” His eyes held a flicker of smugness. “I really don’t know what you’re so anxious about all the time.” I ignored him, took Leo’s hand, and led him to the restrooms just outside our private ballroom. I waited for him by the door. A few moments later, a piercing car alarm shrieked from the direction of the parking garage. It was followed by a man’s furious roar. “What the FUCK? Who did this? Who the hell keyed my car?!” “Goddammit, it’s a limited-edition Bentley! I just got it!” “Which one of you assholes did this? Get the hell out here!” My blood ran cold. My stomach dropped. I called out to the men’s room door, my voice trembling. “Leo?” “Leo, are you in there?” Silence. The restroom was empty. My heart seized in my chest. I broke into a run, sprinting toward the parking garage as if my life depended on it. I burst into the garage to find a crowd gathering around a gleaming black Bentley. A deep, long, white gash ran from the front fender all the way to the taillight. A man in an expensive suit was absolutely apoplectic, screaming at his car. 4 I knew that scratch. I knew it like a part of my own body. The commotion had drawn the attention of our party. Graham and all our relatives came running out. When they saw the defaced Bentley, they gasped. Everyone froze. And then my son, Leo, ran from behind a pillar, a car key clutched in his hand. He dove into my arms, sobbing loudly for everyone to hear. “Mommy, didn’t you say this was the most expensive car?” he cried. “Didn’t you say if I scratched it, you could buy me the biggest Transformer ever? Why is that man yelling at me?” His innocent, tear-filled accusation made every single person turn to look at me, their eyes like daggers. “Clara, are you insane? You told him to key a car like this?!” Graham screamed, his face turning crimson. His father, trembling with rage, pointed a shaking finger at me. “Are you trying to bankrupt our family on purpose?!” I shook my head, trying to find the words. “No, I didn’t, I—” SMACK! Graham’s mother slapped me hard across the face. “You dare lie about it?” “Leo is six years old! Do you think he knows how to make up a story like that?!” “A child doesn’t know any better! If you, his mother, didn’t tell him to do it, why would he?” “I knew it! You’ve always been jealous of our family’s success! You’re trying to destroy us!” The car’s owner saw me and his eyes narrowed with fury. He pulled out his phone and immediately started another livestream, the title a sensationalist banner: INSANE MOTHER FORCES 6-YEAR-OLD SON TO VANDALIZE MILLION-DOLLAR CAR FOR A TOY! He bellowed at his phone’s camera, “You all see this? This is the woman! I heard her son with my own ears! She put him up to it!” “I just had this car imported! I haven’t even had it a week! This woman is a psycho!” The story from the day before was still fresh in people’s minds. The moment I appeared in a new livestream, hundreds of thousands of viewers flooded in. The comments were a tidal wave of hate. “It’s that bitch again! Is she mentally ill?!” “Holy shit, telling her kid to key a million-dollar car? What is wrong with her brain?!” “She doesn’t deserve to be a mother! She’s a menace to society!” “Call the cops! They need to arrest this lunatic and lock her up!” The online mob was rabid, hurling the most vicious curses imaginable at me. The story was exploding, my face plastered across every social media platform. “Psycho Mom,” “The Vandalism Coach,” “Social Menace”—these were my new titles. More and more people gathered in the garage. Fueled by the car owner’s rage, the mood of the crowd reached a fever pitch. They started pointing, shouting, and someone even threw a lit cigarette butt at me. I stood in the center of the circle, a condemned prisoner awaiting execution, enduring the storm of their hatred. I looked at their faces, twisted with a desire to see me ripped apart. And then I looked at my son, nestled in my arms, who gave me a tiny, triumphant smile that only I could see. In that moment, I did something that shocked everyone to their core. 5 Under the glare of a dozen phone cameras, I raised my hand and slapped myself hard across the face. Twice. The sharp, cracking sounds echoed through the garage, silencing the roar of the crowd. Everyone stared, dumbfounded. Even the livestream comments seemed to pause for a beat. Into the stunned silence, I spoke, my voice cold and flat. “Yes. I’m a terrible mother. I’m a criminal.” There was no emotion in my tone. As they all watched in bewilderment, I scanned the crowd, my expression