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After Rebirth, I Became My Ex's Aunt-in-Law-Chapter 145: Unmedicated, Unhinged, and Unbelieved
The darkness of the bathroom was absolute.
Aria couldn’t breathe. The gloved hand clamped over her mouth tasted of cheap leather and something chemical. The thick arm wrapped around her waist lifted her completely off the marble floor, crushing the air from her lungs.
She was dragged backward, her bare feet kicking uselessly at the air as the heavy wooden door of the restroom was kicked open, leading not back into the pristine aisles of Elysium, but into a narrow, concrete service corridor.
The air instantly dropped twenty degrees.
"Dépêche-toi! (Hurry up!)" a harsh voice hissed in the dark.
"Elle se débat, putain! (She’s struggling, fuck!)" her captor grunted, his grip tightening like a vice around her ribs.
They hit a metal push-bar door. It banged open, and Aria was suddenly swallowed by the freezing, damp air of a New York back alley. The smell of eucalyptus and expensive produce was replaced by the stench of stale garbage and stagnant water.
As the heavy metal door slammed shut behind them, cutting off any remaining light, something inside Aria’s brain snapped.
The darkness, the rough hands dragging her against her will, the smell of damp concrete triggered a violent, catastrophic misfire in her nervous system.
She wasn’t twenty years old. She wasn’t outside a grocery store.
She was twenty-five. She was in the asylum.
The shadows morphed into the stark, blinding white of the psychiatric ward hallways. The men holding her weren’t French cartel members; they were the orderlies. She could smell the bleach. She could feel the heavy canvas of the straightjacket.
’Stop fighting, Miss Vale,’ a phantom voice echoed in her ears. ’It’s time for your treatment.’
Aria let out a muffled, desperate scream against the leather glove. The sheer, unadulterated terror of being locked away again didn’t paralyze her. It acted like a shot of pure adrenaline straight into her heart.
Her 20-year-old body didn’t have the muscle mass to fight off three grown men. But her brain remembered exactly how to fight dirty. She had spent five years defending herself from abusive nurses and violent inmates.
She stopped thrashing.
Instantly, she let her entire body go completely, utterly limp. Dead weight.
Her captor, expecting continued resistance, was caught off guard by the sudden drop of a hundred and twenty pounds.
"Merde (Shit)," he cursed, his grip loosening just a fraction of an inch to adjust his hold so she wouldn’t slip through his arms.
That fraction of an inch was all Aria needed.
Her hand shot up to her messy, damp bun. Her fingers found the long silver needle securely woven into her hair like a hairpin.
She yanked it out.
With a feral, guttural snarl, Aria drove the three-inch needle directly backward, plunging it deep into the cluster of nerves at the base of the man’s neck—the Brachial Plexus.
The man let out a high-pitched, strangled shriek. The needle essentially short-circuited the electrical signals to his arm. His muscles spasmed violently, his grip completely failing.
Aria dropped to the asphalt. She didn’t hesitate. She spun around on her bare feet and delivered a brutal, upward kick directly between his legs.
The man folded like a cheap lawn chair, collapsing onto the wet concrete with a sickening groan.
"Catch her!" one of the other shadows yelled.
Aria didn’t look back. She sprinted.
Her bare feet slapped against the freezing, debris-littered asphalt of the alleyway. Sharp pebbles and shards of broken glass bit into her soles, but she didn’t feel the pain. She ran with the desperate, lung-burning speed of a prey animal, the silk of her camisole clinging to her sweat-drenched skin.
She saw the warm glow of the streetlights at the end of the alley.
She burst out onto the sidewalk, gasping for air, her hair a wild, tangled mess around her face.
She scrambled around the corner, throwing herself toward the frosted glass entrance of Elysium.
The suited bouncer was standing exactly where she had left him minutes ago. He looked bored, checking his cuticles.
"Help!" Aria screamed, her voice hoarse and raw. She threw herself at the glass doors, slapping her hands against the frosted panes. "Call the police! They’re in the alley!"
