PART 1: THE CRIME AND ABANDONMENT
The Cathedral of Seville had never seemed so imposing nor so cruel as on that October morning. Sunbeams filtered through the gothic stained glass, painting patterns of blood and gold onto the polished marble floor, where five hundred of Europe’s most exclusive elite had gathered. The air smelled of ancient incense and the cloying fragrance of a thousand white lilies, a mixture Victoria Valerius would remember for the rest of her life as the scent of death.
Victoria, the sole heiress to the Valerius shipping empire, the oldest and most powerful commercial fleet in the Mediterranean, stood before the high altar. Her dress was a masterpiece of Chantilly lace and silk, with a five-meter train stretching behind her like the wake of a ghost ship. Her hands, gloved in satin, trembled slightly, not from fear, but from nervous anticipation. She was about to unite her life and legacy with Maximus Sterling, the prodigy of tech finance, the man who had promised to modernize her father’s fleet and bring the Valerius name into the 21st century.
The organ music ceased abruptly. The massive oak doors of the main entrance opened with a groan that echoed in the vaults. Victoria turned, expecting to see Maximus’s reassuring smile.
What she saw froze the blood in her veins.
Maximus entered, but he wasn’t wearing the groom’s tuxedo they had chosen together in Milan. He wore a charcoal gray business suit, cut with surgical precision. He didn’t walk with the humility of a man in love, but with the predatory arrogance of a general entering a conquered city. And, most terrifying of all, he did not come alone. By his side, marching with equal coldness, was Isabella, Victoria’s maid of honor, her best friend since childhood, the woman who had dried her tears of stress just the night before.
The silence in the cathedral was absolute, dense, suffocating.
Maximus ascended the altar steps, ignoring the archbishop, and took the microphone from the lectern. His voice, amplified by the temple’s perfect acoustics, sounded metallic and soulless.
“I regret to inform you that there will be no wedding today,” Maximus announced, scanning the room.
A murmur of confusion rippled through the pews. Victoria took a step forward, her heart beating against her ribs like a caged bird. “Maximus, what are you doing?” she whispered, her voice cracking.
He turned to her. In his eyes, there was no love, not even pity. There was only calculation. “There is no wedding, Victoria, because there is nothing left to merge.”
He snapped his fingers. The immense LED screens installed for guests to view the wedding vows flickered and changed images. Instead of rings, they displayed a high-resolution legal document, stamped with the Supreme Court emblem. The title shone with obscene clarity: “Hostile Takeover Merger: Sterling Corp acquires Valerius Shipping.”
Victoria felt the world tilt. “What is this?” she gasped.
“It’s the end, darling,” Maximus said, leaning in close so the microphones caught every syllable of his cruelty. “Your father signed this total transfer exactly one hour ago.”
“You’re lying!” Victoria screamed. “My father would never sell!”
“He did so under duress, of course,” Maximus admitted with a viperous smile. “Just before the Civil Guard’s Financial Crimes Unit burst into the sacristy to arrest him for massive tax fraud, money laundering, and collaboration with organized crime. Charges that, ironically, hold up thanks to the digital signature you, in your infinite naivety, authorized me to use ‘to manage the wedding preparations’.”
At that instant, the cathedral’s side doors burst open. A dozen uniformed officers entered. Victoria watched, in paralyzing horror, as they dragged her father, Don Alejandro Valerius, out in handcuffs like a common criminal. The old man screamed his daughter’s name, eyes wide with fear and betrayal, before disappearing into a police van.
Victoria tried to run to him, but Isabella stepped in her path. The “friend” handed her a thick, heavy envelope.
“It’s a court order, Victoria,” Isabella said, her voice soft and poisonous. “You are forbidden from approaching the offices, the family mansion, or any Sterling Corp property. Your personal accounts have been frozen as part of the investigation.”
