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Kicked Out? Watch The True Heiress Shine

Kicked Out? Watch The True Heiress Shine

Author: : Xie Huan
Genre: Romance
For nineteen years, Chloe lived with the Tucker family, enduring their endless insults while acting as their quiet, grateful adopted daughter. But today, her adoptive sister Amber framed her for stealing a cheap, fake diamond necklace. Her adoptive parents didn't even bother to investigate the obvious setup. Brenda called Chloe a jealous stray from the trailer park, while Gary turned purple with rage, pointing at the door and ordering her to pack her trash and leave immediately. Even her cheating ex-boyfriend Preston joined the drama, comforting Amber in the driveway and screaming at Chloe for being a vicious woman. The household staff smirked in the shadows, openly enjoying the sight of her being scolded and thrown out. Chloe looked at these pathetic actors, feeling nothing but pure, unadulterated disgust. "Living with you for nineteen years was an insult to my intelligence." She didn't cry or beg for their forgiveness. Instead, Chloe completely wiped her phone, packed her heavy laptop, and walked out of their front gates. The Tuckers stood in stunned silence as a massive, military-grade stealth helicopter descended from the sky to pick her up. Her real grandfather, the head of the ultra-powerful Sinclair family, had finally found her. As Chloe boarded the aircraft to reclaim her true identity, she sent Gary a grand parting gift: a certified DNA report proving Amber was never his biological daughter.

Chapter 1

Amber sat on the center cushion of the tufted velvet sofa. A jagged sob ripped from her throat. She timed it perfectly-just as Gary's footsteps approached the living room.

Tears spilled over her lower lashes. The saltwater dragged dark streaks of mascara down her cheeks, ruining her expensive makeup. She looked like a shattered angel.

Brenda lunged forward instantly, as if on cue. She wrapped both arms around Amber's shaking shoulders, pulling her close. "My poor baby. My real daughter." She pressed the word real into the air like a blade, her venomous glare slicing across the polished glass coffee table toward Chloe.

Gary stood by the massive stone fireplace. His face flushed a deep, mottled purple with rage. His hand trembled-not with sorrow, but with the intoxicating fury of a man who believed he was defending his bloodline.

Gary slammed his closed fist against the heavy wooden mantle. A framed Tucker family photograph rattled violently. In that photo, a much younger Amber sat centered between her parents, beaming with the confidence of a princess who knew she would never fall. Chloe stood awkwardly at the very edge of the frame, half-cropped out, her face partially hidden by the silver frame's edge-a stranger in her own family portrait, invisible even in memory.

Gary pointed a thick finger at Chloe. His voice dropped low, dangerously quiet. "You have been nothing but a burden since the day we took you in. We gave you our name. Our roof. Our food. And this is how you repay us? By trying to destroy our real daughter?"

Chloe stood in the exact center of the living room. Her spine formed a perfectly straight line. While the entire Tucker family shook with orchestrated emotion, she stood still as stone. Her facial muscles remained completely relaxed. Her eyes showed absolutely zero panic. She had been their punching bag for nineteen years. She knew every move in their playbook.

Chloe lowered her gaze to the glass coffee table. The fake diamond necklace lay there-cheap rhinestones on a tarnished silver chain. It was so obviously worthless that any pawn shop would laugh at it.

Amber extended a trembling finger toward the jewelry. Her voice cracked with practiced vulnerability-the same voice she used when she wanted Preston to buy her something expensive. "I found it in my jewelry box this morning. She must have snuck into my room while I was sleeping. She's always resented everything I have. Everything I am."

Amber's eyes, still glistening with tears, found Chloe's face. For just a fraction of a second, the mask slipped. Pure, gloating triumph flickered in her gaze-a silent message meant only for Chloe. I win. Again. And you can do nothing.

She choked out another sob, burying her face against Brenda's shoulder. "She hates that I'm the real daughter. She hates that I have Mom and Dad's love. She's always wanted to destroy me because she knows she's just... just a charity case you were too kind to throw out."

Brenda tightened her grip on Amber, her manicured nails pressing into her daughter's silk sleeve. She lifted her chin and glared at Chloe with the particular cruelty of a woman who had spent nineteen years pretending to be a mother. "You heard her. You have always resented Amber because she is everything you will never be. She is a true Tucker. She has our blood in her veins. You-" she spat the word like poison, "-are nothing but a jealous, ungrateful stray we should have never taken in from that trailer park."

