
The Brilliant Pathologist And Her Stoic Cop
Dr. Kylee Mcdonald was a brilliant medical examiner whose life was defined by cold, mechanical precision.
But that perfect control shattered when her phone rang in the middle of an autopsy.
It was her best friend, Dana, whispering their old college distress code.
"Curtain call."
By the time Kylee and Detective Justice kicked down Dana's door, she lay dead on her couch, her skin a horrifying cherry-red from cyanide.
The crime scene was clumsily staged to frame a billionaire suitor, but soon, every single suspect linked to Dana turned up violently dead.
Internal Affairs pointed the finger at Kylee, accusing her of using her medical expertise to become a vigilante serial killer.
But the encrypted truth Kylee uncovered was far more chilling.
Dana had been severely abused by her boyfriend, and driven to the edge, she manipulated him into murdering their tormentors before executing him and taking her own life.
To avoid a public scandal, the police chief buried Dana's brilliant, terrifying manifesto.
Kylee's flawless mind short-circuited. She was a genius at reading the dead, so why had she been completely blind to the living hell her best friend endured right in front of her?
Three days later, while attending a formal gala to numb her grief, a nearby apartment building exploded in flames.
As Kylee examined the charred bodies pulled from the rubble, she realized the male victim was strangled long before the fire started.
She looked at the surviving mother, whose baby had just died in the blast, but the woman's eyes were completely, terrifyingly empty.
The alarm bells in Kylee's meticulously ordered brain began to chime, signaling that a new, deadly script had just begun.
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Chapter 10
The grand ballroom of the Waldorf Astoria was a sea of silk, diamonds, and tailored tuxedos.
Kylee walked through the crowd, her hand resting lightly on Justice's arm. She nodded politely to police chiefs and former professors, her social mask flawless. But her eyes remained detached, scanning the room out of pure habit.
Justice felt the tension radiating from her rigid spine.
He smoothly intercepted a waiter, grabbed two flutes of champagne, and guided Kylee away from the suffocating crowd, pushing open the heavy glass doors to the outdoor terrace.
The crisp autumn air hit them immediately.
Kylee walked to the stone balustrade and looked out over the Manhattan skyline. She took a sip of the champagne. Her shoulders finally dropped an inch.
Justice stood beside her, close enough that she could feel the heat radiating from his body.
"Better?" he asked softly.
Before Kylee could answer, the night sky to their left erupted.
A massive, blinding ball of orange fire tore through the darkness.
A split second later, a deafening boom hit them. The shockwave rattled the champagne flutes and made the terrace glass vibrate violently.
Kylee's pupils dilated. The chemical smell of burning accelerant hit her nose on the wind.
"Gas explosion," she said, her voice instantly dropping into her clinical, deadpan register.
The fire was close. Less than two blocks away, in a neighborhood of old, dilapidated tenement buildings.
Justice dropped his champagne glass. It shattered on the stone. He ripped his police radio from his belt. "Dispatch, 10-60! Major explosion on 4th and Elm! Roll fire and bus immediately!"
He turned and sprinted toward the service elevator.
Kylee didn't hesitate. She reached down, unbuckled the straps of her designer high heels, and kicked them off.
Barefoot, she hiked up the skirt of her blue gown and ran after him.
They burst out of the hotel lobby and sprinted down the sidewalk, pushing against the tide of screaming pedestrians running away from the blast.
They reached the scene. The entire third floor of a brick apartment building was engulfed in roaring flames. Thick, black smoke billowed into the sky.
Sirens wailed in the distance, but the fire trucks weren't there yet.
A group of residents stood on the sidewalk, screaming and pointing at the third floor.
Kylee looked up. Through the smoke, she saw the silhouette of a young woman leaning out of a shattered window, coughing violently, her clothes singed.
Justice moved to rush toward the burning entrance, but Kylee grabbed his arm, her grip like a steel vise, stopping his blind rush.
"The wind is pushing the thermal column east! The fire escape will melt in three minutes!" she commanded, her voice an icy blade cutting through the panic. "Take the central stairwell, breach the door, and stay below the neutral plane!"
Justice nodded, drawing his gun out of habit and plunging into the smoke while Kylee directed the arriving engine companies from the perimeter.
The heat inside the stairwell was agonizing. The air burned Justice's lungs. Sparks rained down, but he didn't stop.
Justice kicked open the door to the third-floor apartment.
He dropped to his knees to find breathable air. In the corner of the living room, the young woman had collapsed, gasping for air.
Justice scooped the woman up over his shoulder. "Move! Move!" he yelled.
He scrambled down the stairs. The moment his feet hit the pavement outside, the structural beams of the third floor gave way with a sickening crunch. The roof collapsed inward, sending a pillar of fire into the sky.
Paramedics rushed over, pulling the survivor onto a stretcher.
Kylee stood on the curb, her face smeared with black soot from the fallout, her bare feet bleeding from the broken glass on the street. She was panting hard, but her eyes were wide, wired with adrenaline and analytical calculation.
Justice dropped to one knee in front of her. He pulled a handkerchief from his pocket and gently wiped the soot from her cheek, his hands shaking slightly as he checked her for burns.
Thirty minutes later, the fire was reduced to smoldering ash.
A fire captain, his face grim, walked over to Justice.
"We found bodies in the back bedroom," the captain said heavily. "Two of them. Burned beyond recognition. One adult male. And one infant."
The word 'infant' made Kylee's head snap up.
She pushed the paramedic away who was bandaging her foot. She limped past the yellow tape, ignoring Justice's protests, and walked straight to the coroner's van.
Two black body bags lay on the asphalt.
Kylee stared at the adult male corpse. The fire had charred the flesh, but the musculature was visible.
Her eyes locked onto the neck. "The posture is anomalous," Kylee muttered to herself. "It lacks the typical symmetrical flexion of a fire victim's pugilistic stance. The cervical contraction mimics a mechanical asphyxiation reflex. We need a full autopsy to confirm, but I suspect he was dead long before the ignition."
Kylee slowly turned her head. She looked at the back of the ambulance, where the young mother they had just saved was sitting.
The woman-Allena-was staring at the burning building. She wasn't crying for her dead baby. Her eyes were completely, terrifyingly empty.
The alarm bells in Kylee's meticulously ordered brain began to chime. A mother who just lost her infant in a fire shouldn't have eyes that empty. It wasn't clinical shock; it was a psychological void. There was a glaring, dangerous discrepancy here, one that required immediate dissection.
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7.2
I am a resident surgeon, secretly married to Dr. Barrett Walters, the Chief of Cardiothoracic Surgery. It was a transactional marriage; he paid my mother's mounting medical bills, and I was his secret, obedient wife in the dark.
But at the hospital, he was a cold-blooded tyrant who deliberately made my life a living hell. During a major medical conference, he viciously tore apart my successful surgical repair, looking me dead in the eye as he called me incompetent in front of all my colleagues.
The humiliation didn't stop there. With his tacit approval, the senior residents bullied me, assigning me every brutal night shift. When his beautiful, wealthy heiress "girlfriend" visited the ward, he publicly mocked my background to make her smile.
"Some people get in through the back door. They're not fit for the front lines."
Even when I was forced to work as a secret banquet waitress to cover the medical copays he ignored, he found me, ruined the job out of pure possessive jealousy, and then fined my meager resident salary the very next morning just to show his absolute control.
I endured his punishing kisses and cruel rebukes, sacrificing my dignity just to keep my mother alive. But I couldn't understand why he had to destroy every shred of my peace. If he wanted the perfect heiress, why did he refuse to let me go?
Staring at his cold, controlling eyes in the stairwell, my exhaustion finally overpowered my fear. I was done being his victim, and it was time to tear up this contract.

