
No Longer A Victim, Now I Rise
The fluorescent hum of the DMV was the soundtrack to my boring life, until I tried to replace my lost driver's license.
"Your marital status. It says you're divorced," the clerk said, shattering my five-year marriage to Jackson Parks with a single, flat sentence.
My husband, Jackson, the man who swore he loved me, had secretly divorced me three years ago. Not only that, he had remarried the very next day to Candida Camacho, the woman who had tried to murder me on my wedding day and left me infertile. And they had a two-year-old son, Joey.
I stumbled home, my world a blur, only to find Jackson and Candida in our living room, arguing. "I hate having to pretend for that pathetic woman!" Candida shrieked. Jackson, my husband, pleaded, "I love you. I've always loved you."
The man I sacrificed everything for, who swore to destroy her, was now playing house with my attempted murderer, and I was the fool living in his house, sleeping in his bed, believing his lies.
The pain in my abdomen, a phantom ache from five years ago, flared to life, mirroring the gaping wound in my soul. I would not be his victim anymore.
"Hamilton," I said into the phone, my voice clear and steady. "I need your help. I need you to help me die."
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Chapter 5
Elena POV:
I dragged my torn dress across the wet asphalt and slid into the backseat of the Maybach.
The jagged shards of glass embedded in the fabric sliced into my calves. My muscles screamed as they tore against the movement, sending sharp, electric shocks up my spine.
I bit down hard on my lower lip. The metallic taste of blood flooded my mouth, but I didn't make a sound. Five years in the Parks family had trained me well. Screaming only invited more cruelty. I had learned to swallow my pain until it became a physical weight in my stomach.
Hamilton sat beside me. He picked up a cashmere blanket that smelled of soothing lavender and cedar. He reached out to drape it over me.
I flinched, my shoulders pulling back as my body instinctively pressed against the cold leather door.
Hamilton paused. His eyes softened, but he didn’t push. He simply let the blanket fall gently over my trembling shoulders. The heavy fabric trapped my body heat, but I still felt freezing.
I rolled the window down halfway and looked out at the winding mountain road.
In the distance, the flashing red and blue lights of the ambulances pierced the dark night. The strobing colors burned my retinas.
Paramedics were lifting a bloodied stretcher into the back of the ambulance. Jackson was on it. His chest was barely moving.
I watched him with dead eyes.
When the paramedic moved to slam the ambulance doors shut, Jackson’s hand slipped off the side of the stretcher and dangled in the air. That was the same hand that had pushed me away countless times. The hand that had held Candida while I stood in the shadows.
I pulled my gaze away and stared straight ahead.
Hamilton opened the small refrigerated compartment between the seats. He pulled out a syringe filled with clear liquid. The silver needle caught the dim cabin light, making the air in the car suddenly feel thin.
He unbuttoned the cuff of my torn sleeve and pushed it up. "Painkiller," he said, his voice low and elegant.
He slid the needle into my arm with practiced gentleness.
The cold liquid rushed into my veins. Within seconds, my ragged breathing began to slow. The sharp, stabbing pain in my legs dulled into a heavy throb.
But my hands were still balled into tight fists. My fingernails dug so hard into my palms that they broke the skin. A single drop of cold sweat rolled down my temple.
Hamilton snapped open the center console and pulled out a black velvet box.
The small combination lock clicked sharply in the quiet car. He pushed the open box across the leather armrest toward me.
My fingers trembled as I reached for it.
Inside sat a brand-new European Union passport. The gold crest gleamed under the reading light. I picked it up and opened the thick pages.
The photo was me, but the name printed next to it was *Aria*.
"Do you want one last look?" Hamilton asked softly. The low hum of the Maybach's engine almost masked his heavy sigh.
I looked at the passport, then at the distant ambulance lights. I shook my head once.
I looked down at my left hand. The diamond ring on my ring finger felt like a shackle. Jackson had shoved it onto my finger three years ago, a cold business transaction disguised as a marriage. Now, it just looked ridiculous.
I grabbed the diamond and pulled. It was stuck on my swollen knuckle. I yanked it hard.
The metal scraped a layer of skin off my joint. A bead of dark red blood welled up on my finger, but I didn't care.
I tossed the ring out the open window. It vanished into the tall, wet grass by the cliff edge.
Hamilton snapped his fingers.
The bodyguard in the front passenger seat immediately reached back and handed Hamilton a heavy black remote. A small red light blinked steadily on its surface.
Hamilton placed the remote directly into my palm.
