"The Woman They Shouldn’t Have Mocked" Chapter 1
ADVERTISEMENT
Chapter 1
The bus reached Blackridge just before dawn, rolling through freezing rain beneath a sky the color of old steel. Water streaked across the fogged windows in crooked silver lines, blurring the fences and guard towers into something ghostly and distant. Most of the passengers had fallen asleep hours ago, their heads tipped awkwardly against vibrating glass, but Emily Carter had stayed awake the entire ride with her duffel bag tucked beneath her boots and her hands folded loosely in her lap.
Sleep had become difficult after Kandahar.
Not impossible.
Just dangerous.
The driver killed the engine with a low mechanical groan, and silence settled through the bus so abruptly that several soldiers startled awake at once. Someone cursed under their breath. Another man yawned loudly enough to echo. Outside, rain hammered the roof in cold relentless waves.
“Blackridge Unit,” the driver muttered. “Everybody out.”
Emily stood first.
Not quickly. Not nervously. Simply before the others.
The movement drew attention immediately.
It always did.
She stepped into the aisle wearing standard combat fatigues still creased from transfer processing, dark hair braided tightly at the back of her head. She carried only one duffel bag while most of the others dragged two or three. The overhead lights washed the exhaustion from everyone’s faces except hers. Emily’s expression remained unreadable in that same quiet way that often unsettled people before they understood why.
One of the men near the back let out a low whistle.
“Well, shit,” he said. “They sending us recruits or morale boosters now?”
A few tired laughs followed.
Emily didn’t react.
The driver opened the door, and freezing air crashed into the bus hard enough to sting exposed skin. Rain soaked through uniforms almost instantly as soldiers climbed out one by one onto cracked pavement shining beneath floodlights.
Blackridge emerged slowly through the storm.
Concrete buildings.
Chain-link fencing.
Watch towers.
Everything gray.
Everything hard.
The base looked less like a military posting and more like something abandoned halfway through a war.
Emily stepped onto the wet asphalt and tilted her head slightly upward, studying the administrative building across the yard. Three floors. Reinforced windows. East corridor lights still on. The old bronze unit plaque remained bolted beside the entrance exactly where she remembered from archived photographs.
Her stomach tightened before she could stop it.
So this was where they buried it.
“Move, Princess.”
A broad shoulder slammed into hers from behind—not hard enough to injure, but deliberate enough to send rainwater splashing across her boots.
Emily steadied herself automatically.
The soldier who bumped her grinned without apology. Tall. Blond. Thick-necked. Mid-twenties maybe.
Corporal stripes.
“Didn’t think we’d have to babysit transfers this year,” he said. “But here you are.”
Another soldier snorted beside him. Dark-skinned, taller, sharper around the eyes. He looked Emily over openly, unimpressed.
“She even brought one bag,” he said. “Cute.”
“Maybe the second one’s makeup.”
ADVERTISEMENT
More laughter.
Emily bent calmly to retrieve the strap of her duffel where it had slipped loose. Her fingers were steady despite the cold needling into her skin.
The blond corporal seemed irritated by that.
Most people were.
At Blackridge, reactions were currency. Men barked insults because they expected something in return—anger, embarrassment, weakness, fear. Silence denied them all of it, and denial had a way of becoming personal very quickly.
“You deaf?” the corporal asked.
Emily lifted her bag again.
“No, Corporal.”
Her voice surprised him.
Not soft.
Not timid.
Just flat enough to leave nowhere for the conversation to go.
The dark-skinned soldier barked a laugh. “Damn. She does talk.”
“Not much, apparently.”
The corporal stepped in front of her as the others moved toward the barracks. Rain dripped steadily from the edge of his buzz cut.
“Jake Miller,” he said, tapping his chest. “Since we’re all becoming family.”
Emily looked at him.
There was a beat too long before she answered.
“Private Carter.”
Jake smirked. “No first name?”
“Didn’t realize you needed one.”
