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Victory in Obscurity

Chapter 2 

Word Count: 724    |    Released on: 30/06/2025

evening light. Marcus, ever loyal, followed without another question, quickly getting the car. He op

d looked at me through the rea

's residen

s no longer a part of. I felt no sadness, no heartbreak. Only a hollow, cold resolve. I ha

and her expression hardened. She didn't ask what happened. She was a woman who underst

her, standing in the middle of

of a fierce, protective

. "The one for the national secur

bersecurity initiative. I had turned it down for David, for a life I now knew was a lie.

a call. "It's done," she said a few minutes later. "A transport will be ready in the morning. Your i

"Thank y

or you, my girl. I never said it, but I always knew it." Her embrace

', the anonymous architect of the nation's most advanced cyber-defense system. I lived and breathed the work. The remote facility was my

t respect of the nation' s top intelligence operatives. I also built connections.

le bride who had left a good man at the altar. They had used my disappearance to build a narrative of their own tragic romance, a story that strengthened

longer a source of terror but a focusing agent. It reminded me why I was there, what I was working toward. It was

in the form of an

conference in the world. It wasn't an invitation for Amelia, the disgraced fiancé

s being held

te sponsor was David

creen. The time for hiding was ove

time to

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Victory in Obscurity
Victory in Obscurity
“The cold, tiled floor of the dungeon pressed against my cheek. I could hear the sounds of a victory feast, the laughter of soldiers loyal to him. My husband, General David, stood over me, his polished boots reflecting the dim torchlight. "Worthless," he spat, the word hitting harder than the back of his hand had moments before. He accused me of driving Bethany, my maid, to suicide, believing every lie she whispered. His boot pressed down on the back of my head, grinding my face into the filthy stone. "You will die down here," he promised, his voice low and final. And I did, alone and broken, my last breath a ragged gasp of despair. I opened my eyes to the dazzling white silk of a bridal suite, my wedding day. The memories weren' t a dream; they were seared into my soul. I was Amelia, an elite special forces operative, now reborn, sent back to the moment it all went wrong. My fiancé, David, was now a charismatic tech CEO, but I knew the cruel soul beneath the expensive suit was the same. Bethany, my maid of honor, my best friend, was the maid who betrayed me in my last life. I heard her soft, breathy voice from the adjoining room, "David, are you sure about this? Marrying Amelia... she doesn' t understand you." Then David's low murmur, "Bethany, don't. Not now." And her whimper, "I love you. I've always loved you." In my past life, I had burst through that door, heartbroken and furious, playing right into their hands. This time, my hand froze on the doorknob; I simply stood there, listening to the betrayal I knew was coming, that had already happened a lifetime ago. A cold calm settled over me. There would be no screaming match, no public drama. I turned away from the door, my plan for simple happiness shattered, replaced by a bitter necessity. "Everything is fine, Marcus," I told my security chief, my voice devoid of emotion. "Plans have changed. We' re leaving. There is no wedding." As I walked away, the memory of the dungeon flashed through my mind: "You will die down here, and no one will remember your name." A grim smile touched my lips. He was wrong. They would all remember my name.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10