The freezing metal sent a violent shiver down my arms. Hamilton wrapped his large, warm hand over mine, pressing my fingers around the device.
I closed my eyes and took a deep breath.
Behind my eyelids, I saw the exact moment the truck had hit us. I saw Jackson unbuckle his seatbelt and throw his body over Candida to shield her, leaving me exposed to the crushing metal.
My eyes snapped open.
I pressed my thumb down on the red button. The resistance was heavy, requiring real force. I pushed until it gave way with a loud, mechanical click.
A muffled boom echoed from the cliffside behind us.
The shockwave hit a second later, violently rocking the heavy Maybach on its suspension. The night sky lit up in a blinding flash of orange and yellow.
Through the rearview mirror, I watched the sedan registered in my name turn into a massive fireball. Thick, black smoke billowed into the clouds. The flames were hot enough to melt the chassis. They would easily incinerate the blood-soaked clothes I had left in the driver's seat.
The orange glow washed over my pale face. Even through the bulletproof glass, I could feel the faint warmth of the blast.
The corners of my mouth twitched. A cold, relieved smile broke across my face.
Hamilton picked up a crystal glass of warm water and handed it to me. The water sloshed over the rim as my hands shook, but I brought it to my lips and drank the entire glass in one breath.
"Airport, sir?" the bodyguard asked from the front. His eyes met mine in the rearview mirror, wide with a new, distinct fear.
Hamilton nodded.
The Maybach pulled smoothly onto the dark highway. The raging fire grew smaller and smaller behind us until it was swallowed by the night. I pressed the new passport tightly against my chest, feeling my own heartbeat against the thick paper.
The television screen embedded in the seatback flickered on. An automated female AI voice began to read the local traffic report. *"Warning. Major explosion reported on Route 9..."*
Hamilton reached forward and hit the mute button.
I leaned my head back against the soft leather headrest and closed my eyes. Memories of the last five years clawed at the inside of my skull like trapped animals. I forced myself to breathe through my nose, pushing the images away until my mind was entirely blank.
Hamilton shrugged off his suit jacket and draped it over my blanket. The fabric rustled quietly.
This time, I didn't pull away.
Thirty minutes later, the convoy rolled onto the tarmac of a private airfield. The deafening roar of jet engines vibrated in my chest. A sleek Gulfstream jet stood waiting, its stairs already lowered.
The bodyguard opened my door. The smell of jet fuel and cold night wind hit my face.
My legs wobbled as I stepped out, but Hamilton caught my elbow, supporting my weight.
The bright lights lining the boarding stairs made me squint. I didn't look back. I put my foot on the first metal step and climbed.
At the top of the stairs, a flight attendant in a sharp uniform bowed deeply.
"Welcome aboard, Mademoiselle Aria," she said in perfect French.
"Merci," I replied, my own French flawless and smooth.
I stepped into the cabin. The heavy door hissed and sealed shut behind me, completely cutting off the wind, the noise, and my entire past.
The plane immediately began to taxi down the runway.
I sat down on the white leather sofa. Hamilton sat across from me. He picked up two crystal flutes and poured the champagne. The bubbles rushed to the surface in a frantic fizz.
He held his glass out toward me. A slow, genuine smile touched his lips.
"Welcome to your new life, Aria."
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7.5
On the morning of our twenty-fifth wedding anniversary, I found a cream-colored document tucked inside my husband's suit pocket.
It was a twenty-million-dollar asset transfer for his former receptionist, Carmen. But what made my blood run cold was the contingent beneficiary: Leo, my newborn son who the hospital claimed was kidnapped twenty-three years ago.
When I confronted Devonte, he didn't even try to explain. He handed me a fake Cartier watch, canceled all my credit cards, and publicly called me delusional.
The next day, he moved Carmen into our mansion and emptied all our joint accounts into offshore trusts.
"If you don't sign these papers and walk away, I will have you committed," he threatened, his mother nodding in agreement.
They had orchestrated the kidnapping of my baby, hiding him with the mistress while I spent half my life sedated and screaming in grief. Now, to keep his secret, Devonte was going to lock me in a psychiatric ward and bury me in debt.
I didn't understand how the man I loved could be such a monster. Why did he steal my child? What else was hidden in that confidential adoption file?
Pushed to the absolute brink, I refused to be his victim.
When his goons came to my temporary apartment to drag me away, I turned to the rugged union electrician who had just fixed my lights.
"If you need a husband to keep you out of a psych ward, I'll marry you," he said, offering himself as my legal shield.
I took his hand. It was time to tear my husband's perfect life apart.

