
The Family's Regret, Too Late Now
My family accused me of betraying them, of nearly destroying the tech empire they had built from nothing.
As punishment, my father and two older brothers locked me in my room, leaving me without food or water until I confessed to a crime I didn't commit.
But when a medical condition flared and I began to suffocate, they dismissed my desperate screams for help as just another one of my "theatrics."
"She's just being dramatic," I heard them say through the thick oak door, right before they added extra bolts.
They were completely blinded by Ivy, the manipulative outsider I had welcomed as a sister. They chose her lies over their own blood, forgetting how I had secretly liquidated my own assets to save their company years ago.
I died alone, my last breath a desperate gasp in a house that refused to listen.
Then, I woke up.
Floating as a spirit above my own decaying body, I became a silent witness, waiting for the moment they would finally break down the door and be forced to see what they had done.
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Chapter 1
My family accused me of betraying them, of nearly destroying the tech empire they had built from nothing.
As punishment, my father and two older brothers locked me in my room, leaving me without food or water until I confessed to a crime I didn't commit.
But when a medical condition flared and I began to suffocate, they dismissed my desperate screams for help as just another one of my "theatrics."
"She's just being dramatic," I heard them say through the thick oak door, right before they added extra bolts.
They were completely blinded by Ivy, the manipulative outsider I had welcomed as a sister. They chose her lies over their own blood, forgetting how I had secretly liquidated my own assets to save their company years ago.
I died alone, my last breath a desperate gasp in a house that refused to listen.
Then, I woke up.
Floating as a spirit above my own decaying body, I became a silent witness, waiting for the moment they would finally break down the door and be forced to see what they had done.
Chapter 1
Chelsea's POV:
I died. Not with a bang, but with a whimper, alone in a room that smelled of stale air and my own fear.
Then, I woke up. Not in a hospital, not in heaven, just… awake.
My body was still there, slumped against the wall, but I wasn't in it anymore. I was floating, formless, a silent observer in the very room they had locked me in. It was dark, stifling, exactly how I remembered it.
A flurry of footsteps echoed from the grand hallway outside. The heavy oak door, which had been my prison, rattled.
Laughter. Familiar, deep, and utterly devoid of the warmth I once cherished.
My father, Corbin, entered first, his expensive suit still perfectly tailored despite the late hour. His presence always seemed to suck the oxygen from a room, leaving only ambition in its wake.
Behind him, Emilio, my eldest brother, a carbon copy of our father's ruthless efficiency. His arm was wrapped around Ivy Winters' waist, guiding her gently into the opulent living room.
Then Erland, my middle brother, the tech genius, who usually preferred the solitude of his lab. He followed closely, his hand resting solicitously on Ivy' s lower back.
Ivy. She looked radiant, as always. Her red dress shimmered under the chandeliers, a stark contrast to the gloom of my former prison.
"Are you alright, my love?" Corbin asked, his voice thick with concern as he helped Ivy onto the plush velvet sofa. "That meeting was exhausting."
Emilio nodded, his eyes scanning Ivy' s face for any sign of distress. "You looked truly drained. This whole ordeal has been taxing on you."
"I truly am fine," Ivy murmured, her voice soft, designed to sound fragile. She leaned her head against Corbin's shoulder. "Just a little… unsettled. It' s been a stressful few days, hasn't it?"
Erland knelt beside her, his brow furrowed with genuine worry. "You should rest, Ivy. Perhaps a warm bath? You've been so strong through all of this."
My spirit, hovering near the ceiling, felt a cold, hollow laugh escape from where my lungs used to be. Strong? She was performing. They were blind.
A housemaid, Mrs. Gable, a kind woman who had served our family for decades, shuffled forward, her hands clasped nervously. "Mr. Gibson, sirs… about Miss Chelsea."
Corbin' s eyes, which had been doting on Ivy, snapped to Mrs. Gable. His face hardened. "What about her, Mrs. Gable?"
"She hasn't eaten in two days, sir," Mrs. Gable said, her voice trembling slightly. "And… she' s been calling out. Very weakly this morning, but still calling."
Emilio cut her off, his voice sharp like a whip. "That's enough, Mrs. Gable. Her theatrics are irrelevant."
Mrs. Gable flinched, her eyes dropping to the polished marble floor. She knew better than to argue with Emilio when he used that tone. He had a way of freezing the air around him.
