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img img Modern img Broken Pianist, Unbreakable Spirit Returns
Broken Pianist, Unbreakable Spirit Returns

Broken Pianist, Unbreakable Spirit Returns

img Modern
img 10 Chapters
img Gavin
5.0
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About

I was Haylee Velasquez, a real estate heiress and Juilliard pianist, engaged to tech genius Joshua Cunningham. My life was a fairytale written in gold. Days before our wedding, I was kidnapped. The ransom was fifty million dollars. My fiancé refused to pay. Instead, he and my best friend, Giselle, used that exact amount to close a business deal, leaving me to be tortured for fifteen days. I lost our unborn child and the use of my hands forever. When I finally escaped and ran to him, bleeding and terrified, he accused me of being dramatic. "What in God's name are you doing?" he hissed. "Are you trying to ruin everything?" He had me committed to a mental institution for three years, stealing my inheritance and my sanity. Now, I'm out. A viral article celebrating their success just popped up on my phone, with a cruel comment from Giselle meant only for me. They think I'm still the broken girl they locked away. They're about to find out how wrong they are.

Chapter 1

I was Haylee Velasquez, a real estate heiress and Juilliard pianist, engaged to tech genius Joshua Cunningham. My life was a fairytale written in gold.

Days before our wedding, I was kidnapped. The ransom was fifty million dollars. My fiancé refused to pay.

Instead, he and my best friend, Giselle, used that exact amount to close a business deal, leaving me to be tortured for fifteen days. I lost our unborn child and the use of my hands forever.

When I finally escaped and ran to him, bleeding and terrified, he accused me of being dramatic.

"What in God's name are you doing?" he hissed. "Are you trying to ruin everything?"

He had me committed to a mental institution for three years, stealing my inheritance and my sanity.

Now, I'm out. A viral article celebrating their success just popped up on my phone, with a cruel comment from Giselle meant only for me.

They think I'm still the broken girl they locked away.

They're about to find out how wrong they are.

Chapter 1

My therapist always said that healing wasn't linear, but sometimes it felt like a cruelly twisted circle, dragging me back to the exact spot I'd fought so hard to leave behind. Today, that circle was drawn by a digital screen, a glowing rectangle filled with words that promised to shatter the fragile peace I' d built.

I was on my usual bus route, the low hum of the engine a familiar comfort, a rhythmic pulse against the dull throb behind my eyes. Sunlight filtered through the grimy window, painting streaks across the worn seats. I usually spent this time watching the city wake up, a quiet observer in a world that once demanded my full, dazzling participation. Now, I preferred the shadows.

But today, the shadows were interrupted by the insistent buzz of my phone. A notification. Another viral article, probably. The internet was a vast ocean of noise, most of it meaningless. I rarely dove deep, preferring to skim the surface, a detached observer. My life now was simple, quiet. I liked it that way. Most of the trending topics were about celebrities I didn't recognize or political dramas I couldn't care less about. I scrolled past them, my thumb a disinterested blur.

Then I saw it. A familiar name. A name that, even after three years, could still send a jolt of ice through my veins. Giselle Carney.

The headline blared about her latest triumph, a glowing profile painting her as the ultimate female tech mogul, Joshua Cunningham' s right-hand, his indispensable partner. People were gushing in the comments, praising her ambition, her drive, her "rags-to-riches" story. I felt nothing. Just a familiar, dull ache.

But then, a specific comment, one buried deep within a thread, caught my eye. It was from an account with a peculiar username, one I instinctively recognized. Giselle' s personal, less public handle. It was a vicious, calculated strike, aimed directly at me, even if no one else knew it.

"Some people are just born to create drama," it read, nestled under a photo of Giselle and Joshua, both beaming. "Always seeking attention, always playing the victim. So glad that chapter is finally closed. True success is built on stability, not manufactured chaos."

My breath hitched. Manufactured chaos. It was a veiled reference, cruel and cutting. A public shaming in plain sight, a reminder of the story they' d fed the world. My story.

I usually ignored the internet' s endless chatter. The sheer volume of it guaranteed anonymity, offered a shield. But this wasn't just chatter. This was Giselle. And that specific phrase, "manufactured chaos," it was a direct hit. It meant she hadn' t forgotten. And she wanted to make sure I hadn't either.

