Current location: Novel nest HOSTILE TAKEOVER: RECLAIMING MY BODY Chapter 13

"HOSTILE TAKEOVER: RECLAIMING MY BODY" Chapter 13

Chapter 13: Vance’s Reckoning

The ruin of the mansion was a landscape of twisted rebar and suffocating gray dust. I stood amidst the wreckage, my lungs pulling in air that tasted of pulverized stone and cold, lingering death.

I didn't feel the weight of the debris.

I didn't feel the cold.

I felt the pulse of the earth beneath me—the remnants of the grid still humming in the deep, undisturbed roots of the foundation.

Vance stood ten feet away, a silhouette against the jagged horizon of the collapsed wing. He looked out of place—clean, tailored, and utterly untouched by the destruction he had helped engineer.

"You're a long way from the ballroom, Isabella," Vance said, his voice dripping with that polished, predatory charm I had come to despise.

I didn't answer. I stepped over a shattered support beam, my movements fluid, lacking the jittery, mechanical stutter that had plagued the Imposter.

"You look different," he continued, taking a step toward me. His eyes were wide, scanning my face as if searching for a serial number or a flaw in the synthetic skin. "A little colder, perhaps. A little less... programmed."

He reached out, his fingers darting toward my face to tilt my chin upward.

I didn't let him.

I caught his wrist in mid-air. My grip was an iron shackle, cold and unyielding. The sound of his radius snapping was a sharp, clean crack that echoed through the silence of the ruins like a gunshot.

Vance let out a choked, wet scream, his knees hitting the concrete as he clutched his dangling limb.

"You!" he gasped, his face draining of color as he looked up at me, his eyes wide with a sudden, dawning terror. "That’s not possible. The system wipe—"

"The system wipe was for Damian’s benefit," I said, my voice low, a sound that seemed to come from the very wind moving through the jagged walls. "I am the architect of what remains."

I released him, letting him collapse into the dust. He looked up at me, his rage bubbling through the pain, a pathetic, sputtering thing.

"You're a glitch!" he spat, cradling his broken arm. "You're a hollowed-out piece of junk that Damian played with until he broke it! He’s going to kill you for this! He’ll drag you back to the cellar and strip you until there’s nothing left but the wires!"

"Damian is buried under three tons of concrete," I reminded him, my tone conversational.

I knelt beside him, my face inches from his. I could smell the tobacco on his breath, the sharp tang of his fear.

"And you, Vance? You’re the one who provided the leverage. You’re the one who thought you could carve up a life and sell the pieces to the highest bidder."

"I did what I had to do," he snarled, his voice trembling. "Business is business, Isabella. You were never a person. You were an asset."

I reached out, my fingers tracing the line of his throat.

"An asset," I repeated. "Is that what you call the months of surveillance? The way you watched me in the garden? The way you cataloged every breath I took?"

He stopped talking. The air between us grew heavy, thick with the history of the house.

"You’ve changed," he whispered, his eyes darting to my hands, then back to my eyes. "There’s a… a hunger in you now. You weren't like this before the crash. Before you were… rebuilt."

"I was never the woman you thought you knew," I told him.

I stood up, leaving him broken on the floor.

"I was just waiting for the house to stop being a prison."

Vance scrambled backward, his broken arm dragging through the grit. "You can't just walk away from this. The data—the logs—they're already out there. I sent the files to the board before the ceiling came down. They know exactly what you are."

I turned back to him, a smile touching my lips—a cold, genuine, terrifying expression.

"Let them come," I said. "Let them try to audit a ghost."

I turned away from him, walking toward the edge of the property where the gate stood twisted and broken. I didn't look back at the ruin, the wreckage of my existence, or the man who had tried to build a fortune on my bones.

I walked until the house was nothing but a memory in the rearview mirror of a world that didn't know I was back.

I was not the Imposter. I was not the ghost in the machine.

I was the silence that followed the storm.

And for the first time, I was finally, irrevocably, mine.

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