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Once The Rejected Bride, Now His Eternal Nightmare
img img Once The Rejected Bride, Now His Eternal Nightmare img Chapter 4 The Night I Should Have Died
4 Chapters
Chapter 6 The Girl Who Vanished img
Chapter 7 Sterling Ventures img
Chapter 8 Across the Table img
Chapter 9 The First Crack img
Chapter 10 Fault Lines img
Chapter 11 The Man Who Looked Away img
Chapter 12 The Name That Doesn't Exist img
Chapter 13 The Marriage That Strengthened the Trap img
Chapter 14 Pressure Without a Face img
Chapter 15 A Crack in the Crown img
Chapter 16 The Questions a Husband Shouldn't Ask img
Chapter 17 The First Cut is Never Fatal img
Chapter 18 A Gift Wrapped in Pride img
Chapter 19 The Man Who Should Have Inherited img
Chapter 20 Applause is Not Power img
Chapter 21 The Woman Behind the Numbers img
Chapter 22 Pressure Points img
Chapter 23 Fault Lines 2 img
Chapter 24 Invisible Moves img
Chapter 25 The Second Crack img
Chapter 26 Echoes Beneath the Surface img
Chapter 27 The Things She Left Behind img
Chapter 28 Cracks in the Crown img
Chapter 29 Ghosts Don't Stay Buried img
Chapter 30 The Truth That Lies img
Chapter 31 Silk and Daggers img
Chapter 32 The Gravity Between Strangers img
Chapter 33 Fault Lines Beneath Glass img
Chapter 34 The Ghost Move img
Chapter 35 Access Denied img
Chapter 36 The Quiet Acquisition img
Chapter 37 Smoke Without Fire img
Chapter 38 The Hand No One Sees img
Chapter 39 Crack Beneath the Crown img
Chapter 40 Fractured Reflection img
Chapter 41 Invisible Pressure img
Chapter 42 The Weight of Expectations img
Chapter 43 The Edge of Control img
Chapter 44 The Gamble img
Chapter 45 The Illusion of Power img
Chapter 46 The Fracture img
Chapter 47 The Gambit img
Chapter 48 Shadows in Motion img
Chapter 49 The Misstep img
Chapter 50 The Whispered Shadow img
Chapter 51 Fractured Control img
Chapter 52 The Quiet War Beneath Glass img
Chapter 53 Hairline Cracks img
Chapter 54 Controlled Pressure img
Chapter 55 The Cost of Silence img
Chapter 56 The Line You Don't See Until You Cross It img
Chapter 57 Pressure Turns Personal img
Chapter 58 Shadow Moves img
Chapter 59 First Ripples img
Chapter 60 Ripples Become Currents img
Chapter 61 Whispers in the System img
Chapter 62 Lines of Tension img
Chapter 63 Dangerous Moves img
Chapter 64 A Risk Taken img
Chapter 65 Shadows of Doubt img
Chapter 66 Rising Tension img
Chapter 67 The Unseen Current img
Chapter 68 Shadow in Motion img
Chapter 69 Cracks in the Armor img
Chapter 70 Tides of Influence img
Chapter 71 Fractured Calm img
Chapter 72 Shifting Shadows img
Chapter 73 Calculated Risk img
Chapter 74 Pressure Rising img
Chapter 75 The Subtle Snare img
Chapter 76 The Counterpulse img
Chapter 77 Escalation Point img
Chapter 78 The Emotional Strike img
Chapter 79 The Dual Edge img
Chapter 80 The High_Stakes Gambit img
Chapter 81 The Fracture of Trust img
Chapter 82 The Ghost in the Room img
Chapter 83 The Woman Behind the Mask img
Chapter 84 The Trap Within the Walls img
Chapter 85 When the Predator Feels the Net img
Chapter 86 Lines You Cannot Cross img
Chapter 87 The Third Power img
Chapter 88 The Art of Redirection img
Chapter 89 The Nodes Will Be Stable img
Chapter 90 Shadows Unveiled img
Chapter 91 Beginnings of Fire img
Chapter 92 Promises and Cracks img
Chapter 93 The Turning Point img
Chapter 94 The Marriage That Shifted Everything img
Chapter 95 The Subtle Test img
Chapter 96 Testing the Unthouchable img
Chapter 97 Pressure Without Contact img
Chapter 98 Before the Fall img
Chapter 99 The Woman Who Didn't Flinch img
Chapter 100 Silence Is a Weapon img
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Chapter 4 The Night I Should Have Died

Ashley's Point of View

There is no pain at first.