blank. “It’s my fault. I was greedy.” “It’s my fault. I failed to raise him right.” “It’s my fault. I ruined your perfect day.” “There. Are you satisfied now?” Without another word, I stopped looking at them. I ignored the shocked, angry, and contemptuous stares. I pushed my way through the crowd and walked out. Behind me, after a moment of dead silence, the garage erupted in an even more ferocious wave of discussion. And above it all, Graham’s furious, panicked shout: “Clara, what the hell is this new psychotic episode?” “You can’t just walk away! Get back here and clean up this mess!” No. The mess that needed cleaning wasn’t the scratch on that car. It was the years of filth that had accumulated in my own heart. I went straight home. The first thing I did was pull the divorce papers I’d prepared months ago from my desk drawer. Then, I started packing. I’m only thirty-two. I refuse to spend the rest of my life consumed by a child who is deliberately trying to ruin me, trapped in an endless cycle of debt and public condemnation. I am a person first, a mother second. I am done living this small, terrified life. This cold house has given me nothing but despair, humiliation, and exhaustion. Graham, my husband, the eternal bystander, always looking down on me from his pedestal. And the child I risked my life to give birth to, always stabbing me in the back, always setting me up for public disgrace. I don’t know what I did to deserve this. I don’t know why this father and son duo teamed up to torture me this way. But I’m done serving them. I’ve had enough. I didn’t have much to pack. The house was filled with Graham’s expensive suits and Leo’s designer toys. My own existence had been whittled down to nothing but cleaning up their messes. I gathered a few articles of clothing, my old art supplies, and my important documents. Then I dragged my dusty suitcase out from under the bed. As I bent down, my fingers brushed against something cold and hard tucked away in the back. I reached in and pulled it out. My eyes widened. My breath caught in my throat. I finally understood why Leo had become the boy he was.

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  • They Called Me a Nobody

    My best friend, my fellow struggling actress, turned out to be the long-lost heiress to one of New York’s old-money families. The day she left our tiny walk-up in Queens, she swore she’d pull me up with her into the good life. Two months later, she blocked my number. Fueled by a white-hot rage, I chased her to the city, arriving just in time for her wedding to the son of a titan of industry. Ava, that ungrateful snake. The second she got a taste of the high life, she forgot all about me. For the sake of appearances, I swallowed my anger, stuffed some cash in an envelope as a final goodbye to our friendship, and prepared to walk away. But when I looked up, I saw the woman in the wedding portrait wasn’t my best friend. It was Chloe, the Davenports’ adopted daughter. Mr. and Mrs. Davenport, the same couple who had once plastered their tear-streaked faces all over national television, begging for their daughter’s return, now spoke of Ava with utter disgust. “That morally corrupt creature has been thrown out of this house. From this day forward, Chloe is our only daughter!” “She’s just a no-name extra who learned all her dirty tricks from TV. Since she loves acting so much, we decided to let her star in her own horror show—naked and screaming.” I just stood there, stunned, the world tilting on its axis. On the day of that wedding, I brought the Davenport empire to its knees. A no-name extra? Hardly. I am Jade, the Crown Princess of Starlight Entertainment, the largest media conglomerate in Asia. And my best friend? She is destined to win an Oscar. 1 The woman next to me on the flight to New York had been talking for the last hour about the wedding of the decade: the union of the Davenport heiress and Carter Sterling, son of the real estate magnate. “Twenty custom Rolls-Royces, circling Central Park twice,” she’d gushed, scrolling through a gossip blog on her phone. “The gown was designed in Paris, took a year to hand-bead. And the party favors? The new Hermès Kelly. For everyone.” She sighed, a cloud of envy. “That Davenport girl, she hit the lottery. Disappeared for twenty-three years, and the moment she’s found, she’s wrapped in cotton wool. Parents who adore her, in-laws who basically own the Eastern seaboard… God, I’d wake up laughing in my sleep.” I gripped the cheap airline blanket bunched in my