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Sold to Bastard Alpha after My Divorce!-Chapter 171
Aria’s POV
The knocking came again.
Soft. Tentative. Almost hesitant.
My heart kicked into overdrive. Every nerve in my body suddenly screaming danger.
I was on my feet before I could think. My eyes darted around the dim living room, searching for anything I could use to defend myself.
The flashlight.
Heavy. Metal. Sitting on the side table where I’d left it after the last power outage.
I grabbed it. The weight was reassuring in my palm. Not much of a weapon, but better than facing whatever was out there with bare hands.
The knocking came a third time.
Quieter now. Almost like whoever was out there was losing courage. Or hope.
I crept toward the door. Each step deliberate. Careful. The floorboards under my feet seemed impossibly loud in the silence.
My apartment had never felt so dark. So isolated. The soft glow from Lina’s nightlight down the hall only made the shadows in the living room seem deeper. More threatening. Like they were alive and watching.
I pressed myself against the wall beside the door. Held my breath. Listened.
Nothing.
No voices in the hallway. No footsteps shuffling outside. No sounds of multiple people waiting to rush in the moment I opened the door.
Just profound, unsettling silence.
Maybe they’d left? Maybe it had been a mistake? Someone at the wrong apartment?
But my instincts were still screaming. Something was wrong. Very wrong.
I leaned forward slowly. Carefully. Brought my eye to the peephole.
And my blood turned to ice.
A small figure stood in the hallway.
A child.
I could barely make out the details through the fish-eye distortion of the lens. Dark hair plastered wetly to a small head. Clothes that looked completely soaked through, clinging to a tiny frame. Thin shoulders hunched forward, trembling against what must be bone-deep cold.
My mind raced.
What the hell?
A child. Alone. In the middle of the night. Standing at MY door.
This didn’t make sense. Nothing about this made sense.
But I couldn’t just leave a kid out there. Not in the middle of the night. Not alone and clearly in distress.
My hand was on the doorknob before I could second-guess myself.
I yanked it open.
The figure’s head snapped up.
And my heart stopped.
Completely, utterly stopped.
Because I knew that face.
Those features I’d spent five years trying to forget. Trying to move past. Trying to reconcile with the painful memories they represented.
That delicate bone structure. That shape of the eyes. The curve of the chin.
But this child was older than the last time I’d seen her. Taller. The baby softness gone from her face, replaced by the sharper angles of a growing girl. Her hair hung in wet, tangled strands around her face, so much longer than I remembered.
"Lilith?"
The name ripped from my throat. Strangled. Barely audible even to my own ears.
The little girl’s face crumpled instantly.
Her whole body started shaking. Not just shivering from the cold—though she was clearly freezing. This was something deeper. Violent tremors that made her teeth chatter audibly. Made her look like she might collapse right there in the hallway.
"M-mommy?"
The word was so small. So broken. So full of desperate hope and absolute terror and bone-deep exhaustion all tangled together.
It hit me like a physical blow.
She took a step forward. Her movement jerky. Uncertain. Like she wasn’t sure if she was allowed.
Then another step.
Then she launched herself at me.
Her small body crashed into mine with surprising force. All sharp elbows and bony knees and desperate need. Her arms wrapped around my waist in a death grip. Her face buried against my stomach. Her whole frame shaking so violently I could feel it through my clothes.
And she started crying.
Not quiet tears. Not gentle weeping or soft sniffles.
Sobbing. Deep, wrenching, gut-tearing sobs that shook her entire frame. The kind of crying that came from somewhere deep and dark and absolutely terrifying. The kind that spoke of trauma and fear and complete desperation.
"Mommy!" The word came out muffled against my shirt. Choked. Desperate. "Mommy, mommy, MOMMY!"
Over and over. Like a prayer. Like a lifeline. Like the only word she remembered.
I stood there.
Frozen.
My arms hovering awkwardly in the air. Not touching her. Not pulling her close. Not pushing her away.
Just... frozen.
Because this was Lilith.
My daughter.
The daughter I’d given birth to after eighteen hours of labor. The daughter I’d held for the first time in that hospital room, counting her tiny fingers and toes, marveling at the miracle of her. The daughter I’d nursed through endless sleepless nights. Changed countless diapers. Sang to when she couldn’t sleep.
The daughter who’d grown to look at me with disgust in those beautiful eyes.
Who’d called me "smelly" in front of Finn’s family. Who’d preferred Celestia’s expensive perfume to my natural scent. Who’d pushed me away when I tried to hug her. Who’d cried when I came to pick her up from school because the other kids would see.
The daughter who’d broken my heart into a thousand pieces. Who’d made me question everything about myself as a mother.
The daughter I’d failed.
"Mommy, please!" Her voice cracked on the word. Raw. Terrified. "Please don’t send me away! I’m sorry! I’m so sorry! I’ll be good! I promise I’ll be good! I promise!"







