
Never Forgive, Never Forget My Pain
After eight years in captivity, I was finally rescued. I thought it was the beginning of a new life with my mother.
But she didn't even look at me. She ran into the arms of a handsome stranger, her real husband, and I was treated like a dirty secret from her past.
They called me a contamination, a reminder of their trauma. My new stepsister set their Doberman on me, and as the dog's teeth sank into my arm, I looked up and saw my mother watching from the window.
She met my eyes for a second, then slowly closed the curtains.
In that moment, the last bit of hope I had died. The shallow bond of family was completely gone, and I finally gave up.
But they made one mistake. The family patriarch, suspicious after a car accident, ordered a secret DNA test.
The results came back on the day of my stepsister's birthday party, revealing a truth that would burn their perfect world to the ground.
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Chapter 5
Hadley McCall POV:
The hum of the Lincoln Navigator’s tires against the wet Manhattan asphalt was the only sound in the cabin. I leaned back against the plush leather seat and pinched the bridge of my nose. The familiar, bone-deep exhaustion of running the McCall empire weighed heavily on my shoulders. I was an old man, but I was the absolute ruler of my family. I controlled everything. Everyone bowed to me.
But tonight, my chest felt tight.
I opened my eyes and glanced at the passenger seat next to me. A thick manila envelope lay there, stark against the black leather. A bright red "URGENT" stamp glared up at me. It was from the private investigator I had hired a week ago.
My upper lip curled in a sneer. I didn't want to open it. I despised the very idea of it. That filthy, malnourished street rat who had showed up at my gates, claiming to be my true granddaughter—it was an insult to the McCall bloodline. I had taken one look at her dirt-streaked face and ordered the guards to throw her out. I didn't care what she said. We already had Kylie. Kylie was perfect. Kylie was a princess.
But the nagging doubt had forced me to run the DNA test anyway. Just to be sure. Just to put the matter to rest so I could sleep at night.
I reached out and grabbed the envelope. I tore the flap open roughly, the sound of ripping paper loud and grating in the quiet car. The cabin was too dark. I fumbled for the reading light above my head and clicked it on. A harsh, pale beam illuminated the thin sheet of paper inside.
I pulled the report out. I didn't bother reading the medical jargon. I skipped straight to the bottom line.
*Probability of Paternity: 99.99%.*
My heart stopped. It didn't just flutter; it completely stopped beating in my chest. All the air was sucked out of the car.
I stared at the black ink. The numbers blurred, then sharpened again. 99.99%.
My hands began to shake. The tremor started in my fingers and traveled up my arms, rattling my bones. The thin paper crinkled loudly in my grip. I couldn't breathe. My throat closed up, and a wave of pure, acidic bile rose in my stomach.
I closed my eyes, but the darkness only brought the memories rushing back. I saw her again. I saw the rain pouring down on her frail, skeletal body. I saw the massive estate dogs lunging at her, their teeth sinking into her thin legs. I heard her desperate, agonizing screams as she begged me for help. And I remembered standing on the porch, looking down at her with cold disgust, and turning my back.
I had thrown my own flesh and blood to the dogs.
A sharp, agonizing pain ripped through my chest. The McCall honor, the bloodline purity I had protected my whole life—it all turned into a rusted blade, stabbing me repeatedly in the gut.
I jerked forward, gasping for air. My head slammed hard against the edge of the car roof. The dull thud echoed in the cabin, but I didn't feel the pain. My mind was completely fractured.
"Turn around!" I roared. My voice didn't sound like my own. It was a guttural, animalistic snarl that tore my vocal cords. "Turn the damn car around right now!"
The driver jumped in his seat. He slammed his foot on the brakes. The heavy SUV skidded on the wet asphalt, the tires screeching violently as the car violently jerked to a halt.
Horns blared behind us. The traffic was chaotic. I didn't care. I hit the button to roll down my window. The freezing rain whipped against my face, soaking my hair and my expensive suit. The physical shock of the cold was the only thing keeping me from passing out.
"Drive!" I screamed out the window at the cars blocking us, then turned to my driver. "St. Jude’s Hospital! Go! Run the red lights!"
