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Fallen 155

Fallen 155

Alaric’s POV

My body went completely still. Clint’s words hung in the air like a dark and heavy cloud. His gaze remained on mine, and I didn’t look away either. Didn’t move, didn’t say a fucking word

I didn’t try to deny it. Hell, I didn’t even want to. It’s why I was here

To accept the fact that I killed my own father

Nothing to say, huh?he asked, gaze narrowing. You won’t try to deny it?” 

With every second that passed, the expression on Clint’s face soured even more. He was in disbelief. Almost like he wasn’t sure I did it at first, and was only guessing when he tried to accuse me just now

And me not denying his accusations only confirmed it

Yes, I killed my father

I was thirteen years old and completely fed up. My father had done too much, consistently beating up my mother, and even though I tried so hard to defend her, it was never enough. He still locked her up in psychiatric facilities and made her look crazy, releasing her whenever he wanted and putting her back whenever she defied him

But then, he touched Nolan. Beat him up. I wasn’t around when it happened, only to get home and find out that he had passed out and was receiving stitches at the hospital

I told Meadow all that, but what I didn’t tell her was what I did after

My father was a reckless man. I knew where he kept his gun. And at that point, I was fucking pissed. More than pissed. No thirteen year old should’ve ever had to know things like this, but I wasn’t just a regular thirteenyear -old

I needed to protect my familyMutti and Nolanbefore my father killed us

I went to his office during one of his late nights, when no witness was around

And then I… 

I shot him

I didn’t say a word to him, I just pulled the trigger

I didn’t flinch when my father’s body hit the floor. I didn’t think I was even capable of flinching. But that moment ruined me forever. The image

The way his eyes widened in surprise. His last word: Why?” 

Why

I knew I would get in trouble, and so I hid the gun. Nobody ever suspected, and when the police couldn’t find the killer, they closed the case

That was the same period I developed the neurological condition. I didn’t understand how it happened, how badly damaged I had to be to shut everything and everyone out to the point where I couldn’t even feel anything anymore physically. But it happened

And I wanted it to remain that way, but somehow, my mother knew. And instead of bringing it up with me, she kept it to herself for years and years

I had unknowingly ruined the people I loved all because of one stupid fucking mistake

I smirked at Clint. Bravo,I muttered smoothly. You figured it out.” 

Clint’s eyes flashed, and I already knew what he was going to do before he did it. He sprung to his feet, face completely red as he started to charge toward me with his cuffed wrists

I sprung to my feet as well, however, before he could even reach for me, I swung my arm back and delivered a hard punch to his jaw. You should know better,I said, clicking my tongue. I have more privileges than you do, Clint. You’re only here alone with me because I willed it so.” 

His chest heaved, and he replied through his teeth. You framed me and put me in here, and for what? Huh?” 

Clenching my jaw, I punched him again. Don’t stand there and act like you didn’t fucking ruin my family, Clint,I growled

When he turned to look at me this time, I could see a red crack on his lip. I glanced down at my fist. They hadn’t yet healed from the punching bag and hitting him was going to split my wounds open again

Clint scoffed. Ruin your family? If there’s anyone who ruined your family, it’s you,he spat. You killed your own father, and then you had the guts to put it on me.” 

My gaze narrowed. You seem to have forgotten that murder isn’t the only reason you’re here. Sit,I added, nodding toward the chair. Clint opened his mouth, about to protest, but I silenced him with a look and he lowered himself into the chair, his fists clenched together

You stole from people, Clint, did you forget that? Did you forget the amount of people who were ready to testify against you because you swindled their money and used it to build your own company?I leaned in, pressing my fist against the surface of the table. Did you forget that my father was among the unfortunate ones you conned, and that you were the reason he became bankrupt? Do you know how fucking selfish you have to be to con your own friend out of his life investments? I mean, you were friends, weren’t you?” 

He clenched his jaw and my gaze narrowed as I lowered my voice. Answer me, Clint.” 

He shot me a glare. Don’t blame me because your father was fucking easy to manipulate.” 

Oh, but I will blame you,I replied, finally lowering myself onto the seat. The air was thick with tension. Both of us wanted to break each other’s jaws. Maybe even a spine

Me? I wanted to break his fucking neck

Leaning in, I continued. You want to know why? After my father lost everything, he turned to drugs, turned to fucking alcohol. Before then, he still wasn’t father of the year, but at least he was bearable. But after you ruined his life and somehow made him turn to you for help, it crushed him. I hated the man, but I could see the pain in 

his eyes. He hurt my mother, hurt my brother, hurt meI shoved out a breath as my brows drew together. So you see, Clint, you are the reason my father is dead. You’re the reason I had to kill him, you’re the reason my life was fucking ruined!My voice was louder now and I slammed my fist against the table

Fallen

Fallen

Score 9.9
Status: Ongoing Type: Native Language: English
Fallen Summary & Review: Fallen

Meadow Russell arrives at an upscale hotel, heart fluttering with excitement and nerves. She’s about to marry the love of her life, Tyler, in a small, private ceremony — just the two of them. Clutching her bag, she approaches the front desk with a smile. “Hi, I have a reservation. Meadow Russell.”

But from the very first second, something feels off.