lap, my knuckles white. Ava. That ungrateful, forgetful… friend. She’d sworn on the day she left our shoebox apartment that she’d bring me with her, that we’d finally live the life we’d always dreamed of. Two months later, my number was blocked. Now she was handing out designer bags like party mints while I was still counting my tips to make rent. I took a cab straight from JFK to the Sterling family’s sprawling Long Island estate. The sheer opulence of the place, with its manicured gardens and fountains that glittered like diamonds, should have made me angrier. Instead, a strange calm settled over me. I pulled all the cash I had from my wallet—a couple hundred dollars—and stuffed it into a wedding envelope. A final transaction to close the account on our friendship. As I walked toward the entrance, I glanced up at the massive, elegantly framed portrait of the happy couple. And I stopped dead. The bride smiling in the photograph wasn’t Ava. It was Chloe, the Davenports’ adopted daughter. A cold dread washed over me. Something was terribly wrong. I pushed past a confused-looking usher and stormed into the bridal suite, searching for any sign of Ava. Inside, Mr. and Mrs. Davenport were fussing over Chloe, their faces beaming with pride. They looked up, annoyed by my intrusion. The moment I said Ava’s name, their expressions curdled. “That morally bankrupt creature has been thrown out,” Mrs. Davenport said, her voice dripping with disdain. “From now on, the Davenports have only one daughter: Chloe.” She gave me a dismissive once-over. “If you’re here for the wedding, have some champagne and find your seat. But if you’re here to make a scene on that little tramp’s behalf, you’ll find we are not nearly as polite as our staff.” My heart sank to the floor. The way she spat the words “little tramp,” referring to her own flesh and blood… “I’m here to find Ava,” I said, my voice dangerously steady. “Where is she? Why is her phone off?” Chloe, who had been watching me with a look of curated curiosity, suddenly shrank back, clutching her mother’s arm. “Dad, it has to be her! I bet Ava sent her! She’s still furious that I won Carter’s heart, and now she’s trying to hurt me again!” she cried, her voice trembling. “Mom, you have to protect me!” The Davenports’ eyes narrowed, instantly protective and hostile. I let out a short, cold laugh. This whole damsel-in-distress act was so pathetically outdated. If she wanted to play the victim, I’d be happy to give her a reason. I snatched a bottle of champagne from a silver bucket on the table and, in one smooth motion, dumped the entire contents over her perfectly coiffed head. “Aaaah! My dress! You’re insane!” Chloe shrieked. “Mom, my wedding is ruined! It’s ruined!” Mrs. Davenport lunged at me with a scream, her manicured nails like claws. I sidestepped and slapped her, hard, across her powdered cheek. The sound echoed in the silent room. “You… you hit me!” she gasped, her hand flying to her face. As I raised my hand again, Mr. Davenport quickly pulled his wife and daughter behind him, his eyes boring into me with pure hatred. “You really were sent by that monster to destroy Chloe’s day!” he snarled. “Security! Get this woman out of here! She’s trespassing!” Two large men in black suits started toward me. I didn’t move. Instead, I crossed my arms, sank into a velvet armchair, and casually crossed my legs. “Inform the guests,” I said, my voice calm and clear, “the wedding is cancelled.” The head of security, a man with a jaw like a cinder block, stopped in his tracks, gave me a short, respectful nod, and said, “Yes, ma’am.” The expressions on the three Davenports’ faces shifted from outrage to utter confusion. For the security of the Sterling Estate to obey me, a complete stranger, meant something they couldn’t comprehend. “Who… who in God’s name are you?” Mr. Davenport stammered. 2 “You don’t need to know who I am,” I said, my gaze locked on him. “You just need to know that I’m Ava’s friend. And if you want this wedding to happen, you will bring her to me. Now.” The security team formed a loose circle around the three of them, a silent, intimidating wall. Chloe stomped her foot, her champagne-soaked dress squelching pathetically. “If you’re her friend, why are you doing this to us? Everyone who’s anyone in New York is out there! Ava isn’t just embarrassing me; she’s making a mockery of the entire Davenport family!” “That viper! That ungrateful snake!” Mr. Davenport’s face was turning a blotchy, furious red. “By tomorrow, this will be all over the society