
Priced Out: The Heiress's Billion-Dollar Revenge
Priced Out: The Heiress's Billion-Dollar Revenge Chapter 1
Chapter 1
The smell of raw onions and industrial bleach was practically tattooed onto Elena Vance’s skin.
She stood at the stainless steel prep station in the sweltering basement kitchen of *L’Aura*, rhythmically bringing a razor-sharp chef’s knife down on a mountain of shallots. Her shoulders ached, her lower back throbbed, and her cheap, slip-resistant shoes felt as though they had fused with the soles of her blistered feet.
"Vance! Wrap it up!" barked the sous-chef from across the line, wiping sweat from his brow. "Garbage duty, then you're out. And don't forget to scrub the mats!"
"Heard," Elena said, her voice steady and devoid of complaint.
She scraped the last of the shallots into a massive plastic Cambro, wiped down her cutting board, and untied her grease-stained apron. For three years, this had been her reality. Three years of minimum wage, chemical burns, and being screamed at by men with inflated egos and mediocre culinary skills.
It was the ultimate undercover experiment. As the sole heiress to Vanguard Holdings—a hospitality empire worth over fourteen billion dollars—Elena could have bought this restaurant with the loose change in her investment portfolio. She could have fired the sous-chef, leveled the building, and turned it into a parking lot before lunch.
But she didn’t. She had chosen this grueling life for one reason: Julian Hayes.
When they met at a community college culinary class three years ago, Julian had been passionate, charming, and broke. Elena, terrified by a lifetime of sycophants who only saw her bank account, had introduced herself as a struggling orphan. She wanted to know what it felt like to be loved for her soul, not her stock options.
And for a while, she thought she had found it. She worked double shifts to pay their rent so Julian could focus on his apprenticeship. She quietly tweaked his recipes late at night, turning his bland sauces into the culinary masterpieces that were currently earning him a promotion to Head Chef.
She was ready to tell him the truth. Tonight was their three-year anniversary. She had a reservation at the most exclusive restaurant in the city—owned by one of her subsidiaries, of course—where she planned to hand him the keys to a brand-new Mercedes and finally confess her true identity.
Elena pushed open the heavy metal doors of the loading dock, stepping out into the cool, damp alleyway. The dim glow of the streetlamp illuminated the slick cobblestones and the overflowing dumpsters.
She expected to see Julian waiting by the chain-link fence, holding a single cheap rose like he usually did.
Instead, she saw him pressed against the brick wall, his hands tangled in the expensive blonde extensions of a woman wearing a five-thousand-dollar Chanel trench coat.
Elena stopped dead in her tracks. The heavy metal door clicked shut behind her, the sound echoing sharply in the narrow alley.
Julian pulled away from the blonde, his eyes snapping toward the noise. For a fraction of a second, panic flashed across his handsome face. But it was quickly replaced by an irritatingly calm, almost bored expression.
"Julian?" Elena asked, her voice dangerously quiet. She didn't scream. She didn't cry. The stoic, methodical part of her brain—the part that analyzed hostile corporate takeovers—immediately kicked into gear.
The woman turned around, a slow, theatrical smirk spreading across her lips. Elena recognized her instantly. Chloe Sterling. The daughter of the city’s most feared food critic and a prominent restaurant investor. She was a fixture in the VIP dining room upstairs, known for sending back perfectly cooked steaks and leaving zero tip.
"Well, well," Chloe purred, adjusting the collar of her designer coat. She looked Elena up and down, her nose wrinkling in disgust. "The little prep cook finally clocks out. Tell me, do you bathe in garlic, or does the stench just seep out of your pores naturally?"
Elena ignored her, keeping her eyes locked on her fiancé. "Julian. Care to explain what I'm looking at?"
Julian sighed, running a hand through his perfectly styled hair. He stepped away from Chloe, though he didn't bother to look ashamed. "Look, Elena, let's not make this harder than it has to be. You had to know this was coming."
"Did I?" Elena asked, crossing her arms over her faded t-shirt. "Because this morning you kissed me and told me you couldn't wait for our anniversary dinner."
"That was before Chloe and I finalized some... arrangements," Julian said smoothly, shoving his hands into his pockets. "I'm being promoted to Head Chef next week. My career is taking off. I'm moving into a different tax bracket, Elena. A different world."
"And I don't fit into that world?" Elena asked, her tone entirely unreadable.
"Oh, sweetie, you don't even fit into this alley," Chloe laughed, stepping forward and wrapping her manicured hand around Julian’s bicep. "Look at you. You're wearing knock-off sneakers and a shirt that looks like a rag. Julian is a rising star. He needs a partner who can elevate him. Someone with connections. Capital. Class."
"I see," Elena said. She looked at Julian, studying his cowardly posture. "You're trading me in for a venture capitalist with daddy issues."
