
The Phantom Heiress: His Secret Obsession
After eighteen years, I finally returned to the billionaire Warren family, only to be treated like uneducated, rust-belt trash.
My stepmother shoved me into a freezing, windowless room, and my half-sister Kelly bought me an $89 plastic dress to humiliate me at the family's high-society gala.
When her petty bullying failed, Kelly took it a step further. Standing at the top of the grand marble staircase, she grabbed my wrist, screamed, and intentionally threw herself down the steps in front of hundreds of elite guests.
Lying in a pool of her own blood, she pointed a trembling finger at me.
"She pushed me! Corrie tried to kill me!"
The entire ballroom erupted in disgust. The guests called me a psychopath. My biological father, purple with rage, raised his hand to strike me, while my stepmother hid a victorious smirk behind her fake tears.
They thought they had perfectly framed the feral country bumpkin.
But they had no idea who they were dealing with.
They didn't know I was "Night God," the dark web's most legendary underground surgeon and hacker, currently being hunted by New York's most ruthless billionaire.
I didn't panic. I didn't cry.
I calmly pulled out my heavily encrypted phone and projected a crystal-clear, un-hackable security feed onto the ballroom's massive LED screen.
"Let's see the replay," I said.
Watching the color drain from their faces was just the beginning. I was going to tear this entire toxic family apart to find out who really burned my mother alive.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 6
Corrie didn't stop running when she turned the corner.
She moved through the labyrinth of Philadelphia's old industrial district with the fluid, silent grace of a ghost. Her brain was a high-speed processor, mapping out the blind spots of the city's municipal camera grid.
She ducked under a rusted fire escape, avoiding the gaze of a traffic camera mounted on the intersection.
While jogging, she grabbed the hem of her oversized gray hoodie. In one smooth motion, she pulled it over her head, flipping it inside out. She shoved her arms back through the sleeves.
The hoodie was reversible. The outside was now a dull, nondescript matte black. She pulled the hood back up, instantly erasing the gray suspect from existence.
She slowed her pace to a casual walk as she merged onto a busier street, blending perfectly into the crowd of tired factory workers and homeless drifters.
Ten minutes later, she stood in front of a heavy, rusted iron door in a dark alleyway. A faded, neon sign above it buzzed with a single word: Crow's.
She pushed the door open.
A wall of sound hit her chest. The heavy, vibrating bass of a death metal track rattled her ribs. The air was thick, choking with the smell of stale beer, cheap cigars, and sweat.
Corrie kept her head down, weaving through the crowded, sticky floor. She bypassed the bar and headed straight for a circular leather booth hidden in the darkest corner of the room.
A man was already sitting there. He wore a sharp, tailored suit that looked entirely out of place, but his posture was hunched, defensive. He wore gold-rimmed glasses and had a cigarette pinched between his fingers.
It was K. Nash.
Nash saw her approach. He immediately crushed his cigarette into the glass ashtray and stood up, giving a short, respectful nod.
"Doctor C," Nash said, his voice barely audible over the screaming guitars.
Corrie slid into the booth opposite him. She didn't waste time on pleasantries. She unzipped her canvas bag, reached past the crumpled blue knockoff dress, and pulled out a heavy, brushed-steel thermos.
She slid it across the sticky wooden table.
Nash's eyes widened. He grabbed the thermos with both hands, treating it like an unexploded bomb. He unscrewed the cap just enough to peek inside.
Nestled in protective foam were two glass vials. They glowed with a faint, bioluminescent blue light.
Nash sucked in a sharp breath. The air hissed through his teeth.
"Jesus," Nash whispered, his hands trembling slightly. "Two full doses of the targeted nerve-regenerator. Do you know what the tech billionaires in Silicon Valley will pay for this? They'll start a war on the auction boards."
"Split them into two separate auctions," Corrie ordered, her voice cold and sharp, cutting through the heavy metal music. "I need a massive injection of clean, untraceable liquid capital for a large-scale investment by Friday. The physical cash I have on hand is too dirty and cumbersome to move for what comes next."
Nash nodded quickly, securing the cap on the thermos. He tucked it into his briefcase.