pages! The Davenports will be a laughingstock!” He turned on his wife. “I told you we should have just left it alone! People lose children every day, it’s fate! But no, you had to go looking!” “What good does saying that now do?” she shrieked back. “If I’d known she was this much trouble, I would have preferred she’d died out there! A gutter-born animal with no manners, after all the money I wasted on her!” The story of the lost Davenport heiress had been national news. They had poured millions into a TV drama about missing children, a vanity project designed to find their daughter. Every episode began and ended with Mr. and Mrs. Davenport, weeping into the camera, pleading for her return. Ava had been hesitant, unsure about re-entering their world. But they’d gone on talk shows, they’d sworn to the entire country that they would spend the rest of their lives making up for the years they’d lost. Their performance had convinced me. It was I who had encouraged Ava to go back to them. Two months. How had their hearts turned to stone in just two months? My jaw tightened. I pulled out my phone and tried Ava’s number again. Straight to voicemail. My patience evaporated. I held out my hand, and the captain of the security detail, as if anticipating my need, placed a long, thin riding crop into my palm. “Tell me where Ava is,” I demanded, the leather tip tapping against the marble floor with a sharp crack. Just then, a man pushed through the security cordon and strode into the room. “What the hell is going on? Why was my wedding cancelled?” The Davenports lit up like they’d seen a savior. “Carter, darling, you’re finally here!” Mrs. Davenport cried. “Mr. Sterling, this girl cancelled your wedding without your permission! You have to stop her!” “Carter!” Chloe wailed, running to him. “Look what she did to my dress! She’s just some nobody extra Ava used to know! She’s here to cause trouble, to disrespect your family, to disrespect you!” She looked up at him, her beautiful face streaked with tears and mascara, a perfect picture of wounded innocence. “All our guests are watching! You have to put her in her place!” A thunderous look crossed Carter’s face. “Who the hell did this to my wife?” he boomed, scanning the room. “Who thinks they can come to New York and screw with the Sterling family? You got a death wish?” Whispers erupted from the onlookers who had crowded the doorway. “That’s Carter Sterling! His family practically built this city. They’re old-world power, serious political connections.” “No wonder the Davenports kicked out their real daughter. The adopted one landed the biggest fish in the sea.” “Carter’s family is untouchable in this town. It doesn’t matter if this girl is right or wrong, she’s about to get flattened.” As the crowd waited for the fireworks, I flicked my wrist. The riding crop sliced through the air and struck Carter across the chest. I’d spent six months in intensive training with a world-renowned stunt coordinator for a role. My technique was flawless. Even with only a fraction of my strength, a bright red welt blossomed instantly on his white tuxedo jacket. “Who the hell hit me?” he roared, stunned. I took a step forward. “Do I need an appointment?” Carter clutched his arm, his eyes wide with a mixture of shock and fury. Then, recognition dawned. “You! What are you doing here?” “Is that any way to greet your elders?” I gestured with the crop toward Chloe. “I thought you were marrying the Davenport heiress. Who’s the impostor?” A flicker of guilt—or maybe fear—crossed his face. “I saw you last on a film set in Vancouver. This is my business. Stay out of it.” Your business? A humorless smile touched my lips. “Kneel.” Carter’s jaw clenched, his eyes burning with defiance. Chloe scoffed from behind him. “He’s Carter Sterling! Why in the world would he ever kneel to a nobody like you?” I didn’t even bother to look at her. With another sharp flick of my wrist, I struck the back of Carter’s knee. His leg buckled, and he fell to the ground with a grunt of pain, landing heavily on one knee. “Jade,” he choked out, his face pale. “I thought you said you were too busy to come to the wedding.” 