
Return Of The Lethal Unwanted Heiress
Allison was hiding in a dusty small-town garage, working as a mechanic to suppress the lethal, experimental serum freezing her veins.
But a call from her estranged, wealthy father shattered her peace.
He threatened to permanently freeze her dead mother's trust fund if she didn't return to the family estate immediately.
That trust fund held the only key to the truth behind her past and her survival.
When she stepped into the sprawling mansion in her faded hoodie, her family treated her like a stray dog.
Her stepmother mocked her cheap clothes, and her half-brother called her a piece of trash.
Her father tossed a vocational school enrollment form at her, telling her to learn to sew so they could marry her off to anyone desperate enough.
Her perfect, porcelain-doll stepsister Gwyneth even deliberately smashed a glass of boiling milk against her own leg.
"Why did you push me?!" Gwyneth screamed, crying tears of fake terror to frame Allison.
"You vicious bitch! You're just as sick as your mother!" her father roared, raising his hand to strike her.
They looked at her with absolute disgust, thinking she was just a stupid, uncultured hick they could easily manipulate and destroy.
They had no idea that the girl standing before them was a lethal operative who already possessed all their offshore tax ledgers and darkest secrets.
Allison easily caught her father's wrist mid-air, her grip like a steel vice.
"I'm not going to a trade school," she whispered coldly, ripping the form into pieces. "I am going to Crestwood Academy."
It was time to take back everything that belonged to her, with interest.
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Chapter 5
The heavy bass of the metal music vibrated through the soles of Allison’s boots.
The abandoned quarry was lit up like a warzone. Blinding halogen spotlights cut through thick clouds of exhaust fumes and dust. Hundreds of people screamed and shoved against the chain-link fences, desperate for a view of the track.
Allison rode her black motorcycle through the crowd and hit the brakes hard, throwing the bike into a vicious tailwhip. The rear tire screamed against the dirt and stopped perfectly on the starting line.
High above the track, standing in the shadows of a rusted crane, Graham held a pair of military-grade binoculars to his eyes. He locked the lenses onto the girl in the black helmet.
Down on the track, Nash Corrigan pushed his way through the crowd. He was a massive wall of muscle, chewing on a lit cigar. His crew flanked him, glaring at Allison.
He stopped inches from her front tire and blew a cloud of toxic smoke right at her visor.
“You got a death wish, little girl?” Nash laughed, his voice booming over the engine noise. “A hick trying to take on the Azure Syndicate? You’re gonna die on this dirt.”
Allison didn’t take off her helmet. She kept her hands on the handlebars, then slowly lifted her left hand and flipped him the middle finger.
The crowd went wild.
Nash’s face turned purple with rage. He reached into his leather vest and slammed a piece of paper onto her fuel tank.
“Two million dollars,” he roared. “And a turf bet. Whoever loses, their crew is banned from this track for three years.”
Allison looked down at the check. Her heart rate remained perfectly steady. She needed that money. She gave a single, sharp nod.
Nash sneered and stomped over to his car—a heavily modified supercar rigged with a massive nitrous oxide system. The engine revved, sounding like a screaming demon. Allison’s bike looked like a toy next to it.
A girl in a torn tank top walked to the center of the track and raised a red flag high above her head. She held it for three agonizing seconds, then dropped the flag.
Nash’s supercar exploded off the line. The tires dug into the dirt, launching the heavy vehicle forward like a missile. He was fifty yards ahead in the blink of an eye.
Allison didn’t move. She waited half a second, then smoothly rolled the throttle. The bike launched forward, but she wasn’t pushing it. She was trailing behind.
Up in the shadows, Pierce gripped the railing. “She choked. She’s terrified.”
Graham didn’t blink. He adjusted the focus on the binoculars. “She’s not choking. She’s testing the grip of the dirt. She’s reading the track.”
They hit the halfway mark. The track narrowed violently, leading into the ‘Reaper’s Scythe’—a brutal hairpin turn with a solid rock wall on the inside and a sheer cliff drop on the outside.
Nash slammed his brakes and cut hard into the inside lane, blocking her path. He left her no room to pass.
Allison didn’t brake.
She twisted the throttle until it locked. The motorcycle let out a high-pitched, terrifying shriek.
The crowd screamed. People covered their eyes. She was going too fast. She was going to fly off the cliff.
Allison threw her body weight entirely to the right. The motorcycle dropped horizontally, footpegs sparking violently against the asphalt. She was inches from the ground, riding the absolute edge of the tire’s grip.
She swept to the outside lane, right on the edge of the cliff. Her rear exhaust pipe scraped against the metal guardrail. A massive shower of orange sparks exploded into the night sky, illuminating her black helmet.
Nash looked in his rearview mirror. He saw the sparks. He saw the bike practically defying gravity. Panic seized his chest. He jerked the steering wheel, his car fishtailing wildly as he lost his nerve.
Allison flew past him, a dark streak in the night.
She crossed the finish line three seconds ahead of him. The digital timer on the overhead screen flashed a new track record.
The quarry went dead silent. Then the crowd erupted into a deafening roar.
Up on the crane, Graham dropped the binoculars. His breathing stopped. His hands gripped the metal railing so hard his knuckles turned white.
That leaning angle. That suicidal outer-lane overtake. He had seen it before. Four years ago, on an F1 circuit in Monaco.
It was ‘S’. The legend. The ghost he had been hunting for years.
Down on the track, Allison kicked her kickstand down and ripped off her helmet. Dark hair fell over her shoulders. She walked straight over to Nash, who was slumped against his steering wheel, pale and shaking.
She reached through his open window and snatched the two-million-dollar check from his dashboard.
“This track is mine now. The Azure Syndicate is done here,” she said coldly.
She walked back to her bike, shoved the check into her jacket, and rode off into the darkness.
Graham stared at the empty track. His chest heaved. He twisted his pinky ring, a dark, predatory fire burning in his eyes.
“I found you,” he whispered.
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8.1
Elinor's frail daughter, Cece, died in a sterile hospital room while waiting for her father to take her to Disney World.
But her billionaire husband, Derick, never showed up. At the exact moment Cece's heart monitor flatlined, the hospital TV broadcasted Derick affectionately holding the hand of his mistress and he has booked a clearance of the entire Disneyland to celebrate mistress's daughter's birthday!.
When Elinor confronted Derick with their daughter's ashes, he sneered and accused her of hiding the child just to get his attention. Elinor's heart was torn to shreds. How could a father be so blind and ruthless? Did Kamryn use his power to steal the very kidney that belonged to Cece? Why did her innocent baby have to die for their sick affair?
The suffocating grief inside Elinor finally crystallized into a sharp blade. She wiped the blood from her lips, canceled the simple divorce, and began her ruthless revenge.

