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Return From Grave: Reclaiming My Betrayed Heart

Return From Grave: Reclaiming My Betrayed Heart

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I returned to Boston after three years, not for forgiveness, but to die. My family, who blamed me for my mother's death, had cast me out, replacing me with a quiet, grateful orphan named Gabriela. She stole my father's love, my brother's affection, and my childhood sweetheart, Corey. Now, terminally ill, my only wish was to reclaim my mother's wedding dress, a final piece of her to hold onto. But Gabriela was wearing it to marry Corey. When I confronted her, she destroyed my mother's locket and cursed me to drop dead. In a blind rage, I slapped her. She shrieked, stabbed her own arm, and framed me for the attack. As my family and Corey looked on with disgust, calling me a maniac, my body gave out. I collapsed, coughing up blood, my secret illness revealed in the most brutal way possible. "You always blame me," I gasped, the words bubbling out with blood. "But I was just... dying." Their faces filled with dawning horror, but it was too late. I was already gone. Until I opened my eyes again, and my mother, who had been waiting for me all along, took my hand. "We'll be reborn," she promised, her eyes blazing with fury at the family who had destroyed me. "Together. As mother and daughter, again."

Contents

Chapter 1

I returned to Boston after three years, not for forgiveness, but to die.

My family, who blamed me for my mother's death, had cast me out, replacing me with a quiet, grateful orphan named Gabriela. She stole my father's love, my brother's affection, and my childhood sweetheart, Corey.

Now, terminally ill, my only wish was to reclaim my mother's wedding dress, a final piece of her to hold onto. But Gabriela was wearing it to marry Corey.

When I confronted her, she destroyed my mother's locket and cursed me to drop dead. In a blind rage, I slapped her. She shrieked, stabbed her own arm, and framed me for the attack.

As my family and Corey looked on with disgust, calling me a maniac, my body gave out. I collapsed, coughing up blood, my secret illness revealed in the most brutal way possible.

"You always blame me," I gasped, the words bubbling out with blood. "But I was just... dying."

Their faces filled with dawning horror, but it was too late. I was already gone.

Until I opened my eyes again, and my mother, who had been waiting for me all along, took my hand. "We'll be reborn," she promised, her eyes blazing with fury at the family who had destroyed me. "Together. As mother and daughter, again."

Chapter 1

My return to Boston wasn't heralded by cheers or even cautious welcomes, but by the scathing headlines that had followed me for three years, a ghost in every major newspaper: "The Bradford Black Sheep Returns: Blake Poole, Boston's Infamous Maniac, Back on Home Soil."

The articles were quick to remind everyone of my past, painting me as a destructive force, a reckless rebel who had torn her influential family apart. Most people, I knew, were relieved when I left, breathing a collective sigh of relief as if a storm had finally passed. They had seen the chaos, the scandals, the arrests, and they had judged me.

I had once been a fixture in their social pages, a promising young ballerina, a Bradford heiress. Then, I became a different kind of celebrity-the one whose meltdowns were public, whose grief was weaponized against her, whose sanity was always in question. Now, after years of silence, the familiar hum of public scrutiny started buzzing again. My reappearance was a fresh wound, a new scandal waiting to unfold.

But I wasn't here for them. I wasn't here for reconciliation, or even revenge. I was here for a burial plot. A final resting place, right next to the only person who had ever truly loved me.

My first stop wasn't the sprawling family estate or the familiar bustling streets of downtown. It was the quiet, serene green of Mount Auburn Cemetery. The air here was always different, hushed and respectful, a stark contrast to the clamor of the city and the noise inside my own head. My feet knew the path by heart, leading me through rows of polished marble and weathered stone until I reached it. My mother's grave.

"Hey, Mom," I whispered, the words catching in my throat, tasting like ash. The stone was cool beneath my fingertips. It felt like yesterday the world had ended, and yet, an entire lifetime of pain had unfolded since then.

