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I was ambushed in a Brooklyn alley, bleeding and running for my life. I called my husband, Attilio Shepard-the one man who had promised to protect me. He never picked up. I later found out that while I was being hunted, his private jet was landing in New York. He was flying home from Paris with Candace, the woman he'd always truly loved. The police arrested the man who attacked me, but my husband's lawyers had him out by morning. It turned out my attacker was Candace's brother, and Attilio was protecting her from the scandal. I even overheard him on the phone. "Find out who the victim is," he told his assistant. "Offer them whatever it takes. Cash. An NDA. Just make it go away." He never bothered to ask who the victim was. He was ordering my silence, my forgiveness, my complete erasure-paid for with the power I gave him when I took his name. I was just a problem to be solved with money. So when his lawyers brought me a check for five million dollars, I took it. This wasn't surrender. It was funding. That night, I walked into my attacker's penthouse party, ready to burn their world to the ground.
The rain in Brooklyn tasted like rust and exhaust.
Abigail Hartman pressed her palm against the gash on her forehead, blood mixing with rainwater and running down her wrist in thin pink rivers. Her ribs screamed with every breath. She stumbled into the mouth of the alley, her Chanel flats slipping on the slick concrete.
Behind her, boots splashed through puddles.
Three men. Maybe four. She didn't turn to count.
Her heart slammed against her sternum so hard she could taste copper at the back of her throat. The alley narrowed ahead, brick walls pressing close, fire escapes tangled overhead like metal vines. No exit. Only shadows and the stench of rotting garbage from the industrial dumpsters lining the right wall.
She fumbled for her phone.
The screen was a spiderweb of cracks, but it lit up when she pressed the power button. The cold blue glow painted her shaking hands. She hunched over it, trying to shield the light, but a whistle cut through the rain behind her.
"Pretty little thing," a voice called. "Dropped something?"
Abigail's stomach dropped through her knees. She shoved the phone into her coat pocket and ran.
The pain in her ribs was white-hot now, probably cracked, definitely bruised. She'd taken the first hit when they cornered her outside the warehouse, before she'd screamed and clawed and run. The second hit had caught her forehead against the brick wall. She couldn't remember the third.
She found a gap between two dumpsters and squeezed through. The stench of rotting food and chemical waste made her gag. She pressed her back against the cold metal and pulled out the phone again.
Her thumb hovered over the screen. Rainwater dripped from her hair onto the glass, distorting the app icons.
She opened the phone app. Scrolled to the top of her favorites.
Attilio.
Her husband.
The man who had signed the papers that made her Abigail Shepard on paper, even if he never called her that out loud.
She pressed the call button and held her breath.
One ring.
Two.
Three.
The footsteps stopped at the mouth of her hiding spot. She could hear them breathing, scanning the darkness.
Four rings.
Five.
"Come out, come out," the voice sang. A boot kicked a loose can, sending it clattering against the brick.
Six rings.
Seven.
The line clicked. Abigail's heart surged.
"You've reached Attilio Shepard. Leave a message."
The voicemail greeting was crisp, professional, recorded in a studio somewhere. It didn't sound like him. Nothing about him sounded like him anymore.
The phone slipped in her wet grip. She caught it against her chest and squeezed her eyes shut. A tear escaped, hot against her freezing cheek, indistinguishable from the rain.
The dumpster to her left shuddered.
A baseball bat crashed against the metal shell, the sound exploding through the alley like a gunshot. Abigail's body jerked, her free hand flying to her mouth to trap the scream. Her teeth sank into her knuckles. The taste of blood and rainwater filled her mouth.
"Think she's in there?" one of them asked.
"Check the other side."
She had seconds. Maybe less.
Her thumb moved on autopilot, scrolling through her contacts. Not 911. The police would take too long. The questions would take longer. She couldn't be Abigail Shepard in a police report. Not tonight. Not ever.
She found the name. Pressed call.
It rang once.
"Abby?" Phineas Cole's voice cut through the line, background noise of the newsroom behind him. "It's almost midnight, what-"
"Shut up and listen." Her voice came out as a whisper, barely audible over the rain. She pressed harder against the dumpster, feeling the rust flake against her coat. "Brooklyn. Navy Yard. Corner of Flushing and North Portland. Three men. Armed."
