Chapter 9
Victoria stopped at a heavy wooden door, unlocking; it with key from her robe pocket. Inside was a hgym.
unlike any I'd ever seen, state- of-the-
art equipment, mirrors covering one wall, a boxing ring taking up the center of the room.
She flipped on lights that mimicked daylight, making;blink at the sudden brightness. Without a word, she
crossed to a caband extracted hand wraps and boxing gloves "Put these on."
| took them, bewildered. "Victoria, it's the middle of the night."
"And you're awake, drowning in self-
pity instead of planning your resurrection." Her voice wasn't cruel, just matter-of-
fact. "So put them on."
My hands trembled as | wrapped them, clumsy from Inexperience. Victoria watched, neither helping nor
criticizing, until I managed to secure the gloves.
"Hit that." She pointed to a heavy bag hanging in the corner
| approached it uncertainly. "I've never boxed before."
"I'm not teaching you to box. I'm teaching you to channel your rage." She positioned
herself behind the bag, holding it steady. "Now hit it. Hard as you can."
Feeling foolish, | threw a weak punch. The bag barely moved.
"Again. Harder. Think of Rose's face when she saw you at the house that day."
Follow on NovᴇlEnglish.nᴇt
I hit again, putting slightly more force behind it.
"Pathetic. Is that all the anger you have? After what she did to you?" Victoria's voice hardened. "Think of Stefan
signing those divorce papers on your anniversary. Think of your mother comforting Rose while you walked away
bleeding."
Heat bloomed
in my chest, anger flickering to life. | threw another punch, then another, each one harder than the
last
"Better. Now think of them laughing in that restaurant. Toasting your
destruction. Planning your replacement." The image from my nightmare flashed before me, champagne glasses
clinking, Rose wearing my ring, Stefan in the tie I'd given him. Something snapped inside me. My "Yes!" Victoria's
approval fueled me. "Again. Think of
the men who attacked you. Think of your parents choosing llose over you for fourteen years."
I lost myself in the rhythm of it, fists connecting with leather again and again. Each punch carried away a piece
of furt, of betrayal, of worthlessness. | hit until my arms burned and sweat soaked my nightgown, u llut until |
had nothing left.
When I finally stopped, chest heaving, Victoria released the bag and handeda towel without comment. |
wiped my face, suddenly exhausted but oddly cleaner somehow, Like I'd purged something toxic from
"This is the last time," Victoria said, unwrapping the gloves from my hands. "The last tyou break for them.
The last tyou cry over people who never deserved your tears."
| met her eyes, seeing not pity but recognition. Understanding. She knew this journey because she'd walked it
herself.
"Tomorrow, we begin." She checked her watch, a discreet
Patek Philippe that probably cost more than
a year's rent at my old apartment. "In exactly four hours, you'll meet with the lawyers to finalize the adoption
papers. By noon, you'll be legally Camille Kane. By evening, you'll have begun your education in fina She tossed
the gloves into a basket and turned to facefully, silver hair gleaming under the lights.
"Tonight was necessary, Grief must be acknowledged before it can be transformed. But from sunrise onward,
your are no longer their victim. You are my protégé. My heir. My laughter."
The word 'daughter' hung in the air between us, weighted with expectations and possibilities. | straightened my
shoulders, Ignoring the protest from my ribs,
"What if I'm not strong enough?"
Victoria's smile was sharp as a blade. "Strength isn't something you're born with. It's something you build, one
painful brick at a time. And you, Camille, have been gathering bricks for years without knowing it." She moved
toward the door, pausing with her hand on the light switch. "Each betrayal, each disappointment, each moment
they underestimated you -
those are your building materials.
Now we construct something magnificent from them."
| followed her from the gym, back through silent hallways that would soon becfamiliar. My home. My
fortress. My launching pad.
At my bedroom door, Victoria paused. For a
moment, | thought she might embrace me, offer smaternal comfort after the night's emotional storm.
Instead, she simply touched my shoulder, a brief pressure that conveyed more than words could have. "Sleep if
Follow on Novᴇl-Onlinᴇ.cᴏmyou can," she said. "If not, start reading the files left on your desk. The first details your sister's recent business
ventures. She's seeking investors for a boutique clothing line, apparently."
An investor. Rose, who'd stolen my husband, my family, my dignity, was
now seeking money. The irony was almost poetic
"How long before she knows?" | asked. "That I'm alive. That I'm... yours."
Victoria's smile held all the warm
comfort of a circling shark. "We'll wait until you're ready. Until you can look her in the rye and feel nothing but
cold satisfaction. Until your hand doesn't shake when you sign the denying her funding."
| nodded, something new settling into my bones. Something hard and certain.
"Best," Victoria said, turning away.
now is the first day of your ow life."
papers
| entered my room, closing the door softly behind me. The ghtmare's grip had taded, replaced by something
sharper, clearer Purpose. Direction For the first tin years, perhaps ever, | knew exactly who | nee Not the
good sister. Not the perfect wife. Not the pleasing daughter.
Someone new. Someone dangerous.
Someone who would make them all regret the day they decided Camille Lewis wasn't worth keeping.
the dayt
| caught my reflection in the window glass, disheveled, eyes red- rimmed, but standing straight.