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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 3

April Thomas POV: The ride home was silent, thick with the cloying stench of fake sympathy. Douglas drove, his knuckles white on the steering wheel, while Connor sat beside me in the back, murmuring useless platitudes. I kept my face buried in his chest, playing the part of the shattered victim. In reality, I was watching them, my mind a cold, calculating machine. When we walked-or rather, when Douglas carried me-through the front door, Isla was waiting in the great hall. She was dressed in a simple white dress, her hair pulled back, her face a perfect portrait of angelic concern. "Oh, April!" she cried, rushing forward. "I saw the news… it's horrible! Are you alright?" She reached for my hand, her touch cool and dry. Douglas and Connor immediately softened, their protective energy shifting from me to her. "We're fine, Isla," Douglas said, his voice gentle. "Don't you worry." "But they were so cruel to her," Isla whispered, her eyes welling with manufactured tears. Then, as if she couldn't contain her excitement any longer, she turned, a brilliant smile breaking through the facade of sorrow. "But I have some good news! Something to cheer us all up!" She gestured to the grand mahogany table in the center of the hall. Sitting atop it, gleaming under the chandelier, was a large, golden trophy. "I won," she announced, her voice ringing with triumph. "The National Ballet Competition. I'm the new champion." My eyes locked onto the trophy. It was mine. The competition I was supposed to have dominated. The culmination of twenty years of sweat, sacrifice, and endless pirouettes. It was the stage on which my Broadway debut was to be announced. A phantom ache spread through my legs. I could almost feel the familiar burn in my calves, the satisfying click of my joints as I moved through a Grand Jeté. I remembered the roar of the crowd, the blinding heat of the stage lights, the feeling of flight. Now, I couldn't even stand. Douglas and Connor beamed, their faces alight with pride. They flanked Isla, showering her with praise, their earlier "trauma" over my public humiliation completely forgotten. "That's incredible, Isla!" "We knew you could do it!" They were a perfect, happy little family of three, celebrating a victory bought with my blood and dignity. I was an afterthought, a piece of broken furniture in the corner of the room. I said nothing. I simply turned my wheelchair and began to push myself away, the soft whir of the wheels the only sound I made. "April, wait!" Isla called, her voice dripping with false sweetness. She hurried after me, catching up at the base of the stairs. She placed a hand on my shoulder, leaning in close as if to help. "Don't be such a sore loser," she whispered, her voice a venomous hiss in my good ear. "It looks pathetic on you. Then again," she added, her eyes raking over my useless legs and the hidden bulk of the catheter bag, "everything looks pathetic on you now." The cruelty of it stole my breath. My face went pale, my hands tightening on the wheels of my chair. Suddenly, Isla shrieked. "Ah!" She stumbled backward, tumbling dramatically down the first few steps of the grand staircase, landing in a heap on the plush runner. "Isla!" Douglas and Connor spun around, their faces masks of horror. They rushed past me, kneeling beside her, their hands fluttering over her like frantic butterflies. "What happened?" Douglas demanded, his eyes finding mine, instantly filled with accusation. Isla, ever the actress, sobbed into Connor's shoulder. "It's my fault," she whimpered. "I shouldn't have crowded April. She's just… upset. She didn't mean to push me." The lie was so blatant, so audacious, it was almost brilliant. She hadn't just accused me; she had framed it as an act of magnanimous forgiveness. Douglas's face hardened into a familiar, cold fury. He stood up, towering over me. "You pushed her?" he snarled. "I didn't touch her," I said, my voice flat and even. "Don't lie to me, April!" he thundered. He gestured wildly at Isla, who was now examining a supposedly twisted ankle. "Do you have any idea what her legs mean to a dancer? An injury like this could end her career!" The irony was so thick I could have choked on it. My own legs, permanently destroyed by his design, were forgotten. My career, already obliterated, was irrelevant. A dry, mirthless laugh escaped my lips. "Her legs?" I asked, my voice dangerously quiet. "You're worried about her legs?" Douglas flinched as if I'd slapped him. Connor looked from me to Douglas, his expression torn. For a fleeting second, I saw a flicker of doubt in his eyes. But it was quickly extinguished by Isla's soft whimper. "Apologize to her, April," Douglas commanded, his voice leaving no room for argument. "Now." "No," I said. The word was small, but it was a rock against the tide of their injustice. Isla's performance intensified. "It's okay, Douglas, really," she said, her voice trembling bravely. "I know April is going through a lot. I forgive her." She looked at me, her eyes gleaming with triumph. Douglas's heart audibly melted. "You're too good, Isla," he murmured, stroking her hair. I couldn't watch anymore. I turned my chair and wheeled myself into the quiet solitude of the library, leaving them to their disgusting tableau. Later that night, Connor came to my room. He brought me a glass of warm milk, just like he used to when I couldn't sleep. "For you," he said softly, his eyes pleading for a connection I could no longer give. I took the glass, wheeled myself to the ensuite bathroom, and poured the milk down the sink. I didn't look at him as I wheeled back out. I was startled from a fitful sleep in the dead of night by a sound in my room. My eyes snapped open. A figure was standing by my bed. Douglas. My blood ran cold. I squeezed my eyes shut, feigning sleep, my heart hammering against my ribs. Suddenly, the blanket was ripped away. Rough hands grabbed me, yanking me from the bed. I landed on the floor with a jarring thud that sent a shockwave of pain through my useless spine. Before I could scream, a coarse burlap sack was pulled over my head, plunging me into suffocating darkness. I was dragged from the room, bumping down the stairs, every impact a fresh agony. I bit my lip to keep from crying out, the coppery taste of blood filling my mouth. I was thrown onto a cold, damp floor. The basement. I heard their voices again, the two voices that haunted my nightmares. "Are you sure about this?" It was Connor, his voice hesitant. "She needs to be taught a lesson," Douglas's voice was like stone. "She hurt Isla. She's becoming unhinged, dangerous. A little bit of discipline is what she needs." "Discipline? Douglas, this is insane." "You saw her today. The jealousy is making her ugly. We need to remind her of her place." My place. A broken toy. A disobedient pet. The pain in my heart was a thousand times worse than the agony in my body. It was a tearing, a shredding of the very fabric of my soul. "Do it," Douglas commanded a third voice, one I didn't recognize. I squeezed my eyes shut, bracing for the impact. The first blow landed on my back, a solid, sickening thud of a wooden rod against my flesh. A strangled groan escaped my lips. Another blow, this time on my legs. I felt nothing but the jarring vibration, a ghostly echo of pain in limbs that could no longer feel. Thud. Thud. Thud. The sounds were rhythmic, brutal. I curled into a ball, my silent screams trapped in my throat. Then, just as suddenly as it began, it stopped. "What was that?" Douglas asked, his voice sharp and alert. The sack was ripped from my head.