"Jesus Christ." Phineas's chair scraped. She heard him moving, shouting something at someone in the office. "Are you hurt? Where are you exactly?"
"Alley. Behind the textile warehouse." She heard boots approaching her side of the dumpster. "Hurry."
"Three minutes. I'm calling it in right now. Stay on the line, Abby. Don't hang up."
She couldn't answer. The boots stopped inches from her hiding spot. She could see the toe of a steel-toed work boot, black with yellow laces, resting in a puddle that reflected the distant streetlight.
Her fingers found a piece of broken glass on the ground beside her. Jagged, thick, probably from a beer bottle. She gripped it until she felt the edge bite into her palm.
The boot shifted.
Then stopped.
In the distance, a siren wailed. Red and blue lights swept across the alley mouth, painting the wet brick in carnival colors.
"Shit," the voice muttered. "Cops."
"Let's move."
The boots retreated, splashing faster now, fading toward the far end of the alley. A metal gate clanged. Then silence, except for the rain and her own ragged breathing.
Abigail's hand loosened on the glass. It fell to the ground with a delicate chime, harmless now. Her legs gave out. She slid down the dumpster until she was sitting in the filthy water, her back against the metal, her head tipped back to catch the rain.
"Abby?" Phineas's voice was distant, tinny. She'd dropped the phone. "Abby, talk to me. The patrol car is two blocks out. Abby!"
She fumbled for it, her fingers numb. "Here."
"Thank God. Are they gone? Are you safe?"
"Yes." The word felt foreign in her mouth. She wasn't sure what it meant anymore.
"I'm getting in my car now. I'm twenty minutes out. Don't move. I'm coming to get you."
Abigail closed her eyes. The rain was slowing, or maybe she was just losing feeling. "Okay."
A pause. The newsroom noise faded as Phineas moved somewhere quieter. "Abby. Why didn't you call him?"
She knew who he meant. Everyone always meant the same him.
"He's busy," she said. The excuse came out automatic, polished from years of use. "International merger. Frankfurt. Video conferences all night."
"Abby." Phineas's voice changed, something heavy in it. She heard keyboard keys clicking. "I have a source at the FAA. Private flight records. Public data, if you know where to look."
Her stomach tightened. "What are you talking about?"
"Attilio Shepard's Gulfstream G650 landed at JFK thirty-two minutes ago. Flight origin: Paris-Le Bourget. Passenger manifest: two. Attilio Shepard and Candace Padilla."
The name hit her like the baseball bat would have, square in the chest.
Candace.
The wheelchair. The perfect face. The debt that Attilio had been paying for three years, in installments of Abigail's dignity.
"He's back from Europe," she heard herself say. Her fingers were digging into her palm, nails cutting crescents into the skin. "Probably just got in. Didn't check his phone yet."
"Abby." Phineas's voice was gentle now, which was worse. "The flight departed Paris fourteen hours ago. He's been on the ground for half an hour. He's not in a meeting. He's not in Frankfurt. He's at JFK right now, with her, while you're bleeding in a Brooklyn alley."
The glass on the ground seemed very far away. Abigail stared at it, watching the raindrops hit its jagged edge and scatter.
"Abby? Say something. I'm sending you a link right now. To a gossip site. They have stringers everywhere. Look at it."
She couldn't speak. Her throat had closed around something hard and jagged, bigger than the glass, bigger than the alley. Her phone buzzed with the notification. Her thumb, moving with a will of its own, tapped the link. The page loaded slowly, pixel by pixel, the cracked screen distorting the image.
JFK Airport. The private terminal. Attilio Shepard in his charcoal overcoat, the one she'd bought him two Christmases ago, the one he'd never worn. He was leaning over a wheelchair, his hand on the shoulder of the woman sitting in it. His face was turned toward her, his expression soft in a way Abigail had never seen directed at herself.
Candace Padilla looked up at him, blonde hair perfect, face pale and beautiful, lips curved in a smile of perfect trust.
The timestamp on the photo read 11:47 PM.
Twelve minutes ago.
