Follow
Chapters
Share
The Fake Heiress: Captured By Her Warden

The Fake Heiress: Captured By Her Warden

I was a ghost in the rafters of Sotheby’s, five floors above the most expensive pavement in New York, clutching a ten-million-dollar ledger hidden inside a drop of blood-red agate. I had the perfect exit planned, but I didn't count on Harding Bishop, a security predator who could track a shadow through a rainstorm. When the exits were sealed and the tactical teams started swarming, I made a split-second choice to survive. I stepped out of the shadows and looked into the eyes of a billionaire socialite searching for her missing daughter, whispering a single, broken word: "Mom?" Just like that, I wasn't a thief anymore; I was Cassandra Sterling, the heiress who had been gone for five years. But the homecoming was a nightmare. My new "sister" promised to send me back to the gutter, my "father" held a gold-plated pistol to my knee the moment the limo doors closed, and the family patriarch tried to strike me down with his cane just for breathing his air. Every second was a high-wire act. I had to play the part of a traumatized victim while a ten-million-dollar stone was literally sewn into the raw, bleeding wound on my shoulder. If I moved wrong, I’d bleed out; if I spoke wrong, I’d be buried in the backyard of the Hamptons estate. Harding Bishop didn't believe a word of it. He moved into the room next to mine, watching my every breath and checking my hands for gun calluses under the guise of protection. He thinks he’s the warden and I’m his prisoner, but he’s about to find out that a cornered rat is the most dangerous thing in the house. "Sleep tight, Vesper," he whispered as he locked my door, using my real name for the first time. He thinks he’s won, but he has no idea that I’m already reaching for the Agate hidden under my pillow, ready to burn his empire to the ground.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 7

Vesper paced her room. Two hours. That's how long a priority fingerprint match took. She pulled the vent cover off the wall. She retrieved her micro-terminal. "Cipher," she typed. "They're running my prints from the study. They'll match me to Vesper Vale. I need a fix." Cipher: Negative. Harding has a localized firewall on his mobile lab. I can't get in unless someone plugs a physical drive into their server. Vesper cursed. She was trapped. Cipher: Plan B. I can't get in remotely, but the drive is loaded with a worm. It will replace your prints in the national database with Cassandra Sterling's juvenile records. It needs to run for thirty seconds. I can't change the result, but I can change the source. Vesper: So I have to break in. She didn't have four hours. The sample was already in Harding's mobile lab van parked in the driveway. She had to get to that van and plug in the drive. She looked out the window. It was raining. A heavy, dark storm. Perfect. Vesper dressed in black. She climbed out the window, gripping the wet ivy. She slid down to the garage roof. She dropped to the ground. Mud splattered her boots. Harding's van sat in the driveway. A light was on inside. He was waiting for the results. Vesper moved to the main power box on the side of the garage. She pulled her knife. She jammed it into the main breaker. Sparks flew. The estate plunged into darkness. Inside the van, the lights died. The hum of the servers stopped. "Dammit," Harding's voice. The door of the van opened. Harding stepped out, flashlight in hand, looking toward the house. Vesper sprinted. She stayed low. She slid under the chassis of the van. The wet asphalt soaked her back. Harding walked toward the garage. Vesper rolled out from under the van. She slipped inside the open door. She scanned the counter. There. A plastic evidence bag labeled Subject A. Her primary goal was the server port. She didn't take the evidence. If it was gone, he'd know. She located the main server rack and jammed Cipher's thumb drive into an open USB port. A tiny LED flickered, indicating the data transfer had begun. Then, for good measure, she pulled a small UV emitter from her pocket and blasted the evidence bag with high-intensity radiation. It would scramble the DNA and degrade the prints. The van rocked. Harding was coming back. Vesper yanked the drive out-thirty-two seconds had passed-and dove. She rolled out the side door just as Harding stepped in the driver's side. She scrambled under the chassis again. Harding paused. He felt the vibration. "Who's there?" He drew his gun. He dropped to one knee, shining the light under the van. Vesper held her breath. She was pressed up into the wheel well, her body contorted. A stray cat, wet and miserable, hissed from the bushes and bolted. Harding exhaled. He stood up. The power to the house flickered back on. Vesper lay in the mud for ten minutes after he went back inside. When she got back to her room, she was covered in grease and shivering. Ping. Cipher: Done. Your prints are now a ghost. The Vesper Vale file is firewalled at NSA-level clearance. If they run them against that, they'll get an 'Access Denied' flag. But the primary search will now match you to Cassandra Sterling's file. You are officially her. Vesper collapsed onto the bed. She stared at the ceiling. She was safe. For now.

