
Lost Heiress of the Belfort Brothers
"Adrian, why would you lie to me? Why would you let her push my mum like that?"
Yvonne's voice trembled, holding back tears.
Adrian smirked. "Wake up, Yvonne. You really thought I wanted you when Tricia was right here?"
That was how Adrian-her first crush, the boy she thought cared-chose to humiliate her in front of everyone as she was the cleaner's adopted daughter.
But fate had other plans.
Because the Diamond Belfort brothers-the heirs everyone adored were coming to their school in search of their missing heiress- baby sister. But the queen bee steals the chance that should have been hers. Then again, secrets don't stay buried forever. With her true identity waiting to explode, Yvonne must decide to rise from the ashes, claim her place, and bring down everyone who tried to destroy her.
Because the real heiress doesn't beg.
She takes rather.
Now, Yvonne is done playing small. It's her time to rise, reclaim her crown, and make everyone regret ever doubting her.
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Chapter 2
Yvonne's POV
"Oh my gosh, Boo!" Tricia's voice cut through the hum of the corridor as she walked toward us. I felt my stomach drop the second I saw her, and then saw Adrian wrap his arms around her like she was the only person in the world. For a heartbeat I hoped it was nothing-just a friendly hug-but the way he held her said otherwise as it reeked of warm, possessive, and easy.
Tricia laughed loudly and angled those long lashes right at me. The whole laugh landed like a slap on my face. "Look at her. She actually thought the principal's son would take the cleaning lady's adopted child to homecoming." The words were cold and loud, and the corridor got quieter as I noticed some students turned up instantly to watch.
Normally, I would have started to cry. You don't always get used to being humiliated in public-but somehow I found a little reserve of courage. Maybe it was the dress still tucked in my arms. Maybe it was my mom's voice in my head telling me not to give them the satisfaction. I squared my shoulders and tried to let it slide. There was nothing I could do to change what the others wanted to believe.
Tricia drifted closer, smiling like a queen she always claimed to be. She leaned in, as if sharing a secret. "Oh! I think you'll find...this isn't about you," she teased, touching my cheek with a finger that left the faintest trace of perfume. It was meant to humiliate as the gentle touch turned sharp but I kept my face still. I didn't want to start a scene. Not because I was ashamed-because I was afraid my mother would pay for it.
The thought of my mom's job flashed in my mind as she could lose the very job that paid for our tiny apartment and for dresses like this. So I bit down the words that wanted to fight back.
Then Tricia did the thing I had half-feared: she kissed him. No soft little peck-right there in the middle of the school hall. And in turn, Adrian melted into it like he'd been waiting all his life for the show. My brain refused to accept it; I felt like I was watching someone else's life.
I stepped forward on instinct, needing to remind him of promises, to make him remember what he'd said to me. "Adrian, you told me you loved me." The question came out thin and small, but full of hope.
Adrian pushed my hand away like I was a stain. "Get off me. Are you serious?" he spat. His voice was sharp, the kind that got more of the students' attention. Just then, my cheeks warmed with humiliation.
Tricia clapped with a soft, satisfied sound, and Adrian announced, loud enough so everyone could hear, "Tricia is my girlfriend. You're literally the school's charity case."
He sounded so sure of himself, and Tricia took a step back to pose, like a model in a magazine shoot. Around us, phones were already being raised and lenses turning toward me. The hallway filled with the low, cruel chuckles of students who loved nothing more than a public spectacle.
Adrian kept going, like he couldn't stop now that he had everyone's attention. "Besides, you only got into this school on some DEI scholarship because your mum is a pathetic cleaner. You don't even have a proper uniform-always in that cardigan. And you imagined that I wouldn't come down to love a riffraff like you?" The words were precise, aimed like arrows.
It felt like each sentence pushed the air out of my lungs. He was rubbing salt into something that had already been raw. If he didn't love me-if it had all been a lie-why did he let me hope? The questions churned in my head and I couldn't find an answer.
Someone in the crowd jeered, "Give me my phone. The cleaner's adopted girl is getting served." Laughter rose like a wave. Phones clicked and flashes popped.
I wasn't ready to let it end there. I had to try once more. "Adrian, you told me you loved me," I repeated, stronger this time.
The reaction that followed was worse than any insult. The laughter spiraled into something mean and loud. "Oh my God! You actually believed that?" someone cried out. The worst part was how easily they all believed him-how quickly my face turned into an image for jokes.
Tricia leaned in close, voice dripping with venom. "He only needed you to pass his classes. Now you can't even get him the key to the physics lab? You're not useful."
