LOGINTen years of love. Ten years of loyalty. And it all ends with a knife to her heart. Aria devoted her youth to Evan — a man who whispered forever but only craved her body. When he betrayed her for a rich heiress, she thought heartbreak was the worst pain she’d ever know… until the night he tried to erase her from existence. But fate has a twisted sense of mercy. Aria wakes up ten years earlier, lying in the same bed with the same man who will one day destroy her. Only this time, something’s different. Her body is the same, but her mind has changed — she can hear every filthy, selfish thought inside his head. This isn’t a second chance at love. This is a second chance at revenge. Now, with beauty, brains, and a new supernatural gift, Aria will play the game better than he ever could. She’ll make him fall, she’ll make him beg… and she’ll burn everything he ever wanted to the ground. But as she walks the dangerous path of vengeance, a mysterious stranger enters her life — someone who’s always been in the shadows, waiting for her to remember him. And his thoughts? Unlike the others, she can’t read them at all…
View MoreThe sound of champagne glasses clinking felt like a bad joke. I was standing in the middle of the ballroom, dressed in the red dress Evan had picked for me, surrounded by people who didn’t even know my name. All they cared about was him.
Evan Grayson. Golden boy. Charming smile. Liar.
He was standing a few feet away, holding a glass of whiskey and laughing like everything was perfect.His hand was resting on Emma Lancaster’s lower back like it had every right to be there.
I stared at that hand. The same hand that used to hold me at night. The same hand that promised me forever.
Laughter bubbled up in my throat,
but it didn’t sound like me. It sounded cracked and broken.Ten years of my life. Ten years of being his shadow, his quiet supporter, the woman behind the scenes.
I gave him my heart, my body, my time. He gave me lies. “Aria,” Lena hissed beside me. She grabbed my arm, squeezing it.
“Don’t do anything stupid.” “Stupid?” I whispered. “I’ve been doing stupid for ten years.” Her eyes flicked toward Evan and back to me. “Aria, this isn’t the place.”
I looked down at the engagement ring on Emma’s finger. It sparkled under the lights like it was mocking me. Ten years together, and he had never proposed to me. Not once.
But he had been with her for six months, and now she was wearing my dream on her hand. Lena exhaled through her nose. “Please, don’t make a scene.”
I tilted my head and smiled, but it wasn't a nice smile. “No, Lena. I’m done being quiet.”
Before she could stop me, I crossed the room. My heels clicked on the marble floor, and heads began to turn. People whispered.
Evan turned just as I reached him. The smile froze on his face.“Aria,” he said, too calm, like he wasn’t standing next to the woman he’d betrayed me with. “What are you doing here?”
I leaned in close enough to smell the expensive cologne he wore for special occasions. The kind he used when he wanted to impress.“You invited me, remember?” My voice was sweet, almost too sweet. Emma blinked, all wide-eyed innocence. “Evan, who is she?”
My chest burned, but I forced the corners of my mouth upward. “Oh, don’t worry, sweetheart. I’m just the woman who’s been living with him for the last ten years.” A ripple of gasps spread through the nearby crowd. Evan’s jaw tightened. “Aria, don’t start.“Start?” I laughed. “Evan, I’m not
starting. You already started when you told me you loved me while buying an engagement ring for someone else.”
His face shifted into something colder. “This isn’t the time.”
“Of course it is,” I said. “You owe me that much.”
Emma wrapped her arm around his, like she was claiming him in front of
me. “This is pathetic,” she said softly. “You should leave.”
I turned to her, and for a second, I almost pitied her. She thought she was winning. She had no idea she was standing next to a man who could smile into your eyes while stabbing you in the back.
“No, Emma. Pathetic is giving ten years to a man who promised you forever and finding out forever means nothing.”
Security started moving toward us. I could hear Lena calling my name.
but I couldn't stop. The words poured out like someone had torn the dam open. “I wasted ten years,” I said, looking straight at Evan.
“And for what? So you could throw me away like trash?” His voice dropped low enough so only I could hear.
“Aria, walk away.” I stared at him. That calm, warning tone was the same one he’d used every time he wanted me to shrink.
