The Hidden Heiress's Campus Betrayal

The Hidden Heiress's Campus Betrayal

Youran Qianwu

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To escape the tragic legacy of my famous mother, I hid my identity, becoming a plain, forgettable film student. I fell hard for Hayes McCall, the campus playboy, believing our love was real. But he was just using me. I was a human shield, a decoy to protect the real object of his affection: the fragile campus "it-girl," Karmen. He let me get bullied and kidnapped. He stole my thesis film-a tribute to my mother's memory-and gave it to Karmen to claim as her own. When I tried to fight back, he destroyed my work, my past, everything. At graduation, my ex-roommate projected a video to the entire auditorium, branding me a high-class escort who slept with powerful men. "She's a disgrace!" she screamed, as the crowd turned on me. I calmly walked to the podium, my voice cutting through the noise. "You're accusing a Zamora of being a gold-digger?" I let the name hang in the air before delivering the final blow. "I don't climb the ladder. I am the ladder."

Chapter 1

To escape the tragic legacy of my famous mother, I hid my identity, becoming a plain, forgettable film student. I fell hard for Hayes McCall, the campus playboy, believing our love was real.

But he was just using me. I was a human shield, a decoy to protect the real object of his affection: the fragile campus "it-girl," Karmen.

He let me get bullied and kidnapped. He stole my thesis film-a tribute to my mother's memory-and gave it to Karmen to claim as her own. When I tried to fight back, he destroyed my work, my past, everything.

At graduation, my ex-roommate projected a video to the entire auditorium, branding me a high-class escort who slept with powerful men.

"She's a disgrace!" she screamed, as the crowd turned on me.

I calmly walked to the podium, my voice cutting through the noise. "You're accusing a Zamora of being a gold-digger?"

I let the name hang in the air before delivering the final blow. "I don't climb the ladder. I am the ladder."

Chapter 1

Everly Zamora POV:

He used me as a shield, and I was too blind to see it. That thought cut through me, sharper than any knife. It was a painful echo of my mother's own tragedy. Her beauty, her fame, had become her downfall. A relentless media spotlight, a stalker who haunted her every move, it all shattered her mind before it stole her. I swore I would never let that happen to me.

I turned eighteen and vanished. My family' s media empire meant nothing to me then. I used makeup, a careful mask, to flatten my features, to blur my edges. I became forgettable. Just another film student at NYU, anonymous and safe. For two years, it worked. Two years of peace.

Then came the night at the bar. My roommate, Joelle, was laughing too loud. Some men, too aggressive, cornered her. Instinct took over. I stepped in, a plain girl with a fierce voice. They shoved me, hard. I stumbled backwards, lost my footing.

I landed in strong arms. I looked up. Hayes McCall. He was a storm of dark hair and sharp eyes, the kind of beautiful that stole your breath. He looked at me, a flicker of something unknown in his gaze. He muttered my name, just a breath. I froze. Did he know?

He didn't. Not really.

He stepped between us and the aggressive men. His voice was low, lethal. The men paled, backing away. They knew who he was, and they scattered. Hayes McCall, the notorious playboy, heir to a new money fortune everyone talked about but no one understood. His recklessness was legendary. So was his charm. And his endless line of adoring fans.

I felt it, a pull, a dangerous spark. I hated it. I hated feeling anything that made me visible. But he was there, a sudden anchor. I knew I was falling.

I tried to get his attention. Small notes, a favorite coffee, a book I thought he' d like. My attempts were clumsy, a stark contrast to the effortless glamour of the girls who usually surrounded him. His friends laughed at me. They called me names.

Then, one day, he took the coffee. He looked at me, a faint smile on his lips. "Black," he said, "always black." My heart hammered. He spoke to me, flirted, sometimes. I was lost. I loved him. It felt so pure, so real.

I finally gathered all my courage. "I... I like you, Hayes." The words were a whisper. I expected a laugh, a dismissal. He was Hayes McCall. I was nobody.

His eyes held mine. "Okay," he said. Just "Okay." Then he added, "But you have to accept all of it. Everything that comes with me." I was so happy, so foolish. I didn't care what "it" was. I just wanted him.

"Yes," I said, without a second' s thought. I promised him everything. I promised him me.

The "it" arrived fast. The bullying started. Anonymous threats, hateful messages. I was the plain girl, the one who didn't belong. I took it, for him. I thought it was just the price of loving someone like Hayes. Then came the kidnapping. It was terrifying. I was bruised, shaken. Hayes found me. He held me, whispered comfort. In his arms, the pain faded. It felt like a small price to pay for his love.

Then I saw him. Not with me. With her. Karmen Barry. The campus "it-girl." She looked fragile, her eyes wide with fear. Hayes was a different man with her. His anger, his protectiveness, it was raw, furious. I tried to speak to him, to ask what was happening. He walked past me as if I wasn't there.

I found one of Hayes's former friends, a guy who looked beaten down. He told me the truth. Karmen had been attacked before. Hayes felt responsible. He used me. My plainness was a shield. "You're just a decoy," the friend spat, his voice bitter. "He needed someone forgettable to draw the fire."

It hit me, cold and hard. His condition: "accept all of it." It wasn't about love. It was about her. My mother's ghost whispered in my ear. I was a casualty again, but this time, it was my heart that lay broken.

The rain started, a cold autumn downpour. I walked out into it, my mascara running down my face, washing away the carefully constructed plainness. The disguise was gone. I just didn't care anymore. When I reached my dorm, Hayes was waiting. His eyes widened, fixing on my face. The rain had done its work. He saw me, finally.

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