He leaned forward, lowering his voice until it was a harsh whisper.
"You need to be careful," Nash warned, his eyes darting around the bar. "The Griffin family has lost their minds. Barron Griffin is personally in Philadelphia. He's bought out the local police chiefs. They are tearing the city apart looking for a girl in a gray hoodie."
Corrie picked up a glass of ice water the waitress had left. She took a slow sip. The ice clinked against the glass.
Her face was a mask of absolute, chilling boredom.
"Let them look," Corrie said, setting the glass down. "They won't find anything on the cameras."
Across the city, in a commandeered executive suite at the Four Seasons, Barron Griffin was experiencing that exact reality.
Barron stood over a massive conference table covered in laptops and monitors. His tie was ripped off, his dress shirt unbuttoned at the collar. His eyes were bloodshot, burning with a mix of exhaustion and pure, unadulterated rage.
Arthur stood next to him, sweating profusely.
"Sir," Arthur stammered, pointing a shaking finger at a monitor. "I don't understand. We pulled the feeds from the intersection, the bank, the traffic lights... everything within a two-mile radius of the alley."
Barron stared at the screen.
The video feed showed the street corner where Leo had collapsed. But exactly three seconds before Corrie entered the frame, the screen dissolved into a wall of gray, hissing static.
The static lasted for exactly four minutes. When the video cleared, Leo was on the ground with a tube in his neck, and the girl was gone.
"Every single camera?" Barron asked. His voice was dangerously quiet.
"Yes, sir," Arthur swallowed hard. "A localized, highly targeted EMP burst, or a master-level network hijack. The municipal grid didn't even register the breach. Whoever this girl is... she's not just a surgeon. She's a ghost in the machine."
Barron slammed both his fists onto the table. The laptops jumped.
He let out a dark, humorless laugh. The sound was terrifying. The challenge ignited a fire in his blood that he hadn't felt in years.
"She thinks she can hide," Barron whispered, his eyes locked on the static screen. "Expand the search. Pull every dashcam from every civilian car that drove past that block. I will tear this city down brick by brick if I have to."
Back in the dive bar, Nash reached into his briefcase and pulled out a thick, manila envelope. He slid it across the table to Corrie.
The atmosphere between them shifted. The business was done. This was personal.
Corrie's fingers hovered over the envelope for a second before she ripped it open.
She pulled out a stack of old, yellowed police reports and crime scene photos.
"I dug into the Warren estate fire from eighteen years ago," Nash said, his voice grim. "The official report ruled it an electrical short in your mother's bedroom. But look at the burn patterns."
Corrie stared at a glossy photo of a charred, blackened room. Her stomach twisted into a tight, painful knot. Bile burned the back of her throat. That was where her mother, Dolores, had burned.
"The fire didn't start in the walls," Corrie said, her voice dropping to a lethal, icy register. Her finger traced a V-shaped burn mark on the floorboards in the photo. "It started on the carpet. Accelerant was used. This was arson."
"Exactly," Nash nodded. "But the fire marshal who signed off on the electrical short retired a week later and bought a yacht in Florida. Someone paid him off."
Corrie flipped to the next page. It was a personnel file.
"There's a loose end," Nash pointed to a blurry photo of a woman in a nurse's uniform. "Martha Higgins. She was the private night nurse hired to take care of your mother's depression. She was on duty the night of the fire. She vanished the next morning. Never collected her final paycheck."
Corrie's eyes locked onto the nurse's face. The air around her seemed to freeze.
"Find her," Corrie commanded. The words felt like shards of glass in her throat. "I don't care if she changed her name. I don't care if she's dead. Find her."
Nash nodded, packing up his briefcase. He paused before standing up.
"You have that Warren family gala tonight," Nash noted, a hint of genuine concern in his eyes. "Dean Warren is a snake. She's going to try and publicly execute you tonight."
Corrie grabbed the plastic bag containing the $89 knockoff dress. She stood up, her black hoodie swallowing her frame.
The corner of her mouth curled into a smile that promised absolute violence.
"I know," Corrie said softly. "I'm counting on it."
