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Reborn Heiress: The CEO's Lethal Obsession

Reborn Heiress: The CEO's Lethal Obsession

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Aria's stepsister Blair handed her a bottle of sleeping pills, convincing her to fake a suicide attempt to finally escape her obsessive, tyrannical fiancé, Julian. But as Aria lay paralyzed on a freezing unfinished rooftop, Blair sneered and injected her with a lethal, untraceable synthetic poison. Blair didn't just want to break the engagement. She wanted Aria dead to steal her twenty percent stake in the Carlisle Group. To completely break her spirit, Blair shoved a phone in her face showing a live news report. "He was coming for you. Took a route too low, too fast." Julian's helicopter had crashed into the East River in a fiery explosion while he was desperately rushing to save her. As the freezing poison stopped her heart, Aria finally understood. Julian's suffocating control wasn't about ownership-it was a desperate, clumsy attempt to protect her from her venomous family. And she had fought him, hated him, and played right into her killers' hands. Why was her life only worth a fraction of company shares? Why did she realize who truly loved her only when they were both dead? A primal wish exploded in her soul: if she had just one more chance, she would make them pay in blood. Opening her eyes again, Aria found herself back in Julian's penthouse, exactly five years ago. It was the very day she had swallowed the pills. Hearing Julian's frantic, furious footsteps approaching the bedroom, this time, she didn't scream or run. Instead, she threw her arms around the "monster's" neck, ready to use the most powerful man in New York to tear her family apart.

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Reborn Heiress: The CEO's Lethal Obsession Chapter 1

Aria's eyelids felt like they were glued shut with drying blood. She forced them open, a sliver at a time. The world was a blur of gray. A raw wind scraped its way down her throat, triggering a cough that felt like swallowing broken glass.

The sharp, rhythmic click of heels on cement . Aria tried to lift her head, but a searing pain shot through her neck. She sucked in a sharp breath, her body tensing against the ropes that bit into her wrists and ankles.

Blair, Aria's stepsister stopped in front of her. She wore a pristine tweed suit, a pop of Chanel pink against the decaying backdrop of the unfinished skyscraper. The contrast was obscene.

"Still conscious? I'm impressed." Blair's voice was smooth, like honey laced with arsenic. She crouched down, her perfectly manicured fingers gripping Aria's chin. The pressure was immense, her nails digging into Aria's skin. Aria clenched her jaw, refusing to give her the satisfaction of a whimper.

Blair smiled, a tight, unpleasant stretching of her lips. She let go and produced a sheaf of papers from her leather handbag. "A formality," she said, her tone light, as if they were discussing the weather. She tossed the document onto Aria's lap. The sharp edge of the paper sliced a thin, stinging line across Aria's cheek.

Aria's eyes fixed on the letterhead: Carlisle Group. An equity transfer agreement.

A weak, raspy laugh escaped Aria's throat. "You'll always be a thief, Blair. A cheap imitation."

The smile vanished from Blair's face. Her expression turned to ice. The slap was so fast Aria didn't see it coming. The crack echoed in the open air, and her head snapped to the side, her ear ringing.

Aria gathered the saliva and blood in her mouth and spat it onto the concrete near Blair's expensive heels. A smirk pulled at her split lip.

That broke the last of Blair's composure. The mask of elegant society girl fell away, revealing the venomous creature beneath.

From the same handbag, Blair produced a syringe filled with a shimmering blue liquid. It caught the dim light, glowing with a terrible beauty. Aria's heart hammered against her ribs. A primal fear, cold and sharp, shot through her.

"Don't worry," Blair whispered, leaning in so close Aria could smell her cloying floral perfume. "It's a new synthetic. No trace. They'll just think your sad little heart finally gave out."

Aria thrashed against her restraints. The rusty iron chair scraped and groaned against the floor, the sound a screech of pure terror.

Two large men in dark tactical gear stepped forward instantly. One clamped a heavy hand on each of her shoulders, pinning her with brutal efficiency. The weight was crushing, stealing the air from her lungs. She couldn't move. She couldn't breathe.

Blair didn't hesitate. She plunged the needle into the vein on the inside of Aria's arm. A frigid fire began to spread through her veins, a terrifying, invasive chill that went straight to her core.

The effect was immediate. Her heart felt like it was being squeezed by a fist full of thorns. Each beat was a spike of agony. Her breathing became ragged, shallow gasps that did nothing to fill her starving lungs.