My hands were trembling. I felt helpless, like I had slipped under ice and couldn't find the way out. Then the next humiliation came from Tricia as she held out a cup she had, turning the content from it right on my head. The cold content spread across my chest, soaking the dress my mom had saved a lot just to get for me.
"Oops." Tricia tossed the empty cup at me as if it were confetti. It landed and stuck and just then, a chorus of laughter swelled from the students.
More phones hovered everywhere Someone shouted, "Makeover of the year!" Another added, "Finally, a look that suits her." Someone else mimed the act of crying. I heard it all-each word another weight on my ribs.
I lunged forward in a fury I didn't know I had. I grabbed that same cup that was beside me with the mess it held and shoved at Tricia in anger.
Maybe they didn't expect resistance. Maybe they expected me to cower. But I wouldn't.
And so, Adrian grabbed a tray from somewhere-having a cafeteria plate, leftover food and before I could move, he kneeled and poured the contents down my dress. The food slid, warm and greasy, staining everything. The smell hit me: tomato, oil and the likes.
A dozen phones recorded the scene. I felt the slickness trickle down, warm paste sticking to my skin. I wanted to scream; instead I picked a piece of meat from the smear and flung it at his face.
"How could you say that to me, asshole?" I snapped.
He looked stunned, like he hadn't expected me to fight back. For a second, his smirk faltered.
Tricia stepped closer, looking all dangerous and pleased. "Oh, you really outdid yourself now," she said, and then, like a queen bestowing mercy, she reached into her pocket and flashed a few dollars. "For your shit dress. At least get something better-don't waste it on that coat of many colors." The money hit everywhere across the floor.
"You know, zoom in on her face," someone laughed, feeding the chaos. "She's about to start crying!"
The voices blended into an ugly chorus. Someone shouted, "That bitch is the stupidest nerd I've seen. How could she think Adrian would ever date her?" The words felt like a thousand small knives.
I was stacked on the floor, the mess cooling on my skin and the dress ruined. I looked up at Adrian, then at Tricia, and something hot and raw rose in my chest. It wasn't just shame. It was fury. But when I tried to stand, Adrian shoved me down with force-hard enough to make me breathe in a sharp pain.
Tricia took one foot and pressed it against my chest, pinning me further to the ground so everyone could see. She laughed as if nothing could touch her.
Then, above the din, I heard a new voice. It cut through like a bell. "That's enough. Leave my daughter alone."
My heart lurched as I saw my mom was there in her wheelchair, her hands gripping the arms as if she'd pushed harder than seemed possible to get into the corridor. Her face was flushed and her eyes fierce.
The crowd turned. For the first time since it started, the laughter dropped down a notch. Some students shifted uneasily, phones half-lowered. I felt tears build up, but they weren't the small, quiet kind. They were the kind that had been collecting for a while.
My mom wheeled herself forward and she reached me in two big pushes, then stopped. Her breathing was heavy but controlled. She didn't shout and couldn't say anything at that point with pity all over her face judging with the way I was looking. She looked at Tricia and then at Adrian like she was measuring them.
"You will not speak to my daughter like that," she said, with her voice steady and low. She didn't wait for them to protest. "Get up."
Some students clapped. Not in a cheering way-more like a reflex, like they didn't know what else to do.
Tricia smirked, and then, for the first time, her face flickered. "Oh, look. The cleaner's here," she sneered. "What are you going to do? Call security?"
My mom's face tightened, but she didn't lose control.
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9.0
Ashlyn was supposed to be just a fragile college student, selling her rare blood to a vicious crime syndicate enforcer to keep his dying sister alive.
But the dynamic shattered when Alex returned from a two-month disappearance. He stepped into the penthouse covered in dirt and blood, sporting a horrific, jagged knife wound slashed completely across his face.
Knowing exactly how to exploit his insecurities, Ashlyn played the role of the terrified victim to perfection. She screamed, pushed against his chest, and called him a terrifying monster. Humiliated and enraged by her blatant disgust, Alex violently smashed a marble table and kicked her out. He forced her out into a freezing, torrential rainstorm without a coat, vowing to kill her if she ever showed her face again.
What the ruthless enforcer didn't know was that her pathetic, trembling tears were a flawless, calculated lie. She wasn't a helpless, greedy girl. She was a cold-blooded corporate mastermind hiding from a family of elite assassins. She desperately needed his impenetrable penthouse fortress to stay alive, and she knew the only way to secure her place wasn't to ask for it, but to make him beg for her return.
Three days later, his sister's organs began to fail, and the hospital's blood bank ran dry.
"I'll pay you whatever you want. Just get here."
Listening to the desperate, broken voice of the monster over her burner phone, Ashlyn smiled coldly in the dark. The trap had snapped shut, and he had just handed her all the power.

