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Rising From Ashes: My Masked Runway Comeback

Rising From Ashes: My Masked Runway Comeback

Author: Adalynn
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Chapter 1 1

Word Count: 2578    |    Released on: Today at 12:02

gainst the cold wall of the emergency

d the seconds between each breath, trying to keep her stomach from climbing up her throat. The gash on her forearm had soaked through the makes

he kept her eyes on tho

ance, thumb slipping on the screen, typing his name three times bef

s. Surely that earned her something. Surely he would walk through those doors and his face would crack open

evator

rs slid

behind him, unbuttoned, revealing the crisp white shirt underneath. He moved with the contained violence of a man who owned every

caught herself. She took one step forward, her left han

for

ked pa

alogued and dismissed. He didn't slow. He didn't pause. His shoes-Italian leather, she knew the maker, s

till extended, fingers

ce carried that particular tone he used in boardrooms, the one

sk stammered something

n the floor. She watched her husband's profile-the sharp line of his jaw, the dark hair she had run

came from her left, urgent, cl

k circles under his eyes that suggested he had been on shift too long. In his hands, he carried a

that color. She had been staring

er bandage with a practiced eye. "You're still losing too much. The bleeding's slowing, but

hed for

interce

e assistant wore the same expression he wore during hostile takeovers-polite, immovable, utterly ruthless

t is bleeding heavily. She's already

ged. "The documents have just been forwarded to your administration. Section fourtee

Efford. He stood at the far elevators, his back to her,

et slipping on the linoleum. She reached for her husband's sleeve, her bloody fingers leaving dark smears on t

tur

he saw him across a crowded gallery opening three years ago. Now they looked at her with something she

n at her hand

almost black under these lights. Her wedding ring caught the fluorescent light-the simple platinum band he

with his. She waited for him to pul

nton flicke

utives. His arm moved outward, his hand brushing hers with enough force to break her grip. She

n inch before c

d the corridor, flat and absolute. "Thorn

mach first. Then her

gna

d's face swimming at the center of a darkening periphery. She thought of her own body, the monthly disappointments, the fertility speciali

gna

th her art gallery openings and her whispered phone calls and h

ra's mouth like a prayer. "Please. Medical eth

tween the blood bag in his hands and the man who signed the hospital's

is thumb moved across the screen with pra

gavel. "I'm standing in your emergency corridor watching a resident disrega

blood bag in his hands seemed sudde

ply room, young, her ponytail trembl

of blood drops leading from the triage station to where Honora now stood,

stic cr

and vital, passing in

tion, through the doors that led to the VIP wing. She watched

mething that had lived in her chest for three years, feeding on hope a

, his expression unreadable. Dr. Chen stood with his hands empty, staring at the floor. The othe

f the wall. Her

. It came from somewhere deeper, somewhere th

ence and expanded, filling

he didn't push them back. For a moment, his professional mask c

er the screen. His pupils contracted, black swallowing ice

he la

weak opening bids. He slipped the phone into his pocket and adjusted his cufflinks-plat

d her a copy of the prenup. And the N

on his tablet, and Honora's phone buzzed with an incoming email. The subject li

ng. The documents were already i

professional monotone. "Upon dissolution of marriage, Mrs. Thornton assumes persona

as perfectly composed, the face he wore for shareholder meetings. "Brookhaven Seni

dge of a nearby medical cart

of Mrs. Chase's medical status with press, social media, or third parties triggers liquid

t on the screen. It was all there, clause after clause of sile

Pre-existing condition exclusion. Without Thornton Group coverage, she transfers to public

od had dried on her fingers, turning her skin stiff and dark. The thought of typing her

knew what it said-silence in exchange for survi

, and for a moment, something flickered th

aw. "Tell me to my face that she carries your child. Tell me

cle there jumped, a small

ne, or a pen. Her own phone was in her pocket. S

charcoal vest gaped open, where his tie hung slightly as

her object there: the heavy Montblanc pen he had given her for Christmas. H.H. Honora H

rew th

rel bouncing against his ribs. Ink sprayed across the white cott

the sailing accident he never talked about. It rose six inches, fingers reaching

turne

ook at Julian, still standing with his tablet. She didn't look back at Efford, at the i

he filth of the emergency room floor. Each step sent fresh warmth down her arm, but she did

ted left: General Wound Care. No VIP de

d through

rained ankle. An elderly woman holding a bloody towel to her ha

ide, snow fell in thick, silent curtains, the storm that had closed the bridges and empt

ne was still there, the screen cracked from the

thousand and fo

ane to Zurich, his glasses folded on the tray table, looking younger, almost vulnerable. Their wedding d

ed over the sel

resse

essed

ppeared. Delete two thous

essed

had mistaken for love. When it finished, the screen showed an empty album. No pho

phone on the

burying the blood on the streets, burying everything that

ss closed

em again, she woul

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