Aria's vision began to swim, the edges darkening as red bloomed behind her eyes.

Then, Blair pulled out her phone. She held it inches from Aria's face.

It was a live news report. The shaky footage showed the burning wreckage of a helicopter, half-submerged in the dark, churning waters of the East River. The Sterling Industries logo was just visible on the tail fin before it was consumed by flames.

Aria's heart, already under assault, seemed to stop altogether.

The reporter's voice was grim, professional. "...confirmed that Julian Sterling IV, CEO of Sterling Industries, was on board and is presumed dead."

The name hit Aria like a physical blow. It shattered the last of her defenses, the last of her strength.

"He was coming for you," Blair said, her voice dripping with mock pity. "He ignored a direct order from air traffic control. Took a route that was too low, too fast. All to get to his precious little Aria."

A roaring sound filled Aria's ears, drowning out Blair's voice, the wind, everything. Julian. Cold, possessive, tyrannical Julian. The man who locked her away, who controlled her every move.

The memory of his eyes, dark and intense, fixed on her as he'd last left, flooded her mind. The unspoken thing she'd always seen there, the thing she'd been too afraid to name. It wasn't control. It was desperation. It was a terrifying, all-consuming love.

An agony far worse than the poison tore through her. A tidal wave of regret, so powerful it eclipsed everything else. The fire in her veins was nothing compared to the inferno of her self-loathing. A scream ripped from her throat, a raw, guttural sound of a soul being torn apart.

Blair recoiled, a look of disgust on her face as a spray of bloody spittle flew from Aria's lips. Aria lunged forward, a primal, useless instinct to tear her apart, but the ropes held fast, cutting deeper into her flesh.

"Why?" Aria choked out, the word bubbling up with a fresh wave of blood.

Blair looked down at her, her expression now bored, dismissive. "Because you were in my way."

That was it. That was all her life had been worth.

Her body was failing, but her mind was horribly, vividly clear. She saw Julian's face, felt his hands on her, heard his voice, low and rough, telling her she was his.

She finally understood. His obsessive control wasn't about ownership; it was a desperate, clumsy attempt to protect her. To keep her safe in a world he knew was full of predators like Blair. And she had fought him, hated him, misunderstood him until the very last moment.

Hot tears mixed with the blood on her cheeks.

Blair gave a final, satisfied nod. She turned and walked away, her heels clicking a death knell on the concrete. The mercenaries followed, their forms melting into the shadows of the stairwell.

And then, Aria was alone.

Her breaths were shallow, erratic. Each one was a new kind of pain. Her consciousness was fraying, dissolving at the edges.

I'm sorry, Julian. The words were a silent scream in her mind. I'm so sorry.

A fierce, desperate wish exploded in her soul. A prayer to a god she didn't believe in. If she had another chance, just one more chance, she would burn them all to the ground. She would make them pay. Every last one of them.

And then, the darkness took her.

It was not the darkness of sleep. It was vaster than that - a black, weightless ocean with no floor, no shore, no sound. She sank into it like a stone, and part of her thought, distantly, that this was what it felt like to simply cease.

But somewhere in that boundless nothing, something refused.

A flicker. Small and stubborn and furious. Not a light exactly, more like an ember buried deep in ash - the kind that looks dead until the wind finds it. It pulsed once. Twice. Each pulse pushing back against the cold with a violence that felt almost personal, almost like rage.

Thoughts came not in words but in fragments. Broken glass catching light.

His hands. The weight of them. The particular way they had always found her in a crowd, certain and unapologetic, as if she were a fixed point in a spinning world.

Blair's heels on the concrete. Click. Click. Click. Walking away from what she had done as if it were nothing. As if Aria had been nothing.

The anger came next - slow at first, then all at once, a tide rushing back in. It was different from the rage she'd felt strapped to that chair. That had been helpless, animal, reactive. This was something colder. Quieter. More dangerous.

She had been underestimated her entire life. She had let them. She had fought on their terms, by their rules, within the walls they had built around her.

Never again.

The ember caught.

Deep in the void, something in Aria Carlisle drew a breath - not with lungs, but with will. A wordless, ferocious declaration pressed outward against the dark: not yet. Not like this. Not without making them answer for every single thing they had done.

The darkness didn't recede. But it shifted. And in the shifting, something that had been extinguished began, very slowly, to burn.

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