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Stripped into Destiny  Novel Cover

Stripped into Destiny

Switched at birth and raised in poverty, Alexa Moore learns of her true identity, only to be rejected by her wealthy biological parents. Desperate to support her adoptive family, she becomes a high-end stripper and shares one unforgettable night with a mysterious man, Miles, who disappears after paying her a fortune. Five years later, Alexa returns as the youngest female CEO, unknowingly partnering with Miles. But secrets resurface when her son, born from that night, is kidnapped while searching for his father. As the world watches, Alexa fights for her child and destiny reunites her with the man she never forgot.
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Chapter 4

Miles Away

Theresa Kingsley had never known hunger, hardship, or the sound of rain leaking through a cracked ceiling. From the moment she took her first breath—her life had unfolded on Egyptian cotton sheets and beneath crystal chandeliers.

The Kingsley estate was a world of polished marble floors, grand staircases, and corridors that echoed with nothing but silence and perfection. Theresa had everything: designer dresses flown in from Milan, a French-speaking governess named Claudine, and a personal violin coach who had once performed at Carnegie Hall. She attended an elite preparatory school where her lunch box contained crustless cucumber sandwiches and hand-packed tiramisu.

From the moment she could walk, she pushed boundaries. At age three, she snapped the neck off a porcelain ballerina statue and blamed the maid. At four, she bit a classmate for calling her "weird." By six, she had been dismissed from two ballet schools for “defiance bordering on aggression.”

But her parents—David and Isabel Kingsley—only saw her brilliance. She was pampered by every family member.

“She’s just assertive,” David would say with pride. “A leader in the making.”

“She’s special,” Isabel agreed, though she often watched her daughter with a quiet unease.

Special, yes—but also volatile.

Theresa hated being told what to do. She refused to practice her violin unless bribed. She spoke to the staff as though they were beneath her, mimicking the clipped tone she’d picked up from overhearing boardroom calls and charity galas.

“She’s precocious,” Claudine often said delicately, bowing her head to avoid conflict.

---

One Sunday morning, she sat cross-legged on a plush window seat overlooking the garden, cradling a stuffed fox in one arm and a platinum iPad in the other. She was watching a YouTube video about orphans in Africa—not out of sympathy, but curiosity.

“They don’t have houses?” she asked Claudine.

“Not like yours,” Claudine replied cautiously.

Theresa blinked slowly. “So they’re poor-poor. Like…gross poor.”

Claudine stiffened. “They’re less fortunate, yes.”

Theresa stared a moment longer, then tossed the iPad aside like a toy she’d grown tired of. “Why don’t they just work harder?”

The question lingered in the room like smoke.

Claudine didn’t answer.

That evening, during dinner, Theresa refused her truffle ravioli because it was “too creamy” and demanded sushi instead. Isabel sighed and ordered the chef to make it.

David chuckled. “She knows what she wants.”

But when the sushi arrived, Theresa ate one bite and pushed the plate away. “I don’t like salmon anymore.”

“You liked it last week,” Isabel said, trying not to sound frustrated.

“Well, I’ve changed,” Theresa replied, tossing her gold spoon to the side.

---

Theresa’s seventh birthday was a spectacle.

A unicorn-themed garden party with live animals, a cotton candy stand, and a guest appearance by a teen pop idol arranged through David’s connections. She wore a custom pink dress that cost more than most people’s monthly rent and was given a purebred mini-poodle.

Theresa twirled through her party like a monarch in a kingdom made just for her.

When one of the ponies refused to be ridden twice in a row, she shrieked until the handler gave in. When a girl in her class complimented her dress, Theresa smirked. “It’s from Paris. You wouldn’t know the brand.”

And when her violin teacher gave her a small bouquet after the party, she looked at it, sniffed once, and said, “Roses? Ew. I hate red.”

The entitlement was growing.

Isabel noticed.

And for the first time, she admitted it to David.

“She’s… not like us.”

David frowned. “What do you mean?”

“She doesn’t look like me. Or act like me. Or you, for that matter.”

David waved it off. “Lots of kids go through phases. She’s just spirited.”

Isabel didn’t push it. But that night, she stood in the hallway and watched her daughter sleep, her small fists clenched around her silk blanket. Even in rest, Theresa looked like she was bracing for something.

A storm

---

Weeks later, Claudine caught her doing something unexpected.

Theresa had snuck into the kitchen at midnight and was using a butter knife to scrape a fancy chocolate bar into a bowl.

“What are you doing?” Claudine asked gently.

Theresa didn’t flinch. “Making poor food.”

“Poor food?”

She nodded solemnly. “Like… how poor people eat. I saw it on a show.”

Claudine’s heart clenched. “Why would you do that?”

“I just want to know what it feels like,” she replied, her voice cold and curious. “Like being… not me.”

She never explained more.

---

A month later, Theresa was called into the headmistress’s office at her school.

She had locked a younger girl in the music room for “singing off-key” during rehearsal.

Isabel was horrified. David was less concerned. “Girls are mean. It’s normal.”

But even the school counselor mentioned a troubling trend—empathy issues, need for control, emotional distance. “She’s gifted, yes. But disconnected. You might consider a psychological evaluation.”

Isabel refused—out of pride, or fear, she didn't know.

Instead, she began watching her daughter more closely.

---

One rainy evening, Theresa stood on the balcony of her room, staring down at the garden below.

Isabel stepped in quietly.

“You’ll catch a cold,” she said.

Theresa didn’t turn. “I like the rain.”

“It’s cold,” Isabel said again, wrapping a shawl around her daughter’s shoulders.

Theresa’s voice was barely audible. “Do you think I’m different?”

Isabel hesitated. “Different how?”

“Just… not like other girls.”

“You’re unique,” Isabel said carefully. “But that’s a good thing.”

Theresa turned to look at her then, eyes dark and unreadable. “Sometimes I think I don't deserve this”

Isabel blinked. “What do you mean?”

“Sometimes I think… I don’t deserve this life. But other times, I wonder if I deserved even more.”

Goosebumps crawled across Isabel’s arms. “How could you say that?”

Theresa nodded, seeming convinced.

Then she asked, “If I ever ran away… would you look for me?”

Isabel stepped forward, placing a hand on her daughter’s cheek. “I would search the world for you.”

Theresa smiled faintly.

But that night, she didn’t sleep.

She just stared out at the rain.

---

The next morning, as Isabel prepared to take Theresa to a charity luncheon, a courier arrived at the gate.

It was an unmarked envelope.

Inside: a photo.

Isabel’s fingers trembled as she flipped the photo over. Her breath hitched. The babies—swaddled, nearly identical—but the tags…

And a note.

You may have raised the wrong child.

Check the blood reports. Look at her DNA.

________________

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