A few nearby soldiers laughed at that, though not kindly. Jake’s smile tightened almost invisibly around the edges.
Interesting, Emily thought.
Men like him hated being denied control in front of an audience.
“Careful,” another voice called from behind them. “She might hurt your feelings.”
The taller soldier approached with his hands shoved into his pockets, rain sliding down the sharp angles of his face. Unlike Jake, who radiated loud aggression, this one carried himself with something quieter and meaner.
Marcus Reed, according to the stitched name across his chest.
His gaze lingered on Emily a second too long.
Assessing.
Searching.
People always searched her face for softness eventually. They seemed disappointed whenever they couldn’t find it.
Marcus nodded toward the administrative building. “You lost already, Carter?”
“No.”
“You sure? You’ve been staring at that place like it owes you money.”
Emily looked back toward the building instinctively before catching herself.
Too late.
Marcus noticed.
Something flickered briefly behind his expression—not understanding exactly, but curiosity.
Dangerous.
Emily adjusted the strap on her shoulder. “Just getting my bearings.”
“Here’s your first bearing,” Jake said. “Blackridge doesn’t care who you were before you got here.”
The words landed harder than he intended.
Not because he knew anything.
Because he didn’t.
Emily held his gaze for the first time then, and something about her eyes made the grin fade slightly from his face. Not intimidation exactly. Worse.
Recognition without familiarity.
As though she had already measured him and found him small.
Then she stepped around him and started toward the barracks through freezing rain without another word.
Behind her, Jake exhaled sharply through his nose.
“I already hate her,” he muttered.
Marcus watched Emily cross the yard alone, boots splashing through shallow puddles beneath floodlights. She never looked back once.
“That’s because she doesn’t care whether you do,” Marcus said quietly.
Jake scoffed. “Nobody’s that calm.”
Marcus kept watching her.
Far ahead near the administration building, Emily slowed beside the old bronze wall plaque mounted near the entrance. Rain streamed down its dark surface, pooling inside engraved letters nearly worn smooth with time.
BLACKRIDGE UNIT
HONOR THROUGH SACRIFICE
Emily reached out and brushed her fingers lightly across the cold metal.
Not reverently.
Not angrily.
Like someone touching a scar beneath clothing just to make certain it still existed.
Then she walked away into the rain.
ADVERTISEMENT
You May Also Like
-
CompletedChapter 40
The Velvet Noose
"He taught her how to be a submissive wife. She’s betting he’ll die of his own arrogance." To the rest of New York society, Elena is the luckiest woman alive. She is breathtaking, elegant, and perfectly soft—the ultimate trophy wife for Julian Vance, Wall Street’s most ruthless billionaire. From the outside, their marriage is a masterpiece. Julian builds her a sprawling estate in Long Island, handpicks her silk blouses, and drapes her neck in flawless Akoya pearls. But behind closed doors, the gold cage snaps shut. Julian isolates her, controls her every breath, and systematically gaslights her with a gentle, terrifying whisper: “A penniless immigrant girl like you would be nothing without me, darling.” For three years, Elena plays the part. She bends, she obeys, she shrinks. She plays the perfect, fragile doll. Until the night she cracks his private safe. Hidden beneath his financial records lies a truth that shatters her world: Julian didn't rescue her from her family’s ruin—he orchestrated it. He destroyed her father, drove her family to the brink of death, and married her just to keep her silent, enjoying the ultimate thrill of breaking a proud soul. That night, Elena doesn’t shed a single tear. Instead, she stands in front of the mirror, spending three hours practicing her sweetest, most adoring smile for when he walks through the door. Julian thinks he bought an marble statue that will never fight back. He has no idea he just brought a predator into his bedroom. When a flawless sociopath meets a master of disguise, the penthouse becomes a slaughterhouse. Welcome to the Vance marriage, Julian. Who do you bet survives the night?Mutual Pining|Dark Secrets|Plot Twist|Possessive Love48.6k words5 0 -
