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The Unwanted Heiress: A Billion-Dollar Reckoning

Chapter 4 

Word Count: 607    |    Released on: 24/06/2025

ones, and I felt nothing. No fear, no anger, just a profound and unset

my pocket. It was a text from

arents. I told them I bought you the dress as a gif

the cellar wall crackled to life. It w

le? Are y

n' t

d with annoyance. "Why didn' t you just tell us he

for the accusation, for the humil

y now that she can' t even eat. Your father and I have decided to take

a response. When I gave he

They were punishing me for their ow

nd laughed. It was a hollow, empty sound that echoe

e airport. They didn' t speak to me. They just left a tray of

sprawling ranch was empty.

ces-the exact temperature he liked his coffee, the brand of cigars he favored, the way he liked his steak cooked. I

rums to find rare, high-fidelity classical music files to add to his precious collection. It was the o

nth. They both suffered from insomnia, and my blend of lavender, chamomile, and valerian root

couple of changes of clothes, my physics textbooks, and th

y, a log of every time they' d denied me basic necessities, and a detailed

ld him. "Not because I want an apology. Bu

proud. "Your flight is book

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The Unwanted Heiress: A Billion-Dollar Reckoning
The Unwanted Heiress: A Billion-Dollar Reckoning
“The day of my SATs, my first step toward freedom, began with a slap. Our Texas ranch was a river of mud, and the testing center was twenty miles away. My father, a self-made oil tycoon, didn' t even look up as I begged for fifty dollars. "Fifty dollars? Do you think money grows on trees, Gabrielle?" he sneered. Then came the slap, hard and fast, echoing through our cavernous living room. "Lazy and entitled," he spat, stealing the seventeen dollars I' d painstakingly saved. He kicked me out into the storm, telling me not to return until I'd learned the value of a dollar. My brother, Andrew, stood by, his face a mask of indifference. My mother was upstairs, oblivious, probably admiring a new diamond. As I trudged through the mud, a news report on our giant billboard flashed. It showed my family smiling on a stage, celebrating a one-million-dollar donation to an arts program in honor of my adopted sister, Molly. Her achievement? A C+ in art. They had just slapped me and thrown me out for a fifty-dollar ride to the most important exam of my life. The image of their smiling faces burned into my mind, washing away the tears I didn' t even realize I was crying. Defeated, I reached the testing center, only to find the doors locked. I tore my soggy admission ticket into tiny pieces, letting the rain carry them away. Something inside me broke. Or maybe, it finally healed.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10