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The Fiancé's Treachery: A Dancer's Vengeance

The Fiancé's Treachery: A Dancer's Vengeance

My brother, Douglas, and my fiancé, Connor, were the two people in the world I trusted most. And they were the ones who destroyed my life. They hired thugs to attack me, leaving me paralyzed from the waist down and ending my career as a Broadway dancer. In the hospital, I overheard them confess it was all for my jealous cousin, Isla. When their guilt became too much, they orchestrated a public scandal to ruin my name, turning me from a tragic victim into a freak. Finally, they left me to die in a yacht explosion, choosing to save Isla instead of me. I was their family's princess, but they sacrificed me on the altar of their pity for a manipulative liar. But a mysterious benefactor offered me a deal: a new, perfect body and the power to destroy them all. Now, I've returned, pretending to be a long-lost twin with amnesia. They think they've been given a second chance. They have no idea I'm here to collect a debt.
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Chapter 2

April Thomas POV: The word "yes" hung in the sterile air of my hospital room, a silent promise. I ended the call with Cyrus Carter and carefully placed the phone back on the bedside table, my movements slow and deliberate. A strange calm settled over me. The storm inside had not passed; it had merely found its eye. I had to play the part. The broken, grieving victim. I closed my eyes just as the door creaked open. "April?" Connor's voice was a soft caress. I felt the dip in the mattress as he sat down, his familiar scent of sandalwood and expensive cologne now turning my stomach. He stroked my hair, his touch a ghostly echo of a love that was now a lie. "Are you awake?" I didn't move. I couldn't bear to look at him, to see the fake concern in his eyes. "She's been through so much," Douglas murmured from the doorway. "Let her rest." Their footsteps receded, leaving me alone with the hum of the machines and the weight of their betrayal. The next few weeks were a blur of faux sympathy. Douglas brought me flowers, their vibrant colors a mockery of my gray existence. Connor read to me from my favorite books, his voice a soothing balm on a wound he had inflicted. They were perfect, doting, and utterly repulsive. The day I was discharged was a media spectacle. Douglas, ever the charismatic heir, had arranged for private transport, but the paparazzi were waiting like vultures. As he carefully lifted me from the wheelchair into the back of a black SUV, the flashbulbs exploded. "Don't look, April," he murmured, shielding my face with his body. "I've got you." The irony was a physical ache in my chest. Connor sat beside me, his arm protectively around my shoulders. "We'll get you home. You'll be safe there." Safe. I almost choked. At home, nothing had changed, and yet everything was different. The grand foyer of our Upper East Side townhouse felt like a museum of a life I no longer lived. My mother, a woman more concerned with social standing than her daughter's well-being, greeted me with a flurry of air kisses and worried glances at the catheter bag peeking from beneath my blanket. "Oh, darling," she sighed, "we'll have to find a way to make that… more discreet." Douglas carried me up the sweeping staircase to my room, his movements practiced and gentle. He laid me on the bed with the care one might afford a porcelain doll. "There," he said, his voice thick with emotion. "You're home." I felt nothing. The love and guilt they showered upon me were like rain on a stone. I was numb, a hollowed-out version of myself, waiting. Waiting for Cyrus Carter's signal. A few days later, Connor insisted on an outing. "Just some fresh air," he'd pleaded. "We can go to the café by the park, the one you love." The one where he had first told me he loved me. The thought was nauseating. The stroll-or rather, the roll-was an exercise in humiliation. People stared. Children pointed. I could feel their pity and morbid curiosity like a physical touch. The subtle hiss and click of the catheter's valve felt like a scream in the quiet afternoon. A woman with a stroller gawked openly, her eyes fixed on the tube running down my leg. "What are you looking at?" Douglas snarled, stepping in front of my wheelchair, his face a mask of protective fury. "It's alright, Doug," Connor said, placing a calming hand on his arm before turning to me, his eyes soft with feigned sympathy. "Don't mind them, April. They don't matter." He squeezed my hand, but his touch felt like a spider crawling on my skin. I couldn't stop the tremor that ran through me, a violent shudder of pure, unadulterated