
The Abandoned Daughter's Secret Golden Fortune
After being kidnapped for years and finally rescued, five-year-old Izzy thought she was going home to her wealthy biological family.
But when the social worker brought her to the freezing bus station, her biological father, Conrad, didn't even get out of his Mercedes. He took one look at her tangled hair and worn-out shoes, his lip curling in disgust.
"I have a real family now. I'm not disrupting my life for this."
He drove away, leaving her choking on his exhaust fumes. When her rough, grease-stained uncle Bryan forcefully brought her to the family mansion, things only got worse. Her biological mother refused to touch her, complaining that she smelled like a dumpster. Her half-sister Katelynn pushed her to the ground, making her bleed, and framed her for stealing. Instead of helping, Conrad roared at Izzy, calling her a wild animal and threatening to throw her back onto the streets.
Izzy stood there shivering in her oversized rags, watching them stand together in a perfect, unbroken circle. She didn't understand why her own blood looked at her like she was a monster, or why they were so eager to throw a traumatized child back into the dark.
But what her wealthy family didn't know was that Izzy had a secret: she could hear plants talking. And the greenhouse orchids were screaming at their cruelty. So, she climbed onto their expensive coffee table, pointed at her mechanic uncle, and made her choice.
"I don't want Conrad to be my daddy. I want Uncle Bryan."
She walked out of that loveless mansion forever, ready to follow the whispers of an old apple tree in her new backyard—a tree that was about to guide her to a buried fortune of gold.
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Chapter 7
The shovel bit into the wet earth with a thick, wet sound.
Squelch. Thud. Squelch. Thud.
Bryan dug into the roots of the old apple tree, the muscles in his arms burning. The ground was hard, packed with decades of compacted soil and tangled roots, but the rain from the night before had softened it just enough.
Caitlin stood a few feet away, her arms wrapped tightly around her torso to ward off the chill. She was shivering, but not from the cold. She watched Bryan dig, her face a mask of skepticism and nervous energy. "This is insane," she muttered. "We're digging up the yard at nine o'clock at night because a five-year-old heard voices."
Izzy crouched at the edge of the hole, her chin resting on her hands, her eyes glued to the shovel. She wasn't breathing. Her heart was a tiny drum beating a million miles a minute. Please be there. Please be real. Please don't let me look like a liar.
Clunk.
The shovel hit something solid. The vibration ran up the handle and into Bryan's arms. He froze.
He looked at Izzy. She looked at him, her eyes wide as saucers.
Caitlin took a step forward, her skepticism replaced by a sudden, sharp curiosity. "What was that?"
Bryan didn't answer. He dropped the shovel onto the grass and fell to his knees. He used his hands, his thick fingers clawing at the wet, black mud, pushing it aside like a dog digging for a bone.
His fingernails scraped against metal.
He grabbed the edge and pulled. It resisted, stuck in the suction of the mud. Bryan grunted, planting his feet, and heaved.
With a wet, sucking sound, it came free.
It was a box. An old, rusted iron box, about the size of a shoebox. It was caked in dirt, the metal pitted and orange with age.
Izzy clapped her hands together, a bright, ringing laugh escaping her lips. "He didn't lie! The tree didn't lie! It's the bright thing!"
Caitlin stared at the box, her mouth hanging open. "What... what is that?"
Bryan carried the box over to the porch, holding it carefully. It was heavy. Unusually heavy for its size.
He set it down on the wooden steps and wiped the worst of the mud off with his sleeve. The lock on the front was a lump of rust. Bryan picked up a loose rock from the garden bed and gave the lock a sharp rap. With a crack, the rusted hasp snapped in two, flakes of orange metal falling away.
He looked at Caitlin. She nodded, her face pale.
Bryan took a deep breath and lifted the lid.
The hinge squeaked in protest. As the lid fell back, the light from the porch bulb caught the contents, and a brilliant, golden reflection bounced back, hitting them square in the face.
