
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.
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Chapter 7
Corrie locked the door of the freezing, north-facing guest room.
She threw the cheap plastic bag onto the lumpy mattress. She reached inside and pulled out the royal blue knockoff dress.
She held it up by the shoulders. The harsh overhead light exposed every horrific flaw. The waistline was boxy, designed to fit a mannequin, not a human. The cheap rhinestones caught the light, glaring with a tacky, plastic shine.
Corrie's face remained entirely expressionless. She didn't feel panic. She felt the cold, clinical focus of a surgeon stepping up to the operating table.
She walked over to her canvas bag and unzipped a side pocket. She pulled out a pair of heavy, surgical-grade trauma shears. The blades were razor-sharp, designed to cut through leather boots and Kevlar in an emergency.
She walked back to the bed and laid the dress flat.
She didn't use chalk. She didn't measure.
Corrie grabbed the hem of the dress. The shears sliced through the cheap polyester with a sickening, tearing sound.
In less than three minutes, she amputated the bulky, ruffled sleeves, turning the top into a severe, asymmetrical halter.
She flipped the dress over. She drove the shears straight up the back seam, splitting the dress open down to the lumbar spine.
Next, her fingers moved like lightning. She gripped the glued-on rhinestones and violently ripped them off the fabric. The dry glue snapped and popped. She tore off hundreds of them, leaving only a cluster of the least offensive stones near the collarbone to act as a focal point.
She reached into her bag again and pulled out a spool of thick, black silk ribbon she used for tying off surgical tourniquets.
She stripped off her clothes. The cold air raised goosebumps on her pale skin.
She pulled the butchered blue fabric over her head. It hung loose and shapeless.
Corrie reached behind her back. She threaded the black silk ribbon through the raw, cut edges of the open back. She pulled the ribbon tight.
The fabric shrieked in protest, but the transformation was instantaneous.
The violent tightening of the ribbon cinched the waist perfectly against her ribs. The excess fabric gathered and draped over her hips, forcing the cheap polyester to mimic the heavy, liquid flow of a mermaid silhouette.
She tied a complex, brutal knot at the base of her spine, reaching into her bag one last time. Her fingers brushed past the stacks of cash and closed around the heavy, antique sapphire brooch George had given her. She pinned the massive, flawless gemstone directly over the raw knot of the black silk ribbon. The heavy, old-money opulence of the Warren family heirloom clashed violently with the avant-garde, deconstructed rebellion of the dress, creating an absolutely breathtaking, jaw-dropping masterpiece.
She walked over to the cracked mirror hanging on the closet door.
The dress was no longer a cheap knockoff. The raw, frayed edges where she had cut the fabric gave it a dark, deconstructed, avant-garde aesthetic. It looked like a piece of high-fashion rebellion, clinging to her sharp collarbones and narrow waist with aggressive perfection.
She didn't touch the makeup Dean had left on the dresser. She turned on the sink, splashed freezing water onto her face, and aggressively rubbed her cheeks until the friction brought a natural, blood-red flush to her skin.
She gathered her long, raven-black hair and twisted it into a messy, severe knot at the nape of her neck, securing it with a single black pen.
She slipped her feet into a pair of plain, flat black leather loafers. No heels. She didn't need the height to look down on them.
Downstairs, the ballroom was a sea of suffocating wealth.
Dean Warren glided through the crowd in a deep purple velvet gown. She held a crystal flute of champagne, laughing musically at a joke told by a state senator. She was in her element, the undisputed queen of the Philadelphia social scene.
Near the grand staircase, Kelly was holding court.
"I swear to God," Kelly giggled, pressing a hand to her chest, surrounded by five other girls in pastel couture. "I bought it off a clearance rack next to a dumpster. It cost eighty-nine dollars. It's literally made of plastic. Wait until you see her. She's going to look like a cheap disco ball."
The girls erupted into vicious, high-pitched laughter.
Suddenly, the string quartet in the corner hit a discordant note and stopped playing.
The heavy, carved mahogany doors at the top of the grand staircase groaned open.
The sound of chatter in the ballroom didn't fade; it was violently decapitated. A suffocating, dead silence crashed over the room in a matter of seconds.
Corrie stepped out onto the landing.
The massive crystal chandelier above the stairs cast a brilliant, blinding spotlight directly onto her.
She stood there, looking down at the sea of upturned faces. The royal blue fabric clung to her body like a second skin. The raw, deconstructed edges of the dress screamed high fashion. The black silk ribbon trailing down her exposed back looked like a deliberate, dangerous statement.
She wore no diamonds. No pearls. But the sheer, cold arrogance radiating from her posture made the women below look like they were wearing cheap costumes.
Kelly's jaw unhinged. The muscles in her face went slack.
Her hand jerked, and the champagne in her glass sloshed over the rim, splashing directly onto her pristine white Chanel dress. She didn't even notice. She stared up at the stairs, her eyes bulging with absolute, incomprehensible shock.
Dean's breath caught in her throat. A physical jolt of terror hit her chest.