“Isabella… you knew this…” Victoria looked at her, searching for a trace of the sister she thought she had. “Please, Victoria. Don’t be dramatic,” Isabella replied, smoothing her dress. “Someone had to be the new Vice President. The car waiting for you outside isn’t the bridal limousine. It’s a taxi paid to the municipal shelter. Maximus is generous, after all.”
Maximus approached one last time. With a harsh, violent movement, he ripped the lace veil from her head, tearing the silk and releasing her hair. “You are too naive for this world,” he whispered in her ear. “You thought love was power. You were wrong. Power is power. And now, it’s all mine.”
Expelled from her own life in a matter of minutes, Victoria walked out of the cathedral. The sky, as if sharing her misfortune, broke into a torrential storm. Rain fell like molten lead, soaking her multi-thousand-euro wedding dress until it became a heavy gray rag clinging to her skin like a second layer of shame.
She walked. She walked for hours, aimlessly, crossing the Triana Bridge while tourists filmed her with their phones and drunks shouted obscenities. Her heels broke; her feet bled on the cobblestones. She felt no cold. She felt no pain. She felt only an immense void, a black hole in her chest where her heart used to beat.
At nightfall, she ended up under the stone arches of the bridge, a place where the city hid its trash. She collapsed onto a pile of damp cardboard, shivering.
It was then she heard the sound of flesh hitting stone.
In the shadows, three thugs were surrounding a human lump. A beggar. They were trying to snatch a bottle of cheap wine and a worn backpack from him. “Let go, you filthy old man!” one attacker shouted, kicking the man in the ribs.
But the beggar didn’t scream. With a fluid, almost liquid movement, he caught the attacker’s leg and took him down with a combat technique no vagrant should know. However, it was three against one. The second one pulled a knife.
Victoria felt something break inside her. The “good girl,” the heiress educated in the best Swiss boarding schools, died in that instant. What remained was pure fury. She grabbed a rusted iron bar lying on the ground, a remnant of some abandoned construction work.
She screamed. A guttural, animalistic scream.
She lunged at the man with the knife and struck his wrist with all her might. The crack of bone was audible. The man howled and dropped the weapon. Victoria spun and struck the third one in the knee. The thugs, terrified by the sight of a soaked, bloody bride fighting like a demon, fled into the darkness.
Victoria dropped the bar, gasping, and looked at the man she had saved.
The beggar wiped a trickle of blood from his lip and looked at her. Beneath the dirt and unkempt beard, his eyes shone with electric intensity, a blue so clear it looked like burning ice. “You hit with a lot of rage for a princess,” he said. His voice was cultured, deep, without the slur of alcohol.
“And you fight too well to be a drunk,” Victoria replied, her voice hoarse.
The man leaned against the stone wall. “My name is Lazarus. Ten years ago, I was the king of Silicon Valley. I designed the quantum algorithm that controls global markets. Until a partner stole my code, erased my identity, and left me here to die. That partner is named Maximus Sterling.”
The name hit Victoria like lightning. She looked at Lazarus, seeing not a beggar, but a mirror of her own broken soul.
Slowly, she took off her engagement ring. A five-carat diamond, Maximus’s last glittering lie. “He took my company. He took my father. He took my name,” Victoria said, extending her hand with the jewel. “I don’t want my life back, Lazarus. I want his head on a silver platter.”
Lazarus looked at the ring, then into her eyes. He smiled. It was a terrible smile, full of teeth and promises of apocalypse. “You provide the capital. I provide the brains. Together, we burn his sky.”
Under the bridge, as the rain washed the blood from their hands, Victoria Valerius and Lazarus sealed a pact.
What silent oath was made in the dark…?
PART 2: THE GHOST RETURNS
Three years. One thousand and ninety-five days. That was the time it took to build the weapon.
During that time, the financial world kept turning. Maximus Sterling ascended to demigod status. His company, now owning the Valerius fleet, dominated global trade. Magazines called him “The Visionary of the Century.” Isabella, his trophy wife, smiled at charity galas, though rumors said her antidepressant consumption increased every month. They believed Victoria was dead or insane, lost in some forgotten corner of the world.