Caitlin gasped, her hand flying to her mouth. "Oh my God."
The box was full of gold.
Not painted rocks. Not fake jewelry. Real, solid gold coins, stacked in neat, gleaming rows. Even under the layers of grime, they glowed with a warm, heavy light that seemed to pulse with life.
Bryan's hands started to shake. He had worked with metal his whole life. He knew the weight of it, the feel of it. This was real. This was heavy. This was impossible.
Izzy peered into the box, her head tilting to the side. She didn't understand money, not really. But she understood beauty. The coins were pretty. They sparkled like captured sunsets.
Caitlin reached out with a trembling finger and touched the top coin. It was cold, but it felt electric. She picked it up, the weight surprising her, and rubbed her thumb across the face. A profile of a woman in a flowing headdress emerged from the dirt.
She turned it over. The date on the back was clear, stamped in sharp relief: 1885.
Caitlin's knees buckled. She sat down heavily on the porch step, the coin clutched in her hand. "Bryan," she whispered, her voice cracking. "This is... this is old. This is real."
She looked up at Izzy, her eyes wide with a mixture of awe and terror. "How did you know this was here?"
Bryan turned to Izzy, his face a mask of stunned disbelief. He knelt down in front of her, his voice hoarse. "Izzy. How?"
Izzy looked at the apple tree, which was swaying its branches in a happy, rhythmic dance. "The tree's roots were hurting," she explained simply, as if talking about the weather. "The hard thing was poking him. He said it was bright. He said it was old. He wanted it gone because it was hurting his toes."
Bryan and Caitlin exchanged a look. The world they knew, the world of bills and overtime and cheap meatloaf, had just tilted on its axis.
"The tree told you," Bryan repeated slowly, trying to wrap his mind around it.
Izzy nodded vigorously. "He's very nice. He says thank you for digging it out. His roots feel much better now."
Caitlin let out a shaky breath. She looked at the coin in her hand, then at the box full of gold, then at the little girl who talked to trees. The logic, the science, the reality-it all crumbled.
She set the coin down in the box and closed the lid with a sharp click. She stood up, her legs steadier now, and pulled Izzy into a tight hug. It wasn't out of pity this time. It was out of a fierce, overwhelming need to protect this strange, miraculous child.
Bryan stood up, his face hardening into resolve. He picked up the box, tucking it under his arm like a football.
"Nobody sees this," he said, his voice leaving no room for argument. "Nobody hears about this. Not the neighbors, not the bank, not the government. This stays in this family. This is our secret. Our family's secret. Do you understand?"
Caitlin nodded.
Izzy looked up at him, her eyes clear and serious. "I understand, Daddy."
The word hung in the air, heavy and golden, more precious than anything in the box.
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8.9
Betrayed by the people she trusted most, Ava Lin's perfect life shatters overnight. From losing her mother under mysterious circumstances to being tormented by her stepmother and stepsister, Ava learns early that love in her world comes at a price. But nothing prepares her for the ultimate betrayal,catching her fiancé in bed with her own sister just weeks before their wedding.
Humiliated and heartbroken, Ava makes a reckless decision that changes everything: a contract marriage to a stranger. What she doesn't know is that her new husband is Elias Ward,a powerful, cold-hearted billionaire with secrets of his own.
Thrown into a world of wealth, power, and hidden enemies, Ava finds herself entangled in a dangerous game of revenge, lies, and unexpected passion. As she rises from the ashes of betrayal, those who once destroyed her will stop at nothing to bring her down even if it means exposing deadly secrets buried in her past.
But when love begins to bloom in the most unexpected place, Ava must decide,will she continue fighting for revenge, or risk everything for a second chance at love?
In a story filled with scandal, heartbreak, and justice, one woman's pain becomes her greatest strength... and her ultimate weapon.

