
Unexpected Comeback Of The Discarded Orphan
I was taken from a filthy Nevada orphanage by the wealthy Tillman family and treated like a stray dog for ten years.
When their company faced bankruptcy, my adoptive parents demanded I marry a known degenerate to pay off their debts, just so their precious biological daughter wouldn't have to.
When I refused, my adoptive mother cut off all my bank accounts and kicked me out into a freezing thunderstorm.
"Walk out that door and you will starve in the gutter where you belong!" she screamed.
My fake sister mocked my lack of a background, and later, the family even posted photos online to frame me as a disgusting sugar baby to ruin my life.
They thought I was just a helpless, worthless orphan who owed them everything.
They didn't know the only reason I endured their abuse was to investigate the orphanage fire that burned ten of my friends alive, a tragedy their elite circles helped cover up.
I didn't beg for their mercy or cry in the rain.
Instead, I got into a bulletproof black SUV waiting in the storm.
It was time to shed the pathetic orphan disguise, cure the paralyzed king of the underworld, and burn the Tillman family's perfect facade to the ground.
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Chapter 1
"Sit down, Ayla."
Preston Tillman's voice cut through the heavy, stifling silence of the living room like a dull blade.
Ayla pushed open the heavy mahogany double doors. The blinding, obnoxious glare from the crystal chandelier hit her square in the eyes, making her squint. She didn't move toward the velvet sofa where Preston sat stiffly. She stayed right where she was, her hands shoved deep into the pockets of her faded, ripped jeans, her weight shifted lazily to one hip.
Eleanor Tillman sat rigid as a mannequin on the adjacent loveseat. She clutched a bone-china teacup in her bony fingers, her knuckles bleached white against the delicate porcelain. She shot Ayla a look so cold, so venomous, it could have frozen boiling water.
Preston cleared his throat, the sound phlegmy and weak. He tugged at his silk tie as if it were strangling him. "The company is bleeding cash. The supply chain collapse has drained our reserves to nothing. We need an immediate injection of capital, or we lose everything."
Ayla shifted her weight to her other leg. Her face remained entirely blank—a perfect, unreadable mask.
"The Redding family has offered a merger," Preston continued, his tone shifting from desperate to falsely authoritative. "It's an old pact made by your late grandfather, one we can no longer afford to delay. They are willing to cover our debts in full. In exchange, they want a union between our families. You will marry their eldest son so Carly doesn't have to."
A short, sharp laugh burst from Ayla's lips before she could stop it.
The sound bounced off the vaulted ceilings, echoing in the massive, sterile room.
Eleanor slammed her teacup down onto the saucer with enough force to crack the porcelain. Hot amber tea sloshed over the rim, scalding her fingers. She didn't flinch. Didn't seem to feel it at all.
"You ungrateful little bitch," Eleanor snapped, her chest heaving against her silk blouse. "We took you out of that filthy orphanage in Nevada. We fed you. We clothed you. We gave you a roof for ten years. You owe this family your life. Your very existence is a debt you can never repay."
Ayla just stared at her. Her pulse didn't even spike. Her breathing stayed slow and even.
Carly—perfect, pristine Carly—suddenly rose from the side sofa like a queen ascending. She smoothed down her designer dress, a garment that cost more than most people's cars, and glided over to Ayla. Her wide, dewy eyes swam with expertly manufactured concern.
"Ayla, please," Carly said, her voice dripping with artificial sweetness, so thick it practically left a residue in the air. "Think about this rationally. You don't have a background. You don't have a degree. You have no prospects, no connections, no future. Marrying into the Redding family is a massive step up for an orphan like you. It's not a punishment—it's a blessing. I'm actually jealous."
Ayla tilted her head slowly, like a predator sizing up prey. She looked at Carly's perfectly manicured hands, the diamond rings glittering on every finger. Then up to her trembling, tear-filled eyes.
"You're terrified, aren't you?" Ayla's voice was low, stripped of any warmth.
Carly blinked, her practiced smile faltering. She took a half-step back, her heel catching on the rug. "What?"
"The Redding boy is a known degenerate," Ayla said, her words slicing through the perfumed air like a scalpel. "Everyone in this room knows it. You're not offering me a blessing. You're just terrified that Preston will force his precious biological daughter to marry that monster if I don't take the bullet."
