
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 8
Carly Tillman sat at her ornate white vanity mirror in her massive bedroom, the soft glow of the lights framing her face like a portrait. She was applying a fresh coat of expensive lip gloss, her lips pressing together with practiced precision.
Her phone buzzed on the marble tabletop.
She picked it up, expecting a message from one of her sycophantic friends. It was an email from the private investigator her mother had secretly hired.
Carly opened the attachment with idle curiosity.
Her eyes went wide. Then wider. Her perfectly glossed lips parted in shock.
There were photos—crystal clear, professionally shot—of Ayla stepping out of a bulletproof black SUV at the Obsidian Estate. The Obsidian Estate. The fortress of the Lawrence Group. There were photos of Ayla confronting their mother in front of a Maybach, Eleanor's face pale with terror. There were photos of Ayla walking into St. Jude's like she owned the place.
Carly's grip on the phone tightened until her knuckles turned stark white against her manicured fingers.
Jealousy—hot, acidic, corrosive—burned up her throat and flooded her mouth.
"Obsidian Estate?" Carly hissed to her reflection, her voice low and venomous. "How the hell did that gutter rat get into the Obsidian Estate?"
There was no way Ayla had the connections or the money. In Carly's shallow, transactional mind, there was only one logical explanation. Only one way a poor orphan girl got access to that kind of power.
With a vicious, guttural snarl, Carly swept her arm across the vanity. Bottles of expensive perfume and pots of designer makeup crashed to the hardwood floor, shattering into jagged, glittering pieces. A cloud of powder rose into the air.
She grabbed her phone, her thumbs flying across the screen with vicious speed.
She uploaded the photos of Ayla getting out of the luxury SUV to an anonymous burner account—one she kept for exactly this kind of dirty work.
Look at the new trash in Class 15, she typed, her words dripping with poison. Selling her body to old men to pay for her tuition. Disgusting. This is who St. Jude's is letting in now.
She hit send, blasting the post to the St. Jude's school forum and every major gossip group chat. The message spread like wildfire, notifications pinging across dozens of phones within seconds.
At that exact moment, miles away in the dark, imposing study of the Obsidian Estate, Aron Lawrence sat behind a massive oak desk. The storm had passed, leaving the night sky clear and cold. He was still in his wheelchair, but his posture was stronger, his color better. The blue vial had done its work.
Morgan knocked twice and entered without waiting for a response. He carried a thick manila folder stamped with red classified markings. He placed it on the desk with heavy deliberation.
"Full background check on Ayla Haley, boss," Morgan said, his brow deeply furrowed. "It's... not what I expected."
Aron opened the folder. He pulled out the thick stack of papers and began to read, his dark eyes moving slowly down each page.
The file was pathetic. Laughably, insultingly pathetic. It showed a childhood in a crumbling, underfunded Nevada orphanage. It showed terrible grades—Ds and Fs across the board. Multiple truancy records. A brief stint working the deep fryer at a fast-food joint. And a juvenile detention record for a violent assault at age fifteen.
Every page had official police stamps. Every signature was perfectly legible. Every document was properly notarized.
"Her background is garbage, boss," Morgan said, shaking his head slowly. "She's a street rat. A nobody. Whatever skills she has, she must have picked them up somewhere off the grid. Maybe she got lucky with your diagnosis."
Aron didn't speak for a long moment. He stared at the juvenile detention record, his dark eyes unreadable. His long, calloused finger began to tap a slow, rhythmic beat against the polished wood of the desk.
Tap. Tap. Tap.
"Morgan," Aron's voice was low, vibrating with dark amusement. "How does a girl who flips burgers in Nevada—a girl who never finished high school, who has no formal education, no training, no credentials—know the exact chemical breakdown of a mutated deep-sea neurotoxin that doesn't exist on any public database?"
Morgan froze. The color drained slowly from his face as the inescapable logic hit him square in the chest.
Aron picked up the file and tossed it dismissively back onto the desk. The papers scattered.
"This file is a ghost," Aron said, his eyes gleaming with dangerous, predatory fascination. "It's too perfect. Too clean. Every stamp is flawless. Every signature is perfectly legible. Every gap is neatly filled. Someone built this identity from scratch—someone with serious resources and serious skill—specifically to hide a monster underneath."
Whoever forged this had access to government mainframes. Federal databases. The kind of clearance that couldn't be bought with money alone.
"Call off the investigation," Aron ordered, his voice dropping to a tone that brooked no argument. "If we keep digging, we'll trip whatever alarms she's set. I don't want to spook her." He leaned back in his wheelchair, steepling his fingers. "I'll handle her myself."
Back in the crowded, hostile hallways of St. Jude's, Ayla and Clotilde were walking toward their lockers.
The atmosphere had shifted dramatically since that morning. Students were no longer just staring and whispering; they were openly pointing, laughing, sneering. Phones were angled in their direction, cameras recording.
"Fifty bucks says the guy in the SUV is over sixty," a cheerleader snickered to her friend as they strutted past, loud enough for Ayla to hear. "Probably has a wife and three kids. Desperate much?"
Clotilde stopped walking. She pulled out her phone, her fingers shaking as she opened the school forum. Her face went from curious to livid in three seconds.
"Ayla! Look at this!" Clotilde's voice was a furious hiss. "They're saying you're a sugar baby! They're saying you're sleeping with old men for money! There are pictures of you getting out of some fancy car! I'm going to find whoever posted this and rip their throat out!"
Ayla leaned over and glanced at the screen. She saw the photo of herself at the Obsidian Estate—slightly grainy, but unmistakable. She read the captions, the vile comments, the laughing emojis.
Instead of anger, a slow, dark, genuinely amused smirk spread across Ayla's lips.
Her stomach didn't tighten. Her pulse didn't race. Her hands didn't shake. She just felt a profound, almost pitying sense of bemusement for whoever was stupid enough to declare digital war on her. They had no idea what they had just unleashed.
"Let them talk," Ayla said, her voice terrifyingly calm. "Words are wind. And wind can't hurt us."
She put her hand on Clotilde's shoulder and steered her down the hall. But her eyes—cold and calculating—were already scanning the crowd, cataloging faces, filing away information.
The game had begun.