You may also like

Bound To The Crown I Was Never Meant To Wear
7.1
Princess Aurelia Blackwood has spent her entire life learning how to obey. As the sole heir to a modern royal dynasty, her future has already been written, strategic alliances, a public marriage, and a crown that allows no room for personal desire. Love is a luxury she was never meant to claim. Everything changes the day she meets Dr. Elara Voss, the academy's newest senior lecturer. Calm, brilliant, and devastatingly attractive, Elara represents everything Aurelia should avoid. Their connection is immediate, unsettling, and impossible to ignore. What begins as restrained conversation and stolen glances soon deepens into something far more dangerous, an emotional bond that threatens duty, reputation, and the crown itself. The age gap, the hierarchy, and the rules of the monarchy stand firmly between them. When their forbidden relationship is exposed, Aurelia is forced to choose between the life she was born to live and the woman she was never meant to love. Because some hearts are not meant to be ruled. Some crowns are meant to be rewritten. And some love stories are worth breaking tradition for.
Chasing His Divorced Wife
8.5
Elara spent three years invisible in her marriage to billionaire Damien Cross. When he hands her divorce papers, she disappears without a fight. Six months later, an accident steals Damien's memory of the past five years. He doesn't remember his ex-wife, but he can't stop searching for the woman with sad eyes who haunts his dreams. When he finds Elara thriving in Seattle, she refuses to let him back in. But this Damien is nothing like the cold husband she remembers, and as he uncovers their past, devastating secrets emerge. Can you forgive someone who doesn't remember breaking you?
Escaping My Cold And Jealous CEO
9.6
For five years, I was Barron Santana's elite bodyguard and loyal shadow. I stood between him and bullets, giving him my youth and my entire heart. But last night, the CEO announced his engagement to a flawless socialite on national television. Heartbroken, I got blackout drunk and ended up crashing on the couch of Cassidy Gross, a billionaire tech CEO who saved me from a bar creep. When I showed up late to work, Barron locked me in his freezing office. He pinned me against the glass, smelling Cassidy's cologne on my clothes. "Are you already looking for your next meal ticket?" He snarled the words, treating me like a cheap whore. When I defended myself, he pulled out a silk handkerchief and wiped his fingers, acting as if my very touch contaminated him. Then, he coldly ordered his assistant to draft my termination papers. Five years of risking my life for him, thrown away like garbage just because of his twisted ego. Devastated, I ran out and collapsed in the hallway, sobbing uncontrollably until a kind coworker gently pulled me into his arms to comfort me. I didn't know Barron had followed me out. Seeing me clinging to another man, his legendary control completely shattered, replaced by a dark, violent possessiveness. But it was too late. I was done playing his obedient dog, and it was time to take Cassidy up on his offer.
Escaping The Obsessive Billionaire's Cage
7.2
For three years, I was imprisoned by Anderson Hopper, the monster who forced me to watch my fiancé, Kendall, plummet into a freezing river. But when I saw the morning news, I realized Kendall wasn't dead. He had returned as Eben Gill, a ruthless tech billionaire. I risked my life to escape and find him, only to be met with eyes full of absolute hatred. He publicly humiliated me, dragged me to the exact bridge where he "died," and sneered at the C-section scar on my stomach. "Anderson Hopper's bastard," he spat, completely unaware that the baby was actually his—the very child Anderson had murdered in the operating room to break me. To make matters worse, Anderson used Kendall's dying mother as a hostage to force me back into my cage. I knelt on the freezing asphalt, begging the man I loved to just visit his mother, while he coldly ordered his driver to run me over. I had lost my baby, my freedom, and my dignity, all to protect him from Anderson's blackmail. Why was I the one being tortured and treated like a traitor? "Don't think your little kneeling stunt earned you my forgiveness." He whispered those cruel words before walking away without looking back. Staring at his cold, retreating figure, the last shred of my love finally turned to ash. That night, under the cover of a torrential storm, I bypassed the estate's laser grids and walked out into the dark.
From Ruined Wife To Tycoon's Obsession
8.4
Everly spent four years playing the perfect, accommodating wife to Carson Moss, swallowing every grievance just to secure medical treatments for their sick daughter. But at a high-society banquet she exhausted herself organizing, Carson's pregnant mistress crashed the party. The woman shoved an ultrasound of Carson's "real heir" directly into Everly's frail grandfather's face. The shock triggered a massive heart attack. Carson refused to use his private helicopter to save the dying old man, choosing to protect his mistress and his company's IPO instead. Her grandfather died on the hospital table. Instead of remorse, her mother-in-law demanded Everly publicly cover up the murder. "You will do exactly as I say, or I will freeze every single cent of the medical trust fund paying for your crippled daughter's treatments." When a battered Everly returned to the estate, she discovered her three-year-old daughter covered in dark bruises and pinch marks. Her in-laws were deliberately torturing her disabled child. Everly couldn't comprehend how a family could be so utterly heartless. Her only family was murdered, her child was abused, and her husband threw a five-million-dollar check at her face as hush money. They thought she would just break and quietly disappear. But when a terrifyingly powerful billionaire unexpectedly blocked Carson's security team from locking her up, Everly finally saw her window. She grabbed her sleeping daughter and ran out into the freezing storm, making a blood-bound vow to make the entire Moss family bleed.
His Loss, The Tycoon's Gain: The Lost Heiress Returns
7.4
When I called my husband while trapped in a kidnapper's warehouse, he laughed. "Stop faking," he said, "my delicate mistress needs her sleep." He hung up. I signed the divorce papers drenched in my own blood, giving up everything just to escape the monster I married. His mother threw a broken umbrella at me in the rain. I had nothing—no money, no identity, no hope. But the moment I turned away, eight black Escalades encircled the street. A man in a tailored suit stepped out of a Rolls-Royce, shielding me with an umbrella. In his hand was a DNA test—and twenty-three years of relentless search. "Your last name isn't Smith," he said, wiping blood from my wrist with his handkerchief. "It's Wilder. The Wilder family. And the man who left you to die?" He smiled, icy. "He owes us nine billion dollars."