7.6
When the Pollard family kicked Alyssa out into the freezing rain, Walter threw a ten-thousand-dollar check into a dirty puddle.
"Take it and get out. Don't ever come back," he sneered.
Her adoptive mother and stepsister stood on the mansion's porch, mocking her as a worthless country girl who tarnished their wealthy name. They laughed, claiming she wouldn't even be able to afford community college and would be begging on the streets in a week.
They looked at her cheap clothes and worn backpack with absolute disgust.
They were completely unaware that for the past five years, Alyssa was the secret mastermind who had built their failing gallery into a multi-million-dollar investment empire.
Every key investment, every fortune they made, came from the anonymous notes she had slipped into their unread books. They genuinely believed they were business geniuses, while treating the true architect of their wealth like a stray dog.
Looking at their smug, arrogant faces, Alyssa didn't feel a shred of sadness, only a cold, sharp irony.
They actually believed they had raised her.
She stepped close, whispered the master code to Walter's most secret offshore account, and watched the blood completely drain from his face.
"I raised you," she said, turning her back on the mansion without hesitation.
Walking into the storm, she pulled out a heavily encrypted phone and gave a single, cold order.
"Initiate a full hostile takeover of the Pollard Group."
It was time to end this little game and step into her true life—as the world's most elusive medical genius, and the long-lost billionaire heiress of the Summers dynasty.

