
Priced Out: The Heiress's Billion-Dollar Revenge
Chapter 2
Chapter 2
The squeaking grew louder, echoing off the damp brick walls of the loading dock. Out of the evening fog emerged an elderly man pushing a heavily laden wooden cart.
It was Mr. Rossi. He was a fixture in the neighborhood, a sweet, seventy-year-old Italian immigrant who spent his nights baking artisanal breads to sell to the local restaurants before dawn. His hands were gnarled from decades of kneading dough, and his apron was perpetually dusted with flour. Elena had often bought a loaf from him at the end of her shifts, slipping him an extra twenty dollars when Julian wasn't looking.
Mr. Rossi paused, his bushy white eyebrows drawing together as he took in the scene. He looked at Julian’s aggressive stance, Chloe’s sneering face, and Elena standing rigidly in front of them.
"Elena? Is everything alright here?" Mr. Rossi asked, his voice thick with a heavy accent. He pulled his cart a few feet closer. The smell of fresh, warm sourdough and sweet brioche temporarily overpowered the stench of the alley.
"Everything is fine, Mr. Rossi," Elena said, her voice softening slightly. "You should keep moving. It's not safe here right now."
Chloe spun around, her eyes flashing with theatrical outrage. "Excuse me? Who the hell is this decrepit old man interrupting my conversation?"
Mr. Rossi blinked, taken aback by the sheer venom in the young woman's voice. "I am just delivering the bread, Miss. But you should not be yelling at Elena. She is a good girl. You leave her alone."
Chloe let out a sharp, incredulous gasp. She looked at Julian, her face contorted in disbelief. "Julian, are you going to let this... this street peddler speak to me like that?"
Julian immediately stepped forward, pointing a finger at the old man. "Back off, Rossi. This is none of your business. Take your garbage bread and get out of here before I call the health inspector on your unlicensed cart."
"It is not garbage," Mr. Rossi said defensively, his hands trembling slightly as he gripped the handle of his cart. "This is three days of work. Sourdough starter I have kept alive for ten years. You have no respect."
"Respect?" Chloe shrieked, her entitlement flaring into outright rage. "You want respect? You're a peasant pushing a wooden box in an alley!"
Before Elena or Julian could react, Chloe lunged forward. She raised a foot clad in a thousand-dollar stiletto heel and kicked the side of Mr. Rossi's wooden cart with all her might.
The cart teetered precariously for a second. Mr. Rossi let out a cry of panic, trying to steady it, but he wasn't fast enough.
With a loud crash, the cart tipped over.
Dozens of beautifully braided brioche loaves, perfectly crusted sourdough boules, and delicate ciabattas spilled out, tumbling directly into the murky, grease-slicked puddles of the alley. The dirty water soaked into the fresh bread instantly, ruining it all.
"No!" Mr. Rossi cried out, dropping to his knees. He reached out with shaking hands, trying to salvage a loaf of bread, but it was already coated in dark, foul-smelling grime. Tears welled up in the old man's eyes. "My bread... my livelihood. Why would you do this? Why?"
Chloe stood over him, dusting off her trench coat with a look of supreme satisfaction. "Consider it a lesson in knowing your place. Next time a lady is speaking, you keep your mouth shut."
Julian chuckled, shaking his head. "Good kick, babe. Come on, let's get out of here. The smell of this trash is making me nauseous."
Elena stood entirely still. She looked at the ruined bread scattered across the alley. She looked at the elderly man weeping quietly on the wet cobblestones. And then, she looked at Julian and Chloe.
The last three years of playing poor, of biting her tongue, of lowering her gaze to avoid conflict—all of it evaporated in an instant. The stoic, methodical queen of Vanguard Holdings stepped to the forefront of her mind, locking away the vulnerable woman who had loved Julian Hayes.
When Elena spoke, her voice wasn't loud, but the absolute, freezing authority in it made the temperature in the alley seem to drop ten degrees.
"Pick it up."
Julian paused mid-step, turning back to look at her. "What did you just say?"
Elena took a slow, measured step forward. Her posture was perfectly straight, her chin raised. The cheap prep cook uniform suddenly looked strangely out of place on a woman carrying herself like royalty.
"I said, pick it up," Elena repeated, her eyes locked onto Chloe with the intensity of a predator. "You will get on your knees, you will pick up every single piece of ruined bread, and you will apologize to this man."
Chloe stared at her for a second before bursting into hysterical laughter. "Are you insane? I'm not touching that filth! And I certainly don't take orders from a minimum-wage loser."
"You are going to pay him," Elena said, her voice a flat, mechanical blade. "Fifty thousand dollars. Right now."
Julian let out a loud, mocking guffaw. "Fifty grand? For a pile of flour and yeast? Elena, you've completely lost your mind. The breakup must have snapped your fragile little brain."
