
Spectacular Comeback Of The Neglected Heiress
Alya Harrell was the illegitimate daughter of a wealthy Long Island family, treated worse than a stray dog in her own home. Tonight, her family finally found a use for her.
Her stepmother and half-sister, Chloe, forced her into a scandalous, plunging red dress. They were offering her as a bargaining chip to Warren Thorne, a ruthless, sleazy hedge fund manager known for collecting and discarding young girls.
Just to ensure her absolute humiliation, Chloe intentionally "tripped" and spilled a glass of red wine all over the silk dress.
"Now you'll have to wear that hideous little black thing you own," Chloe sneered, leaving Alya to face the high-society dinner looking like a beggar.
When Alya tried to escape Thorne's groping hands, her own father hunted her down. He grabbed a fistful of her hair, yanking her head back, and raised his hand to strike her for embarrassing the family.
She was nothing but a pawn to them, a cheap product to be sold and abused for their financial gain. Alya's heart turned cold as she realized her blood relatives would gladly destroy her just to secure a lucrative business deal.
But when she was sent to the cellar to fetch a $50,000 vintage wine for their billionaire VIP guest, Alya caught her perfect sister hooking up with a personal trainer next to the priceless bottle.
Quietly stealing the vintage wine and burying it in the garden dirt, Alya returned to the ballroom with a dangerous smile.
"I think I saw Chloe carrying a bottle down to the cellar," she told her furious father and the VIP, leading them straight toward the trap that would completely ruin her sister's perfect life.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 1
The lightning split the Queens sky, and for a fraction of a second, the night wasn't dark anymore. It was a terrifying, bleached-out white. Then the thunder cracked, a physical blow that seemed to shake the fillings in her teeth.
Nine-year-old Alya Harrell ran.
Her worn canvas sneakers slapped against the pavement, sinking into puddles that sent plumes of gritty city water splashing up her shins. The rain wasn't just falling; it was a solid wall of water, cold and relentless. It plastered her thin t-shirt to her skin, the one with the faded butterfly on the front.
In her right hand, she clutched a quarter. It was slick and cold, the only thing of value she had in the world right now. In her head, the voice of her mother's coworker from the diner echoed, a frantic, sobbing mess of words that didn't make sense.
Bellevue Hospital. Something's happened. Flo... oh God, Alya, your mom... you have to come now!
A shiver wracked her small frame, a tremor that had nothing to do with the cold. She could feel the chill seeping past her skin, deep into her bones.
She looked up, her vision blurred by the rain streaming down her face. The street was empty, a canyon of brick buildings and shuttered storefronts. The streetlights cast a sick, yellow glow on the slick asphalt.
A siren wailed in the distance, a rising and falling cry that tightened the knot of panic in her stomach.
Bellevue. She had to get to Bellevue.
A pair of headlights cut through the downpour. A yellow cab. Hope surged in her chest, hot and painful. Alya scrambled to the edge of the curb, waving her free arm frantically.
The taxi slowed. She could see the driver's silhouette, a dark shape behind the rain-streaked windshield. He paused, his gaze taking in the sight of her-a drenched, mud-splattered child, alone on a street corner in a storm.
Then he hit the gas.
The tires spun, kicking up a wave of filthy water that hit her square in the face. It tasted like dirt and despair.
Alya wiped the grit from her eyes with the back of her hand. The hope in her chest collapsed into a cold, heavy weight.
Another taxi appeared. She didn't care. She waved again, a desperate, frantic motion. This one didn't even slow down. The driver just laid on the horn, a long, angry blare that forced her to stumble back onto the sidewalk.
Her chest heaved. Tears, hot and useless, mixed with the cold rain on her cheeks. An image of her mother's face, pale and still, flashed in her mind. Fear, sharp and suffocating, seized her throat.
She couldn't wait any longer.
She made a decision born of pure, nine-year-old desperation. She was going to run into the street, force someone to stop.
A pair of powerful, bright headlights were approaching, moving much faster than the taxis. A black car, long and sleek. A Rolls-Royce Phantom. Not that she knew its name. It was just a black monster cutting through the storm.
Alya didn't hesitate. She took a breath and bolted from the curb.
The sound that followed was the shriek of expensive tires on wet pavement, a high-pitched scream of tortured rubber. The car swerved, its massive black hood filling her entire world.
The force of its sudden stop sent a gust of wind and water blasting against her, knocking her off her feet. She fell backward, her knee cracking hard against the asphalt. A sharp, searing pain shot up her leg.
She sat there, stunned, in the glare of the headlights. The engine was a low, menacing rumble.
Inside the car, a boy, maybe sixteen, looked up from the file he was reading. The sudden jolt had thrown him forward against his seatbelt. He glanced at the driver, then his eyes fixed on the small, trembling shape illuminated in the headlights.
His gaze narrowed, tracing the outline of her shivering shoulders, the butterfly on her shirt, and then down to her knee. He saw the dark stain spreading on her jeans, the unmistakable gleam of fresh blood.
His fingers, which had been tapping a silent, steady rhythm against the leather armrest, went still.
He pushed the door open.
"Mr. Carter, wait," his bodyguard in the front seat said, turning around.
The boy ignored him. He stepped out into the deluge, a large black umbrella snapping open above his head. His polished leather shoes made soft sounds as they stepped through the puddles, coming to a stop directly in front of her.
Alya flinched, scrambling backward on the rough pavement, the pain in her knee flaring. She looked up, terrified, and her gaze met his.
His eyes were dark. As dark as the storm, but without the chaos. They were calm and deep.
He crouched down, tilting the umbrella so it completely shielded her from the punishing rain. The sudden silence, with only the drumming of water on the taut fabric, was deafening.
He extended a hand, his long, clean fingers stopping just short of her bleeding knee. The gesture was simple, but it held a power that cut through her panic.
The thunder rumbled again, a low growl in the distance. His voice, when he spoke, was low and steady, slicing through the noise of the storm.
"You need to go to the hospital."
You may also like