The driver swallowed hard, his eyes wide with terror in the rearview mirror. He spun the steering wheel. The Navigator jumped the median, scraping the undercarriage, and made an illegal U-turn right in the middle of the intersection. We nearly clipped a delivery truck, but I just gripped the overhead handle so hard my knuckles turned white. My eyes were bloodshot, burning with unshed tears and sheer panic.
I pulled my phone from my pocket. My thumb hovered over the screen, trying to dial the hospital director. My hands were shaking so violently that I entered the wrong passcode. Once. Twice. Three times.
"Damn it!" I roared, slamming my fist against my thigh.
I finally unlocked it and hit the speed dial. The line rang twice before the director answered.
"Mr. McCall, I—"
"Lock down room 302!" I barked, my voice cracking. "Do not let anyone near that girl! I am five minutes away. If anyone touches her, I will destroy your life!"
There was a heavy silence on the other end. Then, the director's voice came through, trembling and weak.
"Mr. McCall... I can't. Child Protective Services breached the ward ten minutes ago. They had a federal warrant. They took her."
"No!" I screamed.
I hurled my limited-edition phone straight at the windshield. The glass spider-webbed with a loud crack. The driver flinched, ducking his head, but kept his foot on the gas.
When the car finally skidded to a halt in front of St. Jude’s emergency entrance, I didn't wait for the bodyguards. I kicked my door open and stumbled out into the pouring rain. My cane slipped on the wet pavement. I stepped directly into a deep puddle, splashing dirty water all over my tailored trousers and polished Italian leather shoes.
I pushed through the revolving doors like a madman. Nurses and doctors took one look at my face and scattered out of my way. I carried the aura of a man ready to commit murder.
The elevator doors were closing. I shoved my silver-handled cane between them, forcing the metal doors to groan and slide back open. I hit the button for the pediatric floor, my chest heaving, my lungs burning.
When the doors opened, I didn't walk. I ran. My old joints screamed in protest, but I forced my legs to move. I burst through the double doors of the ICU wing and sprinted down the silent, sterile hallway.
Room 302.
I grabbed the door handle and shoved it open.
"Eliza!" I gasped.
The room was empty. The harsh white fluorescent lights glared down on a stripped bed. The blanket was thrown halfway onto the floor.
I stumbled forward, my legs turning to jelly. I reached the bed and looked at the pillow. There, resting on the white cotton, were a few strands of dry, yellowed hair. It was the undeniable proof of her severe malnutrition. I reached out and touched the mattress. The edge of the bedsheet was torn, marked with deep, frantic scratch marks. She had fought them. She had been terrified, and she had fought whoever took her.
My knees gave out. I stumbled backward, my spine hitting the cold tiled wall with a heavy thud. My cane clattered to the floor.
A duty nurse rushed into the room, her eyes wide. "Sir! You can't be in here! Who are you?"
I lunged forward and grabbed her arm. My fingers dug into her flesh like iron claws.
"Where is she?" I demanded, my eyes wide and bloodshot, my breath ragged. "Where is my granddaughter?!"
The nurse cried out in pain, trying to pull away from my grip. Tears sprang to her eyes.
"Let go of me!" she screamed. "The poor girl was taken by the CPS van ten minutes ago! And thank God they did! She was screaming that she would rather die than go back to your hellhole!"
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7.7
Not only was I drugged, blinded and assaulted. I was deceived into carrying a baby by a stranger I never knew. Then he appeared and took my child away.
I was sent to a militia by the father of my child. I thought I was rescued but I was recruited to be a weapon for killing. Who was manipulating me, I didn't know. The answers were far from what I knew.
Forced to blend into the world that I could never believe I would be to, a place where brutality reigned, kill or be killed was the only language. I have survived but he has to pay for everything he did to me, because I believed every phase of my life was set by him and him alone. Have I really survived?
Who would have thought, he existed twice in the same world? Do I really know who I should take revenge on? Him or the person I would sacrifice everything for?
Was my mother the one who orchestrated everything? What kind of pawn am I?

