
The Unwanted Heiress And Her Silent Tears
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Abigail was the biological heir to the wealthy Richmond family, finally brought home after sixteen years of living in poverty.
But her birth family didn't love her. They were completely obsessed with Debbra, the fake daughter who had been sent away after a DNA test.
Her biological brother looked at her faded clothes with unfiltered disgust. He left her standing in the freezing rain, screaming that it was her fault Debbra was gone.
Her mother shoved her hard against a wall just for touching a crystal music box.
"She is not my daughter! My daughter plays Chopin, not this pathetic hick!"
Even at her elite new school, her brother's friends threw her to the marble floor, mocking her as trash. In chemistry class, a boy deliberately knocked over a beaker, splashing corrosive acid onto her wrist.
No one helped her. They just ordered her to clean up the mess.
Abigail didn't ask to be switched at birth during a chaotic hospital storm. She didn't understand why her mere existence was treated as an unforgivable crime, while the imposter who stole her life was worshipped like a saint.
Washing her chemical burns alone in the empty lab, the last shred of her hope for a family completely died.
She calmly peeled off her rubber gloves and looked at her pale reflection. She decided to give up on their love and treat them as nothing more than strangers.
But just as she chose to become a ghost, a heavy thud echoed in the silent hallway, and a bloody hand slammed violently against the frosted glass of her door.
The Unwanted Heiress And Her Silent Tears Chapter 1
The autumn wind off the East Coast cut through Abigail's secondhand jacket like it had a personal grudge.
She stood at Boston South Station gripping the frayed handles of her canvas bag, spine pressed against a concrete pillar, watching the city move like a current she hadn't been invited into. Men in tailored suits. Women in sharp trench coats. Leather shoes clicking against stone with the easy confidence of people who had never once doubted they belonged somewhere.
Abigail had been practicing her smile for three weeks.
She'd rehearsed it in the cracked bathroom mirror of her foster family's house in rural Ohio. A smile that said: I'm not asking for much. Just a chance. She'd told herself blood was blood. That it had to count for something.
The black Cadillac Escalade rolled into the pickup zone. The tires made a low, expensive sound on the asphalt.
The passenger door opened.
He was tall, with a sharp jaw and the rigid posture of someone who had been corrected his entire life until good posture became indistinguishable from coldness. A dark blue Ivy League blazer. Not a wrinkle on it.
Hank. Her biological brother. She had only ever seen him in one photograph.
Her heart slammed against her ribs. She took a breath, pulled up her practiced smile, and stepped forward.
Hank's eyes swept her once. They stopped — just for a fraction of a second — on her washed-out jeans and the scuffed toes of her sneakers.
The muscle in his jaw ticked.
Abigail saw it. The raw, unfiltered disgust. Her foot froze mid-step. The smile she had spent three weeks building crumbled off her face.
Then it was gone. Hank blinked, and in its place was a flawless, practiced gentleman's expression. He closed the distance between them in long, unhurried strides and stopped exactly two feet away. He gave a single curt nod.
"Welcome home."
"Thank you," Abigail whispered.
Her thick rural accent landed in the cold air between them like a stone dropped in still water. Hank's eyes darkened. He reached out, his immaculately manicured fingers lightly pinching the frayed strap of her canvas bag.
"Allow me."
Abigail's grip tightened instinctively. Their hands brushed — a half second of skin against skin — and Hank yanked his hand back as if she had burned him. The revulsion crossed his face so fast most people would have missed it.
Abigail didn't miss it.
The silence between them turned suffocating. Hank cleared his throat, adjusted his cuff, and gestured to the driver without looking at her again. The uniformed man stepped forward with a blank face, took the cheap bag, and deposited it in the massive trunk. It sat on the plush carpet like a piece of trash.
Hank pulled open the heavy rear door. He extended a hand — a perfect, mechanical gesture.
Abigail ducked her head and climbed inside. The scent of rich leather hit her first, then the blast of the climate control system. Her stomach turned with a sharp, disorienting wave of vertigo. She had never been in a car that smelled like money before.
She slid to the far side of the seat to make room.
The rear door slammed shut.
Hank walked around to the front passenger door and got in. The tall leather seat closed him off completely.
The Escalade merged onto the highway. Soft classical music drifted from the speakers. Abigail stared at the skyscrapers blurring past the tinted glass, and after a long moment of silence, forced herself to try.
"How is… how is Mom?" she asked, directing the words at the back of his head.
Hank looked at her in the rearview mirror. His eyes were flat.
"She is fine. Just busy today."
It wasn't an answer. It was a door being shut in her face.
Abigail lowered her eyes. She shoved her freezing hands into her jacket pockets and bit down hard on the inside of her cheek.
For the next forty minutes, Hank typed on his phone and did not speak another word.
By the time the wrought-iron gates of the Richmond estate swallowed the car whole, Abigail had quietly, carefully folded up her three-week-old smile and put it away. She wouldn't be needing it.
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The Unwanted Heiress And Her Silent Tears of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6Chapter 7 Ch. 7Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