This wasn't just a fleeting thought or a random insult. It was a deliberate, delayed provocation. Like a predator, she had waited until the perfect moment to deliver her final, crushing blow.

The article itself was already trending, hundreds of thousands of likes and shares. But that comment, her personal one, was quickly rocketing to the top. People were dissecting it, applauding her "honesty," her "strength" in overcoming past "obstacles."

Then I saw the picture she posted with it. A close-up of a hand, her hand, intertwined with Joshua' s, holding a delicate, almost ethereal diamond pendant. It wasn't just any pendant. It was a custom piece, one Joshua had designed. It was my engagement gift from him, meant to be worn on our wedding day. A subtle, yet devastatingly effective, symbol of their shared victory, a flag planted on the ruins of my life.

"Some women," Giselle' s comment continued, "believe their birthright guarantees them everything. They play the victim when their fragile world crumbles. They don't understand that true worth is earned, not inherited. Joshua and I built this empire together, brick by brick. Finally, we can truly enjoy the fruits of our labor, free from the burdens of the past."

"Finally." The word echoed in my mind, a venomous whisper. It screamed of premeditation, of a long-held desire, finally sated. It was a declaration of war, three years too late, or perhaps, perfectly timed.

I slumped back against the bus seat, the movement unconscious. The world outside, the bustling city, blurred into a stream of colors. I wasn't interested in the usual memes or celebrity gossip. This was a direct, personal assault.

The comments section filled with a deluge of opinions.

"So true! Some people just love drama."

"Must be talking about his ex. She was always so... much."

"Good for Giselle! She always seemed like the steady one. Joshua needs stability."

But not all comments were in agreement. Some questioned the veiled cruelty.

"Is this really necessary? So passive-aggressive."

"Why drag up old dirt? What happened to 'rising above'?"

Then, a new wave of comments started to appear, fueled by online sleuths.

"Wait, isn't this Haylee Velasquez they're talking about? The real estate heiress who got kidnapped and then had a public meltdown?"

"Found an old photo! Look at her, compared to Giselle. Giselle always looked so put-together, even back then."

A grainy, pixelated image flashed across my screen, an archived news photo from three years ago. It was me, disheveled, hollow-eyed, my beautiful wedding dress torn and stained. My hair, once meticulously styled, hung in lank strands around my face. My body, once a canvas of health, was a map of bruises and thinness.

I remembered that day. The day I escaped. The day I ran, bleeding and half-naked, into a packed charity event, where Joshua was the guest of honor, giving a keynote speech. Giselle stood beside him, poised and elegant in a sleek, emerald-green gown. She looked like a goddess. I looked like a ghost.

My vision swam.

I saw Joshua' s face, not in the current article, but in that old memory, his eyes narrowing, his lips twisting into a sneer as I stumbled towards him. He hadn't seen a woman who had just endured fifteen days of hell. He had seen a problem. A dramatic, inconvenient problem.

"What in God's name are you doing?" he'd hissed, his voice low, but sharp enough to cut through the hushed murmurs of the horrified crowd. "Are you trying to ruin everything?"

Ruined. That was his only concern. Not my ripped clothes. Not my raw, bleeding skin. Not the terror still clinging to me like a shroud. Just the disruption. The ruin. And I, in my trauma-muddled state, couldn't understand. I had run to him,

my savior, only to be met with accusation.

Giselle, ever the picture of composure, had stepped forward, a sympathetic hand on Joshua's arm, her eyes sweeping over me with a mixture of pity and something colder, something triumphant. She had offered a blanket, a gesture of charity, while her gaze held a silent, brutal message: Look at you. Look at me. I won.

The contrast was stark, cruel, and immortalized in that blurry photo. The elegant, collected COO, Giselle, next to the vibrant tech titan, Joshua. And me, the disheveled, screaming mess, the "drama queen," the "victim" who couldn't handle her own life. That was the narrative they had crafted. That was the story the world bought.

My fingers tightened around the phone, the cold glass pressing into my palm. It wasn't just a memory. It was a wound, reopened, festering.

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