Only light.

Blinding, merciless white light that consumes everything, swallowing the city, the noise, the past. For a brief, strange moment, I think I've finally escaped-that this is what peace feels like.

Then the pain comes.

It crashes into me all at once, violent and unforgiving. My body slams against something hard, the impact ripping the air from my lungs. I hear metal shriek, glass shatter, someone scream.

I think it might be me.

The ground rushes up to meet me, cold and unyielding. My head hits with a sound I feel more than hear. The world spins wildly, stars exploding behind my eyes.

I can't breathe.

My mouth opens, but no sound comes out. Panic claws up my throat as my chest convulses uselessly. I taste blood-sharp, coppery.

This is how it ends, a detached part of my mind observes.

Alone. Unwanted. Forgotten.

Darkness creeps in from the edges of my vision, heavy and seductive. I welcome it. Let it take me. Let everything stop.

Just before it does, I hear a voice.

"Hey-hey, stay with me."

Male. Deep. Urgent.

Strong hands grip my shoulders, firm but careful, anchoring me to the ground.

"Don't close your eyes," the voice says. "Look at me."

I try.

The world flickers in and out like a broken screen. Faces hover above me-blurry, distorted. Sirens wail somewhere far away.

"I didn't... do it," I whisper, though I don't know to whom. "I didn't touch her."

The hands tighten slightly.

"I know," the voice says without hesitation. "I know."

Something about that-about the certainty in his tone-makes my chest ache more than the pain.

I want to ask him how he could possibly know.

But the darkness finally claims me.

I dream of my mother.

She's standing in sunlight, just beyond my reach, wearing the pale blue dress she loved. Her hair moves gently in a breeze I can't feel.

"Ashley," she says softly.

I try to run to her, but my feet won't move.

"Am I dead?" I ask.

She smiles sadly. "Not yet."

"Then why does it hurt so much?"

She steps closer. Kneels in front of me, the way she used to when I was little.

"Because you've been carrying pain that was never yours to bear," she says, brushing my hair back. "And because you forgot who you are."

"Who am I?" I whisper.

Her eyes shine. "You are not weak. You are not disposable. And you are not done."

The light brightens, blinding-

I wake up screaming.

The sound tears out of my throat, raw and panicked. My body jerks violently, sending sharp pain lancing through my ribs, my arm, my head.

"Easy."

Hands-real hands this time-press gently but firmly against my shoulders, holding me still.

"You're safe," a man says. "You're in a hospital."

Hospital.

The word grounds me.

I suck in a shallow, shaky breath. The air smells sterile, tinged with antiseptic and something faintly floral. My heart pounds wildly, each beat echoing in my ears.

The room slowly comes into focus.

Soft lighting. Machines beeping quietly. White sheets tucked carefully around me.

And a man sitting beside the bed.

He's older than I expected. Late forties, maybe early fifties. His face is sharp but not cruel, lined in a way that suggests thoughtfulness rather than age. His hair is dark, threaded with silver. He wears a simple black suit, no tie, as if he came straight from somewhere important and didn't bother changing.

His eyes are what hold me.

Steel-gray. Steady. Observant.

They don't look at me like I'm fragile.

They look at me like I matter.

"You were hit by a car," he says calmly. "You've been unconscious for nearly twelve hours."

Twelve hours.

I swallow. My throat burns. "Did... anyone call my family?"

The question escapes before I can stop it.

Something flickers across his face.

"No," he says gently. "I asked them not to."

My brow furrows weakly. "Why?"

"Because you asked me not to," he replies.

I stare at him.

"I did?"

"Yes." His lips curve faintly. "Very clearly, actually."

My chest tightens.

I don't remember that.

But the idea that I might have said it-that some instinct inside me knew better-makes something ache inside my ribcage.

"Who are you?" I ask.

"My name is Richard Sterling," he says. "I was the one who pulled you out of the road."

The memory flashes-headlights, a voice, hands holding me down.

"You saved me," I whisper.

