
Hidden Heiress: The Maid You Betrayed
For five years, I was the invisible glue holding Damien Crawford together. I was the one who pulled him from a burning car until the skin melted off my back, and I was the one who donated bone marrow when he was on death's door. I even gave up a full-ride scholarship to MIT just to be his nurse.
Yet, he believed his mistress, Hadley, was his savior. To him, I was just the maid's daughter who changed his bedpans—a piece of furniture he could abuse while he planned his wedding to another woman.
But his cruelty didn't stop at verbal abuse. When my father suffered a massive heart attack, Damien refused to let me use the car, choosing to comfort Hadley over a fake panic attack instead.
His mother even slashed the tires to ensure I couldn't leave.
While my father died cold and alone, Damien stabbed a needle into my hand just to teach me a lesson about "respect," oblivious to the fact that the scars on my skin were the receipt for his life.
He didn't know he was torturing the only person who had ever truly loved him. But the girl who begged for crumbs of affection died along with her father that day.
I picked up my phone and dialed the number saved simply as a dot.
"He's dead," I whispered to the man on the other end—Anderson Morrison, the city's most feared Don and my sworn protector.
"I'm coming," he replied, his voice lethal. "And I'm bringing the army."
It was time to show Damien that he hadn't just mistreated a maid; he had declared war on a Queen.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 1
For five years, I was the invisible glue holding Damien Crawford together. I was the one who pulled him from a burning car until the skin melted off my back, and I was the one who donated bone marrow when he was on death's door. I even gave up a full-ride scholarship to MIT just to be his nurse.
Yet, he believed his mistress, Hadley, was his savior. To him, I was just the maid's daughter who changed his bedpans—a piece of furniture he could abuse while he planned his wedding to another woman.
But his cruelty didn't stop at verbal abuse. When my father suffered a massive heart attack, Damien refused to let me use the car, choosing to comfort Hadley over a fake panic attack instead.
His mother even slashed the tires to ensure I couldn't leave.
While my father died cold and alone, Damien stabbed a needle into my hand just to teach me a lesson about "respect," oblivious to the fact that the scars on my skin were the receipt for his life.
He didn't know he was torturing the only person who had ever truly loved him. But the girl who begged for crumbs of affection died along with her father that day.
I picked up my phone and dialed the number saved simply as a dot.
"He's dead," I whispered to the man on the other end—Anderson Morrison, the city's most feared Don and my sworn protector.
"I'm coming," he replied, his voice lethal. "And I'm bringing the army."
It was time to show Damien that he hadn't just mistreated a maid; he had declared war on a Queen.
Chapter 1
Aliana POV
I was standing on the wind-swept steps of City Hall, clutching a marriage license application for the ninety-ninth time, when a photo of my fiancé's hand sliding up another woman's skirt lit up my phone screen.
The timestamp was two minutes ago.
The caption, sent from a burner number, was simple: *He's busy.*
I stared at the image. The grainy resolution didn't matter; that hand belonged to Damien Crawford. I knew that hand better than I knew my own face. I knew the jagged white scar on his knuckle—a souvenir from the time he'd punched a mirror three years ago because his soup was cold.
I knew the way his fingers curled, heavy with the intent of possessing something he thought he owned.
And I knew the woman attached to the skirt. Hadley Stuart. The woman who had abandoned him when he was paralyzed, only to return the second he could walk again.
The wind whipped around the limestone pillars of City Hall, biting through my thin coat. I looked down at the paper in my trembling hand. *Application for Marriage License: Damien Crawford and Aliana Rodriguez.*
It was wrinkled. It was the ninety-ninth copy.
For five years, I had been the invisible glue holding Damien Crawford together. I was the one who pulled his broken body from the burning wreckage of his McLaren when the car bomb went off. My skin had bubbled and melted off my back while I dragged him to safety, but I never screamed.
I was the one who donated bone marrow when the infection nearly took him. I had lain in a hospital bed next to his while he slept in a coma, stealing my own recovery time just to sit by his side and hold his hand.
He didn't know.
His mother, Cecil, had told him Hadley saved him. She told him I was just the maid's daughter who changed his bedpans. And I let them lie. I let them lie because I was eighteen, stupid, and desperately in love with a boy who looked at me like I was furniture.
I looked down at the shoes on my feet. They were designer heels Damien had bought me. They were two sizes too small.
"Wear them, Ali," he had commanded this morning, shoving the box into my chest. "I like the way your calves flex when you struggle to walk."
I wiggled my toes. They were slick with blood.
My phone buzzed again. It wasn't the anonymous number this time. It was *Him*.
The contact name was just a period. A dot.
I answered.
"You are standing on the steps," the voice said. It was deep, like gravel wrapped in velvet. It was a voice that commanded armies, a voice that brought grown men to their knees.
Anderson Morrison. The Reaper. The Don of the rival family that controlled the port, the guns, and half the politicians in the state.
"I am," I whispered.
"He isn't coming, *Tesoro*."
"I know."
"He is at the bistro on 5th. With her." Anderson's voice was devoid of pity. He didn't do pity. He dealt in facts and violence. "Say the word, Aliana. Say the word, and I burn the bistro to the ground with them inside."
I looked at the marriage license.
I thought about the acceptance letter to MIT I had hidden under my mattress five years ago. The full-ride scholarship I had turned down to wipe Damien's brow and take his verbal abuse while he learned to walk again. I thought about the scars on my back that looked like melted wax, the ones I hid under high-necked shirts so he wouldn't be disgusted by the sacrifice I made for him.
I had given him my future. My skin. My marrow.
And he gave me shoes that made me bleed and a wedding date he never intended to keep.
"No," I said into the phone. "Don't burn it down."
"You are mercy, Aliana. It is your weakness."
"I am not mercy," I said, my voice cracking before hardening into something new. "I just don't want you to waste the gasoline."
I took the marriage license in both hands. The paper was thick, expensive. Just like everything in the Crawford world—pretty, heavy, and ultimately flammable.
I ripped it.
One tear down the middle. Then another. I shredded it until it was nothing but white confetti raining from my hands.
I opened my palms and let the wind take it. The pieces swirled around me, dancing like snow, before falling into the dirty gutter water at the bottom of the stairs.
"I'm done, Anderson," I said. "I'm taking my father. We're leaving tonight."
There was a pause on the line. A heavy silence that felt like a blood oath.
"I will have a convoy ready," he promised. "If anyone tries to stop you, they die."
"Just get me out."
I hung up. I kicked off the heels.
My bare feet hit the cold concrete. The pain was sharp, immediate, and grounding. I left the thousand-dollar shoes on the steps of City Hall, right next to the gutter where my dreams were dissolving in the mud.
I walked to the curb to hail a cab. I wasn't going to the bistro to scream. I wasn't going to cry.
I was going back to the Crawford estate to pack my father's medicine and watch their empire crumble in my rearview mirror.
You may also like

