
The Unwanted Heiress And Her Silent Tears
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.
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Chapter 7
The final bell rang at 3:30 PM, and the sky opened up.
A freezing Boston rain came down in sheets. Abigail had no umbrella. She zipped her jacket to her chin and stepped into it.
The Escalade was idling at the curb, Hank visible through the tinted glass, already staring at his phone. She jogged through the puddles, sneakers soaking through immediately, and reached for the rear door handle.
Hank's head snapped up.
He wasn't looking at her. He was looking past her, across the busy street, his body going completely rigid.
Abigail turned.
A girl in a white trench coat stood half-hidden under the striped awning of a small café. A gust of wind caught her hood and pulled it back, and for one brief, exposed second, Abigail saw her face — or enough of it. Long blonde hair. The unmistakable angle of a jaw she had spent two days memorizing from framed photographs on a pink bedroom wall.
"Debbra!"
Hank's voice came through the car door, raw and cracked, a sound she had not heard from him before. He threw the passenger door open.
He ran into the street.
He did not look at the traffic. He simply ran, and a yellow cab locked up its brakes ten feet away, tires shrieking on the wet asphalt, the bumper stopping less than a foot from his knees. The driver screamed out the window. Hank didn't even glance at him.
The girl under the awning turned at the commotion. Her face was obscured by the driving rain. For a second she was perfectly still — and then she spun and disappeared into a narrow alley between the buildings, swallowed by shadow before Hank had even made it across the center line.
He crashed through the cafe's outdoor tables and stood at the mouth of the alley, calling her name into the dark. His voice echoed back empty.
Abigail stood in the rain and watched him pace.
She had thought his cruelty came from coldness. She understood now that she'd been wrong. It came from something much harder to hate: grief. He had lost someone he loved, and he was held together by anger because the alternative was coming apart entirely.
When Hank finally walked back across the street, he was soaked through. His hair dripped into his eyes. He stopped in front of Abigail, and his chest heaved, and his face was a map of something terrible.
"This is your fault."
The words came out quiet. That was worse than shouting.
"If you hadn't come back," he said, "she wouldn't be out there."
Abigail opened her mouth. She wanted to say: I didn't ask to be born. I didn't ask to be switched. I didn't choose any of this any more than you did. But she looked at the red rims of his eyes, the way his hands were shaking, and the words dissolved. You could not reason with grief. You could only get out of its way.
He ripped the car door open. "Get in."
She climbed into the back seat and pressed herself into the corner. The Escalade tore from the curb. The rain hammered the roof.
Abigail stared at the back of Hank's wet head. She thought about a girl in a white trench coat, vanishing into an alley in the rain. She thought about the way Danita had said her name is Debbra — not was. Present tense. A refusal to let go.
Debbra wasn't a name in this family. She was a gravity. Everything in the Richmond house orbited around a girl who wasn't here, and Abigail had been dropped into the center of that orbit like a stone into a solar system — not evil, not malicious, just fundamentally, catastrophically in the wrong place.
The SUV took a hard turn. Abigail's head knocked against the window. Pain flared.
She kept her mouth shut. She kept her face still.
She was starting to understand that surviving this house was going to require a very specific kind of endurance — not just toughness, but patience. The patience to wait for people to stop hating you for something you didn't do.
She wasn't sure she had that much patience. But she was going to have to find it.
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7.8
Alexis signed the divorce papers, leaving her with no assets, no alimony, and just the clothes on her back.
To forget her abusive husband Carlos, she got drunk and bought a high-end gigolo for the night with her last 800 dollars.
But the man she slept with wasn't an escort. He was Jarrett Hughes, a ruthless billionaire CEO.
And while she was gone, her ex-husband was busy destroying her entire life.
Carlos framed her with fake photos of her cheating to justify the penniless divorce.
Then came the real nightmare.
Carlos and her own aunt secretly drained her family's corporate accounts, driving her father to jump off a building.
At the hospital, her grieving mother blamed her for the tragedy, violently attacking her in the ER.
To top it off, her cousin Josie—who was secretly sleeping with Carlos—held her father's ashes hostage.
"Crawl on your knees and pick it up, or the ashes go in the river," Josie sneered, throwing cash into the freezing slush.
Stripped of her marriage, her father, and her dignity, Alexis sat bleeding in the snow.
She couldn't understand why the people she loved most had coordinated such a brutal slaughter against her.
But Carlos and Josie made one fatal mistake.
They didn't know the "gigolo" Alexis had accidentally bought was the most powerful man in New York.
Alexis looked at the towering billionaire standing behind her, a vengeful fire burning in her eyes.
"I need you to get my father's ashes back," she said, pulling him into a kiss right in front of her ex-husband. "I don't care what it takes."