For a split second, Dean didn't see Corrie. She saw Dolores. She saw the woman she had murdered, standing at the top of the stairs, looking down at her with the exact same aristocratic, untouchable disdain. Dean's fingernails dug so hard into her palms that they broke the skin.
In the center of the room, the editor-in-chief of a prominent New York fashion magazine pushed her glasses up her nose.
"Good lord," the editor whispered loudly in the silence. "Look at the draping on that bodice. The raw-edge technique... is that an unreleased Margiela? It's breathtaking."
Corrie began to walk down the stairs.
Her flat shoes made no sound on the carpet. She moved with a slow, predatory grace, her eyes locked dead ahead, completely ignoring the hundreds of people staring at her.
George Warren pushed his way to the front of the crowd. His chest swelled. A massive, overwhelming wave of pride washed over his face.
He stepped to the bottom of the stairs and held out his hand.
"Ladies and gentlemen," George announced, his voice booming with authority. "My eldest daughter. Corrie Warren."
A smattering of polite, awestruck applause broke out.
Kelly felt her blood boil. A hot, blinding rage consumed her brain. She couldn't let this happen. This was her night. This was supposed to be the moment she destroyed the rust-belt trash.
Kelly stomped forward, her heels clicking aggressively against the marble. She stopped right in front of Corrie, blocking her path.
Kelly forced a loud, shrill laugh that sounded like glass breaking.
"Oh my god, sister!" Kelly yelled, making sure her voice carried to the very back of the room. "I cannot believe you actually wore it! You are so brave for wearing an eighty-nine dollar clearance rack dress to a high-society gala!"
The applause instantly died.
The air in the room turned toxic. The socialites exchanged sharp, calculating glances. The awe in their eyes rapidly morphed into sneering condescension.
Dean closed her eyes for a second, a wave of dark relief washing over her. She stepped forward, playing the peacemaker.
"Kelly, please," Dean scolded softly, her voice laced with fake embarrassment. "We don't talk about price tags in polite company. Your sister doesn't know any better."
Corrie stopped. She didn't shrink back. She didn't look embarrassed.
She slowly tilted her head to the side. Her face was a mask of wide-eyed, innocent confusion.
"Price tags?" Corrie asked. Her voice was crystal clear, cutting through the silence like a knife. She looked directly at Kelly. "But Kelly, you told me this was the height of Warren family fashion. You said you used Dean's black Amex card to buy it specifically for me, so I wouldn't embarrass you."
The silence in the room became absolute. You could hear a pin drop.
Corrie took a step forward, raising her voice just a fraction, projecting it to the entire room.
"I thought it was a bit cheap for a billionaire's daughter to spend eighty-nine dollars on her sister's welcome-home gown," Corrie said, her tone perfectly flat, devoid of malice, stating it like a simple fact. "But I didn't want to seem ungrateful to my new mother."
A collective, audible gasp ripped through the ballroom.
The bomb had detonated.
The socialites turned their heads, their eyes locking onto Dean and Kelly. The looks of condescension were gone, replaced by absolute, unadulterated disgust.
Everyone in Philadelphia knew Dean Warren played the perfect, loving stepmother. And now, she had just been outed for forcing her biological daughter to buy the returning heiress a literal piece of garbage with a black card.
Whispers erupted like wildfire.
"Eighty-nine dollars?" a senator's wife sneered loudly. "How incredibly tacky."
"Did you see the way Kelly tried to humiliate her?" another whispered. "Pure trash."
Dean's face turned a violent, sickly shade of gray. The elegant, untouchable mask she had worn for eighteen years shattered into a million pieces. Her stomach churned with violent nausea. She felt the burning, judgmental stares of her peers stripping the flesh from her bones.
Kelly stood frozen, her mouth opening and closing like a suffocating fish. She looked around at her friends, but they all took a synchronized step back, distancing themselves from the radioactive embarrassment.
Corrie didn't smile. She didn't gloat.
She simply stepped around Kelly's frozen body, grabbed a glass of sparkling water from a passing waiter, and walked into the crowd, leaving her stepmother and sister burning in the ashes of their own trap.
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7.9
I woke up in a sterile hospital room, my head split open from a horrific car crash.
But the pain in my skull was nothing compared to the memory burned into my retinas just before the impact: my billionaire husband, Dawson, walking into a luxury hotel with a woman who looked exactly like his dead first love.
When Dawson finally arrived at the ward, there was no panic or relief in his eyes. He just coldly looked at my bloody bandages.
"Your reckless driving just forced me to postpone the quarterly board meeting."
Even our seven-year-old son, who I almost died giving birth to, didn't spare me a single glance. He kicked my hospital bed in annoyance.
"The Wi-Fi here is garbage. You're a bad mom! Dad said Aunt Angelita should be the one living with us!"
My blood turned to ice. For five years, I had bent over backward, wearing the hideous pale dresses he picked, starving myself to maintain a fragile figure, all to be a perfect, obedient substitute for a ghost.
And this was what I got. An unfaithful husband who would rather bury me in debt than grant me a divorce, and a son who wished I was dead.
The weak, subservient Charlene died on that wet asphalt.
When the doctor pointed to Dawson and asked for his name, I looked at my husband with a hollow, defensive stare.
"Who are you?" I whispered.
Using retrograde amnesia as my shield, I was going to tear their perfect world apart.