9.7
For three years, I endured being treated like a walking ATM and a maid by my husband's family, biting my tongue to keep the peace.
Then, my husband's buddy suddenly dropped off a nine-year-old boy at my front door.
The crumpled note from my husband casually explained it was his illegitimate son, blaming me for being barren and demanding I raise the kid as our own.
My mother-in-law was absolutely thrilled, parading the boy around as the true heir at the dinner table.
"Some trees just don't bear fruit, no matter how much water you give them," she sneered.
My brother-in-law cheered, and my drunk father-in-law demanded I cook a feast to celebrate.
They actually expected me to continue paying the mortgage, buying the groceries, and cleaning up their endless messes, all while raising the living proof of my husband's betrayal.
I looked at the parasites who had drained me dry for years, acting like they were doing me a favor by letting me stay in a house that my money paid for.
I didn't scream, and I didn't cry.
I simply called my lawyer to file for an immediate divorce, froze every single bank account and credit card they relied on, and drove off to my grandmother's secluded cabin in the woods.
Let them see how long they survive without my money.

7.4
Evelina Barrett was the legitimate daughter, yet she was framed for a disgusting sex scandal, expelled from the Ivy League, and locked out of her late mother's massive trust fund.
While she was thrown out to rot on the streets with a jagged, hideous red scar covering half her face, her father and step-family were throwing a lavish charity gala to celebrate her total ruin.
They laughed as they officially published her disownment notice in the Times to cut her off forever.
"Without the school halo, that ugly freak will be begging on the streets by tomorrow," her sister Aspen sneered.
Her stepmother Annabella toasted to taking out the trash, perfectly happy to steal Evelina's inheritance while ignoring the fact that Evelina knew exactly how they had murdered her mother.
For years, Evelina had been locked in a dark basement, abused by bodyguards, and treated worse than a stray dog.
Why should she, the true heir, suffer in the gutter while the leeches who destroyed her life enjoyed the wealth that rightfully belonged to her?
She refused to be their victim anymore.
Washing away her fake scar to reveal her true, breathtaking face, Evelina blackmailed New York's most lethal billionaire into marriage to secure the ultimate shield.
Then, she put on a black mourning dress, ordered a dark web ghost crew, and climbed into a heavy semi-truck.
At exactly 6:00 PM, she smashed through the iron gates of her family's elegant gala, delivering three pure black coffins directly to the lawn.

7.0
My chest tightened with anticipation, five years of shared struggle culminating in this moment at the Manhattan penthouse banquet. But Chace, my partner, didn't look at me; he turned to Karyn, sliding his family's heirloom emerald ring onto her finger. Then, his voice echoed through the hall, dismissing me as "nothing but an asset under my name to provide entertainment."
My smile froze, the room erupted in laughter, and a cruel kick sent me sprawling, spraining my ankle on the cold marble floor. Karyn mocked me, but it was Chace’s icy gaze that truly shattered me. He dismissed our past, threatening my mother’s grave and my father’s life if I didn't "stay in your place and be an obedient dog."
The man I bled for, starved for, fought for, was a complete stranger, a monster veiled in cold disdain. My heartbreak bled out, replaced by a reckless, destructive madness. This wasn't just humiliation; it was an execution.
Retreating to the lavish restroom, my mind sharpened. I unblocked a forbidden number, a name whispered with terror in the New York underground: Keith Mosley. My text was brief: "I am ready to pay my debt." His reply flashed, stark and dominant: "The price is marriage." This wasn't a price; it was my knife.

8.8
Clara supported her boyfriend Leo for four years, paying his rent and buying his headshots while working dead-end extra gigs.
On his twenty-sixth birthday, she caught him in their bed with Veronica, a wealthy producer's daughter who constantly stole Clara's roles.
Leo mocked Clara as a "pathetic, poor stepping stone" who was just there until he got his foot in the door.
Veronica threatened to ruin Clara's career forever.
Clara dumped him, packed her bags, and impulsively entered a contract marriage with a cold stranger she met at City Hall.
But her nightmare wasn't over.
When her mother suddenly needed a $200,000 emergency brain surgery, Clara was forced to take a demeaning extra gig to survive.
There, Veronica and her starlet friend cornered Clara.
They mocked her cheap clothes, ridiculed her new wedding ring as fake glass, and intentionally poured scalding coffee on her feet.
"Well, maid, you better clean that up."
Veronica laughed, forcing Clara to her knees to wipe up the burning liquid while snapping photos.
Clara swallowed her burning humiliation, secretly recording their abuse on her phone.
She endured the pain, desperate for the $300 day rate to save her mother's life, feeling entirely crushed by their overwhelming wealth and power.
What she didn't know was that outside the soundstage, her new contract husband—the man she thought was just a struggling, broke tech worker—was sitting in a sleek black Maybach.
He watched his wife kneeling on the floor, and his dark eyes filled with a lethal, terrifying rage.

7.7
I trusted the wrong people in my past life.
My supposed lover and my sweet sister conspired against me, locking me inside a burning warehouse to die.
But the man I had spent my life hating, my ruthless captor Damien Sterling, rushed straight into that inferno and burned alive just to try and save me.
In my past life, I was utterly blind. I believed Julian's forged documents and Scarlett's fake affection. I even tried to assassinate Damien with a silver dagger they provided, breaking the heart of the only man who truly loved me. I died choking on thick ash, realizing too late who the real monsters were.
Why was I so incredibly foolish? Why did I let their vicious manipulation turn me into a weapon against the one person who would sacrifice absolutely everything for me?
Opening my eyes again, the phantom smell of smoke vanished.
I was sitting in the bloody water of Damien's bathtub, right after my staged suicide attempt.
When my sister sneaked into my penthouse suite and handed me the dagger to kill him again, I didn't hesitate.
I grabbed her hand tightly and plunged the sharp blade directly into my own shoulder.
"Please don't kill me, Scarlett!"
This time, I will ruthlessly ruin them both, and I will never let Damien go.