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Between Ruin And Revenge: Her Regret
img img Between Ruin And Revenge: Her Regret img Chapter 4
4 Chapters
Chapter 5 img
Chapter 6 img
Chapter 7 img
Chapter 8 img
Chapter 9 img
Chapter 10 img
Chapter 11 img
Chapter 12 img
Chapter 13 img
Chapter 14 img
Chapter 15 img
Chapter 16 img
Chapter 17 img
Chapter 18 img
Chapter 19 img
Chapter 20 img
Chapter 21 img
Chapter 22 img
Chapter 23 img
Chapter 24 img
Chapter 25 img
Chapter 26 img
Chapter 27 img
Chapter 28 img
Chapter 29 img
Chapter 30 img
Chapter 31 img
Chapter 32 img
Chapter 33 img
Chapter 34 img
Chapter 35 img
Chapter 36 img
Chapter 37 img
Chapter 38 img
Chapter 39 img
Chapter 40 img
Chapter 41 img
Chapter 42 img
Chapter 43 img
Chapter 44 img
Chapter 45 img
Chapter 46 img
Chapter 47 img
Chapter 48 img
Chapter 49 img
Chapter 50 img
Chapter 51 img
Chapter 52 img
Chapter 53 img
Chapter 54 img
Chapter 55 img
Chapter 56 img
Chapter 57 img
Chapter 58 img
Chapter 59 img
Chapter 60 img
Chapter 61 img
Chapter 62 img
Chapter 63 img
Chapter 64 img
Chapter 65 img
Chapter 66 img
Chapter 67 img
Chapter 68 img
Chapter 69 img
Chapter 70 img
Chapter 71 img
Chapter 72 img
Chapter 73 img
Chapter 74 img
Chapter 75 img
Chapter 76 img
Chapter 77 img
Chapter 78 img
Chapter 79 img
Chapter 80 img
Chapter 81 img
Chapter 82 img
Chapter 83 img
Chapter 84 img
Chapter 85 img
Chapter 86 img
Chapter 87 img
Chapter 88 img
Chapter 89 img
Chapter 90 img
Chapter 91 img
Chapter 92 img
Chapter 93 img
Chapter 94 img
Chapter 95 img
Chapter 96 img
Chapter 97 img
Chapter 98 img
Chapter 99 img
Chapter 100 img
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Chapter 4

Finn Briggs POV:

I pushed open the heavy metal door to the hotel's underground parking garage. The air inside was damp and smelled strongly of motor oil and concrete dust. I walked down the concrete stairs, my footsteps echoing in the empty stairwell.

I stepped out into the main parking level. The fluorescent tube lights above flickered, casting long, unstable shadows between the concrete pillars. I reached into my pocket, pulled out my keys, and pressed the unlock button.

My beat-up Ford sat in the far corner of the lot. The headlights flashed once. I started walking toward it.

I reached out to grab the door handle.

A sudden, violent screech of tires tearing against concrete exploded through the quiet garage.

I whipped my head around.

The bright red Porsche 911 was tearing around the corner of the ramp, accelerating wildly. It was heading straight down the lane toward me.

The high beams flashed on, blindingly bright. The intense light hit my eyes, forcing me to instinctively raise my forearm to shield my face.

Through the glare, I could see the driver. Jaquez was behind the wheel. His right hand was heavily wrapped in white bandages. Jaquez's face was twisted into a manic, reckless smile. He jerked the steering wheel hard to the left, aiming the heavy sports car directly at the space where I stood.

In the passenger seat, Arleen was screaming. But just moments before, as they had walked to the car, she had sneered at Jaquez, calling him weak. "You let a broke garage boy embarrass you in front of my friends," she had hissed, her voice dripping with venom. "If you can't even handle a stray dog like Finn, maybe my father is right about you." Those words had ignited a blind, reckless fury in him. She threw her hands out, trying to grab the steering wheel, her face pale with terror. Jaquez swatted her hands away. He was just trying to scare me, to make me jump out of the way like a frightened animal.

But Jaquez was driving too fast.

The garage floor near the pillar was slick with a puddle of water leaking from a ceiling pipe. The Porsche's wide rear tires hit the water. The rubber instantly lost traction.

