
Ashton's Betrayal, Her Unyielding Vengeance
I spent a decade as Ashton Maxwell' s shadow, building his empire and warming his bed, only for him to announce his engagement to a senator's daughter right in front of me.
When assassins struck that night, he didn't just choose her; he used my body as a human shield against a grenade and then shot me himself to prove his loyalty to her family.
I survived, reinvented myself as Grecia Munoz, and returned to burn his world to the ground, eventually forcing him to hand over his entire empire in a desperate plea for forgiveness.
He promised to disappear so I could find peace with a kind doctor named Garrick.
But Ashton' s definition of love was a sickness.
To "protect" me from what he called a weakness, he secretly destroyed Garrick' s career and reputation, driving the only innocent man I ever loved to jump off a bridge.
He thought this would drive me back into his arms, into the safety of the monster he created.
Instead, I drove to the Hamptons, to the pristine dream home he had built for our future.
He knelt before me, begging for understanding, claiming he did it all for us.
I didn't offer forgiveness.
I raised the pistol he had once given me, aimed at the heart I had already broken, and ended the nightmare once and for all.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 6
Iris POV
I was packing the last of my essentials-a single change of clothes, my emergency passport, and a small, worn photo of my parents-when the door to the safe house burst open. Ashton stood there, his eyes wild, his jaw clenched, a gun clutched in his hand.
"Where do you think you're going, Iris?" His voice was a low growl, vibrating with a lethal intensity.
My hand instinctively went to the pistol tucked into the waistband of my jeans. My finger brushed the cold steel. We stood frozen, a standoff that felt both inevitable and impossibly sudden. The air crackled with unspoken history, with betrayal and lingering, toxic attachment.
Before I could react, he moved with a speed that belied his controlled rage. He disarmed me in a blur, twisting the pistol from my grip and sending it clattering across the floor. He pinned me against the wall, his body pressing into mine, restricting my every movement. The cold steel of his gun was now pressed against my temple.
"You really thought you could just walk away?" he snarled, his breath hot against my ear. "After everything? After us?"
His eyes, usually so calculating, held a raw, desperate pain. A pain I had seen glimpses of before, always fleeting, always hidden beneath layers of ruthless ambition. It was unsettling. It almost made me waver. Almost.
Don't fall for it, Iris, a cold voice whispered in my head. It's another one of his manipulations.
"There is no 'us,' Ashton," I said, my voice steady despite the tremor in my hands. "Not anymore. You made that clear."
He flinched, as if my words were physical blows. "Don't say that!" His grip tightened, his knuckles white. "You don't get to decide what we are. You belong to me!"
"I belong to no one," I retorted, pushing against his chest, though it was futile. "Our professional arrangement is over. Our personal one was a lie."
"A lie?" He laughed, a bitter, broken sound. "Every scar you carry, every secret you keep, every empire we built together-that was no lie, Iris! That was our life!"
"It was your life, Ashton," I countered, the words sharp. "I was just a part of it. A disposable part."
His eyes flashed, a dangerous fire igniting within them. He pulled back slightly, his gaze piercing mine. "You think you can just discard a decade of loyalty? A decade of trust? A decade of... of this?" He gestured vaguely between us, his voice thick with a confusing mix of anger and something akin to desperation.
"It's over, Ashton," I whispered, my voice breaking. "It has been for a long time. You just didn't realize it until now."
His hand, still holding the gun, trembled slightly. "Don't you dare," he said, his voice barely audible. "Don't you dare act like this means nothing to you."
A mirthless smile touched my lips. "What exactly do you think it means, Ashton? That you chose a politician's daughter over your 'most trusted asset'? That you threw me to the wolves to save her? That you allowed her to erase every symbol of our shared past?" My voice rose, each question a hammer blow. "What exactly do you think that means for me?"
His face contorted, a mask of warring emotions. He lowered the gun, though his hand remained clenched around it. He reached into his jacket pocket and pulled out a small, ornate silver locket. It was engraved with the Maxwell family crest, intricate and ancient. This was no ordinary locket. It was a family heirloom, passed down through generations, a symbol of unwavering loyalty and belonging. It was given to those who were considered integral, irreplaceable. He had threatened me with it once, years ago, when I'd questioned a particularly dangerous mission.
"You swore an oath, Iris," he said, his voice heavy with ancient weight. "A Maxwell oath. You may be a woman, but you are a warrior. You are bound to this family. To me. This is your chain, forged in blood and loyalty."
My blood ran cold. The oath. The one I took when I was 18, naive and blindly devoted. The one that was supposed to bind me to him, to the family, forever. It was a sacred vow, one that his family, steeped in tradition and ruthless code, took very seriously. Breaking it meant exile, or worse.
"You would use that against me?" I asked, my voice raw with disbelief. "You would invoke ancient vows after you yourself shattered every promise between us?"
"I am the head of this family, Iris," he said, his face hardening. "My word is law. And my law demands loyalty. You will attend the engagement party tonight. You will stand by my side. You will be my Chief of Staff. And you will smile. You will perform your duties, just as you always have." He paused, his eyes burning into mine. "And you will personally supervise the catering. Elodie wants it perfect."
Supervise the catering. The words were a fresh wound, another deliberate humiliation. From strategist to glorified party planner.
I felt a scream building in my chest, but it never escaped. My shoulders slumped. The oath. It was a cage, one I had willingly stepped into years ago. And now, he was rattling the bars.
"Fine," I whispered, the word a bitter submission. "I will be there."
A flicker of triumph crossed his face, quickly masked. He released me, taking a step back. "Good. Don't disappoint me, Iris."
He turned and left, the click of the door echoing the finality of his command. I stared at the empty space where he had stood, my body shaking with a mixture of terror and impotent rage. The silver locket, the symbol of my unbreakable bond, felt like a lead weight in my stomach.
My eyes fell on the pistol he had knocked to the floor. It lay there, glinting innocently. I reached for it, my fingers closing around the cold grip.
He had bound me. He had humiliated me. He had broken me. But he hadn't killed me. And that was his biggest mistake.
The oath, the family crest, the humiliation. They wouldn't break me. They would forge me anew. Into something he would never expect. Into something he would never survive.