They were wrong. Victoria wasn’t lost. She was in the chrysalis.
With the money obtained from selling the diamond on the black market, Lazarus and Victoria had established themselves in an underground bunker on the outskirts of Kiev, a place where digital laws didn’t exist. Lazarus wasn’t just a programmer; he was an architect of reality. He taught Victoria that money isn’t real; it’s just information, and information can be rewritten.
Victoria changed. She underwent a series of painful, clandestine reconstructive surgeries. Not to become more beautiful, but to erase the victim. Her cheekbones were sharpened, her nose reshaped, and her warm brown eyes were permanently hidden under icy green contact lenses. Her hair, once chestnut and wavy, was now ink-black and straight as a blade.
Lady V was born. A mysterious widow of a Kazakh oil tycoon who never existed, with an impeccable digital footprint created by Lazarus.
“You’re ready,” Lazarus said one night, looking at the woman he had forged. Nothing remained of the frightened heiress. Before him stood a predator.
The infiltration plan began in Monaco, Maximus’s playground. He had a known weakness: high-stakes poker. He believed himself invincible at the table, capable of reading any mind.
On the night of the Monte Carlo Casino Grand Tournament, Lady V made her entrance. She wore a black velvet dress that absorbed the light, leaving her back bare and a scar barely visible on her shoulder—a calculated reminder. She sat at the final table, directly opposite Maximus.
“You’re late, madame,” Maximus said, looking at her with curiosity, completely failing to recognize the woman he had abandoned.
“Destiny is never late, Mr. Sterling,” she replied, her voice a semitone deeper, trained to vibrate with authority. “It only waits for the right moment.”
The game was brutal. Victoria didn’t play the cards; she played Maximus’s ego. Lazarus, from a van two kilometers away, hacked the casino’s security cameras and transmitted exact odds to Victoria’s invisible earpiece. But it was she who delivered the final blow.
“I’m all in,” Victoria said, pushing a mountain of chips worth twenty million euros.
Maximus hesitated. He looked into her green eyes. He felt a shiver of déjà vu, a shadow of a memory he couldn’t place. His arrogance screamed at him to win. “I call.”
Victoria showed her cards. A Royal Flush. Maximus lost forty million in a second. But, more importantly, he was fascinated. “Who are you?” he asked, ignoring the money lost. “Someone who can teach you to win what money can’t buy,” she replied, standing up and leaving him a black business card with a single number.
That same week, Lazarus executed phase two. He infiltrated Sterling Tower in Madrid. Not as an executive, but as part of the invisible staff: night maintenance. He shaved, dressed in a gray jumpsuit, and became a ghost. While he mopped the marble floors Maximus walked on, Lazarus installed physical air-gapped interception devices on the central servers.
The duo began dismantling Maximus and Isabella’s sanity.
Isabella started receiving “gifts.” A bouquet of white lilies (the flowers of the cursed wedding) appeared on her vanity every Tuesday. Anonymous text messages arrived on her encrypted phone, showing photos of Maximus entering hotels with women who looked disturbingly like the old Victoria. Lazarus used voice deepfakes to call the mansion at 3:00 AM, playing the voice of Victoria’s father screaming from his cell.
Maximus, meanwhile, watched his side businesses fail mysteriously. Cargo ships diverted off course. Safe investments collapsed hours after he entered. Paranoia grew like cancer. He fired his head of security, his CFO, his secretary. He trusted only one person: Lady V.
She became his advisor, his confidante, his oracle. She offered him a solution to his liquidity problems: “Project Neos.” An autonomous floating city, free of taxes and laws, the ultimate dream of a megalomaniac.
“It’s risky, Lady V,” Maximus said one night, drunk on whiskey and desperation in his office. “Risk is for the poor, Maximus,” she whispered, massaging his temples. “For men like you, it is destiny. I will put up the final 500 million. But I need total control over the digital infrastructure to ‘protect’ the investment.”