An hour later, the sun began to set over the Warren estate.
The driveway was packed with Bentleys, Maybachs, and Ferraris. The elite of Philadelphia's high society poured into the grand foyer, dripping in diamonds and bespoke tuxedos.
Inside the massive ballroom, Kelly stood near a towering champagne pyramid. She was wearing a custom, pearl-white Chanel haute couture gown that cost more than a house. She looked like a princess holding court.
She was surrounded by a circle of giggling, malicious socialites.
The grand double doors of the foyer opened.
Corrie walked in. She was still wearing the baggy black hoodie, holding the cheap plastic shopping bag in her hand.
The chatter near the door died instantly. Dozens of disgusted, judgmental eyes locked onto her dirty boots.
Kelly spotted her. A vicious thrill lit up Kelly's face. She practically shoved her friends aside and marched over to Corrie, making sure the entire room was watching.
"Corrie!" Kelly announced, her voice echoing loudly over the classical string quartet playing in the corner. "You're finally back! Hurry upstairs and put on that beautiful dress I bought you. The guests are dying to see it!"
Corrie looked at the sneering faces of the socialites around her. She felt the heavy, oppressive weight of their collective mockery.
She didn't flinch. She gave Kelly a slow, deadpan nod.
"Sure," Corrie said.
She walked past them, her boots thudding heavily against the marble floor, heading for the stairs. She could hear the erupting whispers and cruel laughter trailing behind her like toxic smoke.
She didn't care. The trap was set.
You may also like

7.8
Elie Joyce’s entire life was controlled by Ebert Ewing, a ruthless billionaire who held her sick grandmother's survival and her family's freedom in his hands.
But on a freezing, stormy night, he forced her into a scandalous scrap of red silk and handed her over to a notorious, disgusting predator.
"You aren't an escort. You're just a free gift."
Ebert mocked her, using her as a disposable bargaining chip to secure a corporate funding round.
When the predator humiliated her, forced high-proof vodka down her throat, and violently pinned her to the floor, Ebert simply watched with dead eyes.
And when Ebert finally intervened to brutally beat the man, it wasn't out of mercy.
"She is my property. Even if she is trash that I threw away, a filthy pig like you doesn't get to touch her."
Afterward, he dragged her battered, barefoot body into his car, only to kick her out into the torrential rain, leaving her on the dark streets to die.
Standing in the storm, shivering and bleeding from broken glass, the last shred of Elie's hope shattered.
She had sacrificed her dignity and soul, enduring his violent bites and cruel control, just to keep her family alive.
Why did she have to suffer this endless, twisted humiliation for a psychopath who only saw her as trash?
But she didn't break.
Tearing a strip of his expensive shirt to bandage her bleeding foot, Elie gripped her broken stiletto like a knife.
With her eyes turning cold and calculating, she limped out of the shadows.
She was going to survive, and Ebert Ewing would soon realize she was no longer his obedient prey.

9.5
As a highborn succubus, I somehow managed to starve myself to death-thanks to my obsessive cleanliness and ridiculously picky appetite.
When I opened my eyes again, I had transmigrated into Vivian Hartwell-the long-lost "real" daughter with a tragically cursed fate.
I had barely been taken back into the Hartwell family before they forced me to attend a so-called "death matchmaking" event in Kingsford-on behalf of Natalie Hartwell, the fake heiress-to meet Damian Blackwood, the infamous "living reaper."
Rumor had it Damian was brutal and bloodthirsty-every woman who'd ever been involved with him either ended up dead or driven insane.
At the event, over a hundred socialites were trembling on their knees, silently praying they wouldn't be the one chosen.
Just as Damian let out a cold smirk and reached to pick his unlucky victim, I took a deep breath from the back of the crowd.
The scent emanating from him was a rare, potent masculine essence-something encountered perhaps once in ten millennia.
For a painfully picky succubus like me, this was nothing short of salvation.
I kicked aside the girl blocking my way, my eyes practically glowing as I threw both hands up. "Pick me! Hurry, pick me!"

9.5
Gina was locked in Blackwood Asylum for five years, framed as a violent lunatic by her own wealthy family.
