
Discarded Bride: The True Heiress Returns
For twenty years, I lived as the adopted daughter of the wealthy Hill family.
But today, they forced me to sign a severance agreement and kicked me out so their precious biological daughter, Malia, could marry my fiancé.
To ruin me completely, they framed me for stealing Malia's engagement bracelet, threatening me with prison.
I calmly exposed the "sapphire" as cheap glass, then rolled up my sleeves to show the reporters my scarred, punctured arms.
For two decades, I wasn't a daughter. I was Malia's living blood and bone marrow bank.
They drained my health to keep her alive, even ordering doctors to ignore my failing organs just so she could attend a gala.
"Take this million dollars and shut your mouth," my adoptive father sneered, throwing a check at my feet.
My ex-fiancé looked at me with disgust, and Malia screamed that I was a crazy, vindictive liar.
They had stolen my life and my health, yet they still looked down on me like I was garbage.
I ripped the check into pieces and threw it in their faces.
Just as they ordered the butler to drag me out, a group of men in black suits shattered the chaos.
The heir of the untouchable Montgomery dynasty stepped through the door, ignoring the Hills' fawning, and handed me a DNA report.
I wasn't a disposable blood bag. I was the long-lost true heiress of old New York money.
And now, I was going to take back everything they stole from me.
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Chapter 4
The old pickup truck shuddered to a halt at a red light in the heart of Midtown Manhattan. The cacophony of the city-sirens, horns, shouting-was a world away from the suffocating quiet of the Hill mansion. Kelsey was staring out the window, replaying the anonymous text message in her mind, when a black Rolls-Royce Phantom materialized beside them, cutting aggressively into their lane.
Wyatt slammed on the brakes. The truck's tires screamed in protest, stopping inches from the Rolls' gleaming rear bumper.
"What the hell!" Wyatt yelled, pounding his fist on the steering wheel. He was about to get out and give the driver a piece of his mind.
But then, the tinted rear window of the Rolls-Royce slid down.
Kelsey's eyes were drawn to the man in the backseat. He was pale, his features sharp and aristocratic, but it was the faint smear of blood at the corner of his mouth and the unhealthy, almost translucent quality of his skin that caught her eye. He sat in a wheelchair, the polished chrome of its frame glinting in the afternoon sun.
The driver of the Rolls, a burly man named Gus Kowalski, got out and stomped back to their truck. "Are you blind? You nearly scratched the paint! Do you have any idea how much this car costs?"
Wyatt shot back, his voice thick with anger, and the two men began a loud, pointless argument in the middle of traffic.
Kelsey tuned them out. Her focus was entirely on the man in the car. She pushed her door open and walked calmly to the front of the Rolls, her gaze locked on him.
The man, Brant Preston, looked back at her. His eyes were cold, assessing, and filled with an impatient arrogance.
"Your complexion is poor, your lips are tinged with purple, and your breathing is shallow," Kelsey said, her voice clear and steady over the traffic noise. "You have the look of a man who is dying. You are being betrayed by someone close to you."
Brant Preston's cold composure cracked. His eyes widened almost imperceptibly, and his hand tightened on the armrest of his wheelchair.
Gus, the driver, turned on her. "What did you say, you little freak?" He reached out to shove her away from the car.
Kelsey moved with a dancer's grace, sidestepping his clumsy push. As he lunged forward, his own momentum carried him past her. She simply stuck out her foot, and the big man tripped, sprawling onto the pavement with a loud grunt.
A flicker of something dangerous-interest, mixed with a hint of killing intent-flashed in Brant's eyes. A man in the passenger seat, his assistant Alex Shaw, quickly got out. "Sir, are you alright?" he asked Brant, before turning to Kelsey. "You need to leave. Now."
Kelsey ignored him, her eyes still on Brant. "Check what you consume," she said with a cold finality. "Or you'll be dead in three months."
The light turned green. Horns blared behind them.
Kelsey grabbed Wyatt by the arm, pulling him away from the driver, who was now scrambling to his feet, and back into the truck.
As they drove away, Brant Preston watched their retreating, rust-colored pickup in his side-view mirror.
"Alex," he said, his voice a low command. "Find out everything there is to know about that woman."
A few minutes later, Alex looked up from his tablet, his expression surprised. "Sir, her name is Kelsey Odom. She was just publicly disowned by the Hill family. And it appears she's the long-lost heiress the Montgomerys just found."
A slow, predatory smile spread across Brant Preston's face. Montgomery. This was getting interesting.
Back in the truck, Wyatt was still shaken. "How did you know all that stuff about him? About being sick?"
Kelsey shrugged, falling back on a well-practiced lie. "When you're a human blood bag for twenty years, you pick things up. You learn to read people. His color was all wrong."
Wyatt didn't look convinced, but he let it drop.
Finally, the truck pulled up in front of a worn-down, pre-war apartment building. It was the kind of place that had seen better days, a century ago.
This was the home of the powerful Montgomerys?
Kelsey looked at the crumbling facade and hid a smirk. The tests, it seemed, were not over yet. And she was more than happy to play along.
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7.2
In the roaring flames of the abandoned warehouse, my skin blistered and peeled.
Through the crackling fire, my sister Elara's malicious voice echoed. She told me my husband, Damien, was dead, and it was all my fault.
For years, I had treated Damien like a monster. I fought him, threw tantrums, and desperately tried to escape our marriage, all because I blindly followed Elara's advice.
"Remember, the harder you fight, the more disgusted he'll get."
She texted me things like that, telling me to smash vases over his head and run away, claiming she was protecting me.
In reality, she was poisoning my mind, stealing my valedictorian spot at university, and plotting to crawl into my billionaire husband's bed.
My foolish rebellion cost me everything, ultimately leading to Damien's tragic death and my own fiery end.
As the massive explosion tore my consciousness to shreds, I finally understood who truly loved me and who the real monster was.
I died suffocating on my own agonizing regret, wishing I could tear Elara apart.
Then, a rush of freezing air punched into my lungs.
I opened my eyes to the crisp scent of cedar and mint. I was back seven years ago, on the very night our marriage was supposed to go to hell.
This time, looking at Damien's flawless, unscarred face, I didn't push him away.
I wrapped my arms around his neck and made a silent vow: I would make every single person who ever hurt him bleed.

