
Broken Engagement: The True Heiress Returns
Brought back from a humble life in Montana, Nora found out she was the true biological heiress of the ultra-wealthy Beaumont family.
But her biological parents didn't love her; they loved the fake daughter, Olivia, much more.
The moment she arrived, her father pushed an engagement termination agreement across his massive desk, forcing her to give up her wealthy fiancé so Olivia could have him.
Her mother looked at her with pure disdain.
"You should know your place. Don't reach for things that were never meant for you."
To break her spirit, they moved her into a cramped, dusty servant's room. They even ordered the butler to feed her cold kitchen scraps and gristle.
They wanted to humiliate her, to make her feel like a piece of trash rather than a daughter.
They expected her to cry, to beg, and to be absolutely crushed by the realization that her own flesh and blood saw her only as a liability to their reputation.
They thought the country girl would easily fold under their united front of cruelty.
But Nora felt no sting of betrayal, only the calculating clarity of a chess player.
She calmly signed the paper, pulled out the Beaumont family trust rules, and looked them dead in the eye.
"Since I am the legal heir, I demand what belongs to me. I'm taking the master bedroom."
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Chapter 3
The red light on the voice recorder blinked steadily, indicating a full charge.
Nora sat cross-legged on the center of the enormous four-poster bed. The house was silent. It was 2:00 AM. The Beaumonts were asleep, probably still reeling from the evening's drama.
She reached out and pressed the play button.
Static. Then, voices. Clear as day.
"Make sure her meals are served late," Olivia's voice said, crisp and commanding. "And only the leftovers. She needs to understand she's not one of us."
"Of course, Miss Olivia," Reginald's voice replied, dripping with deference. "And the room service?"
"Skip it. If she wants clean towels, she can ask the laundry maid herself. I want her to feel like a servant, not a sister."
Nora listened to the first segment of the recording. It was a blueprint of humiliation. Every detail of how to make her life miserable was laid out in cold, precise language.
She felt a chill, but it wasn't from fear. It was recognition. She had heard this kind of plotting before—in the palaces of Florence, in the courts of the Renaissance. The players changed, but the game remained the same.
She paused the playback. There was more on the device—she had glimpsed additional timestamped files in the recorder's memory. Fresh ammunition. She would save it for when she needed it most.
She saved the first audio file to her phone for immediate use, then placed the recorder back in the drawer. It was an ace up her sleeve, but not the one she would play tomorrow.
She climbed off the bed and began to walk the perimeter of the room. She tested the windows. She checked the locks. It was an old habit, born from a time when assassins walked through bedroom doors.
She paused by the door leading to the hallway. She heard it.
Click.
The handle was turning.
Nora's body reacted before her mind could process the threat. Her muscles coiled. Her breathing shallowed. She wasn't a scared girl; she was a predator sensing an intruder.
The door swung open slowly. A tall silhouette filled the frame, backlit by the dim hallway light.
Nora didn't scream. She moved.
She grabbed the heavy brass lamp from the nightstand. She didn't swing it at his head—that was for brutes. As he took a definitive step onto the Persian rug, she thrust the lamp forward, not as a club, but as a barrier, hooking its curved base around his ankle and pulling sharply.
The man gasped, his balance gone, and hit the floor hard. Before he could recover, Nora was on him instantly, her knee pressing into his spine, her hand twisting his arm behind his back.
"Who sent you?" she hissed into his ear, her voice low and deadly. "Connor Sterling?"
"Wait!" the man choked out. "I'm not Connor! I'm Graham! Graham Vance!"
Nora increased the pressure on his arm. "Why are you in my room, Vance?"
"I was looking for the bathroom!" Graham groaned, his face pressed into the carpet. "I had too much to drink at the Sterling party next door. I took a wrong turn, I swear to God!"
Nora's grip on his arm tightened for a fraction of a second. Sterling. The source of her current predicament. So they were neighbors. She remembered the rumors. The Sterlings owned the estate next door. They were having a party tonight.
She reached into his back pocket and pulled out his wallet. She flipped it open. The driver's license read: Graham Vance.
She let go of his arm and stood up, stepping back into a defensive stance. "This is a private bedroom, Mr. Vance."
