
No Longer A Victim, Now I Rise
The fluorescent hum of the DMV was the soundtrack to my boring life, until I tried to replace my lost driver's license.
"Your marital status. It says you're divorced," the clerk said, shattering my five-year marriage to Jackson Parks with a single, flat sentence.
My husband, Jackson, the man who swore he loved me, had secretly divorced me three years ago. Not only that, he had remarried the very next day to Candida Camacho, the woman who had tried to murder me on my wedding day and left me infertile. And they had a two-year-old son, Joey.
I stumbled home, my world a blur, only to find Jackson and Candida in our living room, arguing. "I hate having to pretend for that pathetic woman!" Candida shrieked. Jackson, my husband, pleaded, "I love you. I've always loved you."
The man I sacrificed everything for, who swore to destroy her, was now playing house with my attempted murderer, and I was the fool living in his house, sleeping in his bed, believing his lies.
The pain in my abdomen, a phantom ache from five years ago, flared to life, mirroring the gaping wound in my soul. I would not be his victim anymore.
"Hamilton," I said into the phone, my voice clear and steady. "I need your help. I need you to help me die."
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Chapter 5
Elena POV:
I dragged my torn dress across the wet asphalt and slid into the backseat of the Maybach.
The jagged shards of glass embedded in the fabric sliced into my calves. My muscles screamed as they tore against the movement, sending sharp, electric shocks up my spine.
I bit down hard on my lower lip. The metallic taste of blood flooded my mouth, but I didn't make a sound. Five years in the Parks family had trained me well. Screaming only invited more cruelty. I had learned to swallow my pain until it became a physical weight in my stomach.
Hamilton sat beside me. He picked up a cashmere blanket that smelled of soothing lavender and cedar. He reached out to drape it over me.
I flinched, my shoulders pulling back as my body instinctively pressed against the cold leather door.
Hamilton paused. His eyes softened, but he didn’t push. He simply let the blanket fall gently over my trembling shoulders. The heavy fabric trapped my body heat, but I still felt freezing.
I rolled the window down halfway and looked out at the winding mountain road.
In the distance, the flashing red and blue lights of the ambulances pierced the dark night. The strobing colors burned my retinas.
Paramedics were lifting a bloodied stretcher into the back of the ambulance. Jackson was on it. His chest was barely moving.
I watched him with dead eyes.
When the paramedic moved to slam the ambulance doors shut, Jackson’s hand slipped off the side of the stretcher and dangled in the air. That was the same hand that had pushed me away countless times. The hand that had held Candida while I stood in the shadows.
I pulled my gaze away and stared straight ahead.
Hamilton opened the small refrigerated compartment between the seats. He pulled out a syringe filled with clear liquid. The silver needle caught the dim cabin light, making the air in the car suddenly feel thin.
He unbuttoned the cuff of my torn sleeve and pushed it up. "Painkiller," he said, his voice low and elegant.
He slid the needle into my arm with practiced gentleness.
The cold liquid rushed into my veins. Within seconds, my ragged breathing began to slow. The sharp, stabbing pain in my legs dulled into a heavy throb.
But my hands were still balled into tight fists. My fingernails dug so hard into my palms that they broke the skin. A single drop of cold sweat rolled down my temple.
Hamilton snapped open the center console and pulled out a black velvet box.
The small combination lock clicked sharply in the quiet car. He pushed the open box across the leather armrest toward me.
My fingers trembled as I reached for it.
Inside sat a brand-new European Union passport. The gold crest gleamed under the reading light. I picked it up and opened the thick pages.
The photo was me, but the name printed next to it was *Aria*.
"Do you want one last look?" Hamilton asked softly. The low hum of the Maybach's engine almost masked his heavy sigh.
I looked at the passport, then at the distant ambulance lights. I shook my head once.
I looked down at my left hand. The diamond ring on my ring finger felt like a shackle. Jackson had shoved it onto my finger three years ago, a cold business transaction disguised as a marriage. Now, it just looked ridiculous.
I grabbed the diamond and pulled. It was stuck on my swollen knuckle. I yanked it hard.
The metal scraped a layer of skin off my joint. A bead of dark red blood welled up on my finger, but I didn't care.
I tossed the ring out the open window. It vanished into the tall, wet grass by the cliff edge.
Hamilton snapped his fingers.
The bodyguard in the front passenger seat immediately reached back and handed Hamilton a heavy black remote. A small red light blinked steadily on its surface.
Hamilton placed the remote directly into my palm.
The freezing metal sent a violent shiver down my arms. Hamilton wrapped his large, warm hand over mine, pressing my fingers around the device.
I closed my eyes and took a deep breath.
Behind my eyelids, I saw the exact moment the truck had hit us. I saw Jackson unbuckle his seatbelt and throw his body over Candida to shield her, leaving me exposed to the crushing metal.
My eyes snapped open.
I pressed my thumb down on the red button. The resistance was heavy, requiring real force. I pushed until it gave way with a loud, mechanical click.
A muffled boom echoed from the cliffside behind us.
The shockwave hit a second later, violently rocking the heavy Maybach on its suspension. The night sky lit up in a blinding flash of orange and yellow.
Through the rearview mirror, I watched the sedan registered in my name turn into a massive fireball. Thick, black smoke billowed into the clouds. The flames were hot enough to melt the chassis. They would easily incinerate the blood-soaked clothes I had left in the driver's seat.
The orange glow washed over my pale face. Even through the bulletproof glass, I could feel the faint warmth of the blast.
The corners of my mouth twitched. A cold, relieved smile broke across my face.
Hamilton picked up a crystal glass of warm water and handed it to me. The water sloshed over the rim as my hands shook, but I brought it to my lips and drank the entire glass in one breath.
"Airport, sir?" the bodyguard asked from the front. His eyes met mine in the rearview mirror, wide with a new, distinct fear.
Hamilton nodded.
The Maybach pulled smoothly onto the dark highway. The raging fire grew smaller and smaller behind us until it was swallowed by the night. I pressed the new passport tightly against my chest, feeling my own heartbeat against the thick paper.
The television screen embedded in the seatback flickered on. An automated female AI voice began to read the local traffic report. *"Warning. Major explosion reported on Route 9..."*
Hamilton reached forward and hit the mute button.
I leaned my head back against the soft leather headrest and closed my eyes. Memories of the last five years clawed at the inside of my skull like trapped animals. I forced myself to breathe through my nose, pushing the images away until my mind was entirely blank.
Hamilton shrugged off his suit jacket and draped it over my blanket. The fabric rustled quietly.
This time, I didn't pull away.
Thirty minutes later, the convoy rolled onto the tarmac of a private airfield. The deafening roar of jet engines vibrated in my chest. A sleek Gulfstream jet stood waiting, its stairs already lowered.
The bodyguard opened my door. The smell of jet fuel and cold night wind hit my face.
My legs wobbled as I stepped out, but Hamilton caught my elbow, supporting my weight.
The bright lights lining the boarding stairs made me squint. I didn't look back. I put my foot on the first metal step and climbed.
At the top of the stairs, a flight attendant in a sharp uniform bowed deeply.
"Welcome aboard, Mademoiselle Aria," she said in perfect French.
"Merci," I replied, my own French flawless and smooth.
I stepped into the cabin. The heavy door hissed and sealed shut behind me, completely cutting off the wind, the noise, and my entire past.
The plane immediately began to taxi down the runway.
I sat down on the white leather sofa. Hamilton sat across from me. He picked up two crystal flutes and poured the champagne. The bubbles rushed to the surface in a frantic fizz.
He held his glass out toward me. A slow, genuine smile touched his lips.
"Welcome to your new life, Aria."
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9.5
The disgraced daughter of the Patton family is back from the countryside.At the news, everyone spurned her with contempt!
A good-for-nothing young lady, a crude village wench, a vicious devil...
Until one day--The world-famous life-saving medical sovereign is her.The enigmatic top forensic specialist is her.The grandmaster hacker hunted across the globe is also her.
One hidden identity of the young miss came to light after another.Shocked and dumbfounded, the crowd fell to their knees to beg for forgiveness.
In an instant, Evie was cornered by the mysterious powerhouse.Hartwell's voice lured and mesmerized:"Darling, you have countless secret identities. Would you mind taking on one more, being my wife!"