Her brother suddenly dragged her out, but not to save her. He forced her into an arranged marriage with Kerr Brooks, the billionaire emperor of New York, just to save the Rollins family's failing company.
Back at the estate, her parents treated her like a biohazard. They showered her adopted sister, Hailie, with love and luxury, while forcing Gina into a freezing servant's room. They threw a brutal prenuptial agreement at her face and threatened to leak a deepfake scandal video to the press if she didn't play the perfect bride. To ensure Gina's absolute ruin, Hailie even ordered a maid to spike her dinner with a massive dose of LSD. They were ruthlessly sacrificing her to a man who was secretly in a deep, unresponsive coma.
"She is just a tool, Hailie. Do not waste your pity on a broken thing."
Her mother's cold words echoed in the foyer. They looked at Gina's faded jumpsuit and vacant eyes, fully believing she was a heavily sedated pawn they could easily manipulate and discard.
But they didn't know Gina was a master hacker, a lethal underground surgeon, and the secret owner of the world's top luxury brand. She neutralized the poison in seconds and slipped into her comatose fiancé's heavily guarded ICU. Disabling the secret neuro-suppressants keeping him asleep, Gina smiled in the dark. If they wanted her to marry a corpse, she would use his empire to bury them all alive.

8.6
As the eldest daughter of the Sharp family, I was treated worse than a stray dog, while my younger sister Seraphina was their precious princess.
When the family needed someone to marry a dying billionaire heir, they naturally chose me to take her place.
To force my consent, my brothers held a peanut butter sandwich to my face—knowing it was a lethal allergy—while dangling my EpiPen just out of reach.
On speakerphone, my own mother sighed in annoyance.
"Let her die. It might be for the best."
I choked out an agreement just as my throat closed up. But the forced engagement broke my sacred mystical vow, causing me to violently cough up my own lifeblood.
Seeing the blood, Seraphina dramatically fainted. My brothers instantly carried her to the hospital, stepping over my dying body and leaving me to bleed out on the cold marble floor.
I had to use a forbidden blood rune, draining my last ounce of strength, just to survive the night.
Even the mystical Order I served offered no comfort, calling only to demand I secure ten billion dollars for them or forfeit my soul for eternity.
Abandoned by my blood family and my spiritual master, I was completely alone, left with nothing but a broken body and a ticking clock.
But they made one fatal mistake: they let me live.
I turned to the dying heir they forced me to marry, a man plagued by a dark curse only I could cure.
"I will be your wife, and I will save your life," I told him.
In exchange, I would use his unimaginable wealth and power to make everyone who threw me away pay the ultimate price.

9.5
Janet woke up gasping, the phantom fire of a deadly explosion still scorching her lungs. She had been reborn three years in the past, on the exact day her mother forced her into a marriage contract with Gaylord Bradford, a paralyzed and severely disfigured billionaire.
Before she could even process her second chance, her cousin Kandy kicked the bedroom door open, flaunting a massive diamond ring. Kandy, who had also been reborn, smugly announced she had stolen Janet's Wall Street golden boy fiancé, Jax Adler.
"You're going to marry that paralyzed monster," Kandy spat, gloating that she would build a billionaire dynasty with Jax while Janet wiped drool off a rotting corpse. Kandy expected Janet to have a complete mental collapse, completely unaware that Gaylord's own medical team was secretly injecting him with lethal neurotoxins to finish him off.
But Janet only felt a cold, clinical pity. Kandy's "prophetic" memories were a polluted lie. Jax was actually sterile and dying of irreversible kidney failure, while Gaylord wasn't a dying freak—he was a dormant god whose body was merely in a high-dimensional hibernation. Why would Janet mourn losing a doomed fraud?
Leaving her delusional cousin behind, Janet packed her bags and headed straight to Gaylord's maximum-security military cell. She physically tackled his corrupt doctor, drove three bio-electric silver needles into the crippled king's spine to awaken his deadened nerves, and looked him dead in his glacial blue eye.
"Sign the marriage contract," Janet whispered. "I will make you walk again, and we will take back everything."

8.1
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.