3 A wave of gasps rippled through the onlookers. “What did he just call her?” “She can’t be more than a few years younger than him… How is she his… elder?” The Davenports just stared, their mouths hanging open, unable to process what they were seeing. I ignored the murmurs and pointed the tip of the crop at Carter’s chin. “Tell me where Ava is. Were you involved in this?” “Hmph. I’m not telling you anything,” he spat, his neck muscles straining. “That woman is nothing but a conniving snake. I personally saw her push Chloe down a flight of stairs. She spread the most vicious rumors about her! She deserves everything she’s getting!” “You little fool,” Carter growled, trying to get up. “I call you Jade out of respect for my grandfather, but you better not push it. This has nothing to do with you.” I laughed, a sound devoid of any warmth. What had Chloe done to these people? It was like they were all under a spell. I looked at the four of them—the gullible fiancé, the social-climbing fake, the cruel, heartless parents. “You,” I said, my voice cutting through the air as I addressed the Davenports, “were supposed to be her parents. You didn’t raise her for a single day, and in the eighteen years she was lost, did you ever once try to understand her? To trust her?” I turned back to Carter. “And you. Your grandfather arranged a match with the Davenport daughter, not some imposter you picked. You knew her identity was a lie and you said nothing to your family. You have no honor.” With that, I began to strike them, the crop landing with sharp, punishing cracks. They cried out, trying to scramble away, but the security team moved in, holding them firmly in place as they howled. “Ava was born bad! We don’t have a daughter like that!” “Do you know who you’re messing with? The movie star Seraphina Roche is Chloe’s god-sister! Her fans will eat you alive!” “Don’t think because my grandfather respects you that I’m afraid of you!” Carter yelled. “You’re not blood! Without the Sterling name, you’re nothing!” Just as he said it, a new commotion started at the door. “It’s Marcus Sterling! The man himself is here!” “Mr. Sterling, you have to see what’s happening to your son! He’s been beaten!” A distinguished, middle-aged man in a tailored suit strode forward, his face a mask of authority. “What is the meaning of this circus? Everyone, stop this instant!” I lowered the crop, my breathing heavy. Seeing his father, Carter immediately scrambled over. “Dad, it’s Jade! She’s lost her mind! It’s my wedding day, and look what she’s done to me!” Chloe rushed forward as well. “Mr. Sterling, thank God you’re here! This woman not only ruined our wedding, she attacked my parents! They’re not young, what if she seriously hurt them?” Marcus Sterling looked from his battered son to the weeping bride, to the cowering Davenports, his mind clearly struggling to catch up. I cleared my throat softly. His head snapped in my direction. “Jade! Why are you here? If I had known you were coming, I would have sent a car for you myself!” The Davenports’ jaws dropped so low they nearly touched the floor. They looked utterly, hopelessly stupid. “Let’s skip the pleasantries, Marcus,” I said. “We need to talk about your son. My father, before he passed, arranged for Carter to marry the Davenport heiress. So you tell me why he’s marrying this… replacement. And where is my real niece-in-law?” The color drained from Marcus’s face as he finally understood. “He’s right. Where is Ava? And you,” he said, pointing at Chloe, “you’re the adopted one. Why are you in the wedding dress?” Carter had clearly planned to get the ceremony over with, forcing his father to accept Chloe in front of all their guests. Now, his plan was in tatters. He just stammered, unable to form a single coherent sentence. “Speak up! Where is Ava?” Marcus roared. The room fell deathly silent. Chloe peeked out from behind her parents. It was Mrs. Davenport who spoke, her voice shrill. “That Ava girl is no good! Chloe may not be our blood, but we raised her to be a perfect lady!” “That’s right!” Mr. Davenport chimed in. “That little stray can’t compare to our Chloe! She isn’t worthy of the Sterling family!” “The woman our family chooses is not for you to approve or disapprove of!” Marcus thundered. “Now if you don’t tell me where she is, I will personally ensure the Davenport name is erased from this city by morning!” I was done wasting time. In a single, fluid motion, I stepped toward one of Marcus’s bodyguards, pulled the handgun from his hip holster, and turned, pressing the cold muzzle against Chloe’s forehead before anyone could react. “Where. Is. Ava?” Carter, seeing the look on his father’s face—a look that offered no help—finally broke. He whispered three words, his voice trembling. “Blackwater Street… the warehouse.” For a second, the world went silent, and then my mind exploded.

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