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When Friends Become Your Cruelest Foes

Chapter 4 

Word Count: 820    |    Released on: 02/07/2025

ark stood panting in the middle of my ruined portfolio, his

calm and authoritative,

s name is goi

e was etched with concern and disapproval. It was Mr. Harrison, the renowned art curator. He was one

; Mark, standing over the destruction like a conquering warlad

ing on my hand. In the scuffle, I had scraped it agai

whispered, though

s not the victim he

voice dropping to an icy calm. He stood up, towering over

rk blustered, his face turn

"The entire interview was recorded. Your attack, M

face w

dear friend of mine. He would have been so proud of this portfolio." He gestured to the ink-soaked mess. "This is a tragedy. With these a

ke drowning washed over me. Tears I had

e words torn from my chest. "He

orway behind Mr. Harrison. She had a

d, rushing to Mark' s side. She shot me a look o

ing," she said, her voice smooth as silk. "Mark is

to me, her eyes cold despite t

this all go away. Just... agree to pay Mark back, and we' ll drop the police report. We' ll even

ney I didn' t have, admit to a crime I didn' t commit, and in return, they would allow me to s

d arrogance, ignited something in me. The despai

t-ridden face, at Mr. Harrison'

y at my side. I met Tiffany' s gaze, letting her see t

ed, my voice thick with fals

riumph in her eyes. Sh

poisonous deal. But as I passed the desk, my eyes locked on Mar

fluid motion,

ed and bolted. I flew past a stunned Mr. H

et back here!" Ma

, my only chance at justice-like it was my own heart. I could hear t

is war. Now, I was

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When Friends Become Your Cruelest Foes
When Friends Become Your Cruelest Foes
“"Lily, you should do it," Tiffany Hayes purred, her eyes fixed on me in the art academy' s lounge. As the scholarship student, managing our class' s two-million-dollar art fund seemed like a twisted honor, a responsibility the elite kids conveniently dodged. Three years later, at our graduation exhibition-the night my life' s work was finally displayed-my childhood friend, Mark Miller, seized the microphone. "Our class art fund has been mismanaged," he announced, his gaze piercing me. "One point eight million dollars is missing." The dreams I had meticulously built shattered. Every eye in the buzzing gallery turned to me, judging, accusing. Tiffany, Mark' s girlfriend, stood by his side, her feigned sympathy a cold knife twisting inside me. They stripped me bare, painting me a thief, a public spectacle. "I have records of everything," I insisted. "Every dollar is accounted for!" But the projection screen behind him flashed a balance of $1,250.34, sealing my fate. "Just tell us what you did with the money," Tiffany cooed, trying to lure out a confession. "We were friends." Friends? Their betrayal burned hotter than any accusation. They had done this. Set me up. Framed me. The rage and humiliation were suffocating, but a cold resolve began to crystallize within me. They thought they had broken me, but they had just ignited a fire. I walked out of the gallery that night, not in defeat, but with a fierce determination. I would find the truth. I would expose them. And they would pay.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10