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Unexpected Comeback Of The Discarded Orphan

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 5

Ayla opened her mouth to state her real terms—the terms she had come here specifically to negotiate. Before the words could leave her lips, the sharp, rapid staccato of stiletto heels echoed from the marble hallway outside. Click-click-click-click. Loud. Aggressive. Entitled. Loud, obnoxious arguing bled through the heavy oak doors, a shrill female voice demanding to be let in. Before Morgan could step out to intercept, the double doors were violently shoved open. They crashed against the interior walls with enough force to send a framed painting rattling. Penelope Astor strutted into the room like she owned it. She wore a blood-red designer dress that clung to her like a second skin and carried a limited-edition Hermès Birkin bag that cost more than most people's houses. She was Aron's cousin, and she wore her entitlement like a crown—gleaming, unearned, and utterly unassailable in her own mind. Penelope immediately pinched her nose between two manicured fingers, her face twisting into a theatrical mask of disgust. "God, it smells like a morgue in here. It's unbearable. How can you breathe?" Her cold, calculating eyes swept the room, cataloging everything and dismissing it all in the same glance. Her gaze landed on Ayla. Penelope took in Ayla's damp hair, her plain black turtleneck, the complete absence of any visible designer logos or jewelry. Her upper lip curled into a sneer so pronounced it nearly distorted her face. "Morgan," Penelope snapped, her voice shrill and carrying, "why is there a stray dog in my cousin's room? Did the cleaning staff get lost on their way to the basement?" She marched right up to Ayla, her heels stabbing into the marble floor. She raised her hand, aiming a hard, dismissive shove at Ayla's shoulder to push her out of the way like a piece of furniture. "Move, trash." Ayla's eyes went dead. Completely, utterly dead. She didn't step back. She didn't step aside. As Penelope's hand came down, Ayla shifted her weight a fraction of an inch. Her hand shot out with the speed and precision of a striking viper. She clamped her fingers around Penelope's bony wrist. With a sharp, brutal twist—a move that required almost no effort—Ayla locked the joint and torqued it. A sickening, wet pop echoed through the silent room. Penelope let out a blood-curdling, animal scream that seemed to tear her throat. Her knees buckled instantly under the white-hot, blinding pain, and she dropped to the marble floor like a puppet with its strings cut, her precious Birkin bag spilling its contents across the tiles. Lipstick, compact, a wad of cash, a small baggie of white powder. Ayla released her grip, letting Penelope's arm drop like a piece of garbage. Penelope cradled her mangled wrist against her chest, mascara-streaked tears streaming down her contorted face. She looked up at the bed, her voice cracking. "Aron! Did you see what this bitch just did to me?! She broke my wrist! Call security! Call the police!" The temperature in the room plummeted to freezing. Aron wasn't looking at Penelope. His face had transformed into a mask of pure, terrifying rage—the kind of cold, controlled fury that preceded executions. The veins in his neck throbbed visibly. He turned his head slowly to look at Morgan. "What the hell is security doing?" Aron's voice was a lethal whisper, soft and deadly as a blade sliding between ribs. "Why is this garbage in my room?" Penelope froze on the floor, her theatrical crying instantly cutting off mid-sob. She stared up at Aron in utter, stunned disbelief, her mouth hanging open. "Throw her out," Aron commanded, not sparing his cousin a single glance. "Revoke her access to the estate. Effective immediately. If she ever steps foot on my property again..." He paused, his voice dropping even lower. "Break her other arm. And the legs." "Aron! I'm your family!" Penelope shrieked, her face going pale as a corpse. "Your blood! Your own flesh and blood!" Morgan didn't hesitate for a heartbeat. He grabbed Penelope by the back of her expensive designer dress, hauling her up off the floor like a ragdoll. She kicked and flailed, her one good arm swinging uselessly, but Morgan's grip was iron. He dragged her kicking and screaming out of the room, her curses echoing down the marble hallway. The heavy doors slammed shut with a booming finality, cutting off her hysterical, unhinged cries. Aron turned his head back to Ayla. The murderous, freezing rage in his eyes vanished in an instant—replaced by a calm, almost gentle warmth that was somehow more unnerving than the fury. His face smoothed, the storm passing as quickly as it had come. "I apologize for the interruption," Aron said smoothly, his voice now a low, intimate rumble. "My family can be... exhausting. You were saying?" Ayla watched him for a long second, reassessing. She liked how he handled things. Brutal. Efficient. No hesitation. No mercy for anyone who crossed him, blood or not. She stepped closer to the bed, her boots silent on the marble. "I want Compound X-7," Ayla said. Aron's fingers—which had been tapping a slow, idle rhythm on the bedsheets—stopped dead. His eyes narrowed a fraction, the warmth in them cooling into something more calculating. Compound X-7 was a highly classified, military-grade biological agent developed in one of his most secret underground labs. It wasn't something money could buy. It wasn't something that existed on any public or private registry. It wasn't something anyone outside his absolute inner circle should even know about, let alone ask for by name. Silence stretched between them, taut as a wire. Aron was calculating the risk, weighing the danger of this mysterious girl against the miracle she had just performed on his dying body. A slow, dangerous smile spread across Aron's face—the smile of a predator who had just found prey worthy of his attention. "If you get me out of this chair," Aron said, his voice thick with promise and dark intent, "I won't just give you the compound. I'll give you the whole damn lab. The research. The scientists. Everything." Ayla's lips twitched upward at the corner—a rare, genuine, almost predatory smirk. She raised her hand. Aron met it. Their palms slapped together in a firm grip, sealing the contract in flesh and blood. Ayla picked up her case, turned on her heel, and walked out the door without another word. The king of New York stared at her retreating back, his dark eyes burning with something far beyond gratitude. She pulled out her encrypted phone as she walked down the silent, guarded hallway, her boots echoing on the marble. She dialed a familiar number from memory. The line connected on the second ring. "Clotilde," Ayla said softly into the receiver. "Pack your bags. We're going back to Nevada." Her eyes were hard, focused, burning with old fire. "It's time to settle the old debts and finish what they started."