
Stolen Medal, Broken Heart
Chapter 3
The weeks following the charity gala passed in a blur of rejection and desperation. My phone, once buzzing with sponsorship offers, now sat silent on my kitchen counter. The few messages I received were from bill collectors, their tones growing increasingly impatient.
I stared at the empty cupboard, then at the single packet of instant noodles in my hand. Dinner. Again.
"Fourteen dollars left until payday," I muttered, setting the kettle on the stove. The electricity had been shut off twice this month—each time, I'd scraped together just enough to get it reinstated, only to watch the balance dwindle further.
My training schedule had become a cruel joke. How could I focus on triple axels when I was constantly calculating how many hours I needed to work at the coffee shop to afford next month's ice time?
"Elianna, honey, I'm sorry, but we need to talk about your account." Coach Miller's voice carried through the phone, sympathetic but firm. "The facility fees are three months behind."
"I'll get it to you," I promised, twisting my grandmother's bracelet. "I just need a little more time."
Time. As if that was something I could control when I was working double shifts between training sessions, surviving on caffeine and whatever I could afford to eat.
I'd called Langston seven times in the past week. Each call went straight to voicemail. Each text message showed read but remained unanswered.
"Family obligations," he'd said when we last spoke. "I'll make it up to you, I promise."
Another promise. I touched the diamond ring on my finger—beautiful, expensive, and completely useless when I couldn't afford groceries.
That night, I made a decision. I'd go to Langston's apartment and ask for help. Just a small loan to get me through until I could figure something else out.
"I wouldn't ask if I had anywhere else to turn," I whispered to myself as I boarded the bus the next morning.
The address Langston had listed on his apartment paperwork led me to the outskirts of the city. As the bus wound through increasingly affluent neighborhoods, my stomach twisted with confusion.
"This can't be right," I murmured, double-checking the address.
The bus stopped at a gated entrance. Beyond the wrought-iron fence stretched manicured gardens and a circular driveway filled with cars I recognized from magazines—names like Bentley and Rolls-Royce gleaming in the morning sun.
"Are you getting off here, miss?" the driver asked.
"Yes," I said, gathering my courage. "This is the address."
I approached the gate, pressing the intercom button with trembling fingers.
"Stone residence," a crisp voice answered.
"I'm looking for Langston Stone," I said. "I'm Elianna Nguyen."
There was a pause. "One moment, please."
The gates swung open silently. As I walked up the winding path toward the mansion—because that's what it was, a mansion with columns and windows that gleamed like diamonds—my mind raced.
A woman in a neat uniform opened the door before I could knock.
"Ms. Nguyen," she said with a slight bow. "Master Stone isn't home at the moment, but I can inform him of your arrival."
"Master Stone?" I repeated, my voice sounding distant to my own ears.
"Yes, Master Stone, the heir." She gestured toward an ornate sitting room. "Would you like to wait?"
The heir. The words echoed in my head as I stepped inside, my eyes taking in the crystal chandelier, the antique furniture, the oil paintings that probably cost more than my entire life.
For three years, I'd counted pennies for groceries. I'd worked extra shifts to pay for ice time. I'd eaten instant noodles for weeks at a time while Langston watched me struggle.
"Ms. Nguyen?"
I turned to find Langston standing in the doorway, his expression shifting from surprise to something I couldn't quite read.
"Elianna," he said softly. "What are you doing here?"
"I needed to ask you something," I said, my voice surprisingly steady despite the earthquake happening inside me. "But now I think I understand."
He stepped closer, reaching for my hands. "It's not what you think."
"It's exactly what I think," I replied, pulling away. "You're rich. You've always been rich. And you let me struggle while you watched."
"Elianna, please." His voice dropped to that persuasive tone I'd grown to distrust. "I can explain everything."
"Three years," I whispered, touching my grandmother's bracelet for strength. "Three years of lies."
"Not lies," he insisted, following me as I moved toward the door. "I just didn't tell you everything."
"That's the same thing!" My voice cracked as I turned to face him. "Do you have any idea what it's like to choose between groceries and training? To work until your feet bleed because you can't afford new skates?"
His expression shifted to something like pity. "I wanted you to love me for me, not for my money."
The words hit me like a physical blow. In that moment, I saw him clearly for the first time—not as the man I loved, but as someone who had deliberately watched me suffer while holding all the power to prevent it.
"You're sick," I said quietly, walking past him toward the door. "And I'm done."
You may also like





