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The Unwanted Blessing

Chapter 2 

Word Count: 370    |    Released on: 20/06/2025

a monument to money I' d onl

s, and women in jewel-toned

otton Elara helped me se

his friends trailing h

ered, his voice carrying. "Or is it too

anced over, a flicker of pity or disgu

uch in my pocket, the st

breath smelling of

case is. I tell them you' re my long-lost, dirt-p

to cut, and they did,

rything was fine until she came along!"

whispers, the way relati

e folks are so busy lookin' for gold,

table where a lawyerly-look

day present for ourselves, act

a truly unpl

. You get to be free of us, and we get to

influence" like it wa

briefcase, revealing

ght. Disowned

tled over me, push

oked at him – spoiled, cruel

prisingly steady. "Some ties,

entimental. This is about prote

runs in funny streams. You might

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The Unwanted Blessing
The Unwanted Blessing
“I was eight, maybe nine, when my father branded me "bad luck." Exiled from the Miller empire, I grew up with Elara in the quiet Ozarks, who saw a light in me, saying "things grow better in the sunshine." Ten years later, a thick, gold-embossed envelope arrived, pulling Sadie back. It was a summons to my younger brother Ethan's 21st birthday gala, the favored heir. "Your father expects your attendance," the note commanded, offering no welcome. Richard Miller met me with arctic eyes, scanning my simple clothes. Ethan, the spoiled golden child, sneered, "Look what the cat dragged in from the sticks." The chilling truth emerged: this wasn't a reunion, but a formal disinheritance. At the glittering country club, I was publicly mocked as a "charity case," old wounds tearing open. Ethan grinned, shoving legal documents at me: "We' re making it official." My father, via phone, clipped: "Sign the papers and be done with it." The familiar weight of being blamed, of inherent flaw, pressed down heavily. For years, I' d believed I was the source of Miller's "bad luck"-fender benders, fires-all starting, Dad said, at my birth. This cruel dismissal felt final, confirming every unwanted memory. But clutching Elara' s smooth river stone, a different truth settled. "Luck runs in funny streams," I told Ethan, "You might be diverting more than you think." With a strange calm, I signed "Sarah Miller" for the last time. The moment my pen lifted, a speaker crackled and died, and chaos rippled instantly. Ethan' s prized car smashed, company scandals erupted, credit lines froze. The Miller empire, built on sand and shortcuts, was finally crumbling. Some ties, once broken, unleash far more than just freedom.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10