"She' s just trying to get attention," Emilio continued, turning back to the others. His eyes held a dismissive glint. "It's what she always does when she doesn't get her way. She thinks if she causes enough trouble, we'll just give in and let her off the hook for betraying the family."
"Indeed," Corbin agreed, his jaw tight. "She clearly has no remorse."
Ivy, still nestled against Corbin, let out a soft, shaky breath. "Oh, Corbin. I just… I hope she understands the gravity of her actions. It's not about punishing her, it's about making her see the damage she's caused." She dabbed delicately at the corner of her eye, though no tears fell. It was a practiced move.
"Don't worry, my dear," Corbin soothed, stroking her hair. "She will. We' re doing this for her own good. She needs to learn responsibility." He shot a stern look at Mrs. Gable. "No one is to go near her. No food, no water, until she admits her wrongdoing and shows genuine regret."
Erland, who had been quietly checking his phone, frowned. "Her communication logs are completely empty. No outbound calls, no messages. Not even social media activity for the past three days."
"See?" Emilio scoffed, throwing his hands up. "The little sneak probably ditched her burner phone or found a way to bypass our block. Trying to cover her tracks, no doubt." His theory was always the worst-case scenario when it came to me.
Ivy sighed dramatically. "Perhaps she's truly upset, Emilio. It must be hard for her to face the consequences." Her voice was a purr of false sympathy.
"Upset?" Emilio laughed, a harsh, humorless sound. "She's always been a drama queen. Anything to avoid responsibility. Unlike you, Ivy, who always handles things with such grace."
"She needs to understand," Erland added, his voice firm, "that this kind of behavior will not be tolerated. We built this company from nothing, and her recklessness threatens to tear it all down."
"She will remain confined," Corbin decreed, his voice cold and final. "No contact, no privileges, until she confesses. Until she understands the magnitude of her betrayal."
My spirit watched them, a phantom limb aching with a familiar pain. Magnitude of my betrayal? I wanted to scream, to lash out, but my voice was gone, my form intangible. The irony of their words was a bitter taste in my non-existent mouth.
I was nothing but a shadow, a witness to my own undoing.
It wasn't always like this. My parents, who had been Corbin' s first wife and my mother, passed away when I was very young. It left a void that even the vastness of the estate couldn't fill. Emilio and Erland, years older, had been my protectors then. My brothers, who once held my hand and told me stories, who chased away my imaginary monsters.
I wanted companionship. I yearned for a playmate, a sister.
That' s when Ivy Winters entered our lives. A distant relative of Corbin's new wife, a sophisticated woman who soon became Corbin' s girlfriend. She was charming, intelligent, and seemed to understand the complex dynamics of our family better than anyone. I, naive and desperate for a friend, welcomed her with open arms. I told her everything, shared my secrets, my art, my dreams.
Ivy, however, had other plans. She was a master of whispers, a weaver of subtle lies. Slowly, meticulously, she began to twist my words, to paint me as the volatile, irresponsible black sheep. She fanned the flames of my brothers' existing prejudices against my artistic leanings, making them see my sensitivity as weakness, my quiet nature as defiance.
The data breach. A catastrophic leak that threatened to bring down Gibson Tech. Ivy framed me for it, meticulously planting digital breadcrumbs that led straight to my name. My father, blinded by her flattery and his own obsession with image, saw me as the perfect scapegoat. My brothers, eager to protect their empire, believed every word.
The punishment was swift and brutal. Confined to my room, stripped of all communication, abandoned.
The room was not just dark; it was suffocating. The air grew thick, heavy with my own CO2. My chest tightened, a burning sensation clawing at my throat. My medical condition, usually manageable with proper care, was flaring. My breath hitched. This wasn't just theatrics. This was real.
I beat on the door, my fists raw against the unyielding wood. "Please! I can't breathe! I need help!" My voice was hoarse, ragged, a desperate cry against the silence.
I heard footsteps in the hall. "She's at it again," Emilio's voice, muffled through the thick door, was filled with annoyance. "Trying to get attention."
"Just ignore her," Erland replied, his tone weary. "She'll get over it."
"She's just being dramatic," Ivy's voice, saccharine sweet, cut through the wood. "Don't fall for her tricks, darlings."
"No!" I shrieked, my voice cracking. "It's not a trick! I'm really sick!"
But they only laughed. A cold, dismissive sound that echoed in the vast, uncaring house.