Maria the maid stood in the shadows by the hallway doorway. Her hands gripped a silver serving tray like a shield. A smirk curled her lips upward-she had learned long ago that in this house, survival meant loving the right daughter and despising the wrong one.

Paul the chef peeked out from the swinging kitchen door. He chuckled softly, a vulture watching a wounded animal, knowing the kill was inevitable.

Chloe slowly raised her eyes from the fake diamonds. She looked past the necklace. Past Amber's theatrical tears. Past Brenda's trembling finger. She met Gary's bloodshot gaze with the calm of a chess master who had already seen her opponent's next ten moves.

"You keep calling me a stray," Chloe said. Her voice was not loud. It did not need to be. Each word dropped into the room like a stone into still water, rippling outward in absolute silence. "But between the two of us, Amber is the one who needs to steal to feel valuable."

Amber's sobs hitched. Just slightly. Almost imperceptibly.

"Tell me, Dad-" Chloe let the word hang in the air, bitter and ironic, a title he had never earned, "-do you actually believe this cheap setup? Or are you just afraid to admit you've spent nineteen years raising a thief while calling her your real daughter?"

The silence that followed was suffocating. Even Paul stopped chewing.

Gary stepped forward. His face contorted-not just with fury, but with something deeper. Something that looked almost like fear. Because Chloe had just spoken the thought he had buried in the darkest corner of his mind. The thought he would never, ever admit.

He thrust his arm out, pointing directly toward the heavy front door. "I said get out!" His voice cracked. "Pack your trash and leave this house immediately. You are no daughter of mine. You never were."

Brenda nodded so vigorously her carefully styled hair began to unravel. "Your real parents-whoever those worthless people were-can have their trash back."

Amber lowered her head. Her shoulders shook with what looked like grief. But beneath the curtain of her blonde hair, she was smiling. A triumphant, malicious smile that she no longer bothered to fully hide. "Goodbye, sister," she whispered, the word dripping with venomous mockery.

Chloe saw the smile. She saw everything. She always had.

And then, she laughed.

It was not a loud laugh. It was not a hysterical laugh. It was a short, dry, utterly cold sound that cut through the room like a scalpel. The living room fell dead silent. Even the crackling fire in the fireplace seemed to hold its breath.

"You know what's truly pathetic?" Chloe said. Her gaze swept across all three of them-Gary, Brenda, Amber-with the clinical detachment of a scientist observing a failed experiment. "You've spent nineteen years trying to convince yourselves that blood makes her superior. But deep down, you've always known the truth, haven't you? That's why you need these little performances. These fake necklaces. These rehearsed tears."

She turned her gaze fully onto Amber. For the first time, something flickered in Amber's eyes. Something that looked like uncertainty.

"Because without the Tucker name and the Tucker money, you are absolutely nothing," Chloe said. Her voice was calm. Almost gentle. Which made it infinitely more devastating. "You have no talent. No intelligence. No strength. The only thing you have ever had is their blind, desperate need to believe you are special. And we both know it."

Gary's face turned a darker shade of purple. The veins in his neck bulged against his collar. "Get out! Now! Before I throw you out myself!"

Brenda gasped. She clutched her chest dramatically, her fingers digging into her silk blouse as if she had been physically struck. "How dare you speak to my daughter that way!"

Chloe turned her body away from the angry Tucker family. She paused at the threshold of the living room, her silhouette framed by the hallway light.

"She's not your daughter," she said over her shoulder, her voice flat and final. "She's just the one you chose to keep. I hope she was worth it."

She did not give them a second glance.

She did not slam the door.

She simply walked away, leaving them standing in the wreckage of their own lies.

Chapter 2

Chloe walked from the living room. She ascended the carpeted staircase. Her footsteps made no sound. Behind her, Amber's theatrical sobs still echoed through the halls. Chloe did not look back.

She entered her sparse bedroom. A narrow bed. A scratched desk. A single window. No photographs on the walls. She had always known this room was never meant to be permanent.

Chloe closed the thin wooden door behind her. The latch secured with a quiet click. The lock was flimsy-it had never truly protected her from Brenda's unannounced intrusions. It wouldn't need to anymore.

