My fiancé, Ethan, drove me to an abandoned warehouse, promising a private, romantic surprise proposal. Instead of a diamond ring, he handed me a spiked glass of champagne. As my knees buckled, my adoptive sister, Seraphina, stepped out of the shadows, linking arms with him. They laughed as they told me I was nothing but a convenient placeholder for their family merger. Ethan had always belonged to her. When I screamed for my brother Julian to save me, Ethan casually confessed he had orchestrated a truck accident to crush Julian to death because he knew too much. Surrounded by their hired thugs, I realized my entire life was a lie, and the only person who truly loved me was dead. In a final act of pure, agonizing hatred, I kicked over a metal drum of gasoline and sparked a lighter. The flames consumed the warehouse. Ethan abandoned Seraphina to save himself, and I dragged her into the inferno with me, burning to ashes together. Until my last breath, I couldn't understand how the family that raised me could be so monstrous. Opening my eyes again, I was back in my bedroom, exactly one week before the deadly surprise. My phone buzzed. It was Hayes Decker, the ruthless Wall Street billionaire whose obsessive marriage proposal I had once laughed off. This time, I answered the call. "Yes, I'll marry you. Come get me right now."
"Are you sure this is the right way, Ethan?" Aria asked, her voice a thin thread against the low hum of the Mercedes' engine. The glittering skyline of Manhattan had dissolved behind them, replaced by the skeletal remains of industrial Brooklyn. Rusted fences and graffiti-scarred brick walls slid past the window, a landscape of decay.
Ethan reached over, his fingers cool as they laced through hers. "Trust me. It's a surprise. Somewhere private, where no one can bother us." His smile was the same one that had convinced her to leave her small Pennsylvania town, the one that promised a future as bright as the diamond he was about to place on her finger. After all, she had completely trusted this man, her soon-to-be fiancé, to lead her into their shared future.
She squeezed his hand, a knot of unease loosening in her stomach. He was right. This was Ethan. She was being silly.
The car finally rolled to a stop before a hulking, derelict warehouse. The windows were dark, like vacant eyes. Ethan came around and opened her door with a flourish, bowing slightly. "Your palace awaits, my lady."
Inside, the air was thick with the smell of dust and damp concrete. A single table stood in the center of the vast, empty space, illuminated by a weak overhead bulb. On it were two champagne flutes, the liquid inside bubbling faintly. It wasn't romantic. It was strange. Eerie.
"To us," Ethan said, handing her a glass. His eyes were intense, almost feverish. "To our future."
Aria forced a smile, the unease returning as a cold prickle on her skin. She clinked her glass against his. "To us." She took a generous sip, eager for the familiar warmth of the alcohol to chase away the chill.
But the taste was wrong. A bitter, chemical tang spread across her tongue. A wave of dizziness washed over her, so sudden and powerful that the room tilted. Her knees buckled.
"Ethan?" she slurred, grabbing the edge of the table for support. Her fingers felt numb, clumsy. "What was in that?"
The warmth in his face vanished, replaced by a chillingly flat, indifferent expression. "Just something to help you relax, Aria."
Panic seized her. To fight the encroaching fog in her mind, she bit down hard on her lower lip. The sharp, coppery taste of her own blood was a grounding shock. Through blurry eyes, she saw a figure emerge from the shadows.
It was Seraphina, her adoptive sister, the one who had always shared her home but never her heart. She was wearing a stunning Carolina Herrera dress-the one Aria had pointed out in a magazine last week, saying it would be perfect for her engagement party. Seraphina glided to Ethan's side, linking her arm through his possessively.
"Having fun, sis?" she asked, her voice dripping with mock sympathy.
From another dark corner, three men shuffled forward. They were rough, their eyes lingering on her in a way that made her stomach clench with a primal fear. The trap was sprung. She saw it all with sickening clarity. The shame was a physical blow, followed by the white-hot agony of betrayal.
"Why?" The word was a ragged whisper. "Ethan, we're getting engaged. You're supposed to be my fiancé."
Seraphina laughed, a high, cruel sound that echoed in the cavernous space. "Oh, you poor, stupid thing. Ethan was never yours. He's always been with me. You were just the convenient, boring little key to the Foster family."
A surge of adrenaline and rage cut through the drug's haze. She tried to lunge forward, to claw that smug look off her sister's face, but her legs were leaden. They gave out from under her, and she collapsed onto the filthy concrete floor.
"Julian!" she screamed, the name tearing from her throat. Her brother. He would save her. He always did.
Seraphina crouched down, her perfectly manicured fingers, painted a blood-red, gripping Aria's chin. The pressure was painful. "Don't bother. Julian isn't coming."
Aria's heart stopped. She saw something in Seraphina's eyes-a triumphant, ugly darkness. It was more than just a lie.
"What did you do to him?" she breathed, her voice trembling.
Ethan sighed, inspecting his fingernails with an air of profound boredom. "He found out some things he wasn't supposed to. About us. So, he had a little... accident. A truck on the bridge. It was very thorough."
The words didn't make sense. An accident. Julian. No. The foundation of her world didn't just crack; it disintegrated into dust. A scream of pure, animalistic pain ripped out of her, raw and broken. "How could you? How could you!"
Seraphina seemed to savor her agony. "He was calling your name until the end, you know. Worried about you. It was almost touching."
The fight drained out of her, replaced by a hollow, bottomless despair. The thugs started to close in, their leering smiles twisting in her vision. One of them reached for her.
With a last, desperate instinct for self-preservation, she threw herself backward, rolling away from his grasping hand. Her back slammed into something hard and cold. A large metal drum. It tipped, and a clear liquid gushed out, soaking into her clothes. The sharp, acrid smell of gasoline filled her nostrils.
Her gaze darted around the floor. And then she saw it. Lying a few feet away, discarded by one of the thugs, was a silver Zippo lighter.
A new thought, cold and clear, pierced through her grief. Revenge.
If she was going to die here, she wouldn't be going alone. This wasn't a proposal. It was a funeral. And she would make sure they were all invited.
Reborn From Ashes: The Obsessive CEO's Claim
Xiaoxiao Yunduoer
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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