A shadow fell over me. I didn't need to turn to know who it was. The scent of expensive cologne, the stiff posture, the silence that spoke volumes of disapproval. Brandt. My older brother.

"Blake," his voice was flat, devoid of warmth, like a perfectly pressed shirt without a body inside. "What are you doing here?"

I didn't answer immediately. My fingers traced the engraved name. Eleanor Poole Bradford. The name I carried, but the love I lost. What was I doing here? I was dying. Slowly, painfully, from the inside out. Terminal stomach cancer. A secret I carried, heavier than any of the accusations hurled my way.

I coughed, a dry, rasping sound that vibrated in my chest. I felt a familiar pang in my abdomen, a dull ache that seemed to mock my every move. It was a constant, unwelcome companion, a reminder of the ticking clock within me.

"Just visiting," I finally said, my voice hoarse, attempting a lightness I didn't feel. It was an old habit, deflecting with sarcasm, a defense mechanism honed over years of emotional warfare. "You know, the usual family reunion. Gravestone edition."

He remained still, a statue of judgment. That was Brandt. Always judging, always disapproving. I remembered a time when his gaze held admiration, when he was my protector, my confidant. That was before Mom died. Before the love in his eyes turned to ice, replaced by a cold, hard resentment that seemed to blame me for everything. It had been years since I'd seen even a flicker of the brother I once knew.

"You haven't been back in three years," he stated, not a question, but an accusation. "And now, suddenly, you decide to grace us with your presence?"

I wanted to scream, to lash out, to tell him why. To tear open my shirt and show him the scars, the fading bruises from the surgeries, the gauntness beneath my clothes. To shove my medical records in his face, to make him see the truth. But what was the point? He wouldn't care. No one ever did.

"I decided," I replied, shrugging, trying to appear nonchalant. But my hands trembled slightly, a tell-tale sign of the raging storm within. My body, once a vessel for grace and movement, was now a cage of pain and weakness.

"When did you get in?" he pressed, his eyes scanning my face, as if searching for something, perhaps a sign of the 'maniac' he believed me to be.

I noticed the small, tarnished silver locket clutched in his hand. Mom' s locket. The one with a tiny etched ballerina on the front, a gift she' d given me for my fifth birthday. My heart squeezed, a familiar ache. He shouldn't have it. It was mine.

"Yesterday," I murmured, my gaze fixed on the locket. "Just in time for the anniversary, right? I'm sure you all had a lovely gathering. Without me, of course."

His jaw tightened. "We did. And you weren't there. Again."

"Why would I be?" I retorted, a bitter laugh escaping my lips. "To be blamed? To be reminded of how I ruined everything?"

"You still harbor that resentment, don't you?" Brandt's voice was laced with a weariness that almost sounded like pity, but I knew better. It was just another form of accusation.

Resentment? No. Not anymore. Not for them, anyway. I was too tired for it. Too close to the end to waste my precious remaining breaths on anger. The only resentment I held was for the cruel hand fate had dealt, for the illness that was stealing my remaining time. But I couldn't tell him that.

The truth was, I didn't attend their gatherings because the air in our family home choked me. The silence, the unspoken accusations, the ghosts of what we once were. It was too much. The bitter sting of their rejection, their cold indifference, had long ago cauterized my heart.

On my eighth birthday, all I wanted was the perfect cake-a strawberry shortcake with extra frosting. Mom, with her endless love and patience, had promised to get it, even though it meant driving across town in a sudden downpour. She never came back. A drunk driver. A twisted metal wreck. And my world, my everything, shattered into a million pieces.

My father, Ford, a man whose grief turned into a cold, hard fury, looked at me as if I had personally ripped his heart out. Brandt, my big brother, his eyes mirroring our father's, saw not a heartbroken child, but the cause. The innocent desire for a birthday cake, twisted into a monstrous demand that led to her death. They never said it aloud, not directly, but their eyes, their silence, their absolute withdrawal of affection, screamed it. I was eight years old, and I had killed my mother.