The receptionist’s red-painted lips curl into a mocking sneer, and her colleague exchanges a strange look with her. Meadow’s cheerful tone falters as confusion settles in. The woman scoffs, “You’re kidding, right?” The disbelief in her tone makes Meadow’s stomach twist. She frowns, insisting there must be a mistake, but both receptionists continue to look at her with something close to pity — and something else she can’t quite name.

Then comes the shocker.

According to the hotel records, she’s already checked in. Two hours ago. With a man. The receptionist even claims to have spoken with her — complimenting her “cute top.” The same white crop top with the word “BRIDE” written across it that she’s wearing now.

Meadow tries to rationalize it. Maybe Tyler had checked in under her name. Maybe it’s a simple mix-up. She laughs nervously and explains that her fiancé must have done it for convenience. But both receptionists seem unconvinced. One of them finally sighs and hands her a spare keycard, muttering, “I hope you get things sorted out.”

On her way up to the room, Meadow’s heart pounds in her chest. Something feels horribly wrong, but she refuses to believe it. Tyler would never do anything to hurt her. They’ve been planning this wedding for months — their dream elopement. She tries to calm herself, breathing in and out as the elevator ascends, but her hands won’t stop shaking.

When she finally reaches the room and swipes the keycard, her worst fears materialize before her eyes.

The moment the door opens, the sound hits her first — muffled moans, heavy breathing, the rhythmic creak of the bed. Then she sees them.

Her twin sister, Juniper, straddling Tyler, his hands gripping her hips as he thrusts into her without restraint.

The world stops. The bag slips from Meadow’s trembling hands and lands with a soft thud. The scene before her feels like a cruel joke — something ripped out of a nightmare. Her vision blurs with tears, her body frozen in disbelief.

For a full minute, she just stands there. Watching. Waiting. Hoping someone would scream “gotcha” and end this cruel trick.

But there’s no misunderstanding to clear up. No mistake. No illusion.

Her twin sister moans again, whispering, “Yes, that’s it, baby,” as if to drive the knife deeper into Meadow’s heart.

Something inside her shatters.

“Juniper…? Tyler?” she finally manages to whisper, her voice barely recognizable.

They both turn, startled. Tyler’s face twists in shock, then panic. He pushes Juniper off him, stammering, “Meadow, I swear, I thought she was you!”

It’s a pathetic excuse. One that doesn’t even make sense.

Juniper doesn’t even bother covering herself. She just smirks, tossing her messy hair over her shoulder like a queen enjoying the chaos she’s created. “Oh, please,” she scoffs. “It’s time we drop the act. This has been going on for a while.”

Meadow stumbles back, staring between them. “What are you talking about?”

Her twin rolls her eyes. “You really didn’t think he loved you, did you?”

It hits Meadow all at once — the hotel mix-up, the receptionist’s strange looks, the duplicate “Meadow Russell” check-in. Juniper had stolen her identity, her name, her wedding — and the man she loved.

Tyler tries to approach her again, naked and unashamed. He grabs her jaw gently, his expression hard. “You thought I loved you, Meadow? No. Juni’s the love of my life.”

The words pierce like knives.

Every memory — every kiss, every late-night conversation, every promise he made — turns to ash. She had believed in him completely, trusted him with her heart. And all along, he’d been sharing that same intimacy with her twin sister.

Meadow stares at Juniper, still unable to process it. The last time she saw her twin was two years ago. They’d grown apart after Juniper’s endless trail of lies and manipulation had driven a wedge between them. Juniper had always been the beautiful, daring, chaotic one — the one who got what she wanted, no matter who she hurt. But never, not in her darkest thoughts, had Meadow imagined she would do this.

Juniper laughs again, the sound sharp and cruel. “She’s in shock, baby. Maybe we should help her out of her misery,” she says mockingly, then pulls Tyler into another kiss right in front of her.

That’s when Meadow realizes this isn’t a mistake. This isn’t a sudden betrayal. It’s a plan.

Her sister had known exactly what she was doing. She had tracked Meadow down, learned about the wedding, and swooped in like a vulture to destroy what little happiness she had built. The matching outfit, the fake check-in — all of it was deliberate.

The pain turns into rage. Her tears blur her sight, her breath coming out in shaky bursts. Every muscle in her body screams at her to turn around, to run far away from the two people who’ve just ripped her soul apart.

But she doesn’t move.

She stands there, trembling, her heart breaking piece by piece as she watches her sister smirk and her fiancé — her almost-husband — stand there unashamed, not even offering a shred of remorse.

Tyler and Juniper exchange a look, and she realizes — they’re enjoying this. They want her to see. To suffer.

Meadow’s hands ball into fists. She feels like she’s watching her life crumble in real time, and there’s nothing she can do but breathe through the ache and pray she doesn’t collapse.

Every part of her screams that this is the moment she loses everything — her trust, her love, her family.

And yet, deep inside, a spark ignites — not of despair, but of something darker. A promise that this won’t be the end of her story.

Because betrayal that deep doesn’t fade. It carves itself into your bones. And Meadow Russell — heartbroken, humiliated, and hollow — walks out of that hotel room knowing one thing for certain.

She will never forgive them.

And one day, they will both pay for what they’ve done.

 

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