Maximus, blinded by greed and the need for a triumph to silence his recent failures, signed. He handed Lazarus (unknowingly) the keys to the kingdom. He signed a digital contract Victoria had drafted, full of trap clauses invisible to conventional lawyers but lethal in execution.
The trap was shut. The inauguration date for “Neos” was set. It would be Maximus’s coronation.
Victoria and Lazarus met that night on the roof of a building facing Sterling Tower. The rain fell softly, an echo of the storm three years ago. “Tomorrow a god dies,” Lazarus said. “No,” Victoria corrected, looking at the lights of Maximus’s office. “Tomorrow, the devil discovers that hell has new owners.”
PART 3: THE BANQUET OF PUNISHMENT
The inauguration night of “Neos” was the most extravagant event of the decade. Sterling Tower had transformed into a beacon of light piercing Madrid’s night sky. On the 100th floor, under a bulletproof glass dome, gathered ministers, royalty, tech moguls, and celebrities. Champagne flowed like water, and a live orchestra tried to drown out the sound of the storm raging outside.
Maximus Sterling, dressed in immaculate white, felt untouchable. Beside him, Isabella looked like an exquisitely made-up corpse, her eyes darting nervously around the room, looking for ghosts.
“Ladies and gentlemen,” Maximus proclaimed, raising his glass to cameras broadcasting live to the whole world. “Today we inaugurate the future. Neos is not just a city; it is proof that human ingenuity has no limits. And none of this would be possible without my partner, the extraordinary Lady V.”
Applause erupted. Spotlights swept the room and stopped on Victoria.
She stood up. Tonight she had abandoned black. She wore a blood-red dress, structured and sharp like an open wound. She walked toward the stage with a calm that made the air in the room grow colder.
Lazarus, entrenched in the basement level 5 server room, typed the final command: EXECUTE PROTOCOL NEMESIS. “It’s showtime, Queen,” he whispered through the comms.
Victoria took the stage. Maximus handed her the microphone, smiling like the cat that ate the canary. “Thank you, Maximus,” she said. Her voice was soft but resonated with terrible authority. “You are right. Human ingenuity has no limits. But greed does have a price.”
Maximus frowned, confused. “Excuse me?”
Victoria turned to the immense screen behind them. “Let me show you the true cost of your empire.”
She snapped her fingers.
The lights in the room went out instantly. A scream of surprise rippled through the crowd. The giant screen lit up, but it didn’t show the Neos logo. It showed a grainy video, dated three years ago.
It was the security footage from the Cathedral sacristy.
The silence was sepulchral. Three hundred people watched, in high definition, as Maximus laughed while forging Victoria’s father’s digital signature. They heard the audio, clean and crisp: “She’s a silly girl. I’ll take everything, leave her on the street, and she’ll thank me for not killing her. No one will miss the Valerius family.”
In the video, Isabella laughed and added: “Make sure the eviction order is served before she stops crying.”
In the present, Isabella let out a shriek and tried to run for the doors, but they locked automatically with a metallic click. They were trapped.
Maximus went pale as paper. “This is a fake! It’s Artificial Intelligence!” he screamed, his voice cracking into hysteria. “Cut the feed!”
“You can’t cut the truth, Maximus,” Victoria said.
Suddenly, the phones of every guest began to vibrate and ring in unison. A cacophony of notifications. “Look at your phones,” Victoria ordered.
Investors pulled out their mobiles. Screens displayed bank alerts and breaking news. “We just released all your hidden ledgers to the public web,” Victoria explained, walking slowly toward him. “The cartel money laundering, the bribes to judges, the funds diverted from your employees’ pensions. Everything.”
On the giant screen, a stock market chart appeared. The Sterling Corp stock line plummeted vertically. “And that… that is your legacy turning to dust. In three minutes, your company has lost 99% of its value.”
Maximus trembled with pure rage. He lunged at Victoria with hands outstretched to strangle her. “Bitch! I’ll kill you!”