Not tonight. I stepped even closer, my face inches from his. “I loved you. You said you’d marry me.” His expression didn't even flicker. “I lied.” Something inside me snapped.
Just like that. A clean break. Ten years of love turned to ash. I didn’t scream. I didn’t cry. I just smiled. “Then I hope she’s worth it,” I whispered.
Security finally reached me, but before they could touch me, Evan put a hand on my arm, dragging me toward a side hallway.
He smiled at the guests like everything was fine, like we weren’t falling apart behind the curtains.
He pushed the door open to a quiet corridor and shut it behind us. The noise from the ballroom disappeared. “Aria,” he said, low and sharp. “You just embarrassed me in front of everyone.”I jerked my arm out of his grip.
“Good. You deserved it.” His jaw clenched. “You don’t understand. Emma’s father—”“I don’t care about Emma’s father!”
My voice cracked. “You promised me everything.” He laughed then. A short, cruel sound. “You really thought I was going to marry you?"The hallway tilted slightly. I grabbed the wall to stay steady. “Yes,” Iwhispered.
“Aria,” he said, almost gently. “You were never more than a comfortable option. You made things easy. But Emma gives me more than you ever could."
The words hit harder than any slap. I had loved him since I was nineteen. I gave him everything.
“You’re a monster,” I said. “And you’re a fool,” he answered.
He reached into his pocket and pulled out a small silver keycard.
“I’m not letting you ruin this for me. You’re going to disappear quietly.
I’ll make sure you get something to live on. That’s generous.” I stared at him. “Generous? You used me for a decade.”
He moved closer, lowering his voice. “If you walk away now, I’ll make it painless.”
Something in his eyes made my
blood turn cold. This wasn’t just about breaking up. There was something darker lurking beneath his calm face. “Painless?” I repeated. “What are you talking about?” He tilted his head, almost like he was bored. “Let’s not pretend you can survive without me. It’ll be easier if you don’t make this messy.” For the first time, I felt fear creep up my spine. Evan wasn’t threatening me out of anger. He was calm, calculated and dangerous. “Evan,” I said slowly. “What are you planning?” He leaned in close, his breath hot against my ear. “You’ll find out soon enough.”I stumbled back. “You wouldn’t.” “Wouldn’t I?” He smiled. It wasn’t the smile I fell in love with. It was cold, sharp and empty.
Footsteps echoed down the corridor, and I realized with a sick twist in my stomach that we were completely alone.
The party music was just a dull hum behind the heavy door.
I turned toward the exit, but his hand shot out, gripping my wrist.
“Don’t.”
“Let me go,” I hissed. “Aria, listen to me. You don’t get to ruin my life just because you’re
bitter.”
“Bitter?” I laughed, but it came out shaky. “You ruined mine.”
He slammed me against the wall. Not hard enough to leave a bruise but enough to remind me of the strength I’d ignored all these years.
His face was inches from mine, his eyes dark.
“You don’t get it,” he whispered. “I can’t let you walk away.”
My heartbeat roared in my ears. I shoved at his chest, but his grip tightened.
“Evan, stop,” I said, louder this time. “You should have stayed quiet,” he murmured.
For a second, I saw the man I’d once loved, hidden under all that cruelty. But then he pulled something shiny from his pocket.
My breath caught. A knife. It wasn’t big, but it was enough. I froze. “Evan…”
He didn’t blink. “You should have walked away.”
I pushed him hard, but he pinned me back again. Panic clawed at my throat. He wasn’t bluffing. I could see it in his eyes. “Evan, please,” I whispered.
His mouth twisted. “Goodbye, Aria.”
The pain came fast and hot. My knees buckled, and the hallway blurred. I slid down the wall, my hand pressing against the warm blood spreading across my stomach. He crouched in front of me, almost tenderly, like this was some mercy.
“Don’t take it personally,” he said softly. “You were never part of the future.”
The world tilted. I heard footsteps, or maybe they were just in my head.
His face faded in and out like a bad dream. Somewhere far away, someone was calling my name. Lena. She must have followed. But her voice grew faint. Everything did. The ceiling spun, and then… silence.
Right before the darkness swallowed me, I heard a whisper. It wasn’t Lena. It wasn’t Evan. It was something else. Soft. Cold. Close to my ear.