Carly's face drained of all color, going pale as milk. Her lower lip quivered dramatically, and fat, glistening tears spilled down her powdered cheeks. She stumbled backward as if Ayla had physically struck her, one hand pressing to her heart.
Preston slammed his fist down on the glass coffee table. The impact made the entire room vibrate, crystal glasses rattling on the bar cart.
"Apologize to your sister right now!" Preston roared, his face flooding a violent, purplish red, the veins in his neck bulging against his collar.
Ayla pulled her hands out of her pockets. The lazy, bored posture evaporated like smoke. Her spine straightened inch by inch, and the temperature in her eyes plummeted to absolute zero.
"No."
The single syllable hung in the air, sharp and final as a guillotine blade.
Eleanor shot to her feet, her composure finally shattering. She pointed a shaking, bony finger at the massive front doors. "If you refuse this, you walk out that door and you never come back. I will cut off every credit card. I will freeze every account. You will have nothing. Nothing! You will starve in the gutter where you belong, you ungrateful street rat!"
Ayla didn't hesitate. Not for a heartbeat. She turned her back on them, her movements unhurried, almost casual.
Her boots hit the marble floor with steady, rhythmic thuds—each one a nail in the coffin of her old life.
Preston lurched to his feet, his mouth falling open. He clearly hadn't expected her to actually walk. To call his bluff. His jaw worked soundlessly.
"Walk out that door and you are dead to us!" Eleanor screamed, her voice cracking into a hysterical shriek. "Dead! Do you hear me?"
Ayla reached the heavy front doors. She didn't look back. She didn't pause. She just raised her right hand, waving two fingers in the air in a lazy, dismissive goodbye.
She grabbed the cold brass handle and pulled.
The door swung open, and the violent roar of a thunderstorm crashed into the foyer. Rain lashed against the marble steps in furious, diagonal sheets. Lightning split the sky in the distance.
Ayla stepped out into the freezing, relentless downpour. The heavy oak door slammed shut behind her with a resonant boom, cutting off Eleanor's shrieks like a guillotine.
The icy water soaked through her thin cotton shirt in seconds. It plastered her dark hair to her cheeks and forehead. She didn't shiver. She took a deep, filling breath of the rain-soaked air. Her chest expanded. Her lungs filled with oxygen. She felt, for the first time in ten years, like she could actually breathe.
She reached into the waterproof inner pocket of her worn jacket and pulled out a solid black, heavily encrypted phone. The kind of device that didn't exist on any commercial market.
The screen lit up, illuminating her wet face in the dark, her eyes glowing in the reflection.
She dialed a number with no caller ID. No contact name. Just a sequence of digits stored in her memory alone.
The line connected instantly. No greeting. Just expectant silence.
"Coordinates," Ayla said into the receiver, her voice steady and unshaken against the crashing thunder. "Now."
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8.4
Elia was an orphan from the rust belt, taken in by the wealthy Chapman family in New York.
To them, she was just a shameful charity case.
The parents shoved her into a dusty storage closet, treating their other daughter Geri like a delicate princess, and mocked Elia as uneducated trash.
When Elia secured her own admission to Manhattan Elite Prep, Geri's jealousy turned vicious.
Geri orchestrated a massive smear campaign, posting anonymously on the school forum that Elia was a violent dropout who sold her body to a sugar daddy to pay tuition.
In the cafeteria, the school's elite dumped dirty milk on Elia's food.
They called her a whore and told her to go back to the streets, while Geri watched from afar with a victorious, innocent smile.
They thought she was just a helpless stray dog who would easily break under their high-society cruelty.
They had no idea she was actually "L", the dark web's most feared hacker, and "The Surgeon", a genius medical anomaly.
They also didn't know she was currently tracking a dying Wall Street billionaire who had stolen her only necklace in a dark alley.
What made these arrogant rich kids think they could destroy a girl who played with international firewalls for fun?
Instead of crying, Elia calmly pulled out her phone.
Within seconds, she breached the school's server, locking every screen in the building onto a blood-red skull.
As Geri's own recorded voice plotting the fake rumors blasted through the PA system, Elia grabbed her bag, stepping back into the shadows to reclaim what was hers.