She walked over to the small, scratched desk by the window. The wood was scarred with years of use-ink stains from late-night studying, faint grooves from furious writing. This desk had been her only witness in this house.

Chloe reached out. She picked up her heavy, matte black laptop. It was the single most expensive thing she owned-purchased with money from freelance coding jobs the Tuckers never knew about. They thought she spent her nights sulking. In truth, she had been building skills that would outlast their entire family fortune.

She unzipped her worn canvas backpack-a hand-me-down from Amber, discarded the moment it showed signs of wear. Chloe had taken it without complaint. She had learned long ago that pride was a luxury she could not afford, but patience was a weapon. Every hand-me-down, every insult, every cold dinner-she had stored them all in a mental ledger. One day, she would close the account.

She slid the laptop carefully into the padded compartment.

She reached into the pocket of her denim jeans. She pulled out her smartphone-a device the Tuckers had given her three years ago, preloaded with tracking software. They had thought she wouldn't notice. They had always underestimated her.

Chloe's fingers flew across the glass screen. She entered a hidden developer menu, bypassing standard system commands entirely. She entered a string of complex code that directly targeted the flash memory chip's underlying architecture. The black screen erupted with rapidly scrolling streams of hexadecimal characters. In exactly three seconds, the phone's operating system collapsed and restarted. It was completely wiped of all tracking software and personal data. The device was now an unrecoverable brick. The Tuckers could keep their leash. She was done wearing their collar.

Brenda burst into the bedroom without knocking-she never had. Privacy was not a right in this house; it was a privilege reserved for the real daughter. The wooden door banged loudly against the drywall, leaving a fresh dent.

Brenda's eyes locked onto the phone in Chloe's hand. "What are you doing on that device? You're installing spyware, aren't you? Stealing our bank details!" Her voice climbed into a shrill register. "Give it to me. I'm taking it to the police."

Chloe looked at Brenda. For a long moment, she said nothing. Then she tossed the wiped phone onto the unmade bed. The plastic device bounced once on the thin mattress-the same mattress she had slept on for nineteen years.

"You can keep the cheap plastic brick," Chloe said, her voice flat and uninterested. "Take it to the police. Watch them laugh at you."

Brenda stared at the phone. Her brow furrowed. She had expected resistance, tears, pleading. But Chloe had given her nothing. Just a phone. Just silence. Just that infuriating calm.

Chloe grabbed the zipper of her backpack. She pulled it shut with a sharp, definitive sound-the zip of a chapter closing.

She slung the heavy canvas strap over her right shoulder. Everything she needed was in that bag. Everything else could stay here and rot.

Chloe walked directly toward Brenda. She did not slow her pace. She did not angle her body to squeeze past. She walked as if Brenda were not standing in the doorway at all. For just a fraction of a second, something flickered in Brenda's expression-not anger, but a brief, instinctive flash of fear. Brenda involuntarily stepped back into the hallway, stumbling against the wall.

Chloe stepped past her. She did not say goodbye. Brenda did not deserve one.

Chloe walked down the hallway. Her sneakers moved silently on the runner rug-the same rug Amber had stained with nail polish at age twelve and blamed on Chloe. The stain was still there, faded but permanent, like every accusation this family had thrown at her.

She reached the top of the stairs. She paused for just a moment, looking down at the foyer below. This house had never been her home. A roof kept out the rain. A refuge kept out the cruelty. This house had only ever offered the first.

Maria the maid stood at the bottom of the staircase, pretending to dust the banister. Her eyes tracked Chloe's every move with eager malice. Chloe met her gaze-not with anger, but with the quiet, patient certainty of a queen looking at a servant who had forgotten her place. Maria's smirk faltered, her hand pausing mid-swipe. Chloe's calm unsettled her in a way shouting never could.

Chloe descended the stairs. Each step carried her further from the life she had endured and closer to the life she had planned.

She reached the marble floor of the foyer. She grabbed the brass handle of the heavy oak front door. The metal was cool and solid against her palm-the only thing in this house that had never lied to her.

She pulled the door open. A gust of crisp autumn air rushed in, cutting through the stale scents of the house behind her. Fresh air. Clean air.