The car violently fishtailed.

Jaquez's smile vanished. Panic seized his features. He slammed both feet onto the brake pedal, locking the wheels.

It was too late. The car was completely out of control.

The heavy rear end of the Porsche swung out and slammed brutally into the solid concrete load-bearing pillar. The sound of tearing metal and shattering fiberglass was deafening.

The massive kinetic energy of the crash ripped the rear bumper clean off the chassis. A heavy chunk of jagged metal and reinforced plastic launched through the air like a piece of shrapnel.

I tried to dive backward, but there was no time.

The heavy debris struck the side of my head with the force of a baseball bat.

The impact lifted me off my feet. I was thrown backward through the air. My shoulders hit the concrete floor first, and then the back of my skull slammed against the rough, oily ground.

A sickening crack echoed in my ears. The world violently spun out of focus. A wave of blinding, white-hot pain erupted in my head, followed instantly by a terrifying numbness. Warm, thick liquid immediately began pouring from my temple, running down my cheek and pooling in my ear.

The Porsche's airbags deployed with a loud pop. Thick white smoke billowed from the crushed engine compartment, filling the garage with the acrid smell of burning chemicals. The car's security alarm began shrieking, a piercing wail that bounced off the concrete walls.

I lay on my back. My eyelids felt like they were made of lead. I forced them open halfway. My vision was blurry and swimming in dark spots.

Through the haze of smoke, I heard the passenger door of the Porsche get kicked open.

Arleen stumbled out. She had been wearing her seatbelt and the airbag had saved her. Her hair was a mess, but she was entirely unhurt.

She took two shaky steps in her high heels. She looked up.

Her eyes met mine.

I lay in a growing puddle of my own blood, just ten feet away. I tried to speak. My lips parted, but my vocal cords refused to work. I just looked at her, my chest barely rising.

Arleen stared at my bleeding head for exactly one second.

She looked away.

She turned her back on me completely. She threw herself toward the driver's side of the smoking car. She grabbed the warped metal of the door handle and pulled frantically, her manicured nails breaking against the steel.

"Jaquez!" she screamed, her voice cracking with raw, genuine terror. "Jaquez, answer me! Oh my god, please!"

I watched her. I watched the woman I had loved for three years tear her hands apart trying to save the man she was cheating with, completely ignoring the fact that I was bleeding to death on the floor behind her.

The physical pain in my skull faded away. It was replaced by a sensation of absolute, freezing cold in my chest. It felt as if my heart had been dropped into liquid nitrogen, freezing solid and shattering into dust.

Arleen managed to pry the door open. She grabbed Jaquez by his jacket and dragged his groaning body out of the smoke. They collapsed onto the floor together. Arleen wrapped her arms tightly around Jaquez's neck, burying her face in his chest, sobbing as if they were star-crossed lovers surviving a war.

The elevator doors at the far end of the garage chimed and slid open. A group of hotel security guards and a few panicked guests sprinted out, drawn by the crash.

"Help him!" Arleen screamed, pointing at Jaquez as the guards approached. "He hit his chest on the wheel! He might have internal bleeding! Get a medic!"

One of the guards ran forward with a flashlight. The beam swept across the floor and caught the pool of blood. The guard stopped, his eyes widening.

"Hey! There's another guy over here!" the guard yelled, pointing his light at me. "He's bleeding bad from the head!"

Arleen did not even turn her head to look. She kept her hands pressed against Jaquez's face.

"He just got scraped by a piece of plastic," Arleen said coldly, her voice sharp and annoyed. "He is faking it. He has a hard head, he won't die. Deal with Jaquez first!"

Those words drifted through the smoky air and entered my ears.

It was the final blow. The last anchor holding my consciousness to the physical world detached. I didn't want to look at her anymore. I didn't want to hear her voice.

I stopped fighting the darkness. I let my heavy eyelids fall shut. My muscles went completely slack against the cold concrete. As the blackness rushed in to swallow my mind, the corner of my bloody mouth twitched upward into a faint, relieved smile.

The frantic wail of an ambulance siren echoed down the concrete ramp. The last thing I felt before the world went entirely black was the vibration of stretcher wheels rolling rapidly across the floor.

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