8.3
Ayleen Ramirez sat in the sterile Hope Hill Fertility Clinic, her heart shattering as Dr. Finch delivered the crushing news: her third IVF cycle had failed.
Eavesdropping outside a supply closet, she overheard her husband Don on the phone, laughing cruelly. "She's a defective incubator," he sneered to his mistress Alessandra. "I never used my sperm—just cheap bank donation. No trailer trash carries a Bradley heir."
Betrayed, Ayleen confronted him, but her adoptive family ambushed her at home. Her parents and brother sided with Alessandra, now pregnant by Don, demanding Ayleen sign divorce papers to secure family investments. "You're an embarrassment," her mother snapped, threatening to cut her trust fund. Ayleen tossed back their heirloom necklace and walked out.
She stormed the Bradley mansion, slapped divorce papers on Don, packed her bags amid his aunt's insults, and fled into the night.
Drunk in a trendy bar, she stumbled into a powerful stranger—Burdette Guerrero—spilling whiskey on his crotch, then accidentally grabbed a napkin to his trousers. He shoved her away in rage.
Worse, she mistook his penthouse suite for her hotel room, bursting in on his shower, smashing a mirror in panic. He pinned her to the wall, snarling accusations.
How did this arrogant man know her name? Why demand she sign a mysterious contract at 9 a.m.? Devastated and clueless she's actually pregnant—with his stolen heir—Ayleen sobbed alone, the world crumbling.
The next morning, she straightened her spine in the Grand Guerrero lobby, ready to face him and demand answers—no matter the cost.

