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Rising From Ruin: The Discarded Heiress

Chapter 8 No.8

Word Count: 571    |    Released on: 21/01/2026

, casting seizure-inducing strobes over the crowd. The sm

water. She didn't bump into anyone. She antic

he railing. "He moves like a ghos

ate said. "Look

ut the gait? The conservation o

high with rusted metal, old electronics, and books. The vendor was a ma

at a tourist who was tryi

netic resonance was back. It was faint, buried under layers of oxida

ed out a coin. It was caked in green and brow

the vendor growle

as pitched lower, rougher, utilizing

vendor spat.

e pulled out the wad of crumpled

d out t

a voice boomed

oin. An elderly man in a pristine white suit s

andson, Miles, lookin

red," Ster

snatched the coin from Dejah's han

he looked at the ven

first,"

Dejah. "Beat it, street rat. Do you know who this

Pope," Dejah said calmly.

grinned. "Oh, this is getti

h interest. "Why do you want

a Roman Aureus. Minted in 44 BC. Specifically, the 'EID MAR' coin celebrating the assassination of Julius Ca

d was absolute. The vend

" Miles scoffe

," Dejah said. "S

d at the vendo

he edge of the coin. A gleam of pure,

gasped.

ld. Then greed washed over

, pulling the coin back to his

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Rising From Ruin: The Discarded Heiress
Rising From Ruin: The Discarded Heiress
“I woke up in a sterile hospital room, my body feeling like a hollowed-out shell. For fifteen years, I had been the "spare part" of the wealthy Kensington family, a foster child kept only as a biological resource for their golden daughter, Jenna. My adoptive mother, Kathryn, walked in with a cold-eyed doctor, discussing me like an old car needing parts. They were planning another bone marrow "harvest" for the next morning, even though the doctor admitted the procedure was risky because my body hadn't recovered from the last extraction. "Passable is fine," Kathryn said, waving away the danger to my life like she was swatting a fly. "Just get it done. It's her only value." Jenna arrived in a wheelchair, putting on a performance of fragile sisterly love while actually glowing with health from the blood I had given her months ago. I watched as the doctor callously jabbed a needle into my arm, missing the vein on purpose, before turning off my pain medication pump as a final act of petty cruelty. They left me there to rot, convinced I was just a dull, submissive girl with nowhere to go. I lay in the silence, feeling the weight of every scrap they'd fed me and every hand-me-down I'd worn while Jenna lived in luxury. I realized I was never a daughter to them; I was an organ farm meant to be drained until I was empty. But as the door clicked shut, the fog of sedation in my brain finally lifted, replaced by a cold, predatory stillness. "Oracle," my mind whispered. "Online." I ripped the IV from my arm and escaped into the night, turning a five-dollar piece of junk into a six-million-dollar fortune in the city's darkest underground markets. By the time I returned to the Kensington Manor, I wasn't the useless foster girl they remembered-I was a predator with a massive bank account and a plan to take back everything they stole from me.”