9.5
On the day she discovers she is pregnant, Amara is handed divorce papers by the man she loved for three years. Betrayed by her husband and her best friend, she walks away with nothing-except the secret growing inside her.
But what Ethan Cole doesn't know is that the woman he abandoned is not weak... and not alone.
When Amara returns as a powerful heiress, no longer the woman he could control, Ethan begins to regret everything. But as secrets unravel and the truth about her pregnancy comes closer to light, one question remains-
When he finally finds out the child is his... will it already be too late?

8.7
My little brother's heart monitor was screaming its final warning. I called my husband, Dante Volkov, the ruthless underworld king whose life I'd saved years ago. He had promised to send his elite medical team.
"I'm handling an emergency," he snapped, then hung up. An hour later, my brother was dead.
I found out what Dante's "emergency" was from his mistress's social media. He had sent his team of world-class surgeons to deliver her cat's kittens. My brother died for a litter of cats.
When Dante finally called, he didn't even apologize. I could hear her voice in the background, asking him to come back to bed. He even forgot my brother was dead, offering to buy him a new toy to replace the one his mistress deliberately crushed.
This was the man who had promised to protect me, to make my high school tormentors pay. Now, he was holding that very tormentor, Seraphina, in his arms. Then came the final blow: a call from the clerk's office revealed our seven-year marriage was a sham. The certificate was a forgery.
I was never his wife. I was just a possession he was tired of. After he left me to die in a car crash for Seraphina, I made one call. I texted a rival mob heir I hadn't spoken to in years: "I need to disappear. I'm calling it in."

7.6
For three years, I played the perfect, docile wife to Brendon Jimenez, desperate for the real family I never had as an orphan.
But during a high-society gala, I peeked through a cracked door and caught him sleeping with my best friend.
When I packed my cheap canvas bag to leave the penthouse, my mother-in-law blocked the door.
She dumped my clothes on the marble floor, called me a stray dog, and slapped me so hard my mouth bled.
Brendon just stood there, watching his mother humiliate me.
To keep me trapped as his perfect public prop, he even faked his mother's heart attack in a VIP hospital suite.
"Get on your knees. Kneel down right now and beg my mother for forgiveness until she decides to accept it."
I gave them my youth and unconditional loyalty, only to realize this prestigious old-money family was nothing but a rotting corpse built on dirty secrets.
I didn't cry, and I certainly didn't drop to my knees.
Instead, I pulled out my phone right in front of him and called my lawyer.
"File for an at-fault divorce. I have proof of his infidelity with Kaelynn Hudson. I want him ruined."
Then, I touched the matte black card hidden deep in my clutch.
It belonged to Kile Barrett, the ruthless billionaire shark my husband feared most, and I was going to use him to tear the Jimenez family apart.

9.0
For a whole year, April believed her billionaire husband, Bartholomew, abandoned her in Europe the day after their arranged wedding. She hated him so much she drunkenly prayed for his death at a club.
But he suddenly returned that very night, catching her red-handed. Instead of a divorce, he trapped her, threatening to bankrupt her bloodsucking family unless she moved into his penthouse to play the devoted wife.
Forced to comply, she attended a dinner with her toxic family. Her stepmother deliberately served her lobster—knowing April had a fatal allergy.
"Eat up, darling. I know hospital food is dreadful."
When April refused and exposed their massive gambling debts, her furious father raised his hand to strike her across the face.
But it was Bartholomew, the ruthless tyrant she despised, who caught her father's arm and snapped his wrist.
"If you ever try to touch my wife again, I will erase your family by sunrise."
April was completely stunned. Why was he defending her with such murderous rage? And why did he keep a cheap paper airplane she had made at age six preserved under a glass dome in his study?
The answer came that night. When Bartholomew stepped out of the shower, April saw the massive, jagged surgical scar sliced directly over his heart. He hadn't run away; he had been fighting for his life on an operating table. Staring at the man who had silently survived just to come back to her, April made her choice. She was going to uncover the truth behind his surgery and their past.

7.8
For five years, I was the flawless wife to the heir of the De Luca empire, securing billion-dollar acquisitions to prove my worth.
But my husband, Alessandro, still paraded his mistress in our home, publicly humiliating me as a "cold spreadsheet" while she sneered in triumph.
It didn't stop at infidelity. When I dared to cut off her credit cards, Alessandro decided to teach me a lesson.
He allowed his mistress to secretly file down the metal clasp on my horse's saddle right before a massive public equestrian event.
My leg was completely shattered in a horrific, agonizing fall in front of hundreds of elite guests.
While I lay bleeding in the dirt, my husband didn't even glance my way. Instead, he rushed to hold his mistress, shielding her eyes from the gruesome sight.
Later, pretending to be unconscious in the infirmary, I overheard him ordering his guards.
"Get rid of the saddle. It was just a lesson to remind her who's in charge."
He didn't just want me humiliated; he wanted me crippled and broken.
As the sterile smell of the hospital hit me, a horrifying realization set in—I was two weeks late. I was pregnant with his child.
The thought of my baby growing up in this ruthless, toxic family made my blood run cold, and the last spark of my love turned into absolute hatred.
The obedient wife died on that dirt track.
I quietly contacted his family's biggest rival and activated my secret scorched-earth protocol. It was time to burn his empire to the ground.