7.1
I was the top commander of a black-ops military program. After slaughtering my way through a hellish mission, I reached the extraction helicopter, trusting my second-in-command to watch my back.
But the moment our hands locked, he didn't pull me up. Instead, he plunged a syringe of lethal neurotoxin directly into my neck.
He aimed his gun at my chest, coldly stating that I was too dangerous to live. My lungs stopped, and I died in a pool of my own blood. But the endless blackness suddenly shattered. My consciousness violently forced its way into a new, broken shell. I woke up in a freezing alley, soaked in muddy rain.
This body belonged to seventeen-year-old Eliza Wyatt. A massive wave of foreign memories crashed into my brain. Her own younger sister had just stood at the top of the stairs with a mocking smile, watching street thugs beat Eliza to death.
"Take good care of the Wyatt family's eldest daughter. Tonight is the night she finally disappears."
The endless humiliation, the cold stares of her family, and the brutal betrayal by her own blood flashed before my eyes. Why was this fragile girl treated like garbage and pushed to her death by the very people who should have protected her?
I looked down at my pale, trembling hands. The top commander was dead, but in this bleeding shell, Eliza Wyatt was very much alive. I picked up a switchblade from the bloody puddle and stood up in the storm. It was time to hunt.

8.2
Justine abandoned her career as a top trauma surgeon to marry Congressman Carl McConnell. She did it to fulfill her dying sister's last wish: to protect her son, Leo, from this ruthless political family.
But the seven-year-old boy she swore to protect shoved her into a freezing koi pond, then cried to his father that Justine tried to drown him.
Carl didn't even check the security cameras. He hugged his precious heir and looked at his freezing wife with pure disgust.
"Are you out of your mind? Trying to hurt the heir to the McConnell family!"
He locked Justine in a 55-degree wine cellar while she was burning with a 102-degree fever. When she finally told him the truth, Carl flew into a rage and hurled a heavy brass-cornered book at her face, slicing her cheekbone wide open.
His mother even ordered the staff to starve her for seven days to reflect on her sins.
Justine stood in the dark, blood dripping down her face, her heart completely dead. She had sacrificed her brilliant future and her pride for this family, only to be tortured and discarded like garbage. How could they be so utterly devoid of humanity?
She pulled out her old medical kit and stitched up her own face.
Then, she signed the legal documents to permanently relinquish her stepparent rights, threw them at the housekeeper, and calmly looked at her abusive husband.
"I am divorcing you, Carl."

8.7
Emerson worked grueling twelve-hour shifts just to keep her five-year-old son, Leo, alive. Her only lifeline was her partner Alden, who was willing to give up his wealthy family to protect them.
But when Leo's bone marrow completely failed, the doctor delivered a death sentence. The only way to save him was a two-million-dollar treatment, or having another child with his biological father.
That father was Finnegan Mcconnell, the ruthless billionaire who had accused Emerson of faking her pregnancy and abandoned her five years ago.
Desperate for the medical fees, Emerson submitted her designs to Finnegan's company.
Instead of advancing the money, Finnegan tore her portfolio to shreds and trapped her as a prisoner in his estate.
To force her complete submission, he systematically destroyed her reality. He framed Alden with federal charges, leaving him facing twenty years in prison.
Alden's mother stormed into the pediatric ICU, violently strangling Emerson against the wall.
"Beg Finnegan to let my son go! You are a curse!"
Even Emerson's own adoptive mother showed up at the hospital, just to publicly mock her dying child.
Emerson was suffocating in despair. Finnegan already had a beautiful new wife and a five-year-old daughter—absolute proof he had been cheating while she was pregnant and alone.
He had his perfect family. Why did he have to hunt her down and sever every lifeline she had left, just to watch her drown?
With her son's heart monitor fading and Alden locked in a cell, her pride finally shattered.
Emerson walked into the top-floor executive office and dropped to her knees at the devil's feet, but the desperate mother looking up at him was preparing for a devastating revenge.

9.4
Aria Mcgee was the unwanted second daughter of a decaying Long Island family.
To save their bankrupt corporation, her father and older sister drugged her. They shoved her into a town car and delivered her to a ruthless Wall Street billionaire's bed like a piece of meat.
They expected her to be the perfect sacrifice. The original Aria had no access to her own trust fund and was forced to live in a windowless broom closet. Even worse, a cold, synthetic System voice echoed in her skull, demanding she play the tragic, helpless female lead. It ordered her to endure her family's abuse and suffer the billionaire's humiliation to force a pathetic romance plotline.
"Host must follow the tragic trajectory and achieve the ultimate painful romance."
But the soul that woke up in that bed wasn't a weak, frightened girl. She was a dead Hollywood Oscar-winning actress. Why would a top-tier professional ever agree to play the weeping victim in such a garbage, B-list script?
Instead of trembling in fear as the System commanded, Aria looked at the billionaire and smiled. Using her flawless acting skills, she shattered his ego, extracted a hundred thousand dollars, and walked right out the door. Now, she was heading back to the Mcgee estate, ready to rip her money from her father's greedy hands and burn her sister's life to the ground.

8.4
Juliette was an agriculture major desperately trying to get top-tier CRISPR potato data from Adrian Castillo, the untouchable physics genius and wealthy heir.
But to get it, she was dragged to a high-end shooting club, where Adrian suddenly lost all his legendary motor skills, shooting zeroes and acting like a helpless nerd.
His clumsy act made Juliette a target. Blair, a wealthy heiress, cornered her, mocking her mud-stained cargo pants and calling her a pathetic dirt-girl.
"If you lose, you leave this club and never speak to Adrian again."
Blair challenged her to a professional air pistol match. The crowd of elites laughed, waiting for the farm girl to humiliate herself.
Even worse, Adrian just stood behind her, pretending to be terrified of Blair and whispering that his sinuses would swell shut if Juliette didn't save him.
The mockery and judgment felt suffocating. Everyone thought she was just a desperate fangirl who didn't even know how to hold a gun.
But they didn't know the dark trauma she had buried years ago. And she didn't understand why Adrian, a man who could supposedly shoot a coin at eight hundred meters in a sandstorm, was deliberately playing weak to push her to the firing line. What was his sick endgame?
To secure her experimental fertilizer, Juliette finally stopped hiding.
She picked up the competition pistol, locked her perfect stance, and fired ten flawless shots.
108.5. Total, undeniable annihilation.