7.6
I moaned out his name. "Damien, you are not trying hard to get me, yet .."
He smirked and whispered to my ears. "I like being hard, Not "trying" hard."
When Lila Sinclair's mother is sentenced to life in prison, her world collapses overnight. With nowhere else to go, she is taken in by Sebastian Blackwood, her mother's former lover. A powerful, reserved man who agrees to shelter her under strict conditions.
Lila is placed in his household... and into a life she never asked for, sharing a roof with two stepbrothers who change everything.
Damien is danger wrapped in charm...intense, controlling, and impossible to ignore. Ethan, on the other hand, is steady, kind, and grounding...the only place she feels safe when everything else feels like it's slipping away.
But Lila's situation comes with a hidden clause: her stay in the country is temporary. Within 365 days, her legal protection expires. To remain, she must marry one of the Blackwood heirs.
One house. Two brothers. Twelve months of blurred lines, buried secrets, and emotions she was never meant to feel.
As desire clashes with safety and passion wars with peace, Lila is forced into a choice that could secure her future...or destroy it completely.

8.4
I worked three double shifts at the garage just to buy a velvet-boxed cake for my wealthy girlfriend, Arleen.
But when I pushed open the VIP room door, I saw her lover kissing her bare leg.
She didn't push him away. Instead, she laughed and swirled her martini.
"I only forgot Finn because I knew he would stay. He is a poor boy from Queens who follows me around like a loyal dog."
Later that night, her lover intentionally crashed a Porsche to scare me, sending a piece of jagged metal into my skull.
Lying in a growing pool of my own blood, I watched Arleen crawl out of the wreckage.
She didn't even look at me. She threw herself at her uninjured lover, screaming for a medic.
"He just got scraped by a piece of plastic. He is faking it. Deal with Jaquez first!"
When I woke up, I wasn't free. Arleen had locked me in a private hospital wing with 24-hour security, planning to isolate me and keep me as her broken, captive toy forever.
My blind, pathetic devotion finally froze into absolute disgust.
I looked at the heart monitor next to my bed and grabbed an IV needle.
I severed the sensor wire to trigger a flatline, slipped out the fire stairs while the nurses panicked, and burned my identity to ashes.
This time, I was going to disappear to London, build my own empire, and watch hers burn.

8.6
I woke up choking on rotting air in an alien jungle, surrounded by giant bioluminescent ferns and a three-eyed, armor-plated beast charging straight at me.
Before the monster could tear me apart, I was saved by a squad of men with metallic wings and laser rifles, but my nightmare was just beginning.
When they brought me back to their high-tech military base, every soldier we passed stopped dead, staring at me with a feverish, starving hunger that made my skin crawl.
In the medical wing, a manic doctor bypassed all protocol, pulling out a wicked silver needle to forcibly extract my blood, looking at me not as a patient, but as a winning lottery ticket.
Even their highest-ranking commander, a giant, scarred Admiral, immediately tried to claim me, demanding I be moved into his personal bedroom for "protection."
I didn't understand why I was being treated like a caged miracle, nor why a simple, accidental touch of my hand could bring my winged protector to his knees and silence his feral instincts.
"In the Aethel Empire, there are no females," my protector whispered, his icy blue eyes filled with raw desperation. "You are the only one."
The portal that brought me here was fading, trapping me in a universe of eighty billion shapeshifting Alpha males. Looking at the terrifying devotion in his eyes, I realized my life as an ordinary human was over, and to survive this, I had to tame the beasts.

