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Abandoned By My Hero, Reborn Stronger Novel Cover

Abandoned By My Hero, Reborn Stronger

For years, I was the orphan girl hopelessly in love with my guardian, Jordan. He was my protector, my entire world, the man who promised he would always keep me safe. Then he announced his engagement to Gwyneth Duran, a woman who saw me as a rival to be crushed. One night, he stumbled home drunk, mistook me for her, and forced a kiss on me. But when he woke up the next morning, he looked at me with pure disgust. "I know what you're doing," he spat. "Trying to worm your way into my life. Stay away from me." His fiancée slapped me, calling me a slut, and his parents, believing their lies, threw me out with nothing. The man who had been my hero now saw me as something vile. With my heart shattered, I made one last call. "Aunt Diana? I'm coming to Chicago." From now on, he and I are nothing but strangers.
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Chapter 1

For years, I was the orphan girl hopelessly in love with my guardian, Jordan. He was my protector, my entire world, the man who promised he would always keep me safe.

Then he announced his engagement to Gwyneth Duran, a woman who saw me as a rival to be crushed.

One night, he stumbled home drunk, mistook me for her, and forced a kiss on me. But when he woke up the next morning, he looked at me with pure disgust.

"I know what you're doing," he spat. "Trying to worm your way into my life. Stay away from me."

His fiancée slapped me, calling me a slut, and his parents, believing their lies, threw me out with nothing. The man who had been my hero now saw me as something vile.

With my heart shattered, I made one last call.

"Aunt Diana? I'm coming to Chicago."

From now on, he and I are nothing but strangers.

Chapter 1

Kianna Mckinney POV:

He's getting married. The words echoed in my head, a brutal, undeniable truth that sliced through the fragile hope I' d clung to for years. It was a wound I inflicted upon myself, but the pain was no less real.

I stood before the mirror, my reflection a stranger. Long, dark hair, once a symbol of my quiet demeanor, now lay discarded on the salon floor. The stylist, a young woman with a kind smile, ran her fingers through my newly bobbed cut. It felt light, rebellious, a physical shedding of a past I could no longer bear. The mirror showed a sharp jawline, eyes that held a flicker of defiance I hadn't seen before, and a mouth that, for once, wasn't curving into an accommodating smile. This was me, Kianna, stripped bare.

Later that evening, I found myself with a cigarette between my fingers, something I' d always deemed reckless, something Jordan would have hated. The acrid smoke filled my lungs, a bitter taste that somehow matched the bitterness in my soul. I watched the smoke curl into the night air, carrying with it the remnants of a childhood dream. It wasn't about the nicotine. It was about the act, the defiance, the reclamation of a self that had been lost for too long.

My phone felt heavy in my hand. It had been years since I'd spoken to her, not since the funeral. But now, she was my only way out. I scrolled through my contacts, my thumb hovering over Diana's name. A deep breath. A shaky exhale. I pressed call.

"Aunt Diana?" My voice cracked, raw from disuse and unshed tears.

"Kianna? Is that really you?" Her voice, sharp and precise, cut through the static, instantly conjuring images of her formidable presence.

"Yes, it's me," I managed, a fragile smile touching my lips. "I got into Chicago Law."

A beat of silence. Then, a proud huff. "Took you long enough. Always knew you had it in you, kid."

"I... I want to come live with you, Aunt Diana," I blurted out, the words a desperate plea. "I want to start over."

"Start over?" There was a hint of suspicion in her tone, a lawyer's natural skepticism. "What happened to your beloved Jordan? Last I heard, you were practically glued to his side."

The name hit me like a physical blow. My hand tightened around the phone. "He's getting married," I said, the words flat, devoid of emotion. "To Gwyneth Duran."

Another silence, longer this time. I could almost hear the gears turning in her brilliant mind. "Ah," she finally said, a single, sharp syllable. "So the puppet strings finally broke."

"Something like that," I whispered. "I'm done, Aunt Diana. Truly. I regret every second I wasted loving him. We are over. From now on, he and I are nothing but strangers." The words felt like a vow, a painful but necessary incision.

"Good," she said, her voice softer now, laced with a warmth I rarely heard. "Chicago's always open to you, Kianna. Always has been. You know that. My firm has an opening for a summer intern. It's yours if you want it."

"I do," I said, a choked sob escaping my lips. "I want it more than anything."

