
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 3
Aron Lawrence turned his wheelchair to face the door with a slow, deliberate pivot.
His eyes—dark as obsidian, predatory and piercing—locked onto Ayla with an intensity that felt physical. Despite the pale, sickly cast of his skin and the sharp hollows beneath his cheekbones, the raw, undimmed power radiating from him made the air in the room feel thin and difficult to pull into the lungs.
The three private doctors clustered near the monitors stopped arguing mid-sentence. They turned in unison and stared at Ayla, their faces cycling through confusion, disbelief, and then open disdain.
The chief physician—a man in his mid-fifties with graying temples and a face permanently set in a condescending frown—let out a loud, theatrical scoff. He snatched his clipboard off a metal tray.
"Morgan, what is this?" the doctor demanded, his voice dripping with contempt. "Is this some kind of joke? We are fighting for Mr. Lawrence's life, and you bring a teenager in here? A child?" He threw his clipboard onto the tray with a clatter that echoed through the sterile room.
Ayla ignored the noise like it was static. She walked straight past the doctors, her stride unhurried and confident, stopping exactly three feet in front of Aron's wheelchair. Close enough to examine him. Far enough to show respect.
Aron raised a single, long finger from the armrest.
The room fell dead silent. The chief physician snapped his mouth shut so fast his teeth clicked together, his face flushing a dark, humiliated red.
"You are the one Dr. Cromwell sent?" Aron's voice was a low, gravelly rumble that seemed to vibrate in Ayla's chest even from three feet away.
Ayla gave a single, precise nod. She didn't look away from his piercing, searching gaze.
Slowly—deliberately—she lowered her eyes, tracing the line of his powerful body down to his legs, which rested motionless and dead on the polished metal footplates of the wheelchair. His hands lay still on his thighs, fingers slightly curled, the knuckles prominent.
"We've run every scan known to modern medicine," the chief physician couldn't stop himself from interjecting, his voice swollen with condescension. "MRIs, CT scans, spinal taps, full heavy metal panels, even experimental nerve conduction studies. There is no biological cause for the paralysis. The machines show nothing. Absolutely nothing. Whatever Dr. Cromwell told you, girl, this is beyond your—"
"The machines show nothing because you're looking in the wrong place," Ayla said, her voice cracking through his monologue like ice breaking under a heavy boot.
Before anyone could react, before anyone could even process her words, Ayla dropped into a crouch.
She reached out and—with surgical precision—pinched a specific, deeply buried muscle cluster on Aron's left calf, her thumb driving into the nerve bundle with practiced, unerring pressure.
"Hey!" Morgan roared, his hand flying to his holster. The harsh, metallic click of a gun being drawn cut through the room.
Aron raised his hand again, palm flat and commanding.
Morgan froze mid-draw, his gun half-out, his breath ragged.
Ayla pressed her thumb deeper into the nerve bundle, rotating the pressure point.
Aron's jaw tightened. A nearly invisible twitch flickered between his dark eyebrows—the first sign of sensation in his lower body in six months. His nostrils flared.
Ayla released the pressure and stood up in one fluid motion. She peeled off her black leather gloves and tossed them carelessly onto the pristine medical tray, where they landed with a soft thud.
"It's not a disease," Ayla stated, looking directly into Aron's eyes. "It's poison. A very specific, very rare poison."
The room erupted.
"Absurd!" the chief physician shouted, his face going purple. "His blood work is completely clean! We've run toxicology panels six times! There are no toxins in his system! No heavy metals, no organic compounds, no synthetic agents! You're making wild claims with no evidence!"
