She Took The House, The Car, And My Heart
Between Ruin And Resolve: My Ex-Husband's Regret
Marrying A Secret Zillionaire: Happy Ever After
The Mafia Heiress's Comeback: She's More Than You Think
The Phantom Heiress: Rising From The Shadows
Too Late For Regret: The Genius Heiress Who Shines
Too Late, Mr. Billionaire: You Can't Afford Me Now
Jilted Ex-wife? Billionaire Heiress!
Rising From Ashes: The Heiress They Tried To Erase
Diamond In Disguise: Now Watch Me Shine
CHAPTER 1
LOUIS
Since Mama left Father and me when I was ten years old, all I've ever known is suffering and pain. Father had always been cruel to me, even before my sorry excuse for a mother left-but her absence carved a chasm so deep in his already blackened heart that the only way he knew how to fill it was with fists.
Each. And. Every. Day.
And this morning was no exception.
"You sorry excuse of a man," he roared, driving his heavy boots into my stomach again and again. The pain burned through me, but I didn't dare cry out. Just like I hadn't for the past seventeen years.
"Twenty-seven years and you still can't even stand up to me," he spat, delivering a final kick to my shin. "Such a disgrace."
Then he turned and stomped up the stairs, likely to drown himself in whiskey or whatever poison numbed the void inside him.
I stayed on the cold, cracked kitchen floor, blinking back tears of frustration. I was pathetic. Helpless. A man who couldn't even defend himself in his home. I'd tried over the years-God knows I'd tried- but every attempt ended the same way: bruised, broken, bleeding. And with how much he hated me... I knew it would take only a misstep for him to finally kill me.
So, why was I still here?
Because of my mother. Because my naïve ten-year-old self made a promise to her. She stood in the doorway, eyes dry but distant, and told me she couldn't stay anymore. I begged her not to go. She knelt, held my face in trembling hands, and made me promise to take care of him.
"Don't leave your father," she said. "He's all you have."
I was ten.
I didn't know promises like that could turn to shackles.
I pulled myself off the floor, quietly cleaned the kitchen, and trudged upstairs to get ready for work. My shoulder length blond curls were tangled and wild, so I tied them back in a messy bun. I couldn't care less. After mornings like this, I didn't have it in me to deal with vanity.
Besides, I'd be in a hairnet all day.
In the tiny bathroom-thankfully mine alone- I stared at the not-so-stranger in the mirror. Gaunt. Pale. My lean torso was littered with bruises in various stages of healing, some fresh, others lingering from weeks ago. Cigarette burns scarred my skin in raised patches of pink and white, clustered around my chest and inner arms like a cruel tattoo.
Let's not even talk about the ones on my thighs.
I hated my reflection.
Most of all, I hated my face. Because it looked like hers. The woman who left me behind. The woman who didn't think I was worth staying for.
Cornflower blue eyes-hers-stared back at me, rimmed red from unshed tears.
I swallowed them. Like always.
My life was horrifyingly pathetic. I was horrifyingly pathetic.
With a heavy sigh, I turned away from my now foggy reflection and hopped in the shower.
After a hot shower-a luxury I could barely afford but desperately needed-I got dressed and headed to work, following the same broken sidewalk. The same cracked buildings. The same grey skies pressing down on my world.
When I walked into the hospital, the few staff members on duty offered tired nods. Most people in this neighborhood barely finished high school, let alone trained for medical work. We were short-staffed, overworked, and underpaid. But we made do.
I'd wanted to be a doctor once.
Now, I just clean up after them.
"Louis, my boy," Jamie, the elderly African-American security guard, greeted me with his usual wide toothed smile. His voice was warm, fatherly-the kind I'd always longed for.
"Hi, Jamie," I replied, forcing a smile through the ache.
"You holding up, okay?"
I nodded.
We both knew I was lying.
He'd tried to talk to me before. Begged me to leave. Told me I deserved better. But I never listened. Not really. Still... if he tried again, maybe this time I would. I was close-so close-to breaking.
The rest of the day passed in a numb haze and I welcomed the monotony. Nothing unusual happened, and I was grateful. I didn't have the strength to deal with chaos-not today.
But I had a plan.
A way out.
Over the years, I'd saved every spare dollar I could and hidden it beneath a loose floorboard in my room. Father never stepped foot in there-he called it "pansy territory" and acted like being near my things would infect him with weakness.