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The Phantom Heiress: His Secret Obsession

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 2

Corrie pushed open the heavy wooden door at the end of the second-floor hallway. The hinges groaned, a harsh, metallic scraping sound that set her teeth on edge. She stepped inside. The air in the room was stagnant. It hit her face like a damp towel, carrying the unmistakable, sour stench of old mildew desperately masked by a cheap, synthetic pine air freshener. She dropped her canvas bag onto the floor. It landed with a heavy thud. Corrie turned her head, slowly taking in the space. The room was suffocatingly small, a stark contrast to the sprawling, cavernous hallways outside. The wallpaper was peeling at the corners. The bed in the center of the room was stripped of the estate's standard Egyptian cotton. Instead, it was dressed in faded, pilled polyester sheets that looked like they had been salvaged from a motel dumpster. The sharp clicking of heels echoed in the hallway. Dean stepped into the doorway, leaning against the frame. She crossed her arms over her silk top, her face arranged into a mask of exaggerated pity. "I am so, so sorry about the mess, Corrie," Dean sighed, pressing a hand to her chest. "We've just had so many guests lately, and the staff hasn't had time to properly air this room out. You'll just have to make do for a little while." Corrie didn't look at her. She walked straight to the single, narrow window at the back of the room. She grabbed the dusty plastic cord and yanked the blinds up. Dust motes exploded into the air, tickling her nose. There was no view of the sprawling manicured lawns. The glass looked directly into a towering, solid brick wall of the adjacent garage, less than three feet away. It blocked out every ounce of natural light. Corrie turned around. She leaned her hip against the windowsill, crossing her arms. She looked at Dean, her eyes tracing the fake concern on the older woman's face. The corner of Corrie's mouth curled into a slow, mocking smirk. "Don't apologize," Corrie said, her voice a low, raspy drawl. "It's perfect. It's actually quieter than the roach-infested motels back in Blue Cloud Creek. I feel right at home." Dean's breath hitched. The muscles in her neck tightened. She had expected tears. She had expected a tantrum, a screaming match she could use to prove to George that his bastard daughter was unhinged. She hadn't expected this terrifying, bulletproof indifference. Dean let out a dry, nervous laugh. She reached up and tucked a strand of hair behind her ear. "Well," Dean stammered, her smile cracking at the edges. "I'll have the maids bring up some fresh sheets tomorrow. Dinner is in twenty minutes. Don't be late." Dean spun on her heel and practically fled down the hallway. The second the door clicked shut, Corrie's relaxed posture vanished. She dropped to one knee beside her canvas bag. She unzipped a hidden, waterproof compartment at the bottom. Her fingers bypassed the stacks of hundred-dollar bills and pulled out a matte-black, rectangular device the size of a lighter. She flipped the switch. A tiny green light blinked to life. Corrie stood up and began a slow, methodical sweep of the room. She moved like a predator, her eyes scanning the baseboards, the air vents, the light fixtures. She swept the device over the cheap wooden nightstand. The device vibrated violently in her palm. The green light flashed a rapid, angry red. Corrie paused. Her breathing slowed to a silent rhythm. She reached out and carefully lifted the heavy ceramic base of the bedside lamp. Stuck to the underside, no bigger than a shirt button, was a black audio transmitter. A cold, dark amusement flared in her chest. She didn't rip it off. She didn't crush it under her boot. She gently set the lamp back down, leaving the bug exactly where it was. If Dean wanted to listen, Corrie was more than happy to feed her a script. Twenty minutes later, Corrie walked down the grand staircase. She had changed into a clean, oversized white button-down shirt, the sleeves rolled up to her elbows. The dining room was a cavern of dark mahogany and glittering crystal chandeliers. The Warren family was already seated at the massive, twenty-foot-long dining table. George sat at the head. Kelly and Brad were glued to his right side. Dean sat to his left. At the very opposite end of the table, miles away from the rest of them, a single place setting was laid out. Corrie walked the length of the room. Her boots made no sound on the thick rug. She pulled out the heavy chair at the far end and sat down. A maid placed a plate in front of her. It was a tiny, intricate portion of seared duck breast drizzled in a dark reduction. Corrie stared at the food. Her