9.3
Alyssa Gregory slept with Benton Steele, a recently disgraced and bankrupt heir, just to humiliate him.
She threw a massive check at his bare chest, treating the former prince of Wall Street like a cheap escort.
But Benton didn't take the charity.
Instead, he manipulated her anger, tricking her into signing an ironclad contract that surrendered absolute control of her entire trust fund to him.
When her abusive mother found out she had funded a penniless outcast, she slapped Alyssa across the face.
Her mother froze all her bank accounts, locked her inside her bedroom, and arranged to sell her off to a degenerate politician.
Desperate to escape, Alyssa climbed down her balcony, falling fifteen feet and shattering her ankle on the stones below.
Stripped of her money and freedom, she dragged her broken body to a VIP club just to publicly declare that Benton belonged to her.
She thought she was the boss, playing a rebellious game with a broken man.
But when Benton effortlessly carried her away from the club and locked her inside his rundown apartment, the terrifying calculation in his dark eyes shattered her illusion.
How could a man stripped of his entire empire still radiate such suffocating, violent power?
"You bought me," Benton whispered, his massive frame trapping her against the sofa. "That means I have to take care of you."
Physically trapped and completely broke, Alyssa stared into his consuming eyes, her mind racing to find a way to turn the tables.

7.7
Rory stood on the witness stand, forced by her father into an impossible choice: secure her dying mother's medical funding, or save her innocent boyfriend.
She looked Corbin right in his trusting eyes and lied to the court, testifying that he was the one driving the car during the fatal hit-and-run, sending him to a maximum-security prison for ten years.
The betrayal destroyed him. Corbin's father died of a heart attack upon hearing the guilty verdict. Six years later, Corbin returned as a ruthless billionaire and systematically blacklisted Rory from every job in the city. He cornered her into singing at his private club, humiliating her by forcing her to drink scotch—knowing she was severely allergic—and making her throw away his promise ring just to earn a stack of cash.
"Remember this moment. This is only the beginning."
She endured his cruel revenge because she was hiding a desperate secret: she was raising his five-year-old daughter, Willa. But when Willa's congenital heart defect suddenly worsened, requiring an impossible one-million-dollar surgery, Rory realized Corbin's calculated blockade had left her completely trapped with no way to save their child.
Staring at the sterile hospital walls, the last shred of her guilt burned away, replaced by a cold, hard resolve. He had destroyed her career and backed her into a corner, but he was the only one with the money. Wiping her tears, Rory turned and headed straight for Vance Tower.