Chloe stepped over the threshold. For the first time in nineteen years, she felt something she had almost forgotten existed. Freedom.

She walked into the driveway. She did not look back. Everything she needed was ahead of her now.

Chapter 3

Chloe stepped out of the heavy oak front door. Her sneakers crunched on the gravel driveway. The cool autumn wind pushed her dark hair back from her face. She did not look back.

She had made it halfway down the driveway when the front door slammed open behind her. The heavy oak smashed against the exterior wall with a bang that echoed across the estate.

Amber burst onto the stone porch. Her designer heels clicked frantically against the masonry. "Chloe!" she called out, her voice dripping with sickeningly sweet mockery. "Leaving so soon? Without even saying goodbye to your sister?"

Chloe stopped walking. She did not turn around.

Amber jogged down the steps, breathing heavily as she caught up. She stepped directly into Chloe's path, blocking her with the confidence of someone who had never been told no. She held up her left wrist, shoving the diamond-encrusted face of a luxury watch inches from Chloe's eyes.

"Preston bought it for me yesterday," Amber announced, her voice loud enough to carry across the entire driveway. "He said it was a token of true love. You know, I almost felt bad for you. Almost." Her smile sharpened into something venomous. "But then I remembered-he never truly loved you, did he? He only pitied your pathetic poverty. Every kiss, every promise... it was all just charity."

Chloe lowered her gaze to the watch. Her eyes scanned the metal band, the specific cut of the glass face. She let out a bored sigh and shifted the weight of her backpack.

"That watch is from last season's discount rack," she said calmly. "He couldn't even be bothered to buy you something current. But I suppose you're used to receiving leftovers by now."

Amber's smug smile vanished. Her face contorted with sudden humiliation and boiling rage. "You spiteful little-"

The deep, throaty growl of a sports car engine cut her off. Amber's head snapped toward the street. She recognized that sound. Everyone on this estate did.

Amber's expression shifted instantly. The rage dissolved. The vulnerable victim slid back into place. She grabbed her own right ankle with both hands and threw her upper body backward, slamming into the gravel with practiced precision. She dragged her knees across the sharp rocks, tearing the skin open. Bright blood beaded against her pale legs.

Then she opened her mouth and let out a piercing, theatrical scream that could have woken the neighbors three estates over. "Help! Someone help me! She pushed me!"

Preston ran through the wrought-iron gates. His eyes were wide with panic. He rushed to Amber's side and dropped to his knees in the dirt, ruining his expensive tailored trousers without a second thought.

"Amber! Baby, are you okay?" He gathered her into his arms, his hands trembling as they hovered over her bleeding knees.

Amber's face crumpled. She pointed a shaking finger at Chloe. "She-she shoved me! I only came out to say goodbye, and she attacked me! She said I stole you from her and she would make me pay!"

Preston's head snapped up. His face twisted with righteous fury. "You vicious, jealous bitch," he snarled at Chloe. "She came out here to wish you well, and this is how you repay her? By putting your hands on her? You really are as worthless as they always said."

Chloe looked down at him-at this man who had once whispered promises in her ear, now kneeling in the dirt, cradling a liar in his arms. Her expression settled into pure, unadulterated disgust.

"You're a cheating scumbag," she said, her voice flat and cold. "You deserve a liar like Amber. You deserve each other."

She raised her hands, palms facing him. Clean. No dust. No dirt. No evidence of any struggle at all. "Look closely, Preston. Really look. If I shoved her, where's the dirt on my hands? Where's the scuff on my shoes? Or are you too busy playing the hero to notice the obvious?"

Preston's angry tirade died in his throat. His eyes dropped to her perfectly clean palms, then to Amber's dramatically bloodied knees, then back to Chloe's immaculate clothes. The math was simple. Even he could do it.

Amber saw the doubt flicker across his face. "She's lying!" she shrieked, clutching his arm. "She pushed me and then wiped her hands! You saw her!"

But Preston said nothing. His jaw tightened. For the first time, something that looked almost like uncertainty crossed his features.

Chloe did not wait for his answer. She turned her back on both of them-on the man who had betrayed her and the sister who had orchestrated it all. She left Amber bleeding in the gravel, her perfect performance unraveling behind her.

She continued walking down the long driveway. She did not look back.

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