They had stopped loving me then. I felt it, deeply, like a physical amputation. And then, a year later, came Gabriela. A girl Mom had sponsored, from a disadvantaged background. After Mom died, they adopted her. She was everything I was not: quiet, compliant, grateful. They showered her with the kindness they had once given me, the kindness I now craved like oxygen.

I watched, a silent observer, as she effortlessly slipped into my place. My room, my clothes, my father' s approving glances, Brandt's gentle smiles. I fought back, in the only ways a hurt, neglected child knew how. I rebelled. I broke rules. I screamed for attention, for a sliver of the love they so freely gave Gabriela. They called me "difficult," "unruly," "mad."

Brandt scoffed, pulling me back to the present. "You've certainly changed. Less... theatrical." He looked at me, a flicker of something unreadable in his eyes.

I had changed. The girl who once craved their validation, who threw tantrums and broke things just to be seen, was gone. The illness had stripped me of that desperate need, leaving behind a hollowed-out shell, calm in its surrender. There was no room for their love, or their hatred, in the face of what was coming. I was beyond caring for their approval. Their love had been withdrawn so completely, so brutally, that my heart had simply learned to beat without it.

"Yeah, well," I said, a dry laugh catching in my throat, "three years in exile tends to do that."

He shifted, a hint of awkwardness in his posture. "Dad wants you to come home. Just... for a little while."

Home. The word tasted like poison. My home was a battlefield, a place where every corner held a memory of betrayal, of a love lost and a life stolen.

The media, of course, had loved it. "Blake Poole: The Mad Heiress," "The Scandalous Daughter," "Boston's Maniac." They reveled in every accusation Gabriela manufactured, every piece of gossip, every staged incident.

I remembered the worst one, three years ago. Gabriela, with her innocent eyes and venomous heart, had faked a kidnapping by a local gang. She had pointed a trembling finger at me, claiming I had orchestrated it, driven by jealousy. My childhood sweetheart, Corey Dodson, who had once been my fiercest defender, stood by her side, his eyes hard with accusation. He had bought into her lies, just like everyone else. He was the one who broke my leg, a brutal crack that ended my ballet career, a career my mother had so carefully nurtured. "You're a monster, Blake," he had snarled, his face twisted with disgust as he saw Gabriela's feigned terror.

My father, Ford, had believed them all. He had me committed to a psychiatric hospital, signing the papers without a glance, his face a mask of cold disdain. "You're sick, Blake," he had said, his voice flat. "You need help."

When I finally emerged, a shell of my former self, they were gone. All of them. They had disowned me, cut me off completely. There was no home to return to, no family left to salvage. I left Boston, not out of choice, but because there was simply nowhere else to go. I had no one. I was entirely alone.

"Home?" I repeated, the word a bitter echo. "What home, Brandt? I stopped having one a long time ago." My voice cracked on the last word, a raw edge of emotion I hadn't meant to reveal. My chest tightened, and I felt a wave of nausea. This was too much. All of it. The memories, the pain, the cold indifference.

I needed to leave. Now. Before I completely fell apart. Before they saw the real extent of the damage, the cracks in my carefully constructed facade. I took a step back, my gaze hardening, pulling myself back from the brink of emotional collapse. I wouldn't give them that satisfaction.

"I have to go," I said, my voice barely above a whisper, my eyes flickering to the blurry outlines of the city, anything but his face. I could feel the familiar pressure building behind my eyes, the sting of unshed tears. I wouldn't cry. Not here. Not in front of him. Not ever again.

Brandt watched me, his expression unreadable, and for a fleeting moment, I thought I saw a flicker of something that resembled... regret? But it vanished as quickly as it appeared, replaced by the familiar coldness. He said nothing. He simply let me go.

This was it. The start of the end. And I had to face it, just as I had faced everything else-alone.

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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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