Chloe’s eyes flashed with venom. "Watch your mouth, peasant."
"Elena, stop it," Julian snapped, puffing out his chest. "Chloe is right. I need someone on my level. What can you actually do for me? You slice vegetables for fourteen dollars an hour. You can barely afford your half of the rent in that dump we share. Chloe's father is introducing me to the board of directors tomorrow. She's securing my future."
Elena felt a cold, hard knot form in her stomach. It wasn't heartbreak. It was absolute, chilling clarity.
For three years, she had believed Julian's talent was just raw and unpolished. She had secretly rewritten his menus, balanced his flavor profiles, and guided his hand, letting him take all the credit because she wanted him to feel confident. She had played the supportive, invisible backbone.
He was a fraud. And now that he thought he had squeezed every drop of use out of her, he was discarding her in a literal garbage alley.
"My half of the rent?" Elena echoed, tilting her head. "I pay the entire rent, Julian. I paid for your culinary knives. I paid for the tailored chef's coats you wear to look important. I even wrote the recipe for the truffle-infused reduction that got you this promotion."
Julian’s face flushed a dark, angry red. "You shut your mouth! You didn't write anything! You chopped parsley while I created art!"
"Art?" Elena let out a short, hollow laugh. "You couldn't emulsify a hollandaise sauce if your life depended on it. You're a hack, Julian."
"Don't you dare speak to him like that!" Chloe shrieked, stepping forward. She pointed a perfectly manicured finger at Elena's chest. "Julian is a genius! And you are just a bitter, jealous little nobody who is angry that she’s getting left behind in the dirt where she belongs."
Elena looked down at Chloe’s finger, then back up to her face. "Don't point at me."
"Or what?" Chloe taunted, her voice rising in theatrical pitch. She leaned in closer, the overpowering smell of her expensive floral perfume clashing violently with the scent of the alley's dumpsters. "What are you going to do, Elena? Sue me? With what lawyer? Cry to your nonexistent family?"
Julian stepped up beside Chloe, puffing himself up to look intimidating. "It's over, Elena. I'm moving my things out of the apartment tomorrow. Don't be there when I do. I don't want to deal with your hysterics."
"Hysterics," Elena repeated flatly. She hadn't shed a single tear. She was analyzing them like a biologist studying parasites under a microscope.
"Julian and I are getting married," Chloe announced suddenly, a triumphant, wicked gleam in her eye.
Elena raised an eyebrow. "You've been dating in secret for what, a month? And you're already engaged?"
"When you know, you know," Julian said, though he looked momentarily uncomfortable, glancing at the ground.
"Plus," Chloe added, placing a hand dramatically over her flat stomach. "We have a timeline to keep. I'm carrying the next generation of culinary royalty."
Elena stared at Chloe's stomach. *Pregnant.* Julian hadn't just cheated on her; he had fully committed to his opportunistic climb up the social ladder by knocking up the investor's daughter. The sheer calculation of it was almost impressive in its depravity.
"Congratulations," Elena said, her voice dropping to a low, icy register. "I'm sure the child will inherit his father's cowardice and its mother's fake blonde hair."
Chloe gasped, her face twisting into an ugly sneer. "You insolent little trash."
She looked around the alley, her eyes landing on a puddle of murky, grease-slicked water near the base of the dumpsters. A cruel, spiteful smile spread across her face.
"Julian told me how much you beg for extra hours," Chloe said, reaching into her designer handbag. She pulled out a crisp hundred-dollar bill and let it flutter to the dirty cobblestones, landing right next to the puddle. "Consider this a wedding gift from us. But you have to earn it."
Elena looked at the bill, then back at Chloe. "Excuse me?"
"You're used to cleaning up filth, aren't you?" Chloe mocked, her voice dripping with entitlement. "Get on your knees. Scrub that puddle out of the alley with your bare hands. If you do a good job, you can keep the hundred. It might cover your groceries for the week now that you don't have my fiancé to leech off of."
Julian shifted his weight, a smirk playing on his lips. "Come on, Elena. It’s more than you make in a day. Don't let your pride get in the way of a good tip."
Elena stared at the two of them. The sheer, unadulterated cruelty radiating from them was suffocating. They weren't just breaking her heart; they were actively trying to strip away her humanity for sport.
She felt the final, lingering threads of her undercover persona snap. The poor, subservient prep cook was dead. The billionaire heiress was waking up.
"I am not scrubbing anything," Elena said quietly, her posture straightening. The sudden shift in her demeanor made Julian instinctively take a half-step back. "But you are going to regret those words for the rest of your miserable lives."
Chloe threw her head back and let out a shrill, mocking laugh. "Oh, I'm terrified! The garlic-girl is threatening me!"
Before Chloe could continue her tirade, the heavy, rhythmic squeak of a rusted wheel echoed down the alleyway, interrupting the standoff.
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