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The Price of Family, The Cost of Love

Chapter 1 

Word Count: 642    |    Released on: 08/07/2025

It was a full scholarship, the first one anyone from my small, forgotten town had gotten in

my head down, studied until my eyes burned, and aimed

ith pride for me, but with a greedy, calculating glint I knew all too well. He was a mechanic

table so hard the salt shaker jumped. "We're goin

led her usual weak, tired

er seen before. They weren't family friends or neighbors. They were all older, single men from the surround

hed me onto the small, makeshift stage at the front of the hall. The room was decorated with

artificially. "Straight A's, top of her class. And smarts aren't

der, holding me in place. My body went rigid. I wanted to shrink, to disappear, but I just st

They were assessing me, their eyes crawling over my face

presents. One by one, the men came up to the stage

chain said, peeling a hundred-dollar bill from a thick wad. He d

eyes, walked up. He looked me up and down sl

f I were a horse. He handed my father a

against my ribs. I felt a wave of nausea. This wasn't

my mother, who stood by the refreshments table, smiling vaguely at anyone who looked her way, completely avoiding my eyes. I was utterly alone in a room full of strangers

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The Price of Family, The Cost of Love
The Price of Family, The Cost of Love
“The university acceptance letter, a full scholarship, felt like my ticket out of our forgotten town. I was Chloe Davis, and for eighteen years, I' d studied, dreamed of this escape. But when I showed it to my father, Robert, his eyes didn' t gleam with pride, but with a calculating hunger I knew too well. He announced a "celebration," but it was no party-it was a twisted auction. Middle-aged men, reeking of stale beer, assessed me like livestock, stuffing cash into my father' s pockets as he paraded me around. A churning dread solidified in my gut: I was the prize. My mother, Susan, stood by, a ghost of a smile plastered on her face, turning away when my eyes pleaded for help. When I tried to escape Frank Miller' s sweaty grip, my father' s fury erupted. "Smile, Chloe," he hissed. "Don't you dare embarrass me." Later, for a piece of pie, he backhanded me across the face, leaving me bleeding and dizzy on the kitchen floor. My mother' s only reaction was a sigh of annoyance before she followed him, leaving me in the dark. Lying there, the truth hit me: their "love" was a lie; I was merely a commodity. Then, from their bedroom, I heard it-the monstrous plot. "Frank wants to marry her... a fifty-thousand-dollar 'dowry.' Enough for Kevin's wedding." "She's a good girl, deep down. She just needs to understand that this is for the good of the family. It's her duty." My entire life, my body, my future, sold to an old man to pay for my cousin' s wedding and my father' s gambling debts. But the final dagger was my mother' s next whisper, my father' s rough affirmation: Kevin wasn't my cousin. He was my half-brother, my father' s illegitimate son with his sister-in-law, the golden boy for whom I had always been second, always sacrificed. Every childhood slight, every dismissal, every manipulation clicked sickeningly into place. They hadn't wanted me to succeed; they had kept me small, easy to sell. The girl who craved their love died on that cold kitchen floor. A cold, hard resolve took root: they had a plan for my future, a prison disguised as a marriage. But I had a plan too. They thought I was a compliant girl. They were about to find out how wrong they were.”
1 Introduction2 Chapter 13 Chapter 24 Chapter 35 Chapter 46 Chapter 57 Chapter 68 Chapter 79 Chapter 810 Chapter 911 Chapter 10