Five years ago, Avery Knox was framed for manslaughter, betrayed by her powerful family, and disowned. Now, she was a lethal black-ops commander known as "Wraith," operating deep in the shadows. Her cold, disciplined world shattered when her emergency sat-phone rang for the first time in five years. Her ten-year-old brother, Ethan, had been kidnapped by a ruthless trafficking syndicate. Avery hijacked a military transport, slaughtered the traffickers in the jungle, and brought her terrified brother back to their hometown. But the nightmare hadn't ended. The moment she stepped into her childhood home, she found her cousin Jared-the very man who had helped send her to prison-pinning her mother to the couch, tearing at her clothes. He was trying to force her mother to sign away the remains of their family company. When Jared saw Avery, he wasn't afraid. "You're a convicted felon. Who the hell let you back here?" He threatened to tell the police she had kidnapped Ethan, and then lunged forward, trying to snap the little boy's neck right in front of her. Avery looked at the cousin who had traded her freedom for his reputation. She had spent five years surviving in hell, losing everything, while they lived in luxury. How could their greed and cruelty still know no bounds? The last shred of the helpless girl they once knew died completely. Avery stepped forward and methodically shattered Jared's wrists and kneecaps, listening to his agonizing screams. Then, she pulled out her encrypted phone and sent a single message to her strike team. She wasn't just going to protect her family; she was going to wipe the entire Knox empire off the map.
"Phoenix One, package is secure. Begin extraction."
Avery Knox's voice was a flat, calm line in the tense quiet of the submarine's command center. On the main screen, thermal imaging showed her team moving with practiced efficiency, their objective complete. The air hummed with the low thrum of the Virginia-class sub, a constant, deep vibration that was the only sound besides her clipped commands.
The space was a cocoon of blue-gray light and flickering data streams, sealed off from the world hundreds of feet beneath the North Pacific. A subordinate, a young ensign with nervous energy, placed a mug of black coffee beside her console.
She took it without looking up, her gaze fixed on the tactical map where friendly icons were already moving toward the extraction point. Her focus was absolute, a wall of ice built over years of discipline.
Then, a sound shattered the sterile atmosphere.
It wasn't a military alert or a system warning. It was a ringtone, a simple, jarring melody that had no place in the heart of a classified naval operation.
Every head in the command center snapped toward the source. The sound came from a small, hardened satellite phone on Avery's personal gear rack.
Her emergency line. The family line.
It hadn't rung in five years.
Avery's brow furrowed, a tiny, sharp line appearing between her eyes. The icy calm in her gut fractured, replaced by a sudden, sickening lurch. She gestured to her second-in-command, her movements sharp.
"You have the conn."
She strode to a soundproofed alcove, her boots making no sound on the grated floor. The phone continued its cheerful, terrible ringing. Her hand was steady as she picked it up, but her knuckles were white. The screen glowed with a single name: ETHAN.
Her brother.
She swiped to answer, pressing the phone to her ear. "Ethan?"
The only response was ragged, panicked breathing. A boy's breathing, interspersed with the muffled sound of unfamiliar voices shouting in a language she vaguely recognized as Southeast Asian dialect.
"Avery... help me..."
The voice was a ghost of her brother's, thin and trembling with a terror that clawed its way through the satellite connection and straight into her chest. Her heart, a steady, disciplined muscle, seized. The carefully constructed wall of ice inside her didn't just crack; it exploded.
"Ethan, where are you? What do you see?" she demanded, her voice a low, urgent whisper. She kept her tone even, fighting to project a calm she no longer felt. Panic was contagious, and he needed an anchor.
A muffled thud came through the line, followed by Ethan's sharp cry of pain. Then, nothing. The line went dead.
Silence.
Avery stood frozen for a single, stretched second, the dead phone clutched in her hand. The pressure in her grip was immense, the plastic groaning. The veins on the back of her hand stood out like blue wires.
When she turned back to the command center, the air temperature seemed to drop twenty degrees. The professional detachment in her eyes was gone, replaced by a storm of incandescent rage and a killing cold that made the ensign flinch.
She didn't waste a word. She stalked back to the main console, shouldering her subordinate aside. Her fingers flew across the holographic interface, her movements a blur of lethal purpose.
"Louis," she snapped, her voice devoid of any warmth. "Trace that call's last known signal. I want its location pinpointed to a ten-meter radius. You have five minutes."
Her second-in-command, Louis, a seasoned operator who had seen her through hell in three different continents, stared at her. He had never seen this look on her face. Not once.
He didn't question it. "Yes, Commander!"
Avery shrugged off her commander's jacket, revealing the sleek, black tactical vest beneath. She unclipped a ruggedized datapad from her belt, her thumbs a blur as she sliced through firewalls, hacking into the databases of three different intelligence agencies. Information scrolled past too fast for a normal person to read, but she absorbed it all.
On the main screen, Louis's trace resolved into a blinking red dot.
The Golden Triangle. A derelict plantation deep in lawless territory.
"That's Chimera Syndicate turf," Louis said, his voice grim.
Avery's eyes were chips of flint. "Get me a Ghost Bird. Full fuel, full munitions. Now."
The weapons officer, a lieutenant commander with a by-the-book reputation, hesitated. "Commander, that requires Pentagon-level authorization..."
Avery didn't argue. She slammed a solid tungsten card onto his console. It was stark red, engraved with a single, terrifying symbol. "Use my 'Wraith' authorization. Execute."
The officer's eyes widened at the sight of the key. All color drained from his face. He snapped to attention, his back ramrod straight. "Yes, Ma'am!"
Avery turned back to Louis, her plan already formed. "You handle mission wrap-up. Report to the Pentagon that I'm taking a leave of absence. The reason is 'family emergency'."
She clipped the datapad back to her belt and pulled on a pair of tactical goggles, the dark lenses hiding the inferno in her eyes. Her voice was flat, a promise of violence.
"And tell them if my brother has a single hair out of place, I will wipe the Golden Triangle off the map."
Without another word, she turned and strode towards the submarine's vertical launch bay, where a submersible deployment vehicle was being prepped.
The men in the command center watched her go, a silent, collective shock rippling through them. They had only ever known the Commander-the cold, calculating strategist.
For the first time, they were seeing the woman. And she was far more terrifying.
The Jilted Heiress's Lethal Comeback
Sunian Jinshi
Modern
Chapter 1
17/06/2026
Chapter 2
17/06/2026
Chapter 3
17/06/2026
Chapter 4
17/06/2026
Chapter 5
17/06/2026
Chapter 6
17/06/2026
Chapter 7
17/06/2026
Chapter 8
17/06/2026
Chapter 9
17/06/2026
Chapter 10
17/06/2026