9.4
Six years ago, Breanna was shoved into a pitch-black hotel suite by her own uncle.
She was forced to endure a brutal night with a drugged stranger just to keep her grandmother's ventilator running.
Nine months later, she gave birth in a cold underground clinic.
But her uncle immediately snatched the crying newborn from her trembling hands, coldly announcing the baby had died.
For six years, Breanna lived in agonizing grief, working as a lowly hotel cleaner just to survive.
But a cruel setup threw her directly into the path of Elliot Finch, the arrogant billionaire from that dark night.
He did not recognize the woman whose life he had completely ruined.
Instead, he looked at her like she was rotting garbage, had his guards drag her into a wet alley, and mercilessly got her fired.
"If I ever see your face again, I will make sure you cannot get a job cleaning toilets."
Breanna was suffocating from the injustice, stripped of her dignity and her family's only lifeline.
Yet, when she instinctively protected a traumatized little boy from bullies, she discovered he was Elliot's son.
The boy clung to her neck, crying and desperately begging his father to let her stay.
But Elliot just threw a massive check at her chest, violently accusing her of brainwashing a sick child for a meal ticket.
Looking at the toxic disgust in his eyes, something inside Breanna finally broke.
She picked up the check, ripped the millions into tiny shreds, and let them rain down on his expensive shoes.
"Keep your dirty money."
She turned her back on the crying boy and the stunned billionaire, deciding she would no longer be their victim.

8.0
After fifteen years of marriage and a brutal battle with infertility, I finally saw two pink lines on a pregnancy test. This baby was my victory, the heir that would finally secure my place as the wife of mob capo Marco Vitiello. I planned to announce it at his mother's party, a triumph over the matriarch who saw me as nothing but a barren field.
But before I could celebrate, my friend sent me a video. The headline read: "MOB CAPO MARCO VITIELLO'S PASSIONATE NIGHTCLUB KISS!" It was him, my husband, devouring a woman who looked like a younger, fresher version of me.
Hours later, Marco stumbled home, drunk and reeking of another woman's perfume. He complained about his mother begging him for an heir, completely unaware of the secret I held. Then my phone lit up with a text from an unknown number.
"Your husband slept with my girl. We need to talk."
It was signed by Dante Moretti, the ruthless Don of our rival family.
The meeting with Dante was a nightmare. He showed me another video. This time, I heard my husband's voice, telling the other woman, "I love you. Elara... that's just business." My fifteen years of loyalty, of building his empire, of taking a bullet for him-all dismissed as "just business."
Dante didn't just reveal the affair; he showed me proof that Marco was already stealing our shared assets to build a new life with his mistress. Then, he made me an offer.
"Divorce him," he said, his eyes cold and calculating. "Join me. We'll build an empire together and destroy him."

9.7
For three years, I was the dutiful wife of billionaire Ervin Valdez.
On our third wedding anniversary, he came home smelling of his mistress's perfume, pinned me down, and brutally mocked me.
His mistress, Sylvia, had even sent me a fake ultrasound report to force me out of the picture.
In Ervin's eyes, I was just a vicious, calculating liar who used a pregnancy to trap him into marriage.
He didn't care that I had actually lost that baby, nor did he know the trauma of my gambling father selling me to a dark club where I was assaulted by a stranger.
When I finally handed him the signed divorce papers, giving up all assets, and left the penthouse with nothing but an old suitcase, he just sneered.
"She is playing a game of hard to get. She won't last three days before she comes crying back."
He froze all my bank accounts, let his mistress humiliate me in public, and waited coldly for me to starve and beg.
He thought my entire existence relied on his wealth, completely confident that I would inevitably surrender to his control.
But he was wrong.
I calmly opened my old laptop, bypassed the complex encryptions, and looked at the dozens of unread emails from top-tier global brands begging for my return.
I resurrected my hidden identity as the legendary jewelry designer "R," and walked straight into the top design firm in Manhattan.
"It is time to find myself again."

8.9
For seven years, I hid my MIT Ph.D. and my identity as a top haute couture designer to be the perfect, obedient wife to billionaire Cornelius Lambert.
But on our anniversary, while I waited at home with a cold dinner, I found him at a Michelin restaurant with his childhood sweetheart, Halle.
My seven-year-old son sat between them, laughing loudly.
"Mom is too boring. I wish Aunt Halle was my real mom."
Cornelius didn't defend me. He just smiled and affectionately ruffled the boy's hair.
When I finally packed my bags and left, I accidentally triggered an old AI robot prototype Cornelius had given me years ago.
A hidden recording played his voice from the very night he proposed.
"Why marry her? Because she's easy to control. Halle doesn't want to settle down yet, so Cassidy is just a perfect, temporary shield."
Later, when I caught them being intimate in a dark parking garage and snapped a photo, Cornelius watched with cold, dead eyes as his massive bodyguard shoved me against a concrete pillar.
My arm was torn open, blood dripping onto the floor, as they forced me to delete the evidence of his affair.
For seven years, I filed down every sharp edge of my brilliance for a man who saw me as nothing but a pathetic, disposable placeholder.
My heart turned to absolute ice. He thought I was just a weak, powerless housewife.
But he forgot who he was dealing with.
As his luxury car drove away, I pulled up the hidden command terminal on my phone and recovered the encrypted cloud backup of the photos.
I looked at my lawyer with a bleeding arm and a cold smile.
"Let's go. Now, we have a weapon."