Graham scrambled to his feet, rubbing his shoulder. He stared at her, his eyes wide with shock. "You... you just took me down like a ragdoll. What the hell are they feeding you in Montana?"
Nora didn't answer. Her eyes flicked to the corner of the ceiling. A small, black dome camera. The estate's security system.
She walked over to the antique desk and opened her laptop. She had spent the last week studying the estate's network architecture. It was surprisingly vulnerable.
Graham watched in disbelief as her fingers flew across the keyboard. "What are you doing?"
"Erasing a mistake," she said simply.
She accessed the estate's security log, a system she'd found surprisingly lax during her initial reconnaissance. She didn't have the skill to delete the footage, but she didn't need it. She found the entry for the camera in her hallway and, exploiting a loophole in the administrative settings, flagged the time code of Graham's entry as 'System Maintenance - Signal Loss'. The footage was still there, buried in the archives, but any routine check would show nothing more than a scheduled glitch.
She closed the laptop and looked at Graham, who was standing there with his mouth open.
"Nothing happened tonight," Nora said, her tone leaving no room for argument. "You found the bathroom and left. Go home, Mr. Vance."
Graham nodded slowly, still dazed. He backed out of the room, closing the door quietly behind him.
He walked back to the Sterling estate in a trance. He found Julian Sterling standing in the study, staring at a tablet.
"Graham," Julian said, not looking up. "You look like you've seen a ghost."
"I think I have," Graham muttered, sinking into a chair. "I wandered into the Beaumont house. Went into the wrong room. That girl... the one from Montana..."
Julian's head snapped up. "Eleanora?"
"She attacked me, Julian," Graham said, rubbing his arm. "She was like a ninja. Pinned me to the floor in two seconds. Then she accessed the security system and covered her tracks."
Julian stared at him, his eyes narrowing. He looked down at his tablet. He had been watching the Beaumont security feed—his little secret for keeping tabs on his nephew, Connor. He had seen Graham walk into the room. He had seen the brief struggle. And then, the screen had displayed a 'Signal Lost' message.
A slow, genuine smile spread across Julian's face. "Interesting."
"Interesting? She's terrifying!" Graham exclaimed.
Julian set the tablet down. He had assumed Eleanora Beaumont was a simple, broken girl. A victim. But a victim doesn't fight like that. A victim doesn't cover her tracks with that kind of efficiency.
"Tell no one about this," Julian ordered, his voice suddenly cold.
Graham nodded vigorously. "Believe me, I want to forget it."
Julian turned back to the dark screen on his tablet. He didn't want to forget. He wanted to know everything.
Back in the master bedroom, Nora double-checked the lock. The old mechanism must have slipped when she'd closed it earlier—she made a mental note to have it repaired. She turned the bolt firmly until she heard it click into place, then tested it twice to be certain.
She walked to the dressing table and opened the bottom drawer. The voice recorder was still there, right where she'd left it. She hadn't finished listening to all of its contents earlier—she had only played the first segment before Graham's intrusion interrupted her.
She settled back onto the bed, drew her knees up, and pressed play again. It was time to hear what else Olivia and Reginald had been plotting.
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8.0
My abusive step-family isolated me completely, holding my mother's medical funds hostage to control my every move.
Yesterday, they finalized my sale.
"You will marry Rudy Petrov next month. He is fifty, wealthy, and willing to overlook your lack of pedigree."
Pushed to the absolute edge, I did the insane. I posted an ad online offering my life savings of $50,000 for a contract husband. A stranger named Brennan agreed.
But my family wouldn't let me go. They forced me back for a dinner by threatening my mother's life-saving prescriptions.
At the table, they relentlessly mocked my new "poor IT guy" husband and intentionally burned my hand with boiling tea.
Worse, the housekeeper locked me in a guest room and forced drugs down my throat so Rudy could come in and assault me.
I lay there paralyzed on the floor, bleeding from Rudy's slap, utterly terrified. I couldn't understand why my own family would throw me to the wolves, and I felt a crushing guilt for dragging an innocent, ordinary guy into my nightmare.
Until a pitch-black Maybach smashed through the estate's wrought-iron gates at eighty miles an hour.
My "poor" husband kicked the solid oak doors off their hinges, beat Rudy half to death, and carried me out into the rain.
I didn't know it yet, but the ordinary man I hired to save me was a ruthless billionaire, and he was about to erase my family's entire empire by morning.