The bouncer jumped, stepping back in alarm. He looked at her.
He didn’t see the Matriarch of the Sinclair family. He saw a barefoot woman in a disheveled silk top and black trousers, her hair a bird’s nest, her eyes wide and manic, screaming at a grocery store.
"Whoa, lady, back up," the bouncer said, holding his hands up defensively. "You can’t be here. You need to step away from the doors."
"You don’t understand!" Aria panted, grabbing his suit sleeve. "My husband is inside! Damien Sinclair! He’s at the meat counter! You have to let me in, they are trying to kidnap me!"
The bouncer rolled his eyes, a look of profound, exhausted irritation settling over his features. He gently but firmly peeled her fingers off his jacket.
"Right. Damien Sinclair," the bouncer sighed, shaking his head. "Look, miss, you’re the third girl this week who claims she’s secretly married to the Demon King. I get it, he’s rich, he’s handsome, but this is a private establishment. If you don’t leave the premises, I’m calling the cops to have you removed for loitering."
"Call them!" Aria shrieked, tears of pure frustration prickling her eyes. "I want the cops! I am Aria Sinclair! Check your retinal logs! He literally scanned in with me standing right next to him twenty minutes ago!"
The bouncer scoffed, reaching for the radio clipped to his belt. "Okay, crazy. That’s enough—"
"I am so, so sorry about this."
A smooth, cultured voice, thick with a Parisian accent, cut through the cold air.
Aria froze.
Two men stepped out of the shadows of the adjacent building. They weren’t wearing tactical gear anymore. They had stripped off the Kevlar vests, revealing sharp, tailored dark suits. They wore designer sunglasses, despite the late hour. They looked polished. Professional. Wealthy.
They stepped up directly behind Aria.
Two heavy, immoveable hands clamped down on her bare shoulders, pinning her in place with terrifying, polite perfection.
Aria opened her mouth to scream, but the man on her right leaned in, his grip tightening just enough to promise a broken collarbone if she made a sound.
"Excuse our sister," the man said to the bouncer, offering a warm, deeply embarrassed smile. "She is... unwell."
The bouncer paused, his hand hovering over his radio. He looked at the two well-dressed men, then at the barefoot, disheveled Aria. The picture painted itself instantly in his mind.
"She slipped away from her private nurse while we were parking the car," the second man added, his voice dripping with faux-sympathy as he stroked Aria’s hair in a sickeningly gentle gesture. "She has a fixation on Mr. Sinclair. The tabloids, you know? It fuels her delusions."
"Let me go!" Aria snarled, thrashing her shoulders. "He’s lying! They’re kidnapping me!"
"Shh, Aria, calm down," the first man cooed, his grip locking her spine in place. He looked apologetically at the bouncer. "I’m sorry for the disturbance. She is off her medication. We are taking her back to the clinic now."
The words hit Aria like a physical blow.
She is off her medication. She is unwell. The clinic.
The air vanished from her lungs. The sheer, horrifying irony of the lie paralyzed her. It was the exact script Raymond and Lydia had used to lock her away for five years. It was the ultimate gaslight, deployed with lethal precision by strangers who had no idea they were using her deepest trauma against her.
She looked at the bouncer, her emerald eyes begging, pleading for him to see through the polished veneer of the men holding her.
But the bouncer’s expression had already shifted from annoyed to deeply sympathetic. He relaxed, dropping his hand from the radio. He gave the men a knowing, pitying nod.
"Say no more, man," the bouncer sighed. "Mental health is tough. Do you need a hand getting her to the car?"
"No, thank you," the man smiled perfectly. "We can manage our own."
Aria couldn’t breathe. She was trapped in plain sight, silenced by the one weapon she couldn’t fight: the assumption of her own insanity.
They turned her around, their grips like iron, and began walking her toward the dark, idling van waiting at the curb.