"That is the price," Elena said coldly, not breaking eye contact with Chloe. "For the destruction of property, the loss of wages, and the emotional distress you just caused an innocent man. Fifty thousand dollars. Transfer it now, or I promise you, I will take everything you have."
Chloe’s laughter died down, replaced by a vicious, spiteful glare. She reached into her Chanel bag and pulled out her latest-model smartphone.
"You know what? This is too good," Chloe said, tapping the screen rapidly. "People need to see this. The pathetic, dumped prep cook having a psychotic break in the alley because her betters put her in her place."
She held the phone up, the screen glowing as she opened a social media app.
"What are you doing?" Julian asked, though he was already adjusting his posture to look good for the camera.
"I'm going live," Chloe said, a theatrical, venomous smile stretching across her face. "My followers love a good trainwreck. Let's make this interesting, Elena. Since you're suddenly acting like you own the world."
The red 'LIVE' icon blinked in the corner of Chloe's screen. Within seconds, the viewer count began to tick upward rapidly. Chloe was a minor local celebrity, known for her toxic drama and lavish lifestyle.
"Hi everyone!" Chloe chirped into the phone, her tone sickeningly sweet. "I'm here in the alley behind *L’Aura* with Julian's crazy ex-fiancée. She's a bit unhinged because Julian finally upgraded to a real woman. And now, she's demanding I pay fifty thousand dollars to some street rat!"
She flipped the camera to show Mr. Rossi still kneeling by his ruined bread, then panned it over to Elena's stone-cold face.
"Let's make a bet, Elena," Chloe challenged, her eyes gleaming with malice as she stepped closer, the phone pointed directly at Elena's face. "Since you want to throw around big numbers and act like a big shot."
Elena didn't flinch away from the camera. She stared directly into the lens, her expression completely unreadable. "I'm listening."
"You want me to pay fifty grand?" Chloe taunted. "Prove you're not just a pathetic, broke loser making empty threats. I bet you can't even produce a fraction of that money. In fact, I'll raise the stakes. You have exactly ten minutes to produce five million dollars in liquid cash."
Julian snorted loudly in the background. "Five million? Chloe, she can't even afford a bus pass."
"That's the point," Chloe sneered, keeping the camera steady. "Five million dollars. In ten minutes. If you can do it, I will personally write this old man a check for fifty grand, and I will scrub this alley floor on my hands and knees."
She leaned in closer, dropping the fake-sweet voice for a tone of pure, concentrated venom.
"But when you fail—because we both know you're nothing but a pathetic, penniless rat—you are going to get down on your hands and knees in front of my camera. You are going to apologize to me for breathing my air, and you are going to crawl out of this alley like the dog you are. And it will be broadcast to fifty thousand people."
Chloe pulled the phone back, framing herself and Elena in the shot. "What do you say, garlic-girl? Do we have a bet? Or are you going to tuck your tail between your legs and run?"
Mr. Rossi looked up at Elena, his eyes wide with fear. "Elena, no. Please. Do not do this. They are bad people. Just walk away."
Julian crossed his arms, a smug, narcissistic grin on his face. "Yeah, Elena. Walk away. You're embarrassing yourself."
Elena looked at Julian’s smug face, then at Chloe’s phone, and finally at the ruined bread soaking in the puddle. The sheer arrogance of these two parasites thinking they held all the power in the world because of a few million dollars in daddy's bank account.
It was time to introduce them to the apex predator of the food chain.
Elena pulled her own phone from her pocket. The screen was cracked, the case cheap and faded—part of her disguise. She held it up, looking directly into Chloe's camera lens.
"Five million dollars. Ten minutes," Elena said, her voice carrying a lethal, echoing finality that made Julian's smirk falter for a fraction of a second. "I accept."
Chloe's eyes widened in genuine surprise before she threw her head back and shrieked with laughter. "Oh my god! You heard it here, folks! The clock starts now!"
Elena ignored her. She unlocked her cracked phone and dialed a number she hadn't called in three years. The number of the man who managed her true life.
The phone rang exactly once before a deep, commanding voice answered.
"Miss Vance," Marcus Thorne said, his tone laced with immediate, shark-like readiness. "It has been a long time."
"Marcus," Elena said, her voice dropping into the commanding cadence of a billionaire CEO. "I am in the loading dock behind *L’Aura*. I need five million in cash, and I need it in nine minutes."
"Understood," Marcus replied without a single second of hesitation. "Anything else?"
Elena looked at Julian, who was currently mocking her fake phone call to Chloe's live stream.
"Yes," Elena said, her eyes narrowing into cold slits. "Bring the deed to the restaurant. We're doing some restructuring tonight."
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