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Vows of vengeance

Opeyemi_Ajayi
7
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The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 7 chs / week.
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Synopsis
Synopsis – Vows of Vengeance From the very beginning, Kimberly lived in the shadows. Her younger sister, Summer, was the golden child—showered with adoration, praised for her beauty, and celebrated as the family’s “sunshine.” Kimberly, intelligent and kind but deemed plain, was overlooked at every turn. Her achievements went unnoticed, her presence diminished, her heart quietly breaking as the world revolved around Summer. The wounds of childhood deepened into scars—friends stolen, her first love seduced away, even her parents’ favoritism carved into cruel reminders. On Summer’s sixteenth birthday, while she received silver and praise, Kimberly was told simply to “keep doing well in school.” That night, Kimberly made a vow: she would endure, and one day, she would prove them wrong. At eighteen, suffocated by invisibility, Kimberly escapes her family’s orbit and begins anew in City B. The struggle is merciless—grinding jobs, sleepless nights, and near-despair. Yet from those ashes, Kimberly finds her footing when she becomes the personal assistant to Richard Wellington, CEO of a powerful conglomerate. Her resilience and diligence earn quiet respect. When Richard’s son, Alexander, takes over, their paths entwine. Ambitious yet perceptive, Alexander sees the strength Kimberly hides beneath her modest exterior. Professional respect blooms into a slow, tender romance—one that gives Kimberly, for the first time in her life, the feeling of being chosen. Under city lights, Alexander’s proposal becomes the promise of a future she never dared dream. But happiness draws envy. Summer, consumed by jealousy when news of the engagement reaches her, strikes back with ruthless cunning. Her schemes unravel Kimberly’s fragile world—culminating in a cruel betrayal staged at Alexander’s bachelor party. Misled into believing Alexander unfaithful, Kimberly flees in heartbreak, only to be struck by tragedy. Broken, scarred, and stripped of her memories after a devastating accident, Kimberly is rescued by a wealthy, grieving man. Haunted by his own losses, he adopts her as his own, giving her a new identity and taking her abroad for healing. Five long years pass—years of surgeries, training, and transformation. When she returns, it is not as the forgotten daughter or the betrayed lover. Kimberly has been reborn. Hardened by suffering, cloaked in strength, and armed with a new face, she carries with her not just survival, but purpose. This time, she is no one’s shadow. This time, she will reclaim her life. This time, she will have her vengeance.
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Chapter 1 - Chapter 1-The Golden One

The living room always belonged to Summer.

She stood in the center of it that evening, honey-colored hair tied with a silk ribbon, the hem of her dress falling just above her knees. Their mother fussed around her with pins and pleats, smoothing fabric as though preparing a doll for display. Their father sat back in his leather chair, pride glowing in his eyes—the kind of pride Kimberly had never once seen directed at her.

Kimberly lingered in the doorway, her fingers curled tight against the wooden frame.

 "Doesn't she look like a movie star?" their mother gushed, clapping her hands. "Our Summer, the beautiful one." Her father nodded, gaze never leaving Summer. "A man could build kingdoms for a face like that."

The words were familiar, spoken so often they felt carved into the very walls of the house. Summer, the beautiful one. Kimberly, the other one. And the insult always cut deeper because Kimberly was older. She had been there first—seventeen now, two years ahead of Summer—but it had never mattered. Summer was adored. Kimberly was tolerated.

She glanced at her reflection in the hallway mirror: darker hair, fuller lips, a body too curvy for dresses made for slimmer girls. People called her "striking" when they were trying not to say something else. Never golden. Never beautiful.

Swallowing the bitterness, she forced a smile. "I baked muffins."

On the counter, a plate cooled—the effort of her morning, measured and stirred with careful hope. Maybe, just maybe, this time she would earn a kind word.

Summer crossed the room, plucked one, and bit into it. She chewed, wrinkled her nose, and dropped it back onto the plate.

 "Too much flour," she said simply. "You should leave the cooking to Mom." Their mother laughed instead of scolding. "Don't be unkind, darling. Kimberly tries." The word sliced deeper than any insult. Kimberly lowered her eyes so they wouldn't see the heat rising in them.

 ---

That afternoon, salvation arrived in the form of her best friend, Lila. Kimberly had waited all week for her—they'd planned a trip into town, maybe a movie, a chance to breathe outside the suffocating walls of home. Clutching her purse, Kimberly felt lighter for the first time all day.

Then Summer appeared at the top of the stairs. Even in plain jeans and a white blouse, she was effortless.

"Lila!" Summer's smile stretched wide, as though greeting an old companion. "I didn't know you were coming." Lila blushed, shifting. "Yeah, Kimberly and I were just—"

"Perfect timing," Summer interrupted, gliding down the steps. "We were about to make tea. Come sit with me." By the time they left the house, Kimberly was trailing behind, her plans drowned beneath Summer's laughter. Lila didn't look back. She never did. Kimberly walked three paces behind, throat burning. It always happened like this. Summer never asked. She only took.

---

That night, their father returned from work with a small velvet box. He kissed Summer's forehead and placed it in her hands. Inside lay a silver bracelet that shimmered like liquid light.

 "For my golden girl," he said.

Summer beamed, sliding it onto her wrist.

Kimberly waited. No second box appeared. No glance, no word. Nothing. She stood in the corner, fists clenched until her nails left half-moons in her palms. Later, in their shared bedroom, Summer sprawled across the bed, bracelet glinting in the moonlight as sleep pulled her under. Kimberly sat upright, staring.

The moon painted Summer in silver—her smooth cheek, her delicate lashes, her perfect mouth. Kimberly memorized every detail, not with love but with something sharper. Something darker.

She thought of Lila, already slipping away. She thought of the muffins discarded, the laughter, the word tries. She thought of how easily Summer took everything, as though the world had been made for her alone. Kimberly lay down at last, but her eyes stayed open, fixed on the

ceiling.

And in that silence, she made herself a promise.

One day, she would leave. One day, she would return.