8.8
I discovered I was pregnant with twins from my marriage to Ell Steele, the ruthless CEO of the Steele Group. But he saw me as a gold-digging nobody, unworthy of his heir.
He stormed into our penthouse with his lawyer, slamming down abortion consent forms and a divorce NDA, offering five million to terminate and vanish. "You're not fit to carry my child," he spat, gripping my jaw.
I refused the abortion, signed the zero-payout divorce to keep my company insurance for my dying mom's ICU bills, but stayed on as an admin assistant. Brittany, his mistress, spilled coffee on my reports, got me demoted to the dusty sub-basement sorting old files.
She framed me for attacking her, security dragged me out, slamming me into doorframes that cramped my belly. Trapped in a sabotaged freight elevator, I nearly miscarried in the dark, gasping for air while Ell rescued me—only to find my prenatal pills and rage.
At the gala, I warned Brittany the Angel's Tears necklace—Georgina's flawed design—was cracking. She accused me of theft; Ell ordered me stripped and searched publicly. It snapped anyway, shattering the diamond, but he blamed me, firing and blacklisting me on the spot.
Beaten down, humiliated, body aching from their cruelty—how could my husband, who I once loved, destroy me without a shred of doubt? What made him so blind to my pain?
Dragged from our home in the rain, a black Rolls-Royce Phantom pulled up. The butler bowed: "Madame Aura, your suite awaits." As Ell watched from his Maybach, I initiated the hostile takeover—time to bankrupt them all.

