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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 2

Kianna Mckinney POV:

Jordan' s tender words to Gwyneth, their whispered plans for a romantic dinner, felt like a physical barrier, solid and impenetrable. My message, the news of my acceptance to Chicago Law, would be a jarring intrusion into their perfect bubble. I closed my mouth, the words I' d meant to say dying on my tongue. There was no point. He wouldn' t hear me. He wouldn' t see me. Not anymore.

I turned, my footsteps silent on the plush carpet, and walked away. My exit was as unnoticed as my presence had been. He hadn't even glanced up from his phone, immersed in a world where I clearly had no place. The realization hit me with the force of a physical blow: he truly didn' t care. The protective big brother, the childhood confidant, the one who had once promised to always be there for me, was gone. Replaced by a stranger.

Only three days left. Three days until Chicago. Three days until freedom.

I retreated to my room, a sanctuary of sorts, though even here, his presence lingered in faded photographs and shared memories. My room, once a haven, now felt like a cage.

My gaze fell upon the dusty photo album on my bedside table, its worn leather cover a testament to years of shared history. Jordan and me, laughing, playing, growing up. A pang of longing, sharp and unwelcome, pierced through me. The past. A beautiful lie. It was over. All of it.

With a definitive click, I closed the album, sealing away the memories, or at least, trying to. The click echoed in the quiet room, a final punctuation mark on a chapter that was long past writing.

Time to pack. Not just my clothes, but my life, my memories, my very identity. I pulled out an old, beat-up suitcase from the back of my closet, its faded canvas a silent witness to countless trips, mostly with Jordan. This time, it would be different.

I opened my dresser, a familiar ritual that usually brought a sense of comfort. But today, it was an archaeological dig, unearthing relics of a forgotten past. Each item, a shirt he' d complimented, a book he' d recommended, a small trinket he' d given me, carried a silent weight. I picked them up, one by one, inspecting them as if they were alien artifacts. These weren't just objects; they were anchors, tethering me to a life I needed to escape.

I placed them carefully into the suitcase, not with tenderness, but with an almost surgical detachment. Each addition felt like a release, a small victory in my war against nostalgia. The suitcase filled, heavy with the ghosts of a thousand forgotten moments.

A hollow ache settled in my chest. It felt like I was emptying myself, piece by piece. But this emptiness, I reasoned, was necessary. It was the space for something new to grow. I closed the suitcase, zipping it shut with a firm, resolute motion.

My hand brushed against another drawer. I hesitated, my breath catching. No. Not that one. I couldn't. But I had to. This was part of the purge. I pulled it open.

Inside, nestled amongst old letters and dried flowers, lay a small, leather-bound diary. My heart throbbed. I picked it up, my fingers tracing the faded gold lettering. My childhood. My secrets. My pain.

I flipped to a random page:

October 17th. Mommy and Daddy are gone. Forever, they said. Mrs. Elliott said I have to be a good girl. But I don't want to be good. I want my mommy. I want my daddy. Jordan held my hand today. He said he wouldn't let anyone hurt me. He said he'll always be my big brother.

My eyes blurred. The ink bled into a watery mess. Jordan. Always Jordan. He had been my anchor, my savior, the only light in a world plunged into darkness.

Another page:

November 5th. The other kids were mean today. They called me "orphan." Jordan chased them away. He said I was his little sister and no one gets to hurt his little sister. He bought me ice cream. He always knows how to make me smile.

He had always been there. A constant, unwavering presence. My protector. My everything. Every page, every memory, every whispered hope, was intertwined with him. He was the sun around which my small, desperate world revolved.

Tears streamed down my face, blurring the words on the page. His promises. His protection. His love. All of it, now just a faded memory, a cruel reminder of what I once had, or thought I had. The ink, once so vibrant, now ran like my tears, blurring the lines between past and present.

With a choked sob, I began to tear the pages, one by one. The letters, the photos, the diary itself. Each shredding sound was a violent act of separation, a desperate attempt to sever the ties that still bound me. My hands shook, my heart screamed, but I didn't stop. I tore them into smaller and smaller pieces, until they were nothing but confetti of a broken past. I stuffed the fragments into the suitcase, burying them deep, zipping it shut again. This time, it felt like I was burying a part of myself. A necessary sacrifice.

A sudden burst of laughter drifted up from downstairs, followed by the clinking of glasses. Jordan. And Gwyneth. My heart clenched. They were celebrating. Without me.

I crept to my door, peeking through the crack. Jordan and Gwyneth were in the living room, their faces flushed with happiness. She was draped across him, her head resting on his shoulder, his arm possessively around her. They looked perfect. Like they belonged.

She looked up, her gaze sweeping the room before landing on my door. Her smile, a saccharine sweet thing, widened. "Kianna, darling! Come down! Jordan and I have a little something for you."

I hesitated, wanting nothing more than to stay hidden, but the thought of Aunt Diana' s confident assertion, Gwyneth's knowing smile, propelled me forward. I pushed open the door and descended the stairs, forcing a polite smile onto my face.

"Oh, Kianna, you look… refreshed." Gwyneth purred, her eyes raking over my new haircut. It wasn't a compliment. It was a subtle jab, a reminder that I was out of place, out of their world. She held out a small, beautifully wrapped box. "A little something to mark your new chapter."

My stomach lurched. Gwyneth was known for her exquisite taste, her extravagant gifts. But I remembered the night before, Jordan's casual mention of The Periwinkle. My mind raced, remembering my own silent, debilitating allergy to a rare type of shellfish. It was a secret, a vulnerability I had only ever shared with Jordan. He had always been so careful, so protective.

"It's a gift certificate to The Periwinkle, Kianna," Gwyneth said, her voice dripping with mock sweetness, confirming my worst fears. "I heard you love their seafood platter. Jordan mentioned it."

My blood ran cold. He had mentioned it. To her. The one person who would use it to hurt me. He had forgotten. Or worse, he hadn't cared. The betrayal was like a physical blow, sharper than any anger.

Jordan, oblivious, beamed at me. "Yes, Kianna, Gwyneth insisted. She thought you'd love it. You always said you wanted to try their famous lobster bisque, didn't you?" He looked at me, his eyes full of that familiar, casual affection. Not love. Never love. Just the comfortable, thoughtless affection he' d give to a pet.

My mind reeled. He had truly forgotten. Or he just didn't care enough to remember. The weight of his indifference crushed something vital inside me. There was no going back. There was no turning point left. I was truly, utterly alone.

I took the box, my fingers trembling slightly. "Thank you, Gwyneth, Jordan," I said, my voice barely a whisper, but firm. "It's... very thoughtful." I managed a small, tight smile. "I'm touched."

My heart, once so full of a desperate, unrequited love, now felt cold and empty. But it was also free. He had done it. He had freed me. The pain of the gift, the casual cruelty of his forgetfulness, had severed the last, fragile thread. I was finally ready to go. And I knew, with a certainty that chilled me to the bone, that I would never look back.

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