rage and grief. They saw it as a symptom of my trauma. They had no idea it was a symptom of my hate. They were the architects of my prison, and now they were pretending to be my guards, my protectors. Douglas suggested he and Connor go grab us some coffees, leaving me by the park entrance. "We'll be right back," he promised. They walked a few yards away, huddled together near a hot dog stand, their backs to me. Their voices were low, but the wind carried their words to my one good ear. "It's not enough," Douglas said, his voice sharp. "People are still talking. The 'tragic victim' narrative is getting old. They're starting to ask questions about the business rivals I mentioned. We need to shut it down for good." My blood ran cold. "What are you suggesting?" Connor asked, his tone wary. "We need something else," Douglas said. "Something that makes her… less sympathetic. Something that makes people turn on her." He paused. "I had my P.I. dig up some dirt. One of the chorus boys from her show… they were close. We can spin it. A sordid affair. Leak some doctored photos, a few fabricated text messages. 'Broadway Diva's Secret Sex Scandal.' It paints her as reckless, promiscuous. It explains the 'mugging' in a new light. Maybe it was a lover's quarrel, a deal gone wrong. Anything to take the heat off us." The world tilted on its axis. It wasn't enough that they had broken my body. Now they were going to systematically destroy my name, my last remaining shred of dignity. A wave of nausea and panic washed over me. I had to get away. I fumbled with the wheels of my chair, trying to turn, to flee. My hands were slick with sweat. The chair wouldn't move. It was stuck. A sob escaped my lips. I pushed harder, a frantic, desperate energy surging through me. The chair lurched forward, spinning sideways, and I tipped, tumbling onto the pavement with a sickening thud. My head hit the concrete. And then the chaos erupted. "There she is!" a voice shouted. Suddenly, I was surrounded. A wall of bodies, cameras flashing like machine-gun fire. Reporters, their faces predatory, shoved microphones in my face. "Miss Thomas, is it true you were having an affair with a cast member?" "Did a drug deal gone wrong lead to your attack?" "Are the rumors of your promiscuous lifestyle accurate?" The questions were a barrage of filth, each one a stone thrown at my already broken spirit. I tried to cover my face, but a hand grabbed my arm, yanking it away. A woman with wild eyes and a "Team Isla" t-shirt broke through the cordon of journalists. She looked like a crazed fan. "You whore!" she screamed, her face contorted with hate. "You tried to ruin Isla's career! You deserve this!" Her nails raked across my face, drawing blood. Others surged forward, a frenzied mob. My blanket was torn away. My shirt was ripped, exposing the pale skin of my shoulder and the top of my surgical bra. The catheter bag, my secret shame, was yanked from its hidden pouch, the plastic tubing catching the light, the yellowish liquid inside sloshing for all the world to see. A collective gasp went through the crowd, followed by murmurs of disgust. The pity was gone, replaced by revulsion. I was no longer a tragic ballerina; I was a freak. A broken, tainted thing. Tears streamed down my face, mixing with the blood, stinging the fresh scratches. The salt burned, a physical manifestation of the all-consuming shame. "April!" Douglas and Connor were suddenly there, bulling their way through the crowd like avenging angels. Douglas threw his jacket over me, his face a mask of righteous fury. Connor knelt beside me, his voice trembling with what sounded like genuine horror. "Oh god, April… are you okay?" He tried to gather me in his arms, to shield me from the prying eyes and flashing cameras. But as I looked up at their faces, at their perfectly performed shock and concern, I saw it. The flicker of calculation in Douglas's eyes. The subtle, relieved tension in Connor's jaw. This wasn't a random ambush. This was the plan. This was the "something else" they had arranged. The rabid fan, the reporters, the public stripping of my dignity-it was all part of their grand design. They wanted to erase me. Not just the dancer, but the person. To turn my tragedy into a tabloid headline, a sordid cautionary tale, so that sweet, fragile Isla could rise from my ashes, pure and untarnished. I looked at Connor, my fiancé, the man who was supposed to protect me, now cradling me in his arms for the benefit of the cameras. I let my head fall against his chest, a broken sob escaping my lips. It was the most convincing performance of my life. You've won, I thought, a cold, hard certainty solidifying in my heart. You've truly, utterly won. For now.