Home / Urban / THE SON THEY BURIED CAME BACK AS KING / Chapter 1: THE NIGHT THEY CHOSE TO BURY HIM
THE SON THEY BURIED CAME BACK AS KING
THE SON THEY BURIED CAME BACK AS KING
Author: Timothy
Chapter 1: THE NIGHT THEY CHOSE TO BURY HIM
Author: Timothy
last update2026-02-07 04:54:05

The rain came down hard that night, like the sky itself had decided to pass judgment.

Sixteen-year-old Ethan Vale stood in the middle of the living room, barefoot on cold marble, his school bag still hanging from one shoulder. Water dripped from his hair onto the floor, forming small, quiet puddles no one bothered to notice.

Across from him sat his parents.

His father, Richard Vale, didn’t look angry. That was worse. He looked… decided. Calm. As if the boy standing before him was no longer a son, but a problem already solved.

His mother, Margaret Vale, clutched a silk handkerchief in her hands. Her eyes were red, but she never once looked directly at Ethan.

“You embarrassed this family,” Richard said, his voice steady and cold. “Do you understand what you’ve done?”

Ethan swallowed. His throat burned.

“I didn’t steal anything,” he said quietly. “I swear. I was framed.”

The word framed hung in the air, useless and fragile.

Margaret finally spoke, her voice trembling. “The school expelled you. The police came to our house. Sponsors are calling. Do you know what people are saying about the Vale family now?”

Ethan’s fingers curled into fists.

“I’m your son,” he said. “Don’t you believe me?”

Silence.

That silence answered him more clearly than words ever could.

Richard stood up. He adjusted his suit, the same suit he wore to board meetings and charity dinners. The suit he wore when pretending to be a good man.

“We’ve already made arrangements,” Richard said. “You’ll leave tonight.”

Ethan’s heart skipped. “Leave? Where?”

“A juvenile correction facility outside the city,” Richard replied. “You’ll stay there for a few years. By the time you come out, people will have forgotten.”

Margaret finally looked up then. Her eyes met Ethan’s for half a second—then dropped again.

“It’s for the family,” she whispered.

Something cracked inside Ethan’s chest.

“I didn’t do it,” he repeated. Softer now. Smaller. “Why are you doing this to me?”

Richard’s expression hardened. “Because sacrifices must be made.”

The words cut deeper than any slap.

Outside, thunder rolled.

Ethan laughed suddenly—a broken, disbelieving sound that surprised even himself.

“So that’s it?” he said. “You won’t even investigate? You won’t fight for me?”

Richard turned toward the window. “The car is waiting.”

Two men in dark coats stepped inside the house. They didn’t look like prison guards. They looked like people paid not to ask questions.

Margaret stood up abruptly. “Wait.”

She walked toward Ethan, hesitated, then reached into her pocket and pressed something into his hand.

It was a small silver pendant.

“You wore this when you were a baby,” she said, her voice shaking. “Just… keep it.”

Ethan stared at the pendant. His fingers trembled.

“Mom,” he whispered. “Please.”

She turned away.

That was the moment he understood.

They weren’t sending him away.

They were erasing him.

The car ride was long. Quiet. The city lights blurred past the window as Ethan pressed his forehead against the glass. Somewhere between the rain and the darkness, something inside him shut down.

At the edge of the city, the car stopped—not at a prison gate, but at an old bridge above a raging river.

Ethan frowned. “This isn’t—”

One of the men opened his door.

“Get out.”

Fear crawled up his spine.

“This isn’t where you said—”

The second man grabbed his arm and dragged him out into the rain. The wind howled. The river roared below.

“What’s going on?” Ethan shouted.

The first man avoided his eyes. “Orders changed.”

A third man stepped out from the shadows. He held a folder, now soaked from the rain.

“Official story,” the man said flatly, “is that Ethan Vale jumped. Body not recovered.”

Ethan’s world tilted.

“No,” he said. “No, you can’t—my parents—”

“They signed,” the man replied.

The words crushed him.

The men shoved him toward the railing. Panic exploded in his chest. He struggled, slipped—

A blinding pain struck the back of his head.

The world went black.

Far downstream, the river swallowed a broken body and carried it away.

By morning, headlines would read:

TRAGIC DEATH OF VALE FAMILY SON

POLICE CONFIRM SUSPECTED SUICIDE

At the Vale mansion, Margaret Vale would collapse in tears at a funeral with no body.

Richard Vale would bow his head before cameras.

And the world would forget Ethan Vale ever existed.

But the river did not kill him.