eyes were dead, betraying absolutely nothing. George looked down the length of the table at his eldest daughter sitting in isolation. His throat bobbed. A wave of physical nausea, born of deep, rotting guilt, washed over his face. He suddenly slammed his silver fork down onto his porcelain plate. The sharp clatter made Kelly jump. "Davis," George ordered, his voice thick. "Go to my study. Bring me the velvet box from the safe." The entire dining room froze. The air grew so thick and silent that Corrie could hear the faint buzzing of the chandelier bulbs above her. Davis returned a minute later. He carried a small, worn navy-blue velvet box on a silver tray. He walked over and handed it to George. George opened the lid. Resting on a bed of faded white satin was a massive, antique sapphire brooch. The central stone was the size of a robin's egg, surrounded by a halo of flawless, crushed diamonds. It caught the light, throwing fractured blue beams across the table. Dean saw the stone. Her fingers instantly clamped down on the edge of the table. Her knuckles turned white. Her chest heaved as a sickening wave of pure, unadulterated jealousy ripped through her body. Kelly let out a loud, audible gasp. Her hands flew to her mouth. She had begged her father for that exact brooch for her sweet sixteen. He had told her it was locked away forever. George stood up. He walked the length of the table, his footsteps heavy. He stopped beside Corrie and placed the open box right next to her plate. "This belonged to your great-grandmother," George said, his voice trembling. "It is the Warren family heirloom. It belongs to the eldest daughter. It's yours, Corrie. A welcome home gift." Corrie looked down at the sapphire. She had seen better stones cut in the underground markets of Antwerp. She didn't gasp. She didn't smile. "Thanks," Corrie said. Her voice was entirely flat. Kelly couldn't take it anymore. She violently threw her linen napkin onto her plate and shoved her chair back. The wood screeched against the floor. "Are you kidding me?!" Kelly shrieked, her face turning an ugly, mottled red. "You're giving the heirloom to her? She's a dirty hick! She doesn't even know what that is!" George spun around, his face contorting in rage. He slammed his fist onto the table. "Sit down and shut your mouth, Kelly!" George roared, spit flying from his lips. "She is a Warren! She is my firstborn!" Dean shot out of her chair. She grabbed Kelly's arm, her fingernails digging into the girl's skin to silence her. "George, please, your blood pressure," Dean pleaded, forcing a panicked, placating smile. She looked at Corrie, her eyes burning with hatred. "Kelly is just surprised, that's all. It's a very heavy responsibility for Corrie to carry." Corrie didn't look at them. She reached out and picked up the priceless sapphire brooch. She didn't handle it by the edges. She grabbed it in her fist, her fingers smudging the flawless gemstone. Without breaking eye contact with her plate, she unzipped her canvas bag resting on the floor and casually tossed the brooch inside. It landed at the bottom of the bag with a dull, heavy clunk, hitting her spare combat boots. She treated it like a piece of loose change. Kelly let out a strangled sob of pure agony, watching the disrespect. Dean's jaw clenched so hard her teeth audibly ground together. The rest of the dinner was eaten in a suffocating, toxic silence. The second George put his fork down, Corrie stood up. She grabbed her bag, turned, and walked out, leaving the poison to fester at the table. Back in her freezing, north-facing room, Corrie locked the door. She walked over to the bed and sat down heavily. She leaned toward the nightstand, putting her face inches from the lamp base where the bug was hidden. "God, that meat was so bloody," Corrie muttered aloud, pitching her voice to sound whiny and uneducated. "And that blue shiny thing is so heavy. Probably fake glass anyway. I should pawn it for bus fare." Two rooms down, in the master suite, Dean sat on the edge of her bed with a pair of headphones pressed to her ears. Hearing Corrie's words, the tight knot of anxiety in Dean's chest instantly dissolved. She let out a long, cruel exhale of relief. The girl was a complete, utter moron. She was no threat at all. Back in the dark guest room, Corrie's fake whining stopped. Her face went dead silent. She reached to the bottom of her canvas bag and pulled out a slim, deceptively ordinary-looking laptop reinforced with military-grade internal encryption. She flipped the screen open. The harsh, blue light illuminated her cold, calculating eyes. Her fingers hit the keyboard. Lines of complex, encrypted code began to violently cascade down the black screen.

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