
The Hacker Heiress They Never Saw Coming
Chapter 3
The notification appeared on my phone three days after that call with Marigold—a tagged photo on Instagram. I was in the middle of debugging a security protocol for a client in Singapore when the alert pulled me out of the code.
Marigold's account. Of course.
The image showed her at some rooftop bar, wine glass raised to the camera, surrounded by the usual crowd of trust-fund socialites. But it was the caption that made my jaw tighten.
"Loving this view... unlike certain people who've had to find creative ways to afford theirs. 💅 #KnowYourWorth #NewMoneyProblems"
I scrolled through the comments. Chelsea Hartwell had replied with a laughing emoji. Victoria Ashford had added, "Some people will do ANYTHING to keep up appearances."
The implications were clear. Subtle enough to avoid direct accusation, but pointed enough that anyone with half a brain would understand exactly who she was talking about.
I set my phone down and returned to my code, but the focus was gone. Over the next two days, more posts appeared. A photo of expensive shoes with the caption "Earned, not gifted." A selfie in front of the Locke estate with "Home is where the REAL family is." Each one carefully crafted, each one designed to plant seeds of doubt.
By the end of the week, my phone was buzzing with messages from old acquaintances I hadn't heard from in months. Their questions came wrapped in false concern, fishing for confirmation of rumors they'd already decided were true.
I ignored them all.
But ignoring them didn't make the whispers stop. I could feel them following me through the city—in the careful distance the valet kept at my favorite café, in the way conversations died when I entered a boutique on Fifth Avenue, in the pointed looks from women who'd once competed for invitations to my birthday parties.
The charity auction at the Grandview Hotel was supposed to be a professional appearance, nothing more. David Chen, founder of a promising cybersecurity startup, had asked me to consult on their new encryption protocol. When he invited me as his plus-one to network with potential investors, I'd accepted. It was business. Clean, simple, legitimate.
The hotel's ballroom glittered with crystal and champagne, filled with the kind of people who measured worth in zeros and square footage. I'd worn a simple black dress—elegant but understated, the kind that didn't beg for attention.
David was introducing me to a venture capitalist when I felt it—that prickling awareness of being watched. I turned my head slightly and saw him.
Adrian stood near the bar with a cluster of his usual crowd, his arm draped casually around Marigold's waist. She wore red tonight, a dress that screamed for attention and got it. When our eyes met across the room, she smiled and whispered something in Adrian's ear.
He laughed. Loud enough to carry.
"—charging by the hour now," his voice cut through the ambient noise, deliberately projected. "Makes sense, really. It's the only skill she has."
The laughter rippled through his group like a stone thrown in still water. Faces turned toward me, some amused, some uncomfortable, all curious to see how I'd react.
I felt David tense beside me, heard him start to say something, but I was already moving. Not toward Adrian—that's what they expected, what they wanted—but past him, my gaze fixed straight ahead as if I hadn't heard a thing.
My heels clicked against marble, each step measured and deliberate. My face stayed smooth, impassive, but my right hand found my mother's ring, thumb rubbing across the cool metal in a gesture I couldn't quite control.
Behind me, Adrian's laughter grew louder, emboldened by my silence.
I made it to the lobby before the society columnist cornered me. Diane Matthews, a woman who'd built a career on other people's scandals, stepped directly into my path with a recorder already running.
"Seraphine, darling." Her smile was sharp as cut glass. "Care to comment on the rumors circulating about your... income sources?"
I could have walked away. Should have walked away. But something in her expectant expression—that certainty that I'd crumble or rage or give her the dramatic response she wanted—made me stop.
"I'm a software developer and cybersecurity consultant," I said, my voice calm and clear. "I earn my own money through my skills."
Diane's eyes lit up like I'd handed her a gift. "Software development? How fascinating. And where did you study that?"
"I'm self-taught."
"Self-taught." She repeated it like the punchline to a joke. "I see. And these... consulting fees. They must be quite substantial to afford your new lifestyle."
I met her gaze directly. "My rates are competitive for the industry standard. Would you like a referral list of my clients?"
She laughed, a brittle sound that echoed off the lobby's high ceilings. "Oh, honey. I'm sure your 'clients' are very satisfied."
I left her there, still laughing.
The article appeared online the next morning. My quote was featured prominently, surrounded by enough innuendo and carefully worded implications to paint me exactly as they wanted. By noon, Adrian's response was already viral.
I read it on my phone, standing in my server room where code couldn't lie and numbers didn't judge.
"Seraphine Locke coding? She couldn't write 'hello world' if her life depended on it. Next she'll claim she's a brain surgeon. #DellusionalEx #TryHarder"
Three hundred comments already. Screenshots being shared across every social platform where our circles overlapped. Mocking GIFs. Laughing emojis. A feeding frenzy of collective cruelty.
I set the phone down next to my keyboard and stared at the screens in front of me—at the intricate security system I'd designed, at the half-finished penetration test for a Fortune 500 company, at the encrypted communication network that connected me to clients across six continents.
Hello world.
I could write code that would make Adrian's entire digital existence disappear. Could expose every fraudulent investment, every forged credential, every lie he'd ever told. Could reduce his carefully constructed life to smoking ruins with nothing but my keyboard and a few hours of focused work.
But that would reveal what I really was. And I wasn't ready for that.
Not yet.
My phone buzzed again. Another message. Another cruel joke at my expense.
I powered it down and returned to my code, fingers moving across the keyboard with the muscle memory of five years' practice. In this room, in this world of pure logic and earned respect, I knew exactly who I was.
The question was: how much longer could I let them believe I was nothing?
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