9.7
I secured the lifeline investment for my fiancé's company and went to his office to surprise him.
Instead, I caught Preston sleeping with his top actress—the woman he publicly claimed as his stepsister.
Through the cracked door, I heard him call me his "scarred, ugly bitch shield" to hide their sickening affair.
I didn't cry. I hacked the live broadcast of the Star Awards and played their sex tape to two thousand people.
But that night, drunk and reeling from the agonizing nerve pain in my facial scar, I stumbled into the wrong hotel penthouse.
I was pinned down by a drugged billionaire, Josephus Hodges.
The next morning, he left me a million-dollar check and a Plan B pill.
When he later tracked me down to offer a cold, calculated fake marriage just to absorb Preston's ruined empire, I threw the contract at his chest and told him to go to hell.
But when I got home and looked in the mirror, the chronic, burning torture in my scar was completely gone.
His touch during that terrifying night had somehow cured the agony that had ruined my life.
I had just declared war on the only man on earth who could heal me.
Just then, my ruined ex-fiancé called, begging me to save him with a PR press conference.
"I'll do it, but I control the venue."
I booked it at Josephus's heavily guarded hotel. I was going to slaughter my ex on live television, and force the apex predator to look at me again.

8.2
Trapped in a deadly fire at my own engagement party, my lungs burned as I reached a shaking hand out to my fiancé for help.
He stopped and looked right at me through the thick smoke. But instead of saving me, he wrapped his jacket tightly around my stepsister and ran, leaving me to burn.
I barely survived. But when I woke up in the hospital, my father and stepmother didn't even ask about my injuries.
They threw a stack of legal documents right onto my bed.
"Sign the papers, Avah. Step aside. Jaclyn is far better suited to be Kain's wife."
My fiancé then stormed into the room, publicly humiliating me with false rumors of an illegitimate child and threatening to bankrupt my company.
Four years of swallowing my pride to be the perfect, obedient pawn for our family business, all for nothing.
They threw me to the wolves without a single second of hesitation, expecting me to just lower my head and cry like I always did.
But the fire had burned that pathetic version of me away.
I ripped out my IV, letting the blood drip onto the sheets, and tore their contracts straight down the middle.
"The engagement is over."
I threw my million-dollar ring right at my ex's chest, then picked up the phone to call my trust lawyer. They wanted to take everything from me, so I was going to make them bleed.

9.3
Elara Voss never imagined that a single mistake could turn her life upside down. A brilliant marketing strategist with ambition as sharp as her wit, she thrives on control, until the day she crashes her rival's luxurious wedding, causing a scandal that will haunt her in high society.
Enter Dante Cross: the notorious billionaire, charmingly arrogant, and impossibly handsome, the bride's brother. In a moment of impulsive defiance, he proposes an outrageous solution to save face: a marriage neither of them wants... but both are forced to accept.
Thrown together in a world of glitz, power, and unspoken secrets, Elara and Dante clash at every turn. Sparks ignite as pride battles attraction, and the closer they get, the more dangerous their connection becomes. With hidden rivalries, family secrets, and unexpected betrayals swirling around them, Elara must navigate a game of social intrigue and decide if love is worth risking everything.
Will their forced union survive the chaos, or will the very secrets that brought them together tear them apart forever?

9.3
He was supposed to be my brother. The cold CEO everyone feared. The man who controlled the entire country's business world.
But one night, he looked at me and calmly destroyed everything I thought I knew.
"We're getting married."
I laughed, but he didn't.
Now every door in my life is closing, every choice is disappearing, and the one man I'm not supposed to love refuses to let me go.
Because to Lucien Hale, this was never forbidden. It was inevitable.
And the most terrifying part? The closer I get to him, the harder it becomes to run.

9.5
For nine years, I poured my soul into proving I was worthy of my wealthy boyfriend, Clayton Wright. I endured his endless, humiliating "tests," sacrificing everything for a place in his world.
But at our engagement party, the final test was revealed. He stood by as his ex-girlfriend, Anjelica, framed me for shattering a priceless family heirloom.
"You manipulative bitch!" he snarled, slapping me across the face. He then ordered his bodyguard to force me to my knees, grinding them into the sharp, broken fragments of the watch.
As I bled on the floor, he pulled out his phone and gave a single command: demolish my childhood home, the last piece I had of my deceased father.
He destroyed my past and my dignity, yet minutes later, my phone buzzed with a message from him.
"The engagement is just for show. I'll still marry you. You're my destiny."
That night, clutching the last of my father's life insurance, I booked a one-way ticket and vanished. He thought he had finally broken his little project, but he had just unleashed a woman with nothing left to lose.