
The Hacker Heiress They Never Saw Coming
The Hacker Heiress They Never Saw Coming Chapter 1
The chandelier above the dining table cast fractured light across my father's face as I reached for my wine glass.
Across from me, Marigold smiled—that same practiced smile she'd perfected over the years, the one that never quite reached her eyes.
"Seraphine, you've barely touched your food," she said, her voice dripping with false concern. "Are you feeling unwell?"
Before I could respond, she stood abruptly, her chair scraping against the marble floor. "Excuse me. I need to freshen up."
I watched her disappear down the hallway, an uneasy tension settling in my chest. Something felt wrong. The air itself seemed to thicken with anticipation.
Minutes passed. Then came the scream.
Marigold staggered back into the dining room, one hand clutched to her forearm, blood seeping between her fingers. Her face was contorted in what looked like agony, tears streaming down her cheeks.
"She—she attacked me!" Marigold gasped, pointing at me with her uninjured hand. "In the bathroom! She said I didn't belong here, that I stole everything from her!"
My fork clattered against my plate. "What? I haven't moved from this chair—"
"Liar!" She thrust forward a wine glass, my lipstick still visible on the rim. "You cornered me! You broke this and tried to—"
"Marcus, call Dr. Reynolds immediately!" Daniel was already on his feet, rushing to Marigold's side. My brother wrapped his arm around her trembling shoulders, shooting me a look of pure disgust.
I stood slowly, my mind racing to process what was happening. "Father, I didn't—"
"Enough." Marcus's voice cut through the room like a blade. He hadn't even looked at me. His entire focus was on Marigold, on the blood trailing down her arm, on her theatrical sobbing.
Two members of the household staff appeared in the doorway. Mrs. Chen, who'd worked for us for a decade, and Thomas, the new groundskeeper Marigold had personally recommended last month.
"We saw it, Mr. Locke," Mrs. Chen said, her voice oddly flat. "Earlier today, Miss Seraphine was arguing with Miss Marigold in the garden. She said terrible things."
Thomas nodded vigorously. "I heard her threaten Miss Marigold. Said she was going to make her pay."
The room tilted. I gripped the edge of the table, staring at these people I'd known for years—or thought I'd known. Mrs. Chen wouldn't meet my eyes.
"That's impossible," I said, my voice steadier than I felt. "I was in my room working all afternoon. I have timestamps on my laptop—"
"Your laptop." Marigold laughed bitterly through her tears. "Of course you'd manufacture evidence. You've always been so clever, haven't you? So calculating."
Marcus finally looked at me then. The coldness in his eyes made my breath catch. This was the man who'd once called me his little star, who'd promised my dying mother he'd always protect me.
"Seraphine." He said my name like it tasted bitter. "I want you in my study. Tomorrow morning. Nine o'clock sharp."
I opened my mouth to argue, to fight, to demand they listen—but the words died in my throat.
In that moment, I saw it clearly: the careful way Marigold's blood was distributed, just enough to shock but not endanger. The convenient placement of the wine glass. The too-perfect timing of the staff's appearance.
She'd planned this. Every detail.
And I had lost before I even knew the game had begun.
"Fine," I said quietly, meeting Marigold's eyes across the room. For just a second, her mask slipped, and I saw the triumph blazing there. "Nine o'clock."
I turned and walked out, my mother's ring—the one piece of her I'd kept hidden from this family—burning cold against my finger. Behind me, I heard Marigold's renewed sobbing, Daniel's comforting murmurs, my father's heavy sigh.
None of them followed me.
In my room, I sat at my desk and opened my laptop, the screen's glow harsh in the darkness. My fingers found the keyboard automatically, muscle memory from five years of late nights and coded secrets.
One message window. One username: SIREN.
Five hundred million dollars sat in accounts scattered across three continents, money I'd earned in a world where my father's name meant nothing and my skills meant everything.
I could survive this. I would survive this.
But as I stared at the reflection in my dark window—a girl who'd just lost her family to a monster in designer clothes—I wondered if survival would be enough.
The Hacker Heiress They Never Saw Coming of Contents
New Release Novels

