8.9
My father was marrying a gold-digger, the mother of my cheating ex-boyfriend.
To end the charade, I crashed their luxury wedding with a ten-foot funeral wreath.
In front of hundreds of elites, my father slapped me across the face, calling me a vicious bitch while his new wife smiled in victory.
I triggered the estate's fire system to ruin them, but a terrifying stranger in the VIP section bypassed my military-grade hack in seconds.
He was Kavon Velasquez, a dangerous billionaire heir who had been missing for twelve years.
Instead of exposing me, he shielded me from my father's second blow.
When my pathetic ex tried to drag me away, I grabbed Kavon and kissed him to humiliate my ex.
I shoved a $500,000 check into Kavon's pocket as hush money and left.
I thought that was the end of it.
But why did this apex predator move into the penthouse right next to mine at 2 AM?
Why did he violently crush my ex's face the next morning just for grabbing my arm?
"She is my woman. If you ever come within ten feet of her again, I will bury you."
I didn't understand why a man with lethal skills was suddenly hunting me.
Then I found out he had just blackmailed my father with undeniable proof of corporate money laundering.
His demand wasn't money. It was me.
He ordered my father to announce our engagement by tomorrow sunset, and this dangerous game officially began.

9.1
Elise thought her life was finally falling into place. She turned down her father's company to work as executive assistant to Marcus Grey-the boy she's loved since childhood, now the powerful CEO she's devoted her life to.
But when Marcus proposes to another woman, Elise's world crumbles. Enter Sebastian Deluca-Marcus's tattooed, ruthless, long-estranged brother. He's everything Marcus isn't: dangerous, magnetic, and determined to take back his place in New York.
But, there's something odd about him.
Something changed since he arrived.
Bound by family secrets and a mutual desire to expose Marcus's fiancée, Elise and Sebastian form an uneasy alliance. But as sparks ignite between them, Elise must choose: remain loyal to the boy she thought she loved, or risk everything for the man who sees her as more than a shadow.
Some loves are safe. Others are consuming. Which one will she survive?

9.3
He was supposed to be my brother. The cold CEO everyone feared. The man who controlled the entire country's business world.
But one night, he looked at me and calmly destroyed everything I thought I knew.
"We're getting married."
I laughed, but he didn't.
Now every door in my life is closing, every choice is disappearing, and the one man I'm not supposed to love refuses to let me go.
Because to Lucien Hale, this was never forbidden. It was inevitable.
And the most terrifying part? The closer I get to him, the harder it becomes to run.

7.4
For five years, Jodi was the perfect, compliant secret lover to billionaire CEO Armand Taylor.
Then, she woke up to a cold email and a seven-figure wire transfer. Armand was marrying European royalty. The money was a severance package to quietly warehouse her out of sight.
Refusing to be his dirty secret, Jodi invoked her contract's termination clause to leave for good. But Armand wouldn't let her go easily. He forced her to personally train her vicious new replacement, Selah.
Selah immediately tampered with a crucial financial file, framing Jodi for sabotaging Taylor Corp's multi-billion-dollar tech acquisition.
Without a second thought, Armand took the new girl's side. He cornered Jodi in the boardroom, his eyes dead and cold.
"You have three days to fix this. If you fail, I will personally see to it that you go to prison for corporate fraud."
He froze her bank accounts and stripped away her dignity, ready to destroy her life over a blatant lie.
He thought she was just a weak, discarded toy who would break under his threats.
What Armand didn't know was the terrifying secret Jodi had just discovered hidden at the bottom of her bathroom trash can.
Three positive pregnancy tests.
If the ruthless billionaire found out she was carrying his heir, he would never let her escape.
Wiping her tears, