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From Ashes To Altar: Her Vengeance Novel Cover

From Ashes To Altar: Her Vengeance

My mother was killed in a hit-and-run. My husband, Haywood, told me to drop the investigation. Then my father died because Haywood froze my assets, refusing to pay for his life-saving surgery. "My mother was murdered!" I screamed at him. "You want me to just... forget that?" He told me he knew who the driver was and threatened to ruin me if I didn't stop. He used his power to destroy my career, publicly shame me, and even had me thrown into a cellar full of venomous spiders, leaving me for dead. The final blow came when he forced me to lie on a live stream at my mother's grave, confessing to crimes I didn't commit. As I collapsed, he had his men scatter her ashes into the mud. I lost everything. My family, my dignity, my truth. They thought they had broken me. They were wrong. As I boarded a flight out of New York, I hit 'Go Live' on a global stream. "My name is Celina Alvarado," I began, my voice steady. "And I'm here to tell you everything."
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Chapter 4

Celina POV:

The antiseptic smell of the hospital room clawed at my nostrils as I slowly blinked awake. White walls, white sheets, a muted hum of medical machinery. My body felt heavy, bruised, and utterly broken. My mind, however, was strangely clear. A calm, terrifying clarity.

Haywood was there. He sat in a visitor's chair, looking surprisingly disheveled, his eyes bloodshot. He looked at me, a flicker of something unreadable in his gaze. "Celina," he rasped, his voice rough. "How are you feeling?"

I didn't answer. My eyes remained fixed on the ceiling, a blank stare. There was nothing left to say. Nothing left to feel, other than a cold, steady thrum of emptiness.

He frowned, a line appearing between his brows. "You're lucky, you know. The venom wasn't lethal, but it was close. You were bitten by a highly venomous spider. We found you… just in time."

I finally turned my head, my eyes locking onto his. A bitter, mirthless laugh escaped my lips. "Lucky? Lucky that you found me after you threw me in a pit of spiders? Lucky that your chosen method of torture didn't quite kill me?" My voice was weak, but the words were sharp, each one a tiny barb. "Thank you, Haywood. For the experience. It was… enlightening."

His face flushed with anger. "Don't be ridiculous, Celina! I didn't 'throw' you anywhere. Someone must have... mistaken you. It was an unfortunate accident. And I was worried about you."

"Worried?" I scoffed. "You looked worried enough to torture me. You were worried about your image, Haywood. Not me. Never me." I turned my head away, disgusted. I didn't want his fake concern. I didn't want his presence.

He stood up, impatiently. "You're being irrational, Celina. This is not how you thank someone who saved your life. Are you trying to garner sympathy? To paint me as the villain?"

His words hammered home the truth. His "concern" was a calculated move, a performance for an invisible audience. He thought I was playing a game. He always did.

"You want to talk about villains, Haywood?" I said, turning back to him, my eyes burning with a cold fire. My hand reached under my pillow, finding the small, discreet digital recorder I had managed to salvage. I clicked it on, the tiny red light a beacon of my resolve. "Let's talk about villains then."

"What are you doing?" he asked, his eyes narrowing at the recorder.

"Just documenting our heartfelt conversation," I replied, a chilling smile touching my lips. "For posterity. Now, about our divorce. You remember signing those papers, don't you?"

He looked momentarily confused, then his expression shifted to one of dismissive arrogance. "Divorce? Celina, don't be absurd. You're my wife. We have a company to protect. Appearances to maintain."

"Appearances?" I chuckled, a hollow, broken sound. "This marriage has been nothing but an appearance. A cage. And we've both been torturing each other in it. Don't you think it's time to be free?"

He leaned back, crossing his arms. "You won't leave me, Celina. You can't. You need me. Your career is in ruins. Your family is… gone. Where would you go? What would you do?" He smirked, confident in his power over me. "Besides, our marriage is a valuable asset. It adds to my company's stability. And to my own image. I keep you. You stay."

"So our marriage is a business transaction then?" I asked, my voice dangerously soft. "And I'm just a commodity?"

He shrugged. "More or less. You were always ambitious, Celina. And I provided you with a platform. It was a fair exchange."

"I never used you, Haywood," I whispered, a flicker of my old self, the one who believed in love, surfacing for a brief, painful moment.

He scoffed. "Please. You're all the same. Don't pretend to be some fragile, innocent flower. You knew what you were getting into." He paused, a strange glint in his eye. "And besides, even if I wanted to divorce you, I couldn't. It would cause a scandal. Damage the company. And Anika… she would be devastated."

"Anika," I repeated, a bitter taste in my mouth. "Is that what you tell yourself? That you can't divorce me because of your company? Or because of Anika? Is it love, Haywood? The way you worship her, protect her brother, even after he murdered my mother and father? Is that love?"

He looked away, his jaw tight. "It's… complicated."

"Complicated," I echoed, a cold smile on my lips. He was lying. To me, to himself. His obsession with Anika was sickening.

-

Days later, I was discharged. The sun was shining outside, a cruel mockery of my internal landscape. The world felt bright, vibrant, alive, while I felt like a ghost, hollowed out and dead inside.

Haywood met me at the hospital exit. Anika was with him, clinging to his arm, looking radiant in a designer dress. "Celina, darling!" Anika chirped, her voice overly sweet. "So glad you're recovering! Haywood and I are throwing a huge birthday bash for me next week. You absolutely must come! And you better prepare a really special gift."

Haywood's eyes bore into mine. "You will be there, Celina. And you will be gracious."

"I don't think so," I said, my voice flat. "I'm not in the mood for celebrations. Especially not yours, Anika."

Haywood's face darkened, the air around us growing heavy, suffocating. "You will be there, Celina. Or I will make sure your mother's meager possessions, whatever little is left, mysteriously disappear. Permanently."

My blood ran cold. My mother's grave was safe, for now, but her few cherished belongings, packed away in boxes, were vulnerable. He knew my weaknesses. He knew my pain points. He was a master manipulator.

"You wouldn't," I whispered, my voice trembling with a mixture of fear and rage. "You're a monster."

"Try me," he challenged, his eyes burning with a sadistic glee. "Your tears mean nothing to me, Celina. Not anymore. Just do as you're told."

I closed my eyes, a single tear escaping, but I quickly wiped it away. The tears were for my dead parents. Not for this man. "Fine," I said, my voice devoid of emotion. "I'll be there."

Anika's birthday party was a spectacle of opulence and excess. The ballroom glittered with crystal chandeliers, filled with the city's elite, all fawning over Anika and Haywood. Haywood, the doting partner, stood by Anika's side, his hand resting possessively on her waist, his eyes full of an adoration he had never shown me.

He presented her with a diamond necklace, each stone sparkling with a thousand fires. Gasps rippled through the crowd. "It's exquisite!" "So romantic!" I heard whispers, mixed with envious sighs. Then, their eyes turned to me, standing alone in a corner, my simple black dress a stark contrast to their dazzling display. Their gazes were a mixture of pity, scorn, and morbid curiosity.

Haywood caught my eye, a chilling command passing between us. He wanted me to present my gift. To perform.

I walked towards them, my heart a leaden weight in my chest. I handed Anika a small, elegantly wrapped box. "Happy birthday, Anika," I said, my voice calm, betraying none of the turmoil within.

Anika took the box, a sly smile playing on her lips. She opened it to reveal a delicate, hand-painted silk scarf, a piece I had commissioned from a local artist, a symbol of quiet beauty and resilience. "Oh, how… quaint," she said, her voice dripping with mock sincerity. She then turned her gaze to the silver chain around my neck. It was my mother's second locket, a smaller, simpler one, the only piece I had left un-mangled. I wore it constantly, a silent comfort.

"You know, Celina," Anika said, her eyes glittering, "that necklace you're wearing… it's so pretty. I've always admired it. It would look so much better on me. Don't you think, Haywood, darling?" She batted her eyelashes at him.

My heart lurched. "No," I said, my voice sharp, a primal instinct to protect the last vestige of my mother. "This is my mother's. It's not for sale. It's not a gift."

Anika pouted, turning to Haywood. "Haywood, she's being mean! She won't let me have it!"

Haywood' s eyes, which had softened for Anika, hardened instantly as they met mine. "Celina. Give it to her. Now." His voice was a low growl, a warning.

"Haywood, please," I pleaded, my voice thin. "This was my mother's. She wore it every day. She held it when… when she was dying." The memory of her last phone call, her voice, her love, flooded my mind. I remembered her telling me, years ago, This locket protects me, my darling. It will protect you too.

Haywood' s jaw tightened. He glared at me, a silent, chilling reminder of his threat to my mother's grave. My stomach dropped. I knew what he would do. He would go through with it. He would desecrate her memory, rip apart her final resting place, just to prove a point. Just to appease Anika.

My hand trembled as I unclasped the small, silver chain. My fingers brushed the cool metal, a final farewell to the last tangible piece of my mother. I looked at Anika, her face alight with triumph, and a cold, desolate despair settled over me. I placed the locket, still warm from my skin, into her outstretched hand.

Anika snatched it, a triumphant smirk on her face. She immediately fastened it around her own neck, her eyes sparkling with malicious glee. She wore my mother' s locket like a trophy, a symbol of her victory.

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