Ayla let out a cold, humorless laugh that cut through his bluster like a knife. "It's a synthesized neurotoxin derived from a mutated blue-ringed octopus—a variant that doesn't exist in nature. It was engineered specifically to evade detection. It doesn't bind to the blood. It binds to the bone marrow. It incubates there, releasing micro-doses over exactly six months until it fully paralyzes the lower extremities. Then it moves upward. The brain stem is next."
Aron's breath hitched audibly. His pupils dilated so rapidly his eyes looked entirely black.
Exactly six months ago. To the day. He had been ambushed in Eastern Europe—a meeting that was supposed to be secure, a location known only to five people. He had walked away with barely a scratch, or so he thought.
The heavy, guarded suspicion in Aron's eyes evaporated like mist, replaced by a burning, violent spark of desperate hope. It was almost painful to look at.
Ayla unlatched her black leather medical case. She opened it with precise, efficient movements and pulled out a small glass vial filled with a liquid that seemed to glow from within—a bioluminescent, electric blue that pulsed faintly, as if alive.
"This is the counter-agent," Ayla said, holding the vial up so the light caught the swirling blue liquid. "It will strip the toxin from the marrow and temporarily halt the neurological degradation. It won't reverse the damage already done, but it will stop it from getting worse."
Morgan stepped forward, his massive chest blocking the overhead light and casting Ayla in shadow. "No way. Absolutely not. We need to send that to the lab first. We need to run a full chemical breakdown. We need to verify—"
"A chemical breakdown will take three hours minimum," Ayla interrupted, her voice flat and cold. "The toxin reaches his brain stem in two. Less than two hours." She rolled the glass vial idly between her fingers, the blue liquid swirling. "If you want to plan his funeral, go ahead and take it to the lab. I'll wait."
The room went completely, deathly still. The only sound was the frantic, accelerating beep of the heart monitor attached to Aron's chest.
Everyone stared at Aron.
Aron looked at the glowing blue liquid, then up at Ayla's calm, unflinching face. She didn't look away. She didn't blink. She just waited.
He reached out his hand, palm up.
"Boss, you can't be serious!" Morgan yelled, raw panic bleeding into his voice. "We don't know her! We don't know what's in that vial! It could be anything!"
Aron snatched the vial from Ayla's fingers with a sudden, decisive movement.
Without breaking eye contact with her—his dark gaze locked onto hers like a challenge and a promise wrapped together—he popped the cork with his thumb. He tipped his head back, exposing the corded muscles of his throat.
He swallowed the blue liquid in one long gulp.
He closed his eyes, his massive hands gripping the armrests of his wheelchair until the leather creaked in protest. He waited for the impact.
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9.3
Jessie's biological parents brought her back from a Rust Belt wasteland just to force her into marrying a paralyzed heir to save their bankrupt empire.
Three years later, when the global doomsday apocalypse hit, her own family shoved her into a swarm of infected corpses.
As she was being torn apart by mutated hounds, she was stunned by what she saw.
Her fake sister, Harley, was clutching the antique silver necklace she had stolen from Jessie—an heirloom that secretly contained a magical spatial dimension.
When the infected swarmed them, her biological mother didn't even look back.
"Jessie is just white trash, she is perfectly suited to buy us time to run!"
Harley used Jessie's stolen necklace to live in absolute safety and luxury, while Jessie's windpipe was ripped out in the rotting wasteland.
Until she died, Jessie didn't understand. She was their true flesh and blood.
Why did her parents hate her so much? Why was she sacrificed so easily while the fake daughter got everything?
Opening her eyes again, the blinding glare of a crystal chandelier stabbed into her retinas.
She was back in the Manhattan penthouse on the exact day they sold her off.
This time, Jessie calmly signed the marriage contract, demanded a one hundred million dollar buyout, and walked out to prepare for the apocalypse.