"She always does this," Corbin' s voice, a gravelly rumble of authority. "Trying to manipulate us. Don't worry, she'll calm down when she realizes we won't be swayed by her childish games. Lock the secondary bolts."
I heard the heavy thud of the extra locks. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic bird trapped in a cage. The last shred of hope withered, dying inside me. The darkness pressed in, heavier now, thicker.
I slumped against the door, my vision blurring. The air was a suffocating blanket. My body convulsed, a final, desperate struggle.
Ivy's faint, triumphant smile. I saw it through the crack under the door, a fleeting glimpse of pure malice.
You truly are a monster, my spirit whispered, a silent accusation in the suffocating void. And they… they are your accomplices.
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9.7
"Be my wife for eight months and I will save you from this hell. But if you fall in love with me? I will destroy you."
She wasn't sold for a price. She was lost in a bet.
A dark deal made in the shadows between a father who sold his own daughter without thinking twice and the man who runs the Blackwood empire. The CEO who doesn't just own money. He owns the city. He owns the law. He owns the men and their fates.
She was just a normal designer until she became his wife on paper. A wife to a man who knows no mercy. A man who never loses a deal. A man who refuses to let the woman carrying his name be weak.
Eight months. A marriage with no love. Strict rules. Forbidden feelings.
But what happens when the deal turns into a deep hunger? What happens when the contract becomes a cage? What happens when she finds out that running away from her father put her in the trap of a man who is a thousand times more dangerous?
Her father sold her in a bet. And her only escape was the man who owns the city.

7.7
Married off to him to pay a debt that was never mine, my only purpose was to give him an heir.
Year after year, my foolish heart fell harder while he shattered it without mercy.
When my service ended, my debt paid, and no child to bind us, I chose freedom through divorce.
But just when I thought I was free...
I was bound to him again.
Bound by his child.

7.4
I never expected to be branded a 'fake heiress' and a 'scheming bitch' on my own wedding anniversary.
"Did you really think we'd never find out you faked the DNA test?" My mother's voice cut like a blade. "You've been impersonating our real daughter all along."
The irony was suffocating. They were the ones who stormed into my peaceful life, insisting that I was their long-lost child-no proof needed. And now they dared to call me the fraud.
"Since Camille has finally returned to where she belongs," my father declared coldly, "it's time for you to crawl back into whatever shadow you came from."
Then came the final blow. My husband of five years didn't even hesitate.
"I'll have the divorce papers drawn up immediately. Don't make this difficult, Mirena. You were never meant to be my wife."
Overnight, I was discarded. The scandal of the city. The woman who stole a life that was never hers.
But they forgot one thing: I never needed them.
Before I was George Ashton's wife, I was Mirena Sterling-the Investment Queen. The woman who broke Wall Street records before she turned twenty-five. A racing champion. A tech prodigy.
I walked away from all of it. Gave up my empire. My crown. My name. All for a man who threw me away like garbage the moment someone "better" came along.
Big mistake.
On the night they cast me out, soaking wet and humiliated, I ran into the last person I ever wanted to see.
"Look at you now, Mirena," Alexander Pierce murmured, watching me with those piercing eyes. "The woman who once ruled the financial world. Reduced to this." He tilted his head. "And for what? Love?" A dark laugh. "Pathetic."
My former rival. The man who spent years trying to beat me-and never once succeeded. Now he stood before me, a Wall Street titan, watching my downfall with hungry satisfaction.
He thought he'd seen the last of me.
He was wrong.
The game was simple now: drop the dead weight, reclaim what's mine, and remind everyone why they feared my name.
Within months, I was back. Every market moved when I breathed. Every headline screamed my return. The Sterlings came crawling, begging for mercy they'd never shown me. And George? He watched in horror as I bought his most prized company without blinking.
The divorce he'd so eagerly signed? His greatest regret.
"Mirena, please," he begged, groveling at my feet. "Give me another chance."
I didn't even look at him. "Sorry, darling. I don't recycle trash."
But what I didn't expect was him.
Alexander Pierce dropped to one knee in front of me-the man who had once mocked my fall, now looking up with something raw and undisguised in his crimson gaze.
"I knew you'd take back everything they stole," he said, voice low. "Now..." A slow, dangerous smile curved his lips. "Take me too."

7.7
I was kneeling on the warped linoleum of my trailer, packing my life into a trash bag, when the predatory purr of a luxury SUV echoed through the thin walls. I thought it was a raid, but it was something much worse.