Do it over. My eyes fluttered shut. The last thing I saw was Evan’s face, calm and empty as I slipped into the dark. And then… I gasped. I was in my bed. In our apartment.
Evan’s arm was around my waist. The clock on the nightstand said 6:12 a.m. And the man who killed me was breathing softly beside me.
"I've made my decision. I choose release. I choose humanity. I choose peace over power, normalcy over enhancement, ordinary existence over supernatural obligation." The words hung in the air, irreversible and absolute. For a moment, nothing happened. Then reality rippled, cosmic presence manifesting just enough for response without full manifestation. "ARIA SINCLAIR," The Balance's voice resonated through consciousness rather than sound. "YOUR CHOICE IS ACKNOWLEDGED AND ACCEPTED. YOU HAVE EARNED PEACE THROUGH SACRIFICE, DEMONSTRATED PURPOSE OVER POWER, CHOSEN AUTONOMY OVER OBLIGATION. WE HONOR THAT CHOICE." I felt something fundamental shift within me—not painful like the Severance had been, but profound nonetheless. The last lingering connections to resurrection, the residual enhancement still barely functioning, the subtle supernatural awareness I'd been clinging to—all of it dissolved gently into ordinary human consciousness. "RELEASE IS GRANTED," The Balance continu
Three days of thinking. Three days of weighing power against peace, obligation against autonomy, extraordinary purpose against ordinary happiness. Three days of Damian supporting me without trying to influence my decision, even though my choice would fundamentally affect our future together. I found him in the Guardian facility's observation deck, watching the city lights spread below like constellations made terrestrial. His enhanced perception probably registered every detail of the urban landscape—traffic patterns, pedestrian movement, the subtle energy signatures of other resurrected hunters moving through the crowds. All things I could no longer sense. All capabilities I might reclaim if I chose restoration. "I've decided," I said quietly, approaching to stand beside him. Damian turned, his expression carefully neutral despite what I knew must be intense curiosity and concern. "Tell me." "I choose humanity," I said, the words feeling simultaneously liberating and t
"WE CAN RESTORE YOUR RESURRECTION," The Balance explained. "NOT THROUGH THE BINDING THE COUNCIL PROPOSED—THAT WAS THEIR SOLUTION, LIMITED BY MATERIAL REALM UNDERSTANDING. WE CAN RECONNECT WHAT THE SEVERANCE SEVERED, GRANT YOU SUPERNATURAL CONSCIOUSNESS AGAIN, RETURN ABILITIES YOU SACRIFICED."Hope surged through me so intensely it hurt. Everything I'd lost, everything I'd been mourning for over a week—The Balance could restore it. Give me back the enhanced perception, the mental influence, the supernatural awareness I'd grown to rely on."What's the cost?" Damian asked immediately, his tactical thinking recognizing that cosmic gifts never came without complications."NO COST IN CONVENTIONAL SENSE," The Balance replied. "BUT CONSEQUENCES NONETHELESS. RESTORED RESURRECTION WOULD BIND ARIA TO SERVICE MORE DEEPLY THAN BEFORE. HER CONSCIOUSNESS WOULD BE PERMANENTLY INTEGRATED INTO OUR NETWORK, CALLED UPON FOR THREATS REQUIRING HER UNIQUE CAPABILITIES. SHE WOULD BECOME WHAT YOU MIGHT CALL C
A knock on the door interrupted before I could respond. Veena entered, her expression carrying professional composure that suggested official business rather than personal visit."I'm sorry to interrupt," she said, "but The Balance has summoned both of you. Immediately, if Aria is medically cleared for travel.""Summoned us?" Damian asked sharply. "Why? We submitted comprehensive mission reports. What more do they need?""They didn't specify," Veena replied. "Just that your presence is required at The Balance's primary council chamber. Both of you, together, as soon as possible."I exchanged glances with Damian, our fading resonance still strong enough to communicate shared concern. The Balance didn't issue summons lightly, and requesting both of us suggested something significant."Can it wait?" Damian asked. "Aria's still recovering—""I'm fine," I interrupted, surprised by my own certainty. "I want to go. I need to know what they want, and sitting in this recovery room isn't helpin






Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.