8.7
Brought back from a humble life in Montana, Nora found out she was the true biological heiress of the ultra-wealthy Beaumont family.
But her biological parents didn't love her; they loved the fake daughter, Olivia, much more.
The moment she arrived, her father pushed an engagement termination agreement across his massive desk, forcing her to give up her wealthy fiancé so Olivia could have him.
Her mother looked at her with pure disdain.
"You should know your place. Don't reach for things that were never meant for you."
To break her spirit, they moved her into a cramped, dusty servant's room. They even ordered the butler to feed her cold kitchen scraps and gristle.
They wanted to humiliate her, to make her feel like a piece of trash rather than a daughter.
They expected her to cry, to beg, and to be absolutely crushed by the realization that her own flesh and blood saw her only as a liability to their reputation.
They thought the country girl would easily fold under their united front of cruelty.
But Nora felt no sting of betrayal, only the calculating clarity of a chess player.
She calmly signed the paper, pulled out the Beaumont family trust rules, and looked them dead in the eye.
"Since I am the legal heir, I demand what belongs to me. I'm taking the master bedroom."

9.6
Brenda Vincent thought her biggest nightmare was catching her boyfriend cheating with her roommate on her own sofa.
But her life truly derailed after a drunken night led her into the bed of Bryon Reeves, the ruthless billionaire CEO and older brother of the student she tutored.
Trying to pay off the most dangerous man in New York with a crumpled twenty-dollar bill was her first mistake.
Fleeing the hotel, she accidentally rear-ended his custom Maybach. Bryon used the massive repair bill to blackmail her into being his fake date, parading her at a gala just to make his sister-in-law jealous.
When Brenda finally snapped and fled the humiliation, only to be rescued by his biggest corporate rival, Bryon's twisted possessiveness turned completely destructive.
"If you feel kidnapped, call the police. But your teaching license will be permanently revoked."
He didn't just threaten her. He systematically dismantled her life, using his influence to force the university to freeze her tenure and suspend her without pay.
Brenda couldn't understand why this terrifying man was going to such extreme lengths to ruin a simple tutor who just wanted to be left alone.
Now, stripped of her career, her income, and her independence, she was forced into the sprawling Reeves Manor.
Hearing the heavy mahogany door lock from the outside in her signal-jammed bedroom, Brenda's panic slowly morphed into a cold, clinical rage.
She was trapped, but she refused to be his helpless pawn.

9.5
Jennifer, a fiercely independent entrepreneur, never imagined that running her company would put her in the orbit of Joseph, a reclusive billionaire with a dangerous agenda. Their professional clashes ignite a forbidden attraction, drawing them into a passionate affair that threatens to unravel everything Jennifer has built. As corporate sabotage, hidden heirs, and dark secrets from Joseph's past begin to surface, Jennifer's world spirals into a web of betrayal, desire, and moral peril. In a story where power and love collide, nothing is as it seems and every choice could be lethal.

9.2
Lainey spent her last life destroying herself for Larry, only to become the woman he discarded most cruelly. He never loved her, never wanted her, and made no secret that his first love still owned his heart.
On their wedding day, he abandoned Lainey at the altar for that woman, then later used Lainey as nothing more than a stepping stone for his company's rise. In the end, he even had her kidney ripped from her.
Reborn at the very moment everything began, Lainey called off the wedding without hesitation. But after losing her, Larry begged desperately.
Lainey shot him a cold look, then turned and walked straight into the arms of a powerful, aloof man, who stared down at Larry with pure contempt. "She's my wife now."

7.4
Alaya woke up in the sterile hospital room to a devastating reality: her six-month-old baby was gone, lost in a horrific car crash.
But as the memories crashed into her, she realized she had been reborn. She was back three years before her ultimate death, back to the moment she remembered lying bleeding on the asphalt while her husband, Hardy, shielded his mistress from the freezing rain.
When Hardy finally showed up at the ward, he coldly dismissed the crash as a mere accident and immediately left to comfort his young lover. To make matters worse, Alaya secretly checked her medical files and found a terrifying detail: someone had intentionally slipped beta-blockers into her system, a lethal drug for her transplanted heart. And Hardy didn't care about her dead baby or her irreversible infertility. He only coldly confirmed with the doctor that her heart was still viable.
A horrifying suspicion made Alaya's blood run cold. Why was her husband so obsessed with protecting her transplanted heart while treating her like garbage? And why was his perfectly healthy mistress secretly racking up massive bills at an advanced cardiac hospital?
Realizing she was nothing but a vessel in a twisted, deadly game, Alaya didn't shed another tear.
She packed her belongings, left her flawless diamond wedding ring on the cold marble table, and vanished from their penthouse.
When Hardy finally tracked her down, she threw a thick stack of documents onto the table.
"Sign the divorce papers," she said, her eyes completely dead.