9.3
Alyssa Gregory slept with Benton Steele, a recently disgraced and bankrupt heir, just to humiliate him.
She threw a massive check at his bare chest, treating the former prince of Wall Street like a cheap escort.
But Benton didn't take the charity.
Instead, he manipulated her anger, tricking her into signing an ironclad contract that surrendered absolute control of her entire trust fund to him.
When her abusive mother found out she had funded a penniless outcast, she slapped Alyssa across the face.
Her mother froze all her bank accounts, locked her inside her bedroom, and arranged to sell her off to a degenerate politician.
Desperate to escape, Alyssa climbed down her balcony, falling fifteen feet and shattering her ankle on the stones below.
Stripped of her money and freedom, she dragged her broken body to a VIP club just to publicly declare that Benton belonged to her.
She thought she was the boss, playing a rebellious game with a broken man.
But when Benton effortlessly carried her away from the club and locked her inside his rundown apartment, the terrifying calculation in his dark eyes shattered her illusion.
How could a man stripped of his entire empire still radiate such suffocating, violent power?
"You bought me," Benton whispered, his massive frame trapping her against the sofa. "That means I have to take care of you."
Physically trapped and completely broke, Alyssa stared into his consuming eyes, her mind racing to find a way to turn the tables.

9.5
Elsie was the Sutton family's perfect puppet, a sickly heiress locked away in a pristine manor and treated like fragile porcelain. Her only purpose was to be a pawn in her mother's corporate games.
Without warning, her mother ordered her to marry Duke Blake, a ruthless, cold-blooded billionaire known for destroying his rivals. Worse, her mother immediately handed over total control of Elsie's life to him, declaring she couldn't even step outside the gates without his explicit permission.
Desperate, Elsie met him and asked if she would be expected to perform wifely duties, praying for a marriage in name only.
"I have a very high sex drive."
He stated it bluntly, shattering her illusions. Yet, when he drove her into the city days later, a sudden swerve sent her tumbling directly into his lap. Instead of the desire he claimed to possess, his body went completely rigid. He violently shoved her away, slamming her hard against the passenger seat. His face was pale, his knuckles white, and he stared straight ahead with a look of absolute, terrifying revulsion.
Humiliation and sharp pain coiled in her chest. She couldn't understand. Why did he demand absolute control over her and boast about his desires, only to treat her accidental touch like a repulsive disease? Why did this all-powerful man secretly smell of hospital antiseptics? What exactly was the Sutton family forcing her to marry?
But she was no longer willing to be a lamb led to the slaughter. Thinking of the provocative black lace hidden behind her wardrobe's false wall, Elsie smiled coldly. She was going to find the fatal flaw in this ruthless billionaire's code, and use it to completely shatter her cage.

7.8
Andrea was trapped in a suffocating marriage with billionaire Gregory Morse, forced to live as the pathetic substitute for his dead fiancée.
When armed intruders broke into their estate in the dead of night, she called her husband in pure terror.
"Stop playing these cheap, attention-seeking games," Gregory sneered with disgust, and hung up the phone.
She barely escaped with her life, but the cruelty only escalated. At the family mansion, his dead fiancée's sister deliberately scalded Andrea's hand with boiling tea. Instead of defending his wife, Gregory publicly humiliated her, ordering her to clean up the mess while calling her a stray dog.
That night, hiding in the dark wine cellar, Andrea overheard a chilling confession.
Gregory admitted to his brother that he knew Andrea was completely innocent of the car crash that killed his fiancée. He knew she had been framed.
Why did he marry her? Just to use her as a psychological punching bag to vent his twisted grief. He watched her suffer every single day, treating her like disposable trash, while violently threatening anyone who showed her an ounce of kindness.
He thought she was just a useless, helpless shadow who would quietly endure his torment forever.
He had no idea that behind her submissive facade, she was secretly Madame Lan, the apex predator of the global fashion world. And now, she was ready to burn his empire to the ground.

9.2
Nica caught her boyfriend, Chris, and her best friend, Ella, in a shocking betrayal. Chris was kissing Ella while caressing her close, and Ella only smirked at Nica as if she had won. Nica got pissed off and swore she would not let their betrayal go unpunished. What happens next? Read the story and find out for yourself.

9.5
I woke up gasping from a nightmare of flames devouring Chandler Finch's estate, my body wrapped in burning curtains as I died alone.
But my eyes opened to silk sheets in his penthouse master bedroom. He was alive beside me, his cedarwood scent real. This was my second chance—I'd been reborn.
His phone buzzed: Eugenia Stewart's "emergency." Her security detail reported her refusing meals, unstable. Chandler bolted without a glance, rushing to her side.
I signed the brutal cohabitation contract binding me to him, but Temperance had planted birth control pills in the trash—a trap to frame me. Chandler found them, exploded in jealous rage, crushing the pills to dust. "No child unless it's mine," he growled, possessive fire in his eyes.
Brett, Eugenia's lapdog, stormed in later, accusing me of manipulation. I fired back: Chandler demanded my womb for his heir. Brett paled, fled to tattle.
Then the storm hit—power outage, locked on the terrace in pouring rain, freezing as Eugenia faked an asthma attack on Chandler's line, stealing his focus again. I hung up, huddled with a stray puppy, nearly dying from hypothermia.
He'd never believed me before—Eugenia's lies always won, dooming me to isolation and fire. Why did her every whimper trump my screams? How could he be so blind?
This time, reborn weeks before the inferno, I wouldn't beg. I'd play his game, shatter Eugenia's web, and make Chandler mine—before the flames returned.