"I stopped you from dying," he corrects quietly. "The rest is up to you."

The weight of that settles over me.

I look away, staring at the ceiling.

"I didn't want to be saved," I admit.

"I know," he says.

There's no judgment in his voice.

Just understanding.

The doctors come and go.

They tell me about the injuries: a fractured arm, bruised ribs, a mild concussion. Nothing life-threatening. Miraculously.

I don't feel miraculous.

I feel emptied out.

When they leave, silence settles again.

Richard doesn't rush to fill it.

That, more than anything, unnerves me.

Most people can't stand silence around broken things.

"Why are you still here?" I finally ask.

He studies me for a long moment before answering.

"Because I saw something in you," he says. "Even before you opened your eyes."

I almost laugh.

"You saw a woman bleeding on the street."

"I saw someone who had been pushed there," he corrects. "There's a difference."

My fingers curl into the sheets.

"You don't know me."

"No," he agrees. "But I know despair. And I know resilience. They often look the same at first glance."

I turn my head to look at him.

"You're very calm for someone who just saved a stranger's life."

His mouth tightens slightly. "I've had practice."

With death, I realize.

The way he speaks. The way he looks at me.

This is a man who lives with a clock ticking loudly in the background.

"Why help me?" I ask quietly.

His gaze doesn't waver.

"Because no one helped me when I needed it," he says. "And because I suspect you won't survive much longer if you're sent back to where you came from."

The truth of it lands like a blow.

Tears burn behind my eyes, but I refuse to let them fall.

"I don't have anywhere else," I say.

"I know," he replies.

Silence again.

Then-

"Stay with me," he says.

I blink. "What?"

"I have a private recovery residence outside the city," he continues evenly. "Quiet. Secure. No press. You can heal there."

Suspicion prickles faintly beneath the fog of exhaustion.

"And what do you want in return?" I ask.

A ghost of a smile touches his lips.

"Nothing," he says. "Yet."

That should scare me.

Instead, it feels like the first honest thing anyone has offered me in years.

I close my eyes.

"I'm so tired," I whisper.

"I know," he says softly.

When I fall asleep again, it's not into darkness.

It's into something quieter.

Safer.

I wake hours later to rain tapping gently against a window.

The room is dim, peaceful. My body aches, but the pain feels... manageable.

Richard is still there, reading something on his tablet.

"You should charge rent," I murmur.

He looks up. "You're awake."

"Unfortunately."

He arches a brow. "That's debatable."

I almost smile.

Almost.

"Why me?" I ask suddenly.

He sets the tablet aside.

"Because," he says slowly, "I'm dying."

The words hang in the air, heavy and irrevocable.

I stare at him.

"What?"

"Six months," he continues calmly. "Aggressive. Unpleasant. Terminal."

My chest tightens painfully.

"I'm sorry," I whisper.

"Don't be," he says. "I've made peace with it."

I shake my head. "Then why-"

"Because I need someone," he says simply. "Someone intelligent. Someone invisible enough not to attract vultures. Someone who understands what it's like to be discarded."

Understanding dawns slowly.

Not fear.

Not revulsion.

But something colder.

Clearer.

"You're offering me shelter," I say, "because you need something from me."

"Yes," he agrees without pretense.

"And if I say no?"

He meets my gaze steadily.

"Then I'll make sure you leave this hospital safely," he says. "And I'll never interfere with your life again."

Honest.

Clean.

A choice.

I stare at the rain-streaked window.

At the city that chewed me up and spat me out.

At the future I no longer recognize.

"What do you want?" I ask.

He leans forward slightly.

"I want you to marry me," Richard Sterling says.

The words land like a thunderclap.

I laugh.

It's soft. Disbelieving.

"You don't even know me."

"I know enough," he replies. "And I don't want love. I want legacy."

My heartbeat slows.

"And what would I get?" I ask.

His eyes sharpen-not predatory, but purposeful.

"Everything," he says. "My name. My fortune. My company. My resources."

My breath catches.

"Why?"

"Because," he says quietly, "you look like someone who will survive me. And because I want my life's work to belong to someone who understands what power costs."

The room is very still.

Outside, rain continues to fall.

For the first time since the altar, something inside me shifts.

Not hope.

Not yet.

But possibility.

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