But before he could touch her, red emergency lights flashed. Lazarus had activated the defense systems. A wall of ultrasonic sound hit Maximus, dropping him to his knees, covering his ears in pain.
Victoria approached him, gasping on the floor. With a slow gesture, she brought her hand to her face. She removed the green contact lenses. She wiped the makeup from her cheek, revealing the small scar.
Maximus looked up. His eyes met the dark brown eyes he had betrayed. The recognition was a blow harder than any punch. “Victoria…” he whispered, in absolute horror.
“The silly girl is back, Maximus,” she said, her voice cold as winter. “And she brought the bill.”
The hall doors opened. Not to let guests out, but to let in the Financial Crimes Unit and Interpol. Victoria had coordinated the raid to coincide with the exact second of her reveal.
Agents handcuffed Isabella, who was weeping and screaming curses. They lifted Maximus from the floor. He looked at Victoria, seeking mercy, seeking a way out. “I loved you… in my own way,” he sobbed, pathetic in his defeat.
Victoria leaned close to his ear. “And I have destroyed you in mine.”
As they took him away, Maximus looked toward the dark corner of the stage. There stood Lazarus, impeccably dressed, raising a glass of champagne in a silent toast.
“Enjoy poverty, Maximus,” Lazarus shouted to him. “It’s much colder than you remember.”
PART 4: NEW EMPIRE AND LEGACY
The fall of the House of Sterling was swift and total. It was the financial scandal of the century.
Maximus Sterling was sentenced to three consecutive life terms for fraud, conspiracy, and money laundering. But his true punishment wasn’t jail; it was oblivion. In prison, without his money and influence, he became a nobody. Six months after his sentencing, they found him in his cell, hanged with a sheet. His ego couldn’t withstand irrelevance.
Isabella negotiated, betraying all her former allies, but still ended up cleaning toilets in a minimum-security prison, aging rapidly without her luxuries.
Victoria and Lazarus didn’t rebuild the past. They built something new.
Sterling Tower was stripped of its name. It now rose above Madrid as Nemesis Tower. Victoria recovered her father’s fleet, but merged it with Lazarus’s technology to create a global financial surveillance network. “Valerius-Lazarus” wasn’t just a company; it was a watchdog.
They used their algorithms to hunt others like Maximus. If a dictator tried to hide stolen money, his accounts disappeared. If a corporation exploited its workers, its secrets were leaked. They operated from the shadows, feared and respected.
One year after the night of revenge, Victoria stood on the penthouse terrace. The city shone beneath her feet. She no longer wore designer dresses to impress anyone; she wore simple, functional, black clothing.
Lazarus walked out onto the terrace, holding two glasses of cheap wine, the same wine they had shared under the bridge the night they met. “What are you thinking about?” he asked, handing her a glass.
Victoria looked at the horizon. “I’m thinking about the girl who walked into that cathedral dressed in white. Sometimes I miss her.”
Lazarus leaned on the railing beside her. The wind whipped his hair, now clean and cut, but his eyes still held that wild spark. “That girl had to die so the queen could be born. It’s the law of equivalent exchange. To gain something, you must sacrifice something of equal value.”
Victoria nodded. She drank the wine. It tasted of earth, rain, and victory. “We sacrificed our innocence, Lazarus. Was it worth it?”
Lazarus looked down at the streets where he was once invisible. Then he looked at Victoria, the woman who had pulled him out of hell. “Look at us. We are no longer pawns on anyone’s board. We are the players. And yes, it was worth every damn second.”
Victoria smiled. A true smile, the first in years. “The world is full of monsters, partner.”
“Then,” Lazarus said, clinking his glass against hers, “let’s toast to being the biggest monsters of them all.”
They stood there, two fallen angels at the top of the world, watching over their empire. Below, the city slept, ignorant that it was protected by the woman who was abandoned at the altar and the beggar who saved her
Would you have the courage to burn your own soul to be reborn as a god of revenge alongside Victoria and Lazarus?