Revenge: A Path of Destruction -
Chapter 137: Lauren Blackwood (1)
Chapter 137: Lauren Blackwood (1)
When Lauren saw the image of Alex, all she felt was immense shock.
The man projected in the hologram was older and more mature—his golden-yellow hair slightly longer, his frame sharper and more defined. But despite the changes, she knew. She would always know.
How could she forget the only person who had ever made her heart move?
But as she looked more at the image.
His golden pupils, once so vibrant and playful, now looked hollow. Cold. Emotionless.
Lauren stared at the projection, her fingers subtly curling into the fabric of her dress as a pang of something sharp—guilt, maybe even pain—twisted in her chest.
The Alex she remembered always had a playful glint in his eyes, even in the most serious situations. He had a way of making the world seem less heavy.
But this man on the screen... looked like someone who had lost everything.
And she knew what he lost.
Her heart tightened.
The memories surfaced—unbidden, unwanted.
It was the last time she saw him.
Ten years ago, during a celebration in the Thunder Domain. There had been music, laughter, drinks... and then chaos.
As the world began to shake, shockwave after shockwave shook the world.
"I’ll be fine," he’d said with a soft smile.
"I just need to check what’s happening at the estate."
She had watched him turn and walk away, slipping into the night like a shadow returning to its home.
Something inside her had screamed not to let him go. Her instincts had screamed that this might be the last time she’d ever see him.
But she didn’t stop him.
At the time, she didn’t understand what he meant to her.
They say we don’t realize what we’ve lost until it’s gone.
As the tremors intensified and panic spread, she and their mutual friends helped guide the guests to safety. It was chaos—shocks pulsed through the air, and a storm of power loomed over the place.
Still, she did what she could, ushering people away, guiding them out, suppressing the dread rising in her chest.
Eventually, she made her way back to the hotel she had booked.
No sooner had she arrived than her father’s guards found her. Orders had come directly from President Blackwood himself—extract her immediately.
A private airship was dispatched. as it seemed whatever was happening, had crippled the teleportation portals. Within a few hours, she was back in Australia.
But what truly shattered her came later.
Standing in front of the massive screen in their mansion living room a day after her arrival, still in her formal dress, Lauren watched her mother hold a trembling hand to her mouth, frozen by the breaking news.
"The Thunder Clan is no more. The Seven-Tailed Fox had wiped out the entire estate. No survivors have been found."
Her vision blurred.
One name echoed in her mind.
Alex.
She didn’t even realize the tears had started falling until she tasted salt on her lips.
Here is the continuation of the scene, maintaining your emotional tone and deepening both Lauren’s internal collapse and her mother’s confusion and concern:
Lauren only realized she was crying when she tasted salt on her lips.
It jolted her—not the taste itself, but the sudden awareness that she was breaking.
Her vision had gone blurry at some point, her breathing shallow. And then she noticed... she wasn’t standing anymore. Her knees had buckled without warning. She was on the floor, collapsed, crumpled like a puppet with its strings cut.
And still, the tears kept coming.
One after another.
Her body trembled as her palms pressed against the cold marble tiles. She wanted to scream, to say his name out loud, to deny what she had just heard.
But no sound came. Only her gasping breaths and the quiet, devastating sobs of a girl who had just lost something she didn’t even realize she treasured until it was ripped away.
Alex... you said you’d be okay...
Across the room, her mother stood frozen in disbelief.
She had never seen Lauren like this—not even as a child.
Lauren Blackwood had always been unyielding, a girl of will and fire, who earned her place with every step.
She hated being measured by her father’s name. Hated when people whispered that her talent came from privilege. She fought, trained, bled... just to prove them wrong.
She was the girl who never let them see her cry.
And yet now, on the floor, trembling, shattered by a headline, her daughter looked like someone who had lost her entire world.
Her mother stepped forward hesitantly, uncertain whether to speak or simply kneel beside her.
What could break Lauren like this? What could make her collapse as if a vital piece of her had just been torn out?
She didn’t understand.
But one thing was clear.
She needed to find out.
As she could feel the pain and devastation coming from those tears and she knew that only a man could make a lady cry like that
Here’s the continuation of the scene with the emotional depth and gradual realization you’re building for Lauren, culminating in her whispered confession and her mother’s stunned reaction:
Lauren didn’t understand why she felt like this.
The pain—the guilt—it was too much, too sudden, too deep. He was just a friend... wasn’t he?
That was what she had always told herself.
But as she sat there on the cold floor, knees pressed against her chest, tears streaming freely, she couldn’t lie to herself anymore.
She didn’t want to believe the news.
She wished she had stopped him that night. Wished she had grabbed his hand and told him not to go. Told him to come back with her instead of walking into the chaos.
Even if it was selfish—even if it went against everything they had been raised to do—she wished, more than anything, that she had chosen him over duty.
But she hadn’t.
She had watched him walk away, trusting that he would come back, trusting that it wasn’t goodbye. And now... now the headlines said there were no survivors.
Why didn’t I stop him?
Why didn’t I speak? Why didn’t I say something?
The questions clawed at her mind, sharp and unforgiving, and with every answerless cry, the truth crept in.
Her obsession with Alex, she had judged it as trying to understand him, but now
It hadn’t been about understanding.
She had wanted to be close to him, be next to him, smile and laugh with him.
It had been love all along.
Her sobs quieted for a moment, her breath shaky as she lifted her head slightly from her arms, her voice barely a whisper.
"I loved him... but now it might be too late."
The words escaped before she could stop them.
And across the room, her mother, who had just been about to kneel beside her, froze.
Eyes wide. Heart halting.
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