8.4
Carissa's son was dying in the ICU, and the bone marrow match had just failed.
The billionaire father, Guilford Gates, cornered her with a cruel ultimatum: naturally conceive a "savior sibling" to save their son. But what shocked Carissa more was his family's sudden accusation that she had heartlessly sold her baby to them three years ago.
"You sold your own flesh and blood to us for five million dollars, so your body belongs to the Gates family."
She was dragged into their gilded estate, treated like a filthy, rented womb. Guilford's new fiancée mocked her, the matriarch humiliated her, and Guilford looked at her with pure disgust. When she desperately tried to feed her sick son and accidentally made him vomit, Guilford violently shoved her away and banned her from the room.
Carissa was devastated and entirely confused. She had never seen a single cent of that five million. Driven by a desperate need for the truth, she investigated and uncovered a horrifying reality: her own father and stepmother had secretly trafficked her baby to the billionaire behind her back, leaving her to bear the ultimate blame.
Looking at the bank transfer record bought with her son's life, the last shred of Carissa's vulnerability died.
She signed the conception contract without asking for a single penny. She was going to use the Gates family's immense power to destroy the blood relatives who sold her, and she would survive this hell to take back her son.

9.6
Brenda Vincent thought her biggest nightmare was catching her boyfriend cheating with her roommate on her own sofa.
But her life truly derailed after a drunken night led her into the bed of Bryon Reeves, the ruthless billionaire CEO and older brother of the student she tutored.
Trying to pay off the most dangerous man in New York with a crumpled twenty-dollar bill was her first mistake.
Fleeing the hotel, she accidentally rear-ended his custom Maybach. Bryon used the massive repair bill to blackmail her into being his fake date, parading her at a gala just to make his sister-in-law jealous.
When Brenda finally snapped and fled the humiliation, only to be rescued by his biggest corporate rival, Bryon's twisted possessiveness turned completely destructive.
"If you feel kidnapped, call the police. But your teaching license will be permanently revoked."
He didn't just threaten her. He systematically dismantled her life, using his influence to force the university to freeze her tenure and suspend her without pay.
Brenda couldn't understand why this terrifying man was going to such extreme lengths to ruin a simple tutor who just wanted to be left alone.
Now, stripped of her career, her income, and her independence, she was forced into the sprawling Reeves Manor.
Hearing the heavy mahogany door lock from the outside in her signal-jammed bedroom, Brenda's panic slowly morphed into a cold, clinical rage.
She was trapped, but she refused to be his helpless pawn.

7.4
My mother was dying and desperately needed a half-million-dollar deposit for an experimental heart surgery by tomorrow.
I swallowed my pride and begged my wealthy husband, Garrick, to save her life.
Instead of helping, he laughed coldly and threw a thick stack of divorce papers right in my face.
"A hen that can't lay eggs gets slaughtered," he sneered, ruthlessly poking my flat stomach.
He revealed that his secretary, my supposed friend Lacey, was already pregnant with his heir.
To him, our three years of marriage was just a business transaction, and now that my family was bankrupt, I was nothing but damaged goods.
He flicked a humiliating five-thousand-dollar check at me as his final act of charity, then locked me out of our townhouse into the freezing, pouring rain.
I had spent years enduring agonizing hormone treatments for a fertility issue that wasn't even my fault, only to be discarded like trash when I needed him the most.
Was my dignity, my absolute devotion, and my mother's life really worth nothing to him?
Driven by pure, reckless desperation, I threw myself directly into the path of a moving Rolls-Royce Phantom on Fifth Avenue.
It belonged to Holden Tillman, the ruthless patriarch of the Tillman empire—and the uncle Garrick lived in absolute terror of.
I thought I was walking into my death, but instead, I became his fiancée, ready to make Garrick and Lacey pay for every tear I shed.

8.6
Marrying Theron Draix in a few days was a life long dream come true.
For seventeen years, I'd loved him, revolving my life around him, and in just three days, we should be married.
"Let's break up. I won't be attending the wedding," he said.
My life shattered in that instant.
Finding out he was in love with my adopted sister was worse. They had played me and controlled my emotions.
At the end, Mireya had killed me.
If I was given a second chance, I would never love Theron and never trust Mireya.

9.2
Lainey spent her last life destroying herself for Larry, only to become the woman he discarded most cruelly. He never loved her, never wanted her, and made no secret that his first love still owned his heart.
On their wedding day, he abandoned Lainey at the altar for that woman, then later used Lainey as nothing more than a stepping stone for his company's rise. In the end, he even had her kidney ripped from her.
Reborn at the very moment everything began, Lainey called off the wedding without hesitation. But after losing her, Larry begged desperately.
Lainey shot him a cold look, then turned and walked straight into the arms of a powerful, aloof man, who stared down at Larry with pure contempt. "She's my wife now."