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The Hacker Heiress They Never Saw Coming Novel Cover

The Hacker Heiress They Never Saw Coming

"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.
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Chapter 2

Two weeks after that dinner, I stood in the foyer of my new home, watching sunlight stream through floor-to-ceiling windows that overlooked a private lake. The mansion was everything the Locke estate wasn't—clean lines, open space, and most importantly, mine.

Thirty miles outside the city, tucked into an exclusive gated community where old money whispered behind hedgerows, the property had cost me eight million in cash. The realtor hadn't even blinked when I'd wired the funds through a shell corporation registered in the Cayman Islands. Money, I'd learned, spoke louder than questions.

I ran my fingers along the edge of the custom security panel embedded in the wall. Retinal scanner, fingerprint recognition, encrypted access codes that changed every six hours. I'd designed the system myself, every line of code a fortress between me and the world that had tried to break me.

But the real sanctuary was downstairs.

The basement server room hummed with quiet power as I descended the floating stairs. Twelve high-performance machines arranged in perfect symmetry, their blue LED lights casting shadows across walls lined with sound-dampening panels. The air was cool, controlled, the faint scent of new equipment mixing with the ozone tang of electricity.

I pulled up the chair at my main workstation and let my fingers find the keyboard. On the screen, encrypted messages scrolled past—contract offers, urgent requests, desperate pleas for SIREN's expertise. I'd been selective lately, taking only the jobs that mattered.

The current one had found me three days ago. A journalist in Prague had discovered a human trafficking network using cryptocurrency to move money across borders. The encryption was sophisticated, military-grade. They needed someone who could crack it, trace the financial pathways, expose the monsters operating in the dark.

I'd quoted them two million dollars. They'd accepted within the hour.

Lines of code flowed across multiple monitors as I worked, my mind slipping into that focused state where nothing existed except the logic, the patterns, the beautiful architecture of data waiting to be unraveled. This was where I belonged. Not in dining rooms where families gathered to destroy each other, but here, in the clean precision of ones and zeros.

Six hours later, I had what I needed. Account numbers, transaction histories, a complete map of their operation. I encrypted the files and sent them through three proxy servers before they reached the journalist's secure drop. Another monster exposed. Another victory that no one would ever know was mine.

The notification pinged on my phone just as I was shutting down for the night. A social media post from Chelsea Hartwell, a girl I'd known from the academy. She'd attended some garden party at the Ashford estate, two properties down from mine. The photo showed laughing faces, champagne glasses, and in the background—blurred but unmistakable—my mansion's distinctive glass facade catching the sunset.

I stared at the image, a cold understanding settling in my chest. In this world, privacy was a myth. Secrets had expiration dates.

Sure enough, my phone rang twenty minutes later. Unknown number, but I knew who it would be before I answered.

"Hello, Marigold."

"You absolute—" Her voice cracked with fury. "How dare you. How dare you live like that while you let everyone believe you were cast out with nothing!"

I leaned back in my chair, letting her rage wash over me. In the server room's blue light, I felt untouchable.

"I never said I had nothing," I replied calmly. "You assumed."

"That house—that neighborhood—" She was nearly hyperventilating. "Where did you get the money? It was Mother's inheritance, wasn't it? She left you something secret, something that should have been mine!"

Mother. She called my mother 'Mother' now, with such casual ownership it made my jaw tighten.

"There is no inheritance, Marigold. Mother left nothing but debts and hospital bills. You'd know that if you'd bothered to visit her before she died."

"Liar!" The word came out as a shriek. "I'm going to find out the truth, Seraphine. I'm going through every record, every account, every—"

"Good luck with that." I ended the call and powered down my phone.

Let her search. Let her tear through Father's study, interrogate the accountants, hire investigators. She'd find nothing because there was nothing to find. The Locke family fortune and SIREN's empire existed in completely separate worlds, connected only by the girl who walked between them.

I climbed the stairs back to the main floor, pausing at the window that overlooked the city's distant lights. Somewhere out there, Marigold was probably still screaming, still convinced that I'd stolen something that belonged to her.

She had no idea what I'd actually taken. And what I was still planning to take back.

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