And death… did not want him.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app
Next Chapter

Latest Chapter

  • CHAPTER 95: THE WEIGHT PEOPLE CARRY

    No one answered Clara’s question.The apartment remained completely still except for the soft mechanical hum of the cassette player and the distant sounds of the waking city outside. Morning light spread slowly across the windows, pale and cold, exposing exhausted faces and untouched cups of coffee gone stale hours ago.If Adrian fell—then who had been speaking to them?Marcus sat down heavily like the strength had drained out of his body all at once. He stared at the tape recorder without really seeing it.For years he had carried a shapeless guilt he could never fully explain.Now it had a form.Not murder.But something close enough to haunt people anyway.Selene wiped at her face with trembling hands. The memories had returned in pieces, but the emotional weight arrived whole.Adrian grabbing her wrist near the ledge.Rain making the rooftop dangerously slick.Marcus pulling her backward.And that awful split second where instinct chose survival before morality could catch up.Sh

  • CHAPTER 94:THE RECORDING

    Nobody wanted to play the tape.That became obvious almost immediately.The cassette sat in the center of the kitchen table while the apartment remained silent except for the hum of the refrigerator and distant traffic outside. Dawn had begun bleeding weak gray light through the windows, flattening the room into tired shadows and colorless faces.Marcus stared at the tape like it might explode.Elias looked worse.Because deep down, all of them already understood something terrible:whatever remained on that recording had survived years hidden for a reason.Clara spoke first, barely above a whisper.“We should destroy it.”Marcus looked at her sharply. “You serious?”“Yes.”Selene frowned. “Why?”Clara laughed once under her breath. It sounded close to panic.“Because every time my brother chased the truth, somebody got hurt.”Elias leaned back slowly in his chair.“Maybe people were already hurt.”That ended the argument.No one spoke after that.Finally Marcus reached for the old ca

  • CHAPTER 93: THE TRUTH WAITING UNDERNEATH

    None of them slept.By three in the morning the apartment felt stale with exhaustion, fear, and recycled air. Half-empty mugs sat untouched across the table while the city outside sank into that strange hour where even traffic seemed uncertain whether to keep moving.Marcus stood near the window watching reflections slide across wet pavement below.The words kept repeating in his head.They remembered the wrong version.Every time he tried forcing the rooftop memories into place, something resisted. Not blankness exactly. More like distortion. Certain moments felt unnaturally sharp while others vanished entirely.That wasn’t how memory usually worked.Unless something had shattered it.Behind him, Selene sat curled against the couch with her knees drawn tightly toward her chest. She looked smaller tonight. Not physically. Emotionally. Like each recovered memory stripped away another layer of certainty she’d spent years building around herself.Elias remained at the kitchen table stari

  • CHAPTER 92: THE THINGS THEY DID TO EACH OTHER

    The silence after the call felt unbearable.No one moved for several seconds. The city outside continued breathing normally beyond the windows—sirens in the distance, traffic dragging through wet streets, footsteps passing below—but inside the apartment, everything had narrowed into one terrible sentence.Who pushed first.Marcus stared at the dark phone screen in his hand like he wanted to crush it.“This is manipulation,” he said finally, though his voice sounded strained. “That’s all this is. Adrian knows exactly how to get inside people’s heads.”Elias didn’t answer immediately.Because part of him agreed.Another part wasn’t sure anymore.Selene sat hunched forward on the couch, fingers pressed tightly against her mouth. Fragments of memory kept surfacing violently now, faster than before.Shouting.Someone crying.Adrian provoking people deliberately.And Marcus—angrier than she had ever seen him.Clara looked toward the floor. “He always believed pressure revealed the truth.”

  • CHAPTER 91: THE EDGE OF MEMORY

    Nobody spoke after the call ended.Marcus stood frozen near the apartment door with the phone still pressed against his ear long after the line went dead. The hallway beyond the peephole remained empty, lit by weak yellow bulbs that hummed faintly overhead.Selene could hear her own heartbeat.Loud.Uneven.A memory kept trying to surface and slipping away before she could fully grab it. Rooftop lights. Wind. Someone shouting near the edge of the building.And fear.So much fear.Marcus lowered the phone slowly. “That was him.”Clara looked physically sick now. “You’re sure?”“I know his voice.”Elias stood near the kitchen table, thinking harder than speaking. Something about all of this felt wrong to him in a way he couldn’t fully explain yet.Not the fear.The structure.The timing.Every new revelation arrived precisely when it would destabilize them most.As if someone understood exactly how much pressure to apply before people began unraveling.Like Adrian always had.“We’re mis

  • CHAPTER 90: THE NIGHT EVERYTHING BROKE

    Nobody suggested turning on more lights.The apartment remained dim except for the lamp near the couch and the blurred glow of the city outside the windows. Rainwater still clung to the glass in thin crooked lines while traffic moved far below like veins of restless light.Clara sat rigidly in the armchair across from them, hands wrapped around untouched tea.Marcus studied her carefully.“You’re saying someone stole Adrian’s files,” he said. “And now that person is coming after us?”Clara shook her head immediately.“No. I’m saying I don’t know what they want yet.”“That’s comforting.”She ignored the bitterness in his voice.“For years I thought Adrian destroyed most of it himself,” she continued quietly. “Toward the end he became paranoid. He kept talking about people misunderstanding his work.”Elias frowned. “Work?”Clara looked at him with visible discomfort.“He didn’t think he was manipulating people.” A pause. “He thought he was revealing them.”Selene felt cold settle deeper

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App