CompletedChapter 30
The Mafia King’s Scarlet Trap
For Elena Hawthorne, revenge for her sister’s death was not a choice — it was survival. Every heartbeat, every calculated step, brought her closer to Victor Cassano, the mafia don who thought he could destroy her world. The unchallenged don, was used to obedience, to fear, to women who played their parts—until Elena’s red hair and icy eyes struck at the core of his empire. He had underestimated her. Every calculated move, every subtle provocation, every accidental brush of skin sent sparks of obsession through him. She was the predator in heels, he the prey who couldn’t escape the magnetic pull of her intelligence, beauty, and danger. He tried to dominate. She tried to manipulate. But both were ensnared in a deadly, irresistible dance neither could escape. At a gala where power and money collided, Elena struck. Deals crumbled, alliances shattered, and Victor realized the woman he had dismissed as a mere pawn was the ultimate predator. She turned his empire into her chessboard, twisting rivals and exposing weaknesses with surgical precision. In the world of mafia intrigue, only the cunning survived—and only the irresistible commanded true power.Mutual Pining|Age Gap|Survival|Dark Secrets|Plot Twist|Possessive Love|HE34.8k words5 16 -
CompletedChapter 42
THE THINGS SHE FORGOT
Five years ago, Evelyn Harper’s best friend vanished during a storm on Blackwater Bridge. The body was never found. And Evelyn can’t remember the last two hours of that night. Now a successful true-crime podcaster, Evelyn receives an anonymous video showing her at the bridge the night Lena disappeared. Rain pouring. Blood on her hands. Then she meets Dr. Adrian Cross. Brilliant criminal psychiatrist. Cold. Controlled. Impossible to read. The terrifying part? He remembers Evelyn. Even when she doesn’t remember him. As buried memories begin clawing their way back, Evelyn discovers hidden recordings, missing evidence, and a horrifying possibility: What if she was never just the witness? What if she was always part of the crime? Perfect for fans of dark psychological thrillers, obsession romance, and jaw-dropping twists, The Things She Forgot is the kind of novel that keeps readers awake long after midnight.Human Nature|Mutual Pining|Dark Secrets|Plot Twist|Possessive Love|Reunion Romance|Redemption Arc|Second Chance37.7k words5 36 -
CompletedChapter 40
SHADOWS OF NOCTIS
At Noctis Academy, the empire does not train students. It creates weapons. After her father is executed for treason, Evelyn Valehart survives by becoming invisible. Quiet girls live longer in royal kingdoms. Especially at Noctis Academy— the empire’s brutal gothic war institution where noble heirs learn strategy, magic, and how to kill without hesitation. Evelyn arrives with nothing except: a scholarship, her dead father’s encrypted journal, and a dangerous suspicion that the empire buried something monstrous beneath the academy cathedral. She does not expect to attract the attention of Lucien Mordane. The crown prince. The empire’s most feared war heir. The boy whispered about in candlelit corridors like a curse. Cold. Untouchable. Violent. Students fear him enough to lower their eyes when he walks past. But Evelyn notices something nobody else does: Lucien looks exhausted. As political conspiracies tighten around Noctis and students begin disappearing beneath the academy, Evelyn uncovers terrifying truths about forbidden shadow rituals, dead royal heirs, and the horrifying experiments that transformed Lucien into something more weapon than human. The closer she gets to the truth— the closer Lucien gets to her. And the empire’s perfect prince begins unraveling in dangerous ways: watching her too closely, sleeping outside her door, threatening anyone who touches her, losing control whenever she’s hurt. Because Evelyn becomes the first person to look at Lucien Mordane and see: not a monster. Just a boy taught his entire life that love was weakness. But some kingdoms are built on blood. Some princes are born to destroy empires. And some love stories are less about salvation— and more about choosing who you’re willing to ruin the world for.Healing Romance|Mutual Pining|Dark Secrets|Prophecy|Mythology|Demons|Spirits|Yandere|Possessive Love|Redemption Arc|Adventure41.9k words5 6