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He Buried Me, But I Bloomed

He Buried Me, But I Bloomed

She was dead. Or at least, that's what they thought. Now, five years later, Ivy Richardson stood at her own grave, ready to face the man who put her there. Ivy, in a custom coat, stood at her cold, black marble gravestone. "Beloved daughter and fiancée," the inscription read—a cruel joke mirroring her heart's wasteland. A gravedigger dropped his shovel, face ashen. Trembling, he pointed, gasping, "Oh my God... you look exactly like her." He saw a ghost; Ivy was alive. She paid for silence. Then, Clayton, her former fiancé, appeared, shaking: "Ivy? Where have you been?" She crushed his cheap lilies, her lethal gaze replacing the girl he'd abandoned. He snarled, blaming her, justifying her "Do Not Resuscitate" order for his mistress, Ainsley. Ivy's cold laugh mocked his pathetic lies. "Fiancé?" she echoed, revealing her new wedding ring. "That title expired when you signed the DNR... and Ainsley was watching, wasn't she?" With an icy "Go to hell," Ivy left him slipping in the mud.
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Chapter 4

Ivy Richardson POV: The vintage yellow cab merged onto the highway, putting miles of asphalt between me and the rotting memories of the cemetery. Twenty minutes later, the tires hissed against the pristine driveway of the most exclusive, ultra-luxury serviced apartment building in Beverly Hills. This was the physical manifestation of my new reality. The jump from a muddy, forgotten grave to the absolute pinnacle of global wealth. Before I even reached for the handle, a doorman in a tailored uniform and immaculate white gloves pulled the door open, bowing his head in deep reverence. I stepped out, the sharp click of my heels echoing across the polished marble portico. As I walked through the towering glass doors into the climate-controlled lobby, the head of security instantly stiffened his spine and offered a crisp, silent nod. I didn't break my stride. Over the past five years, my body had completely adapted to this suffocating level of deference. I bypassed the main bank of elevators and walked directly to the private, gold-trimmed lift at the back. I pressed my thumb against the biometric scanner. A soft chime rang out, and the heavy doors slid open. This absolute, impenetrable security wasn't just a luxury; it was a psychological necessity born from the sheer terror I had endured five years ago. The elevator shot upward, opening directly into my two-hundred-square-meter penthouse. The entire western wall was made of floor-to-ceiling bulletproof glass, offering a dizzying, unobstructed panoramic view of the sprawling Los Angeles skyline. Down there, people like Clayton and Ainsley were scrambling like ants. Up here, I was untouchable. I shrugged off my heavy black trench coat, letting it fall carelessly onto a custom Italian leather sofa that cost more than most people's homes. The armor was off. I could finally breathe. I walked straight to the marble island in the kitchen and poured myself a tall glass of ice water. I needed the freezing temperature to shock my system, to wash away the lingering, nauseating residue of Clayton's cologne that still felt stuck in my throat. I tipped my head back and swallowed. The icy liquid burned down my esophagus, and I let out a long, shuddering exhale. The violently tight muscles in my shoulders finally began to uncoil. Suddenly, the sleek, custom-encrypted phone sitting on the glass coffee table violently vibrated against the surface. The harsh buzzing shattered the dead silence of the penthouse. I walked over and glanced at the screen. The name *Collin* flashed in bright white letters. In a fraction of a second, the lethal, freezing armor in my eyes melted away. The corners of my mouth involuntarily twitched upward into a soft, genuine smile. This was the only man in the world who possessed the power to pull me out of the dark. I tapped the green video icon and leaned my hip against the edge of the bar, completely relaxing my posture. The screen flickered, revealing the devastatingly handsome, sharp-angled face of my husband. Collin was sitting in his Manhattan corner office, wearing a bespoke charcoal dress shirt with the sleeves rolled up. Through the glass behind him, the towering skyscrapers of New York looked like mere stepping stones. He was a man who held the global tech economy by the throat. The moment his piercing blue eyes locked onto my face through the camera, the ruthless, predatory coldness he showed the world instantly vanished, replaced by a heavy, consuming warmth. "Are you exhausted, my love?" Collin's deep, gravelly voice vibrated through the phone's tiny speakers, wrapping around me like a heavy blanket. I shook my head, my smile widening. "No. I just went to visit an old acquaintance." I kept my tone light and dismissive. I absolutely refused to let the ghost of Clayton Greene cast a shadow over my husband's day. Before Collin could reply, a mop of messy, dark hair popped up from the bottom edge of the screen. My four-year-old son, Leo, squeezed his face into the frame. He had the exact same striking, deep blue eyes as his father. "Mommy!" Leo's high-pitched, sweet voice chirped. "When are you coming back to New York? I miss you." A fierce ache of pure love clamped down on my chest. I reached out, my fingertips gently brushing the smooth glass of the screen over his chubby cheek. "Soon, baby. I promise, Mommy will be home very soon," I whispered. Collin gently scooped Leo up and handed him off-screen to a nanny. When he looked back at the camera, his eyes had narrowed into sharp, calculating slits. "You look pale, Ivy," Collin stated, his tone shifting from a doting husband to a dangerous predator sensing a threat to his mate. "Did someone in that city give you trouble?" I opened my mouth to deny it, but before a single syllable could escape my lips, the video feed violently glitched. The screen split into three separate, equal squares. Collin's proprietary, military-grade encryption had just been forcefully overridden. In the new, third window, a terrifyingly imposing elderly man appeared. My adoptive father, Alaric Richardson. He was sitting in a massive, hand-carved wooden chair that looked exactly like a throne inside his European estate. His silver hair was slicked back, and his thumb was slowly, methodically turning a massive blood-ruby ring on his index finger. "If that pathetic Los Angeles trash dared to upset you," Alaric's voice boomed, thick with the terrifying, casual cruelty of old money mafia, "say the word." He stopped turning the ring and stared directly into the camera. "One phone call, Ivy. That's all it takes. I will wipe the entire Greene family off the face of the earth before the sun sets." I pressed the heel of my hand against my forehead and let out a genuine, bubbling laugh. The sheer, overwhelming magnitude of their protective instincts was both ridiculous and deeply comforting. I looked at the two most terrifying men on the planet, my chest swelling with absolute certainty. "No, Father. They owe my mother, and I am going to take it all back piece by piece myself."

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