Julian Sterling, a federal prosecutor in a charcoal suit, stepped into the mud and bought me from my alcoholic stepfather. He didn't use cash; he used a list of felonies and a legal settlement to trade my freedom for my stepfather's silence.
"Throw it away," Julian ordered, pointing at the bag containing everything I owned. I watched my sister's stuffed bear fall into an oil puddle as he forced me into a world of cold leather and silence. By the time we reached Boston, Faith Vance was dead. He forced me to sign papers changing my name to Elara, erasing my past to fit a narrative of Swiss boarding schools and high-society breeding.
The horror didn't stop there. The family patriarch, Arthur Sterling, looked at us with hawk-like eyes and issued a command that turned my blood to ice. To avoid scandal, Julian and I were to be introduced as "Brother" and "Sister." Julian's jaw tightened until a vein throbbed in his temple, and when he finally called me "Sister," the word sounded like a curse.
I was a prisoner in a mansion with bars on the windows, caught between a "brother" who loathed my existence and a cousin who tried to assault me in my own room. They dressed me in silk armor and expected me to be a doll, a manageable piece of a legacy I never asked for.
I sat at a dinner table worth more than my hometown, swallowing oysters that tasted like salt and iodine, while Julian created a physical barrier between me and the wolves. Under the tablecloth, I reached out and squeezed his clenched fist.
His fingers uncurled and captured mine in a grip so crushing it felt like a pact signed in the dark. I have a jagged shard of glass in my pocket and five thousand dollars a month to hoard. Julian says the law is a weapon that breaks weak people, but he's about to find out that I'm not a lamb. I'm a survivor, and I'm ready for the casualties.

9.4
On our wedding anniversary, I came home to find my husband, Jace, celebrating with another woman in our living room.
She was wearing my mother's necklace-the only thing recovered from the explosion that killed my parents. Jace laughed, calling it a "cheap piece of junk," and tried to write me a check to buy a new one.
His family called my parents' ashes "garbage" and "unsanitary." When I confronted them, Jace sided with his mother, ordering me out of the penthouse I secretly owned. He let his friends publicly humiliate me, calling me a gold-digging leech with no background.
But that wasn't the worst of it. When a gunman stormed the restaurant we were in, Jace shoved me directly into the line of fire to shield his mistress.
The shotgun blast tore through my arm. As I lay bleeding on the marble floor, I stared at the man who had just used me as a human shield, his face pale with terror as he protected her.
In that instant, every ounce of love I ever had for him died. The pain in my arm was nothing compared to the cold, hollow void that consumed my heart.
He thought he was sacrificing a quiet, useless wife to secure his future. He had no idea he had just declared war on Captain Cilla Henson, West Point valedictorian and the most lethal operator of the Eagle Task Force.

7.6
I was the ultimate trophy wife, a polished ornament in Francisco Zimmerman’s billionaire empire. For three years, I perfected the "Zimmerman Wife Smile," playing the role of the devoted partner while smoothing the Egyptian cotton of his shirts.
The illusion shattered when I stood outside his study and heard him laughing with his mistress, Annalise.
"She’s just a vase that only knows how to smile," Francisco’s voice was cold, devoid of any warmth. "As long as I pay the maintenance fees on time, she stays obedient."
I walked out that night with nothing but a canvas bag and the clothes on my back. But Francisco wasn't finished with his "asset." He froze my bank accounts and used his massive influence to blacklist me from every interior design firm in New York. He tracked my phone, watching me struggle from the shadows, waiting for me to starve so I would crawl back to his mansion.
He even showed up at the dive bar where I was playing piano for rent money, mocking my desperation.
"You have technique, but no heart," he sneered, tossing a silver coin into my tip jar as if I were a beggar. "You're hollow, Iris. Just like your pride."
I couldn't believe this was the same man whose life I had saved during a bloody night in Macau. To him, I wasn't a wife; I was a stock price that needed stabilizing. The more I fought for my independence, the tighter he pulled the net, determined to break my spirit until I had no choice but to return to his gilded cage.
Then, the morning sickness hit. I realized I wasn't just carrying my own life anymore—I was carrying his heir. If Francisco found out, he would never let us go; he would turn my child into another "performance bonus" for his brand.
Looking at the sonogram, I knew a divorce would never be enough to escape a man who thought he owned the world.
"I'm not going back," I whispered, staring at his yacht moored in the harbor. "To save this baby, Iris Potter has to die."