She Ran Into A Stranger’s Car—Then Saw Her Stepmother Calling Him-congtien

The rain started before Elena Vargas reached the back stairs.

It came down hard enough to flatten the grass and turn the path behind the mansion into a slick strip of mud.

Her bare feet hit gravel, then dirt, then a shallow puddle that splashed up her torn silver dress.

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She did not stop to look down.

She did not stop to check the blood at her ankles, or the bruising heat across her cheek, or the place on her shoulder where the fabric had ripped when she climbed through the bathroom window.

She only ran.

Behind her, the house was still lit for company.

Through the trees, the windows glowed gold, soft, expensive, and civilized, the kind of light that made people believe good families lived inside.

Elena knew what lived inside.

It had Isabel Vargas’s voice.

It had Mr. Ambrose’s old hand reaching for a wineglass.

It had a locked bedroom door and a hallway full of people pretending they had not heard anything.

The rain washed mascara into Elena’s eyes, and every breath scraped her throat raw.

She could hear shoes somewhere behind her.

She could hear someone calling orders.

She could hear the thin mechanical click of a gate or a door or a security latch, and the sound made her stomach turn because everything in that house had locks.

Locks on rooms.

Locks on accounts.

Locks on a life Isabel had slowly narrowed until Elena barely recognized it as her own.

“Elena!”

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