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.

8.1
Desperate for a way out of rejection and poverty, Pearl Augustine accepts a nanny job with an outrageous salary-working for billionaire Ace Warren. What she doesn't expect is his daughter.
Mia Warren is spoiled, sharp-tongued, and feared by everyone in the mansion. Behind her cruelty is a lonely child longing for a mother. As Pearl becomes the only one who can reach her, walls begin to fall-especially those around Ace, a grieving man hiding behind wealth and control.
What started as "just a job" quickly turns into something dangerous: attachment.
Sometimes, healing begins where you least expect it.

8.9
Aubree Hamilton was the top-tier executive assistant to Wall Street's most ruthless titan, Beck Franco. A month ago, she made a catastrophic mistake and spent the night in his bed.
Thinking she had erased the mistake with a morning-after pill, she panicked upon his return and lied about being engaged to push him away.
But Beck, a man who despised disloyalty above all else, immediately suspended her and ordered her escorted out of the building. Her nightmare only escalated when her toxic ex-boyfriend attacked her on the street, tearing her purse open and exposing the empty morning-after pill box to the public—and to Beck, who was watching from his penthouse. After having his security rescue her, Beck trapped her in his car, ruthlessly tearing apart her fake engagement. Later in her apartment, the suffocating tension between them almost ignited into a kiss, but a violent wave of nausea suddenly hit Aubree.
She shoved him away with all her strength and violently threw up in the bathroom.
Beck took it as the ultimate physical disgust. He walked out, deeply humiliated and dangerously obsessed, unleashing his resources to investigate her every move.
Left alone and trembling, Aubree finally checked the crushed white box. The pill she took had expired a month ago.
Staring at the two bright pink lines on the pregnancy test, she made a desperate vow: Beck Franco could never know she was carrying his child, and she had to disappear before he found out.

7.7
Jaclyn woke up in the sterile hospital room after falling down the stairs. The nurse delivered the devastating news: she had bled heavily and lost her baby.
But before she could even cry, her trusted cousins, Katelyn and Cherri, locked the door and revealed the horrifying truth.
"It wasn't an accident," Katelyn smirked, pinning Jaclyn's arm down. "The lubricant on the top step was a very deliberate choice."
They needed her broken and unstable. They had forged her signature, draining her massive trust fund to save their uncle's bankrupt business.
What shattered Jaclyn's world was the fresh hickey on Cherri's neck. Her lover, Bradford, had helped plan the entire murder.
When Jaclyn tried to scream, they smothered her with a pillow, framing her as a lunatic having a mental breakdown.
Two weeks later, when she confronted them, Bradford violently shoved her through a second-story glass window to silence her forever.
As she fell to her death, the husband she had spent her life hating—the ruthless billionaire Gaines—burst through the doors.
He threw himself forward, his face filled with pure terror, desperately trying to catch her.
When her body hit the stone patio, Gaines fell to his knees in her blood, weeping and begging her not to close her eyes.
Until her last breath, Jaclyn was consumed by suffocating regret. Why did she trust the monsters who killed her, and hate the only man who truly loved her?
Opening her eyes again, she was back in the penthouse, exactly one month into her marriage with Gaines.

7.4
I was freezing to death in an abandoned cabin, desperately waiting for my fiancé to save me.
Instead, my phone flickered with a video from my adopted sister.
She was smiling as she confessed that she and my fiancé had orchestrated my kidnapping, and my parents' fatal plane crash, just to steal my family's trust fund.
When I called him with my dying breath, he mocked me for faking a PR stunt and hung up.
I died in the sub-zero blizzard, consumed by absolute despair.
But as a ghost, I watched my greatest business rival, the ruthless billionaire Collins, kick down the doors of my mansion.
He didn't just mourn me.
He shot my fiancé, trapped my sister, and set the entire place on fire, choosing to burn alive in the inferno just to avenge me.
I couldn't understand why the man I had publicly despised for a decade loved me so fiercely, while the people I gave everything to wanted me dead.
Opening my eyes again, I was back backstage on the night I won my Oscar, four years ago.
My fiancé smiled, holding out his arms to hug me.
I pushed him away in disgust, marched straight into the crowded theater, and kissed my billionaire rival on live television.
"Let's get married tomorrow."
This time, I would use him to burn them all to the ground.