For years, I hid my identity as a lethal dark web operative by playing the quiet, submissive charity case of the wealthy Valentine family. On my seventeenth birthday, their spoiled kids set up a cruel trap to dump industrial glue and paint on my head. When I dodged it and they tumbled down the stairs instead, my adoptive parents completely lost their minds. Sterling Valentine slammed emancipation papers onto his heavy oak desk, calling me a dangerous liability and a monster. He kicked me out into a torrential storm with nothing but a canvas backpack, sneering that I would be eating out of dumpsters in a week. "You ungrateful piece of trash! We took you out of the gutter and this is how you repay us!" I looked at the man trying to intimidate me. He thought he was throwing away a helpless orphan, completely unaware he had just released a predator who could dismantle his entire life with a single keystroke. I didn't shed a single tear. I signed the papers, walked out the front door, and stepped directly into a waiting armored SUV. By midnight, I had a new billionaire cover family, hacked a mercenary group for three million dollars, and secured my spot at the city's most elite academy. "Game on."
Amara Salinas sat on the edge of the attic windowsill with her left leg dangling in the humid night air. Her eyes tracked the two security guards patrolling the manicured lawns of the Valentine estate.
Her brain automatically mapped out three distinct tactical routes. She could drop to the oak tree branch below, bypass the camera blind spots, and clear the perimeter wall in exactly nine point four seconds without making a single sound.
A faint creak of floorboards echoed from the hallway.
Amara instantly pulled her gaze from the window. Her spine straightened. The muscles in her thighs and shoulders locked into a defensive coil.
The brass doorknob turned. Cloris Tierney, the estate housekeeper, pushed the door open. Her knuckles were white as she gripped a clear plastic garment bag.
Amara let out a slow breath. Her shoulders dropped. She slid off the windowsill, her sneakers hitting the wooden floor in absolute silence.
Cloris walked over to the narrow cot that served as Amara's bed. She unzipped the garment bag and pulled out a simple, blue cotton dress. The store tags were still hanging from the collar.
"Happy seventeenth birthday, Amara," Cloris whispered. She held out the dress. "I bought it with my wages. I wanted you to have something new."
Amara stared at the cheap fabric. A strange flutter hit the back of her ribs, disrupting her usual cold baseline.
She reached out and took the dress. The cotton was rough against her calloused fingertips. "Thank you," she said, her voice barely above a breath.
The sharp, rapid clicking of stiletto heels pierced the quiet. The sound marched straight down the hall toward the attic.
Brandie Valentine kicked the half-open door. It slammed against the wall. Brandie stood in the doorway, clutching a massive pile of wrinkled, heavy fabric to her chest.
Brandie's eyes darted to the blue cotton dress in Amara's hands. Her lips twisted into a hard sneer.
She marched forward and threw the pile of clothes directly onto Amara's bed. It was a heap of outdated, worn-out haute couture gowns.
"Wear these hand-me-downs to the family dinner tonight," Brandie ordered. "Try to look like you belong in this house for once."
Cloris stepped forward, her hands trembling. "Miss Brandie, it is Amara's birthday today. She was going to wear this new dress."
Brandie snapped her head toward the housekeeper. "Shut your mouth. I will have my father fire you right now if you speak to me again."
Amara took a half-step forward. She slid perfectly into the blind spot between Brandie and Cloris.
She reached out with two fingers and pinched the fabric of the most expensive gown on the bed. She looked at it the way a surgeon looks at medical waste.
Brandie crossed her arms over her chest, a smug smile forming on her face. She waited for the compliance she always expected from the trailer trash her parents took in.
Amara flicked her wrist. The heavy couture gown sailed through the air and landed perfectly inside the plastic trash can in the corner of the room.
Brandie froze. It took two full seconds for her brain to process the action. The blood rushed to her face, turning her cheeks a violent shade of red. She let out a high-pitched shriek.
Brandie raised her right hand high. The air hissed as she swung her palm straight toward Amara's cheek.
Amara did not blink. Her left hand shot out. She caught Brandie's wrist in mid-air. The impact made a dull slapping sound.
Amara shifted her grip. She pressed her thumb directly into the ulnar nerve cluster on the inside of Brandie's wrist. She applied three pounds of pressure.
Brandie let out a blood-curdling scream. Her knees buckled instantly. She collapsed, her kneecaps hitting the floorboards hard.
Amara stood over her. She reached into her pocket with her free hand, pulled out a lollipop, and popped it into her mouth. Her teeth clamped down. The hard candy shattered with a loud crack.
"Do not mistake my silence for weakness," Amara said. Her voice was flat, devoid of any human inflection.
She released her grip. Brandie lost her balance and fell backward onto her hands. She scrambled away, clutching her numb wrist against her chest, her whole body shaking.
"You are going to pay for this!" Brandie choked out, tears spilling down her red face. She scrambled to her feet and ran out the door.
Amara turned her head to look at the terrified housekeeper. She picked up the blue cotton dress, held it against her torso, and forced the corners of her mouth up into a stiff, reassuring curve.
Too Late For Regret: The Lethal Orphan
SHANA GRAY
Modern
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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