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Beyond Their Plot: My True Calling

Chapter 2 

Word Count: 839    |    Released on: 04/07/2025

when Sarah and Emily walked in without knocking. Their confiden

the deep learning servers is denied. And Mr. Davies isn

looking up from my screen. "

mean, revoked? We need those resources for th

tated calmly. "You deferred your admission to MIT. You are no longer on that track. You chose to pu

sudden compliance followed by this cold, logical withdrawal of support. They expected me to argue, to

you?" Emily asked, her voice laced wi

their eyes. "It's a matter of policy. You made a

le. They didn't believe me. They thought it was a tactic,

conference room when I heard their voices, sharp and angry

her tone venomous. "He actually cut us off.

. "He's always been like this. So possessive. He thinks because his family paid for thi

d been their biggest champion. I'd stayed up late helping them debug code, argued with my o

ed. "Alex needs that processing

ink he's won. Maybe I'll even hint that I might reconsider the marriage arrangement with his family. That'll get his attention. Once he restores our

of friendship, mentorship, and support were just a transaction they were ready to void the moment a be

would be no more second chances, no more benefit

urture their talents. The directive was simple and absolute: All Miller Corp resources, intellectual property, and personnel support for Sara

en we were just kids. I remembered spending a whole weekend with Emily, helping her build her first functional robotic arm for a science

ve more and more around this new guy, Alex, a junior developer they'd met at a local tech meetup. They spoke of his "raw talent" and "unconventional genius,"

in my head. He's ju

w far they can step without t

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Beyond Their Plot: My True Calling
Beyond Their Plot: My True Calling
“For years, I, Ethan, poured my family's wealth and my own mentorship into Sarah and Emily, cultivating them into tech prodigies destined to lead our industry. Their acceptance to MIT, cemented by their victory in the National Coding Competition, was supposed to be the crowning achievement, our shared golden ticket to the future. Then the email dropped: they'd deferred MIT for some 'unremarkable' junior developer, Alex. My attempts to reason with them were met with empty excuses, until a chilling blue holographic warning materialized before my eyes, threatening a "career-ending injury" if the "male lead" interfered with the "plot." I was forced to comply, to watch them choose a path I knew would lead to ruin, but I wouldn' t just stand by; my family's resources, the very foundation of their genius, quietly slipped from their grasp. They didn't realize that without me, they weren't prodigies; they were just two smart girls about to compete on their own. Their rage was palpable when they realized their access was revoked. "Are you punishing us?" Emily accused. I met their eyes. "This isn't punishment. It's policy. You made a choice. These are the consequences." Later, I overheard them. "He's just trying to make us come crawling back," Emily hissed. "He thinks because his family paid for things, he owns us." Then the true venom of their betrayal struck me: "We'll flatter him... hint I might reconsider the marriage arrangement... Once he restores our access, we'll get what we need for Alex, win the competition, and then dump Ethan and his whole arrogant family for good. He's just a stepping stone." "Stepping stone." My stomach clenched, the years of gratitude replaced by entitlement. How could they betray everything we built?" When they brazenly invaded my home with Alex, demanding my office for their "male lead," the holographic text flickered back, labeling me an "obstacle" to their "plot." But just as Emily, her gentle facade shattered, grabbed my arm, and Sarah slapped me across the face, trying to physically enforce their warped reality, a cold resolve settled in. I stared at the red mark blooming on my cheek, the pain a searing clarity. They would hurt me to get what they wanted. "No." My voice was calm despite my throbbing cheek. This wasn't just about them anymore; it was about reclaiming my life. I would not be a stepping stone. I would not be an obstacle. I would not be written out of my own story.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10