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Phoenix Rising: The Scarred Heiress's Revenge

Phoenix Rising: The Scarred Heiress's Revenge

I lived as the "scarred ghost" of the Stephens penthouse, a wife kept in the shadows because my facial burns offended my billionaire husband's aesthetic. For years, I endured Kason's coldness and my family's abuse, a submissive puppet who believed she had nowhere else to go. The end came with a blue folder tossed onto my silk sheets. Kason's mistress was back, and he wanted me out by sunset, offering a five-million-dollar "silence fee" to go hide my face in the countryside. The betrayal cut deep when I discovered my father had already traded my divorce for a corporate bailout. My step-sister mocked my "trashy" appearance at a high-end boutique, while the sales staff treated me like a common thief. At home, my father threatened to cut off my mother's life-saving medicine unless I crawled back to Kason to beg for a better deal. I was the girl who took the blame for a fire she didn't start, the wife who worshipped a man who never looked her in the eye, and the daughter used as a human bargaining chip. I was supposed to be broken, penniless, and desperate. But the woman who stood up wasn't the weak Elease Finch anymore; she was Phoenix, a tactical predator with a $500 million secret. I signed the divorce papers without a single tear, walked past my stunned husband, and wiped the Finch family's bank accounts clean with a few taps on my phone. "Your money is dirty," I told Kason with a cold smile. "I prefer clean hands." The cage is open, the hunt has begun, and I'm starting with the people who thought a scar made me weak.
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Chapter 3

The elevator doors opened into the lobby. The doorman, a man named Henry who usually looked through Elease as if she were invisible, blinked in surprise. He saw the canvas bag. He saw the hoodie. "Calling the town car, Mrs. Stephens?" Henry asked, his hand hovering over the phone. "Ms. Finch," Elease corrected without breaking stride. "And no." She pushed through the revolving doors and stepped out onto the sidewalk. The noise of Manhattan hit her instantly. Horns blaring, sirens wailing, the low hum of millions of people moving. It was chaotic. It was perfect. She walked to the curb and pulled out her phone. Her fingers flew across the screen. She wasn't opening a social media app. She was accessing a hidden partition in the operating system. The colorful interface vanished, replaced by a black terminal screen with scrolling green text. SkyNet Protocol: Active. She typed in a command string. She pinged a secure offshore server located in the Cayman Islands. The query wasn't a balance check. It was an execution command. Phoenix rerouted a fraction of a percent of global high-frequency trades through a ghost algorithm, simultaneously draining three dark web escrow accounts belonging to arms dealers. It took twelve seconds. The result appeared on the screen. New Account Balance: $500,000,000.00 They were the spoils of a war she had just started. They were untraceable, liquid, and entirely hers. They had been sitting dormant in the dark corners of the web, waiting for a predator like her to claim them. She didn't transfer it all. That would trigger flags at the NSA. She activated a sub-routine to funnel a stream of cash into a generic, untraceable spending account. She set the limit: one hundred thousand dollars a day. She closed the terminal and opened a ride-share app. She spoofed her GPS location to bounce off three different satellites, making her digital footprint a ghost. A black SUV pulled up to the curb thirty seconds later. It was a priority dispatch she had hacked into the queue. High above, on the penthouse balcony, Kason Stephens was watching. He gripped the railing. He expected to see her crying on the bench. He expected her to look lost. Instead, he saw her open the door of a premium SUV. She moved with a military-straight posture. She didn't look back. Not once. His phone buzzed in his pocket. He pulled it out. "Darling, I'm almost there," Chelsea's voice purred through the speaker. Kason felt a sudden wave of irritation. "Fine," he snapped, and hung up. He stared at the spot where the SUV had been, a strange unease settling in his gut. Inside the car, the air was cool and quiet. The tinted windows turned the city into a dark, moving blur. Elease caught her reflection in the glass. The scar on her cheek was a map of Kason's survival and her public shame. It was jagged, pulling at the corner of her eye. "First order of business," she whispered to herself. "Fix the hardware." Her reawakened medical knowledge, far beyond anything taught in a university, surfaced. She knew the science of cellular regeneration. She knew what to buy and where to find it. She typed a query into her phone: Bio-gel synthesis materials. Supplier: Dark Web. The driver glanced at her in the rearview mirror. He saw a woman in a hoodie with a scarred face. His expression remained professionally neutral, his eyes meeting hers for only a fraction of a second before returning to the road. "Destination?" "The Pierre Hotel," Elease said. She needed neutral ground. She needed luxury. She needed a fortress. Her phone vibrated again. The screen lit up. Caller ID: Father. Elease stared at the name. Franklin Finch. She let it ring. The phone went silent, then beeped for a voicemail. She didn't dial into the voicemail system. She accessed the audio file directly through the terminal, playing it at 2x speed. Franklin's voice was venomous, distorted by the speed but clear in its intent. "If you ruined the deal with Kason, don't bother coming home. You are useless to me if you aren't his wife." Elease smirked. It was a dark, dangerous expression. "Home?" she said to the empty car. "No. I'm coming to a battlefield." The SUV merged into the heavy traffic, leaving the Stephens empire behind in the dust.

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