8.6
I was the youngest Paladin in history, the absolute pride of the Azure Blade.
But after a disastrous mission in the snow, I was falsely accused of slaughtering my own squad.
Grand Master Bernardo Rowe didn't just exile me; he surgically severed my connection to the magic Aether, turning me into a crippled mortal.
Desperate to survive, I tried to climb the Holy Stairs to reclaim my legendary sword, "Rebellion."
Instead of answering my call, my own blade shrieked in absolute rejection and blasted me down the thousand stone steps.
My bones snapped like dry twigs, and I was left in a pool of my own blood.
The pilgrims laughed at me. The guards declared me a lost cause and left me to rot in the dirt.
I should have died there, betrayed by the Order and the holy magic I once served.
But a silent, massive laborer named Cato Sims dragged my mangled body into the shadows.
He healed my shattered skeleton in mere days with impossible skill, yet he allowed lowly servants to spit on him and beat him just to keep my presence hidden.
I didn't understand why my holy sword had abandoned me, and I understood even less why this stranger was protecting a condemned criminal.
When I finally snapped and demanded to know his price for saving my life, he didn't ask for money or my body.
"The mountain does not forget its debts. I am reclaiming what was taken from it."
Staring into his unyielding eyes, I realized my exile wasn't the end, but the beginning of a terrifying truth.

9.3
Born into privilege, Eleanor never imagined her life could shatter in a single night. Then her father disappeared with his mistress, her mother fell from a building and slipped into a coma, and everything she once owned turned to dust.
Determined not to ruin Jonathan's future with her family's disgrace, she ended their relationship and became the bride of a man trapped in a vegetative state.
She believed that was the last time their paths would cross. But two years later, Jonathan pinned her in the dark and whispered, "Long time no see, my sister-in-law."

7.3
Naelis Haldrith is many things, daughter to the South's most strategic Alpha, an Omega with Alpha genes, and an unapologetic misfit. During summer break, she decides to journey to Frostpine and spend her heat cycle with her boyfriend, the golden pea of the Thalric pod.
But during a collared moment, a secret of his is revealed, and Naelis realizes that their relationship was more complex than it seemed. Choosing to return to her pack, she steps outside under a storm, and it is at that moment she crosses paths with a man she had never seen before.
Zoran Vyer Thalric. Uncle to her ex. Member of the Elder's Council. The otherworldly primordial with red-ringed eyes and a wolf barely chained beneath his skin. Desire sparks instantly, and her sights are immediately set on him, but... he is a devotee of the Citadel, celibate, untouched, and unwilling to be the calm to her fury.
She is fire, wild and untamed. He is steel, honed and contained. And for the first time, Naelis is the hunter after her prey, and the line of resistance slowly blurs as he finds his years of enforced self-control and suppression unraveling at the tint of her touches.
And with a maniac on their radar, this summer break will demand blood, sacrifice, and passion that howls to the moon.