7.6
I was the fiancée of the Chicago Outfit’s heir, a bond sealed by blood and eighteen years of history.
But when his mistress pushed me into the freezing pool at our engagement gala, Jax didn’t swim toward me.
He swam past me.
He scooped up the girl who pushed me, cradling her like fragile glass, while I struggled against the weight of my gown in the murky water.
When I finally dragged myself out, shivering and humiliated before the entire underworld, Jax didn’t offer a hand. He offered a scowl.
"You’re making a scene, Eliana. Go home."
Later, when that same mistress shoved me down the stairs, shattering my knee and my dance career, Jax stepped over my broken body to comfort her.
I overheard him telling his friends, "I’m just breaking her spirit. She needs to learn she’s property, not a partner. Once she’s desperate enough, she’ll be the perfect obedient wife."
He thought I was a dog that would always return to its master. He thought he could starve me of affection until I begged for scraps.
He was wrong.
While he was busy playing protector to his mistress, I wasn't crying in my room.
I was packing his ring into a cardboard box.
I cancelled my transfer to UCLA and enrolled at NYU instead.
By the time Jax realized his "property" was missing, I was already in New York, standing next to a man who looked at me like a queen, not a possession.

9.1
June woke up transmigrated into the body of a ruthless billionaire's toxic, disposable wife.
Before she could even process the massive Beverly Hills mansion, a cold system voice announced she had exactly five minutes of lifespan remaining.
To survive, she was forced to bind with the system and strictly maintain the original owner's "brainless, abusive drama queen" persona to earn hours to live.
She was forced to violently slap hot coffee out of a terrified maid's hands and physically spank her manipulative five-year-old stepson.
When she tried to escape this nightmare by throwing divorce papers at her terrifying husband, Isaac Walton, he simply ripped them to shreds.
Every time she tried to be reasonable or show a hint of kindness, the system tortured her with agonizing cardiac pain, cementing her status as the most hated monster in the family.
The most absurd part happened when she threw a hysterical, system-mandated tantrum over a gossip magazine, and Isaac's icy demeanor suddenly melted.
He gently touched her hair, offering the one thing she desperately needed.
"Stop crying. I'll handle it."
Just as a spark of hope ignited in her chest, the system's critical death warning exploded in her skull: accepting his sympathy would instantly deduct thirty days of her life.
To stay alive, June had no choice but to violently slap away the only hand reaching out to save her, forcing herself to play the greedy villain while her husband's gaze turned dangerously dark.

9.0
Eileen woke up in a trashed hotel room, her head pounding with the pathetic memories of a despised Hollywood actress.
Outside the window, paparazzi were already screaming about her manufactured cheating scandal, but the real nightmare was waiting at her door.
Her paralyzed, billionaire husband, Carlisle Vinson, looked at her with pure disgust while his butler shoved a divorce settlement at her chest.
"Mr. Vinson is offering a severance package of fifty million dollars, provided you sign immediately and vacate the premises."
The original owner had left her an absolute mess.
Her trusted assistant had sold her room number to the press to frame her, and a playboy had scammed her out of her entire two million dollar life savings.
If she signed those papers and lost the Vinson family's protection, the breach of contract fees and her enemies in the industry would swallow her alive in days.
Eileen felt a cold fury override the original owner's lingering panic.
Why should she take the fall and be thrown out on the streets while the parasites who set her up lived out their wealthy fantasies?
She had died once, and she wasn't about to waste her second chance playing the victim.
Eileen slammed the heavy divorce folder shut right against the butler's chest.
"I'm not signing," she said with a terrifying, absolute calm.
She stepped behind her husband's wheelchair, ready to shield him from the cameras, secretly cure his dead legs, and make everyone who betrayed her bleed.











