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img img Billionaires img The Discarded Heiress's Spectacular Comeback
The Discarded Heiress's Spectacular Comeback

The Discarded Heiress's Spectacular Comeback

img Billionaires
img 10 Chapters
img Jun Wen
5.0
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About

Six years ago, my father tore up my mother's trust fund and threw me out into a freezing New York storm. Crawling in the mud with a high fever, I was nearly run over by a massive Rolls-Royce. The man in the backseat, ruthless billionaire Hiram Houston, looked at my bleeding face with absolute disgust. "Throw her in the trunk." He coldly ordered his driver to lock me in suffocating darkness and dump me behind a sketchy private clinic in Queens like garbage. I survived that night, completely abandoned by my family. But the ultimate cruel joke came when I realized the anonymous sperm donor I later used from that exact same clinic gave my son a pair of piercing, ice-blue eyes. For six years, I clawed my way up to become an untouchable lawyer and designer. I raised my son Julian alone, publicly humiliated my abusive father, and thought I had buried the monster of my past forever. But today, during a tense corporate negotiation, my uncle accidentally showed Hiram a picture of my little boy. The ruthless corporate butcher stared at a child who looked exactly like a mirror reflection of his own youth. "Boss... he looks exactly like you." I locked my apartment door, my body shaking with silent sobs as I slid down to the floor. He ordered a full background check on me, and now he knows the truth. The man who once left me for dead is coming for my son.

Chapter 1

"Sign it, or you rot in the gutter with your whore of a mother's memory!"

Rolf Gillespie slammed the torn trust fund documents directly into Alycia's pale face. The sharp edge of the thick parchment scratched a raw, red line across her cheekbone. She didn't flinch. The stinging pain was instantly swallowed by the freezing sheet of rain pouring down from the black New York sky.

The shredded pieces of paper fluttered like dead leaves, landing in the thick mud covering the driveway of the Gillespie estate.

Alycia dropped to her bare knees. The freezing mud soaked instantly through her thin cotton dress. Her hands, shaking violently from the drop in her body temperature, clawed at the wet dirt, desperately trying to piece together a small sketch of a daisy her late mother had drawn next to her signature on the shredded will. It was the only piece of her mother's warmth she had left, and now it was ruined.

A sharp, agonizing pressure crushed her left hand.

Seraphina's custom-made stiletto heel ground into Alycia's knuckles. The older woman leaned her weight onto the heel, twisting it.

"Oops," Seraphina sneered, her voice barely audible over the roaring thunder. "Looks like trash belongs with trash."

Alycia ripped her bleeding hand away and snapped her head up, her chest heaving as she pulled in jagged breaths of freezing air. Before she could scream, two massive hands clamped down on her biceps. Rolf's bodyguards hauled her off the ground, their grips bruising her skin down to the bone.

They dragged her backward. Her bare feet scraped against the rough asphalt.

"Dad! You know she forged it! You know she's stealing it!" Alycia screamed, the rain choking her throat.

The heavy wrought-iron gates slammed shut in front of her face. The metallic clang vibrated in her teeth. The deadbolt slid into place with a heavy, final thud.

Alycia grabbed the freezing iron bars. Her knuckles, already raw and bleeding from the stiletto, smeared red across the rusted metal. She stared through the bars. Rolf turned his back to her, wrapping a thick arm around Seraphina's waist, and walked toward the brightly lit mansion. He didn't look back. Not even once.

The wind howled, cutting through her wet clothes and stealing the last ounce of heat from her skin. Her teeth chattered so violently her jaw ached.

She let go of the bars. Her legs felt like lead. She turned around and dragged her soaked body toward the pitch-black highway. The fever she had been fighting for two days suddenly spiked. Her vision blurred, the edges of the dark road swimming in front of her eyes. Her stomach cramped, a sharp physical nausea rising in her throat.

A blinding white light tore through the darkness.

It hit her eyes with the force of a physical blow. The deafening screech of tires burning against wet asphalt exploded in her ears.

Alycia froze. Her muscles locked.

The massive black Rolls-Royce Phantom lurched to a violent halt, the silver hood ornament stopping exactly one inch from her kneecaps. The sheer force of the displaced air and her own failing legs made her lose her balance. She collapsed hard onto the wet pavement, her palms scraping against the gravel right in front of the front bumper.

The driver's side door flew open. A man in a sharp suit, holding a black umbrella, rushed out into the storm.

"Hey! Are you crazy?" C.J. yelled, his voice tight with panic.

Alycia's survival instinct kicked in. She reached out with her bleeding fingers and grabbed the wet fabric of C.J.'s suit pants. She gripped it so hard her joints popped.

Behind C.J., the heavily tinted rear window of the Rolls-Royce rolled down exactly one-third of the way.

The glow of the streetlamp cut through the rain, illuminating the face of the man in the backseat. Hiram Houston looked like a statue carved from ice. His jaw was locked tight. His piercing blue eyes swept over the pathetic, mud-soaked woman on the ground. There was zero pity in his gaze. Only raw, unfiltered annoyance.

Alycia used every ounce of strength left in her freezing muscles to lift her head. Her lips parted, trying to force the word 'help' past her vocal cords.

Hiram frowned. He didn't look at her face. He lifted his left wrist, his eyes dropping to the dial of his Patek Philippe watch.

"Clear the obstacle, C.J.," Hiram's voice cut through the rain. It was a low, vibrating baritone that carried absolute authority. "I am not missing this board meeting."

C.J. froze, the umbrella shaking in his hand. "Sir, she's bleeding. Should I call 911?"

Hiram snapped the tablet in his lap shut. The sound was like a gunshot. "I said clear it. Throw her in the trunk if you have to. Do not waste my time."

C.J. sucked in a sharp breath. He looked down at Alycia, then back at the dark window. He didn't dare disobey.

Alycia's heart stopped. The sheer humiliation of his words burned hotter than her fever. She stared into that narrow gap in the window, burning those cold blue eyes into her memory.

C.J. pried her bleeding fingers off his pants. He grabbed her under the arms and dragged her roughly across the wet pavement toward the rear of the car.

The trunk popped open. It smelled like expensive leather and cold metal.

C.J. lifted her and shoved her inside. The heavy trunk lid slammed shut, plunging Alycia into absolute, suffocating darkness. Her consciousness finally snapped, pulling her under.

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