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Claimed By The Coldhearted Sterling Heir
img img Claimed By The Coldhearted Sterling Heir img Chapter 2 2
2 Chapters
Chapter 7 7 img
Chapter 8 8 img
Chapter 9 9 img
Chapter 10 10 img
Chapter 11 11 img
Chapter 12 12 img
Chapter 13 13 img
Chapter 14 14 img
Chapter 15 15 img
Chapter 16 16 img
Chapter 17 17 img
Chapter 18 18 img
Chapter 19 19 img
Chapter 20 20 img
Chapter 21 21 img
Chapter 22 22 img
Chapter 23 23 img
Chapter 24 24 img
Chapter 25 25 img
Chapter 26 26 img
Chapter 27 27 img
Chapter 28 28 img
Chapter 29 29 img
Chapter 30 30 img
Chapter 31 31 img
Chapter 32 32 img
Chapter 33 33 img
Chapter 34 34 img
Chapter 35 35 img
Chapter 36 36 img
Chapter 37 37 img
Chapter 38 38 img
Chapter 39 39 img
Chapter 40 40 img
Chapter 41 41 img
Chapter 42 42 img
Chapter 43 43 img
Chapter 44 44 img
Chapter 45 45 img
Chapter 46 46 img
Chapter 47 47 img
Chapter 48 48 img
Chapter 49 49 img
Chapter 50 50 img
Chapter 51 51 img
Chapter 52 52 img
Chapter 53 53 img
Chapter 54 54 img
Chapter 55 55 img
Chapter 56 56 img
Chapter 57 57 img
Chapter 58 58 img
Chapter 59 59 img
Chapter 60 60 img
Chapter 61 61 img
Chapter 62 62 img
Chapter 63 63 img
Chapter 64 64 img
Chapter 65 65 img
Chapter 66 66 img
Chapter 67 67 img
Chapter 68 68 img
Chapter 69 69 img
Chapter 70 70 img
Chapter 71 71 img
Chapter 72 72 img
Chapter 73 73 img
Chapter 74 74 img
Chapter 75 75 img
Chapter 76 76 img
Chapter 77 77 img
Chapter 78 78 img
Chapter 79 79 img
Chapter 80 80 img
Chapter 81 81 img
Chapter 82 82 img
Chapter 83 83 img
Chapter 84 84 img
Chapter 85 85 img
Chapter 86 86 img
Chapter 87 87 img
Chapter 88 88 img
Chapter 89 89 img
Chapter 90 90 img
Chapter 91 91 img
Chapter 92 92 img
Chapter 93 93 img
Chapter 94 94 img
Chapter 95 95 img
Chapter 96 96 img
Chapter 97 97 img
Chapter 98 98 img
Chapter 99 99 img
Chapter 100 100 img
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Chapter 2 2

The convoy tore down the interstate, the world outside blurring into streaks of green and gray. Inside, the silence was heavy enough to crush bone.

Faith pressed herself against the door, trying to take up as little space as possible. She was acutely aware of the mud on her feet staining the pristine floor mats. She tucked her legs up, hugging her knees.

Julian sat on the other side of the wide backseat. He had opened a laptop and was typing furiously. The blue light from the screen illuminated the sharp angles of his jaw, making him look more like a statue than a man.

Her stomach growled. It was a loud, guttural sound that seemed to echo in the quiet cabin.

Julian didn't look up. He didn't stop typing.

The assistant in the front seat, a man Julian had called Liam, reached back with a bottle of Evian water and a protein bar.

Faith took them, her hands shaking. She stared at the water bottle. It was glass. She had never seen water in a glass bottle before.

"Faith is a weak name," Julian said suddenly.

Faith jumped. She lowered the protein bar. "Excuse me?"

He stopped typing and closed the laptop with a soft click. He turned his head, pinning her with those cold eyes. "Faith. It implies blind trust. It implies waiting for a miracle. In Boston, that kind of thinking gets you eaten alive."

"It was my mother's name for me," Faith said, a spark of defensiveness igniting in her chest.

"Your mother left you in a tin can with a drunk," Julian said. His voice wasn't cruel; it was factual, which made it hurt worse.

Faith flinched as if he'd slapped her. She gripped the water bottle until her knuckles turned white.

Julian reached into the pocket of the seat in front of him and pulled out a document. He slid it across the leather seat toward her.

"Read it."

Faith looked down. The header read: Petition for Change of Name.

"Elara," Liam said from the front seat, his voice soft as he glanced in the rearview mirror. "Mr. Sterling selected it. It's one of Jupiter's moons. It's distant, hard to find, but possesses a significant gravitational pull. It fits the narrative we are constructing."

Julian remained silent, watching her reaction.

Faith stared at the paper. The letters swam before her eyes. "I don't want to change my name."

Julian pulled a Montblanc pen from his jacket pocket and held it out. "You can sign the paper, or I can have the driver pull over on the shoulder and you can walk back to West Virginia. It's about three hundred miles."

Faith looked out the window. The trees were whipping by at eighty miles an hour. There was no going back. The bridge hadn't just been burned; it had been nuked.

She took the pen. The metal was warm from his body heat.

She hovered the tip over the signature line. Faith Vance. That was who she was.

"No," Julian said sharply. "Sign Elara Vance."

Faith looked at him. His expression was unyielding. He was erasing her. He was killing Faith so that something else could be born.

She squeezed her eyes shut, took a breath that rattled in her chest, and signed. Elara Vance.

Julian took the paper and the pen back immediately. He handed the document to Liam. "File it the second we land."

"Yes, sir."

Julian turned back to her. He held out his hand, palm up. "Phone."

Faith hesitated. She pulled her cracked Samsung from her pocket. The screen was spiderwebbed, held together by tape. It had the only photos of her sister she possessed.

"I need the numbers," she said. "My sister's number."

"Give it to me."

She placed the phone in his hand. His fingers brushed hers-his skin was dry and cool.

Julian didn't look at the phone. He pressed the button to roll down his window. The wind roared into the cabin, chaotic and loud.

"This device is a digital footprint," Julian said, his voice raised over the wind. "It connects you to Ray, to dealers, to every mistake of your past life. If you want to be safe, you cannot be found."

Without a glance, he tossed the phone out the window.

Faith gasped, lunging forward. "No!"

She watched it tumble through the air, hitting the asphalt and shattering into a thousand invisible pieces behind them.

"Why would you do that?" she screamed, tears finally spilling over. "That was my sister!"

The window rolled up, cutting off the noise of the wind. Silence returned, absolute and suffocating.

Liam reached back again, this time with a sleek white box. He handed it to Faith.

"New iPhone," Liam said softly. "It has military-grade encryption. The numbers you need will be retrieved from the cloud archives once we scrub them for safety."

Faith opened the box. The phone was brand new, perfect. She turned it on.

The background wallpaper was a generic, high-contrast image of the Boston skyline.

"Caleb is a drug dealer," Julian said, his voice cutting through her grief. "If you keep contact with him, or your stepfather, they will use you to bleed this family dry. I cut the rot out before it spreads."

Faith stared at the screen. She wasn't a guest. She was a possession.

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