8.7
Five years ago, I was the invisible scholarship charity case at an elite Manhattan prep school, trying to survive in a sea of trust-fund babies.
Arlo Hammond, the untouchable billionaire heir, made sure to completely dismantle my soul.
When his wealthy friends asked if he noticed me, his mocking laughter echoed down the hallway.
"Are you out of your mind? You seriously think I'd be interested in a boring little nerd like her?"
But the moment we were alone, he would corner me in dark alleys, pinning my wrists against brick walls with terrifying, possessive jealousy if my phone even buzzed. He played his twisted games until I was left standing in the rain with my shattered dignity.
Now, I am an Assistant District Attorney. I spent years burying those memories under mountains of legal files.
But tonight, he returned.
When we crossed paths at an exclusive club, he looked at me with the cool detachment he'd give a piece of furniture. In front of a crowd of elites, he coldly declared:
"We have absolutely nothing to do with each other anymore."
Then he walked away to pick up a supermodel, leaving me trembling from the sheer humiliation.
I didn't understand. If I was so worthless to him, why did he still have my birthday tattooed in dark ink on his wrist? Why did he look at me with such raw, painful vulnerability in the shadows?
I stared at my pale reflection in the mirror and made a silent vow.
I am not that pathetic seventeen-year-old anymore, and I will prove to him that I am completely, entirely over him.

7.2
Two years ago, Amaya Bennett witnessed a murder.
A powerful man was killed in cold blood, right in front of her. She should have died that night too.
Instead, she woke up in a hospital with no memory of what happened. No faces, no names and no clues. Just fragments, blurred images that slip through her fingers every time she tries to hold on.
Now, Amaya lives a quiet life, piecing herself back together. She works part-time, avoids trouble, and stays invisible. Until she lands a job at Twilight Global.
A company owned by Jake Anderson, the cold and untouchable CEO whose father was murdered the same night Aria lost her memory. Jake spent years searching for the only witness. But she vanished without any trace. Or so he thought.
But somehow, they cross path again, working under his roof, completely unaware of the truth she carries.
The killer is still out there.
And when Amaya starts getting flashes of blood, a voice, a ring glinting under the dim light, the hunt begins again.
But this time, she's not alone. Because even before he realizes who she is... Jake has already started protecting her. In the most relentless and dangerous way.

8.3
He laid me on the sheets, climbed over me, caged me with his arms. "Last chance to run," he said, voice low."I need the money," I whispered, feeling so tiny in his arms."You're soaking," he muttered. "Virgin or not, your pussy wants this."I moaned, looking away, couldn't help it,"Eyes on me, sweetheart," he pushed his tip in slowly."Fuck," he groaned. "So tight."He fucked me like he was claiming something. "Come for me," he whispered in my ears, moving faster."Damien," I cried out his name as I came."That's it," he growled. After a long minute he pulled out slowly. "One night," he said again, almost like a reminder....weeks later, I walked through the quiet hall of my school. A massive portrait stared back at me.Damien BlackwoodPrincipal Benefactor and OwnerColumbia University.Same man who'd just taken my virginity for money. My stomach dropped. "Oh fuck... what have I done?"

8.6
Marrying Theron Draix in a few days was a life long dream come true.
For seventeen years, I'd loved him, revolving my life around him, and in just three days, we should be married.
"Let's break up. I won't be attending the wedding," he said.
My life shattered in that instant.
Finding out he was in love with my adopted sister was worse. They had played me and controlled my emotions.
At the end, Mireya had killed me.
If I was given a second chance, I would never love Theron and never trust Mireya.