While Abigail was hiding in garbage, her husband was pushing his ex-girlfriend through a climate-controlled terminal, looking at her like she was something precious.
She bent forward, her free hand pressing against her stomach, and dry-heaved into the filthy water. Nothing came up. She hadn't eaten since breakfast.
"Abby, I'm getting in the car now. Stay where you are. I'm coming."
She straightened slowly. The sirens were closer now, two blocks, maybe one. She could see the patrol car's lights painting the street beyond the alley mouth.
"I don't need a hospital."
"Abby, you sound like you're dying."
"I'm not." She pushed herself up, using the dumpster for support. Her ribs howled. She ignored them. "I'm going home."
"Let the cops take you. At least let them-"
"No police." Her voice sharpened, cutting through the fog. "No reports. No names. You know why."
Phineas was silent. He did know. Everyone who knew Abigail Hartman knew that she disappeared three years ago and became someone else, someone whose name couldn't be attached to violence or scandal or Brooklyn alleys at midnight.
"Then let me drive you," he said. "Twenty minutes. Stay in the alley. I'll bring a first aid kit. I'll-"
"I'll meet you at the apartment." She was already moving, limping toward the street, away from the patrol car's lights. "Don't follow me. Don't call anyone."
"Abby-"
She ended the call.
The patrol car passed the alley mouth, slow, searching. Abigail pressed herself into the shadow of a fire escape until it moved on. Then she stepped onto the sidewalk and walked.
Two blocks to the all-night bodega on Flushing Avenue. She kept her head down, her damaged phone clutched in her pocket, her coat collar pulled high to hide the blood on her neck. Every step sent fresh lightning through her ribs. She counted them. Seventy-three steps to the corner. Forty more to the door.
The bodega's fluorescent lights hit her like a physical blow. The kid behind the counter looked up from his phone, eyes widening.
"Bathroom?" she asked.
He pointed, wordless, to the back corner.
She walked past the shelves of chips and tampons and overpriced Tylenol, past the lottery tickets and the cigarettes locked behind glass. The bathroom door had no lock. She wedged a trash can under the handle and turned to the mirror.
The woman looking back at her was a stranger.
Her forehead had swollen into a purple mountain, split at the peak where the blood still seeped. Her lower lip was split, crusted with dried blood. Her left eye was beginning to close, the skin around it tightening with impending bruise. Rainwater and alley filth had matted her hair to her skull.
She looked like what she was. A woman who had been used and discarded and then hunted for sport.
Abigail turned on the cold water. She cupped her hands and splashed her face, again and again, until the water ran pink and then clear. She scrubbed at her skin with brown paper towels, rubbing until her cheeks burned, as if she could erase the night by force.
Her phone buzzed in her pocket.
She pulled it out, expecting Phineas, expecting more concern she didn't want.
It was him. Attilio. A single text message.
Landed. Frankfurt was a success. Going into meetings. Don't wait up.
The lie was so bald, so effortless, it stole the air from her lungs. He was at JFK. With her. And he was texting his wife a pre-packaged excuse from a playbook she now realized had been in use for years.
She looked at the message for a long time. Long enough for the screen to dim and then brighten again when she touched it.
Then she pressed the power button. Held it down. Swiped to confirm power off.
She dropped the phone into the bathroom trash can, on top of the bloody paper towels and the empty tampon boxes.
It made a soft sound, plastic against plastic.
Abigail straightened her coat. She ran her fingers through her wet hair, arranging it to cover the worst of the damage. She didn't look in the mirror again.
She walked out of the bathroom, past the counter where the kid still stared, out into the rain that had slowed to a drizzle.
She didn't know where she was going. Not home. Not yet. Home was a penthouse on the Upper East Side with a view of Central Park and a bed that was always cold on one side.
Home was where Attilio Shepard would eventually return, smelling of Candace's perfume, and ask why she wasn't asleep.
Abigail walked north, toward Manhattan, toward the bridge, toward whatever came next.
Her hands were steady. Her face was empty.
She did not look back.
---
His Betrayal Funded My Revenge
Canal
Billionaires
Chapter 1
Today at 16:51
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
Today at 16:51
Chapter 10
Today at 16:51