"Then it's settled," she affirmed. "You pack your bags, and I'll handle the rest. Just tell me when you're arriving."

A wave of exhaustion washed over me, the adrenaline of the past few hours draining away. My body ached, my mind felt stretched thin. But beneath the weariness, a tiny spark flickered. A spark of hope. I was leaving. I was finally leaving.

I stared at the phone. My new future, so concrete and within reach, felt both terrifying and exhilarating. I was tired, yes, but this tiredness was different. It was the exhaustion of a marathon runner who had just crossed the finish line, not the crushing weight of endless despair. I closed my eyes, picturing the vast, impersonal skyline of Chicago. A new canvas, waiting for me to paint my own life. A life without Jordan.

I walked down the hall, the quiet of the house a stark contrast to the storm brewing inside me. Jordan's study door was ajar, a sliver of light spilling into the darkened corridor. He was always in there, working, or sometimes, as now, just existing. I hesitated, my hand hovering over the doorknob. This was it. My last chance to say something, anything.

I pushed the door open softly. Jordan sat at his large mahogany desk, headphones on, a book in his hand. He was engrossed, his brow furrowed in concentration. The soft lamplight illuminated his profile, the strong line of his jaw, the slight curl of his dark hair. He was beautiful, in a way that had always stolen my breath.

I cleared my throat. He didn't stir. My heart sank a little further. I tried again, a little louder. Still nothing. His world, as always, was perfectly complete without me.

Then, a sudden burst of laughter from his headphones. He pulled them off, a broad, tender smile spreading across his face as he brought his phone to his ear.

"Gwyneth," he murmured, his voice a soft caress I had never heard directed at me. "I miss you, too."

My stomach churned. The air around him seemed to thicken with an intimacy that was not mine. He leaned back in his chair, eyes closed, a picture of blissful contentment.

"Tomorrow night, yes, of course," he chuckled, a low, rumbling sound. "Dinner at The Periwinkle? I'll make a reservation. And then, maybe a late-night stroll by the lake? The city lights are always so romantic."

He was planning their life, their future, with an ease that felt like a punch to my gut. The Periwinkle. The lake. All the places he knew I loved, places we had shared in my dreams, now offered so readily to her. My chest tightened, a sharp, bitter taste flooding my mouth. It was a familiar sensation, this ache of rejection, but tonight, it felt different. Terminal.

I remembered the countless times he' d held my hand, a comforting, secure grip. "Don't worry, Kianna," he'd said then, his voice a balm. "I'll always protect you." He was my shield, my guardian, the one who chased away the shadows of my orphaned childhood. I had loved him fiercely, devotedly, ever since. A small, scared girl clinging to the first kindness she knew.

My teenage years were a blur of hushed confessions to my diary, every page filled with his name, his smile, his casual touch that sent shivers down my spine. I was a secret worshipper, a quiet devotee at the altar of Jordan Elliott.

One rainy afternoon, emboldened by a fleeting moment of shared laughter, I had poured out my heart. "Jordan," I'd whispered, my voice trembling. "I think… I love you."

He recoiled as if stung, his handsome face contorted in disgust. "Kianna, what are you talking about? You're like my little sister. Don't be ridiculous. That's gross." He had left me standing there, rain-soaked and heartbroken, my hastily embroidered handkerchief, a token of my affections, crumpled in my outstretched hand. I tried to give it to him, but he just shook his head, his eyes cold. He walked away, leaving me to pick up the pieces of my shattered confession.

I swallowed the lump in my throat, forcing myself to push past the memory, to focus on the cold reality of the present. I had packed away my childish crush, buried it under layers of ambition and self-preservation. I had studied harder, dreamed bigger, determined to build a life that didn't revolve around his orbit.

Then, six months ago, he introduced her. Gwyneth Duran. Elegant, poised, and everything I was not. "Kianna, this is Gwyneth," he'd said, his arm around her waist, his smile dazzling. "We're engaged."

My world, already cracked, had shattered into a million irreparable pieces. The hope I thought I'd buried had clawed its way back, only to be brutally crushed. And in that moment, a chilling clarity descended upon me. My love for Jordan was a poison, slowly killing me. It was a one-sided battle I could never win.

I turned away from the door, the decision firm, absolute. My heart was broken, yes, but it was also free.

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