8.2
I went to a private clinic for a routine physical, only to find out I was pregnant.
It was impossible. I took my birth control every single day. But when the doctor tested my pills, they turned out to be high-purity vitamin placebos. My billionaire husband, Denton, had been systematically replacing my medication.
Yet, on our anniversary, he brought my sister Beverly home, demanding a divorce so he could marry her. When I refused to sign a settlement that left me with nothing, he froze my accounts and blacklisted me across New York.
My own father disowned me. When an old friend offered me a job just so I could afford prenatal care, Denton launched a ruthless financial attack to bankrupt his firm.
Then, Beverly got into a car crash. Denton's bodyguards dragged me off the street and forced me into a hospital trauma room. Beverly was hemorrhaging, and I was the only blood match.
I cried and begged Denton to stop, desperately trying to protect my fragile pregnancy without exposing my baby to the monster who controlled my life.
"Please, my body can't handle this. Don't do this to me!"
But he just looked at me with pure disgust and ordered his men to strap me to the chair, forcing the needle into my vein while threatening to kill me if his mistress died.
As I dragged my bleeding, cramping body out of the hospital into the freezing snow, my last shred of hope died.
I touched my stomach and made a vow: I would disappear, and I would make them all pay.

9.0
Colette stepped out of the federal prison, finally breathing the air of freedom after two agonizing years.
But instead of a bus home, a black armored SUV blocked her path. Ferris Vance's men kidnapped her right at the gates. He forced her to sign a marriage certificate, threatening to completely destroy her father's legacy if she refused.
The nightmare had only just begun. She soon learned her father had been driven to suicide anyway. Dragged into the Vance estate, Colette was beaten bloody by the family of Ellie, the girl she supposedly wronged. Ferris paraded her in a pure white gown for the cameras, playing the fiercely devoted husband. But the second the lenses turned away, he forced her into a coarse maid's uniform, making her scrub the freezing marble floors on her hands and knees.
"Your life isn't even worth the dirt on my shoes."
Ferris whispered those words as he threw his muddy boots at her bruised face. She was nothing but a piece of bleeding bait, a prop meant to lure his missing lover out of hiding. She was tortured and humiliated for a crime she had absolutely nothing to do with. The sheer injustice of paying the price for another woman's disappearance tore her soul apart.
When he cornered her in the bathroom, the last thread of Colette's sanity snapped. She hurled a bucket of filthy water right into his face, broke out of his grip, and threw herself out a window into a freezing storm. This time, she chose to escape, even if it meant death.

7.2
Blaire woke up in a Manhattan penthouse, her body covered in bruises and her innocence stolen.
Before she could process the terror, her adoptive sister Danita burst in, acting heartbroken and accusing Blaire of shamelessly seducing the powerful Kamryn Lane. Kamryn threw a one-million-dollar check at Blaire's bleeding face, calling her a calculating gold digger.
That night, Blaire overheard a conversation in the family study that shattered her entire reality.
"Once she gives birth to the Lane family's seed, we'll stage an accident, drain her blood, and transplant her healthy heart into your chest."
Her adoptive mother and Danita were celebrating the success of their trap. She wasn't an adopted daughter; she was a living organ bank and a disposable surrogate. Even her adoptive brother, Calhoun, knew everything, trapping her in the dark hallways with a sick, possessive obsession to ensure she never escaped.
The horrific truth suffocated her. The family that had taken her in had raised her like livestock for slaughter. How could they smile at her every day while planning to carve out her heart?
Terrified but burning with a desperate will to survive, Blaire swallowed a Plan B pill to ruin their surrogate plot and fled the estate. To get the money and power she needed to crush her adoptive family, she pulled out Kamryn Lane's business card. This time, she would make a deal with the devil.

9.2
He married her to control her.
To break her.
To own her.
Seraphina let him believe it.
She plays the quiet wife-
soft voice, lowered eyes, perfect obedience.
But behind every smile...
is a plan he was never meant to survive.
Because this marriage was never about love.
Not even power.
It was revenge.
And when Lucien finally uncovers the truth-
when he realizes who she really is...
he won't be fighting to keep her.
He'll be begging to escape her.

8.4
On the night before her wedding, Navia Harrison discovers her fiancé in bed with her step-sister-and worse, the two of them are already planning how to get rid of her after the marriage.
Humiliated and consumed by hatred, Navia exposes their affair during the wedding ceremony itself, destroying both families' reputations in a single move.
Then, she meets him.
Leonel Crawford - the cold and dangerously powerful head of the Crawford family. Untouchable. Ruthless. A man no woman has ever been able to keep close.
He's also her ex-fiancé's uncle.
One impulsive proposal changes everything.
"If you need a wife... marry me instead."
"Honestly... we'd make a pretty good match."