Scars To Gold: A Queen's Rise

Gen Foley POV:

The cold autumn rain violently lashed against the single-pane glass of the rundown hospital window.

It sounded like a desperate attempt to shatter the dead silence of the room.

My eyelashes fluttered, heavy with exhaustion and the biting chill that seeped through the thin, scratchy blanket. For five years in the Turner household, I had walked on eggshells, isolated and invisible. Now, I was just cold. So incredibly cold.

Sharp, impatient footsteps echoed down the linoleum hallway.

The sound pierced my eardrums. It was the nurse. She was coming to collect the debt I couldn't pay.

My stomach cramped, a phantom pain from the child I had just lost. I curled my arm inward, trying to hide the ugly, dark bruises and the constellation of needle marks left by careless IV insertions. This was what the bottom of the world felt like. A complete stripping of dignity.

The flimsy wooden door creaked open.

"You need to vacate this bed right now," the nurse snapped, her voice loud and devoid of any basic human empathy. "We have paying patients waiting. Get up."

I bit my cracked lower lip so hard I tasted copper. I didn't make a sound. I was used to swallowing my pain. I was used to being the silent, obedient ghost in Ignatz's world.

Suddenly, a new sound vibrated through the floorboards.

It was the heavy, synchronized thud of military-grade boots. The sheer weight of the footsteps made the old hospital foundation tremble. It was the sound of absolute, unquestionable power closing in.

The nurse's harsh scolding died in her throat.

She froze, her eyes widening in primal terror as she slowly turned her head toward the hallway. People like her recognized the approach of apex predators.

Before she could even take a step back, the half-open door was struck by a massive force.

The wood splintered with a deafening crack. The door slammed against the wall, sending a shower of wood chips flying past the nurse's pale cheek. She let out a pathetic squeak and pressed herself into the corner.

A tall, broad-shouldered figure stepped into the miserable room.

It was Kaleb.

He wore a tailored black trench coat, the fabric heavy and damp. Rainwater dripped from his sharp, unforgiving jawline. He looked like a god of war who had just walked through a hurricane to get here.

My hollow, sunken eyes slowly tracked his movement. When my vision finally focused on his familiar face, a suffocating wave of shame washed over me. I turned my face away, staring blankly at the peeling paint on the wall. Five years ago, I had cut ties with my family for the illusion of love. Now, my rebellion had ended in this bloody, humiliating defeat.

Kaleb's stormy gray-blue eyes swept the room.

The moment his gaze landed on the dark bloodstains on my sheets, his pupils contracted to pinpricks. The air pressure in the room plummeted. A terrifying, murderous aura erupted from him, so thick it felt hard to breathe. The treasure he had guarded his entire life had been thrown into the mud and trampled.

Right behind him, another figure crossed the threshold.

The polished leather shoes crunched over a dropped plastic pill bottle, crushing it to dust. It was Arlington Foley. My father.

He leaned heavily on his gold-rimmed nanmu cane, his immaculate suit a stark contrast to the filth around him. The man who controlled the global economic pulse stopped dead in his tracks.

When he saw my pale, bloodless face, his large, weathered hands began to shake violently. Beneath his ruthless billionaire exterior, he was just a father looking at his broken little girl.

A guttural roar of pure grief and rage tore from his chest.

He swung his cane and smashed it into the plaster wall. Chunks of drywall rained down onto the floor. This was the exact second the Turner family's death warrant was signed.

Immediately, a team of world-class medical professionals flooded into the tiny room.

They shoved the paralyzed nurse out of the way without a second glance. Machines were wheeled in. Wires and monitors were attached to my chest with terrifying, expensive efficiency.

The hospital director sprinted into the room, his white coat flapping, sweat pouring down his red face.

"Mr. Foley, please, let me explain—"

He didn't finish the sentence. A Foley family bodyguard simply raised a booted foot and kicked the director squarely in the chest, sending him crashing to the floor. Absolute class suppression.

Kaleb ignored the chaos. He ignored the doctors, the director, the noise.

He walked straight to my bed. He shrugged off his heavy, warm trench coat and wrapped it tightly around my shivering shoulders. His eyes never left mine.

Then, with an agonizingly gentle touch, he slid his arms under me. He carefully avoided the dark purple bruises on my arms and lifted me against his chest. For five years, he had suppressed his feelings. Now, his hold was possessive, desperate, and infinitely tender.

The moment my cheek rested against his broad, solid chest, the dam broke.

I buried my face in his shirt and let out a broken, agonizing whimper. My final line of defense collapsed. I was safe.

Hearing my cry, Arlington's eyes turned red.

He pointed his trembling cane at the director on the floor. "Shut this slaughterhouse down. Buy the building and level it to the ground." The wrath of the wealthiest man alive was absolute.

Kaleb turned to carry me out, but he suddenly stopped.

His sharp gaze caught sight of the crumpled paper on the bedside table. The divorce agreement.

He stared coldly at Ignatz's jagged, arrogant signature at the bottom of the page. A flash of pure, unadulterated violence crossed Kaleb's face.

He gave a slight nod. A bodyguard immediately stepped forward, wearing white silk gloves, and carefully placed the blood-stained divorce agreement into a plastic evidence bag. It was the first piece of evidence for the upcoming trial.

The hospital director was on his knees now, slamming his forehead against the floor, begging for mercy.

Kaleb didn't even spare him a fraction of a glance. He tightened his grip on me and walked out.

Our entourage swept out of the ward, leaving behind a ruined room, a sobbing director, and a nurse who had fainted against the wall. My old life in this miserable city was officially dead.

When we stepped out of the hospital doors, the storm was raging.

Three heavy military-grade helicopters, all bearing the Foley family crest, sat on the blocked-off street, their rotors roaring through the downpour. This was the peak of global resources, deployed just for me.

The wind whipped the dead autumn leaves into the air.

Kaleb turned his back to the gale, using his large body as a physical shield to protect me from the biting rain. He was my absolute sanctuary.

The medical team rushed forward with a state-of-the-art mobile life-support pod.

Kaleb shook his head. He refused to let go of me. His jaw was locked tight with the possessiveness of a man who had finally found what he lost. He carried me straight up the ramp.

The helicopter blades spun faster, generating a massive downdraft.

The sheer force of the wind pushed back the few media vans that had dared to approach the perimeter. The Foley family's security protocol was impenetrable.

Inside the luxurious cabin, Kaleb sat on the plush leather seat, keeping me securely in his lap.

An assistant immediately handed him a steaming hot towel.

The helicopter lifted off the ground with a powerful lurch. I looked out the window as the rundown hospital shrank until it was nothing but a speck in the dark city. It was a physical rebirth.

Kaleb looked down at the glittering, miserable skyline of Manhattan. His voice was like grinding ice.

"Erase every trace of her here. The Turner family doesn't deserve to know where she went."

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