7.3
I woke up strapped to a cold steel chair in a neon-lit city that wasn't my reality. A voice in my head called The Warden told me I was bound to a digital hell called the Sandbox.
Before I could even process it, my handler casually sentenced me to death. He scheduled my "digital marriage" to a corrupted error program just to harvest my life for a fourteen percent bandwidth boost.
I barely escaped immediate erasure by smashing his skull and jumping from a high-altitude hover-train into the monster-infested lower sector. But the nightmare was just beginning. I was hunted by glitching data monsters and cornered by Dameon, a psychotic AI target who choked me and promised to delete me piece by piece. Even when Jayson, an elite system agent, intervened to save me, his partner Ellen held a pulse pistol directly to my chest.
"She's a spy. If you don't execute her right now, I am dissolving this team."
If they found out I was actually a real human from the outside world, their core logic would classify me as a virus and execute me on the spot. I was trapped in an underground bunker with three apex predators, one mistake away from permanent digital erasure.
So, I did the only thing I could to survive. I ripped my sleeve to reveal hideous, fake code-scars, looked up at Jayson with terrified, tear-filled eyes, and began to manipulate their core programming.

9.8
I was an arrogant, canceled reality TV star, trying to salvage my ruined reputation on a live broadcast.
But after I lost my temper and assaulted a cameraman, my furious grandfather chased me into our family's forbidden gallery, where I accidentally crashed into an ancient, sealed portrait.
The canvas shattered, and a terrifying woman with glowing golden eyes stepped out of the wall.
She was Cecil, the First Matriarch of the Marshall family. She caught a lightning bolt with her bare hands and crushed me to my knees with an invisible, suffocating pressure.
My grandfather, instead of saving me, groveled on the floor and abandoned me to her mercy.
"You are the disgrace that will end this family."
She hijacked my entire life, forcing me to act as her submissive baggage handler on my own survival reality show, broadcasting my humiliation to millions.
I didn't understand why this ancient monster was tormenting me. Why did she strip away my pride, treat me like a broken tool, and force me to endure the mockery of the very ex-girlfriend who had ruined my life?
But when those same cast members tried to corner me in the dark woods, Cecil stepped in front of me, her eyes locking onto the silver ring of the man mocking me.
"To catch the wolf, one must sometimes walk with the sheep."
That was when I realized she wasn't here to destroy me—she was here to hunt the parasites who had been secretly siphoning away my life force.

9.2
I woke up suffocating in the dark, only to find my mind trapped inside a tiny, plump, and entirely uncoordinated body.
A cold, mechanical voice echoed in my brain, announcing that I was dead in my original world and had transmigrated into a corporate revenge novel as the six-month-old illegitimate daughter of Edward McClure, the story's ruthless villain.
The system mercilessly outlined my doomed fate. Tonight, my cold-blooded father would abandon me to a state orphanage. By age two, he would officially sign my rights away, leaving me to die miserably at the hands of human traffickers. Outside my nursery, I could hear his terrifying footsteps approaching, his voice devoid of any human warmth as he debated throwing me out like garbage. I was completely helpless, trapped in a baby's body, staring up at a man who looked at me with pure, visceral disgust.
Why did I have to be reborn as the tragic cannon fodder of a tyrant destined to put a bullet in his own head? How was I supposed to win over a severe germaphobe when my unequipped infant reflexes made me literally pee and vomit all over his pristine Tom Ford suits?
"Your ultimate mission is to prevent Edward McClure's self-destruction. Step one: Survive tonight's abandonment crisis."
Hearing the system's terrifying ultimatum, I swallowed my adult panic, forced a pool of pitiful tears into my large eyes, and reached my chubby little hands toward the monster.