8.9
The mangled car teetered on the cliff's edge, my leg crushed, gasoline fumes thick in the air. My husband, Holden, stood safe on the highway, directing the rescue – but not for me. He was saving her, the woman in the passenger seat, leaving me and our unborn child to the ocean below.
I woke trapped in the crushed Maybach, leg pinned. The cliff loomed; the driver's seat was empty.
Holden, safe outside, directed paramedics past me to Giana, his "most valuable asset," ordering her rescue first.
I watched him comfort Giana, oblivious, as the car slid. My baby barely viable. Holden offered a black card for silence; Giana gloated.
Ten years of devotion, a cruel lie. Rage fueled me: how could he abandon his wife and child?
I swore a venomous oath: never again an accessory. I flicked his card away, shielded my pregnancy, and promised my baby escape.

8.5
Amelia, an artist struggling to live a life full of dreams and hardships, finds herself caught in an unexpected vortex after a wild night at a masquerade ball. She wakes up with a hazy memory of piercing blue eyes and a powerful presence, without knowing who the man was or what happened? A few weeks later, Amelia's life changed forever when she realized she was pregnant. The baby's father? None other than the Lycan King, a powerful and dangerous creature who rules the hidden world of werewolves. Forced into a world of magic, danger, and forbidden love, Amelia must adapt to a new life. He must navigate the dangerous politics of the Lycan Kingdom, learn to control the new powers that arise within him, and face the wrath of the King's jealous couple. In the midst of this chaos, Amelia must choose: accept her fate as the Lycan King's mate, or fight for her freedom and the life she lives.

7.2
I was dying in a rusted warehouse, paralyzed in a wheelchair while the man I loved and my own stepsister watched with smiles on their faces. The air smelled of old oil and damp concrete, and my vision was fading into a milky haze.
Dillon, the man I’d sacrificed everything for, smoothed his custom suit and pulled out a syringe filled with a clear, lethal neurotoxin. Beside him, my stepsister Bianca toyed with my mother’s sapphire ring—the one they’d just pried off my hand while I was too weak to even make a fist.
She leaned in and whispered that my father’s trust fund was already offshore and that they’d sent my husband, Kade, to the wrong coordinates to ensure he’d only find my corpse. Dillon slid the needle into my vein with the chilling efficiency of a man who had done this before.
"This will stop your heart in thirty seconds," he said, sounding as bored as if he were explaining a tax form. Ice flooded my chest, and my lungs seized, fighting for oxygen that wasn't there. As the warehouse lights blurred into white streaks, an explosion echoed in the distance. Kade had come for me, but he was too late.
I died staring at the ceiling, my heart giving one last violent kick of pure, unadulterated hatred. I had been such a fool, believing Dillon’s lies and running away from the only man who actually cared for me. I died with a single thought: if I ever get another chance, I will drag you both to hell with me.
Then, there was nothing. And then, there was air.
I sat up gasping, my silk pajamas drenched in cold sweat. The rusted beams were gone, replaced by a vaulted ceiling and the glittering Manhattan skyline. I grabbed the digital clock on the nightstand—it was five years ago, the exact night I first tried to run away with Dillon.
The bedroom door slammed against the wall, and Kade Mullen stood in the doorway, looking dangerous, furious, and very much alive. I looked at my shaking hands, then at the man I had once hated. This time, I wasn't going to run. I was going to make sure Dillon and Bianca lost everything.

9.2
I died as the "Queen," an elite assassin who leveled criminal syndicates, only to wake up in a damp trailer smelling of rot and stale tobacco. My new body belonged to Arleen Brewer, a malnourished teenager with a failing heart and a life defined by systemic poverty.
A flickering blue light in my mind identified itself as a System, offering a devil's bargain: survive this life, and I could resurrect my dead brother, Dusty. To earn his return, I had to endure my alcoholic stepfather’s rage and a body so weak it struggled to even stand.
At my elite prep school, the rich kids treated me like a walking corpse, covering my desk in trash and mocking my heart condition. Even my fiancé, Shen Wenyu, publicly branded me as "unstable" and stood by while the school's golden boy tried to humiliate me.
They expected me to wither away, but they didn't realize a wolf was now wearing the sheep's skin. I shattered the bully’s nose with a metal tray and tore up my engagement contract in front of a stunned auditorium, only to be met with immediate threats of lawsuits and expulsion.
I didn't understand how the original Arleen survived this suffocating injustice without breaking, but as the Queen, I was ready to turn this school into a war zone.
Then Hale Clemons, the most dangerous man in the city, cornered me outside the principal's office. He saw through my mask, realizing his very presence was the only thing keeping my failing heart from stopping.
"I’m not buying your loyalty," he said, handing me a gold-embossed card. "I’m investing in a weapon."
I took the deal, ready to use his power to bring my brother back and bury everyone who ever looked down on Arleen Brewer.