9.8
Adeline's stepmother had secretly drugged her for years, turning a child genius into a drooling, mentally disabled laughingstock just so her stepsister could steal her life.
But when her greedy father sold her off to Griffin Herring—a violent, untouchable billionaire psychopath—to save his company, things took a deadly turn.
Before the wedding, Griffin attacked her in a dark alley, nearly snapping her neck before stealing her grandfather's silver necklace.
That necklace held a micro-drive with her family's deepest secrets, and without it, she had nothing.
Back at the estate, her situation only worsened. Her stepsister Damaris paraded around in the Herring family's diamond engagement gifts, trying to force-feed Adeline wet dog food on an Instagram live stream.
When Adeline's calculated "clumsiness" ruined the video, her furious father locked her in a damp, rusted basement.
"Give her to the psycho," her stepmother hissed through the door. "Let him lock her away forever."
Listening from the shadows, Adeline's fists clenched until her palms bled.
Her supposed mental fog wasn't a tragedy—it was a calculated assassination of her mind. They had destroyed her childhood and were now throwing her to a monster just to keep the billions.
The dull, empty look in Adeline's eyes vanished instantly, replaced by a razor-sharp, chilling clarity.
She pulled a thin surgical needle from her messy bun and picked the heavy iron padlock in ten seconds. It was time to break into the billionaire's penthouse, take back her necklace, and tear them all apart.

8.2
My wedding to Ethan Reed was just weeks away.
After seven years, I was certain of our perfect future.
Then, Ethan claimed "selective amnesia" from a head injury, forgetting only me.
I tried to make him remember, until I overheard his video call.
"Total genius move," he boasted to friends.
His amnesia was a fake "hall pass" to pursue influencer Chloe Vance before our wedding.
Heartbroken, I feigned belief.
I endured his open flirting with Chloe and their taunting selfies.
He mocked my distress, prioritizing Chloe's fake emergency.
After an accident he caused, he abandoned me, injured, choosing to send Chloe to the hospital first.
He even tried to cut me off financially.
How could my fiancé be this cruel, calculating monster?
His betrayal poisoned every memory.
I felt like a fool for trusting such boundless cruelty.
His audacity left me reeling.
But I wouldn’t be his victim.
Instead of breaking, a cold plan formed.
I would shed my identity, become Olivia Carter.
I would disappear, leaving him, my past, and his engagement ring behind forever, claiming my freedom.

7.7
Alondra spent three hours making soup for her husband, only to find him at the hospital tenderly holding another woman's hand.
"I'm four weeks pregnant, Gerard," the woman said softly.
Gerard coldly handed Alondra a divorce agreement, claiming their three-year marriage was just a placeholder because this woman had once saved his life.
Heartbroken, Alondra fled in her car, only to realize her brakes had been completely disabled.
She spun out of control and crashed head-on into a massive delivery truck.
As she lay trapped in the mangled wreckage with her ribs crushed and blood filling her mouth, Gerard's black Maybach pulled up to the curb.
He stared at her dying body through the window with a completely blank expression.
He didn't call an ambulance or even open his door.
He simply rolled up his tinted window and drove away into the rain.
A raw, suffocating hatred burned in her chest, hotter than the pain in her shattered bones.
She couldn't understand how the man she had loved and served so devotedly could just coldly watch her die like a piece of trash.
Opening her eyes again, Alondra gasped for air.
She had returned to the exact morning two years ago, right before she was supposed to deliver that pathetic soup.
When Gerard walked in and threatened her with divorce, she didn't cry or beg.
"I agree. Let's divorce," she said calmly, packing her bags to reclaim her true identity as a billionaire heiress.

9.8
When I woke up on the muddy bank of the freezing river, I unlocked a brutal, unfiltered preview of my actual future.
For the past six months, I had been the town's ultimate joke, chasing after a city boy who looked at me like a diseased insect. Everyone thought I jumped into the river because he rejected me.
But the nightmare didn't stop there. In the future I foresaw, my entire family was destroyed. My eldest brother was handcuffed and dragged into a squad car. My second brother died in a pool of blood on the asphalt. My parents passed away from sheer grief and humiliation, and our farm was foreclosed.
Meanwhile, Bart Hawkins—my family's sworn enemy, the boy everyone accused of pushing me, but who actually jumped in to save my life—became a billionaire tech mogul. I ended up starving to death in a damp, moldy basement, completely alone.
I finally understood that I was just a pathetic, tragic side character meant to drag my family into hell. My own sister-in-law, Felicie, had been stealing our food and money, laughing at my misery behind my back.
But right now, my mother was still alive, my brothers were safe, and the farm was ours.
When Felicie walked into my bedroom, playing the devoted sister-in-law with a bowl of clear, meatless broth while a stolen roasted chicken thigh leaked grease through her apron pocket, I didn't play along.
"What's in your pocket, Felicie?"
This time, I was going to tear that horrific future apart with my bare hands.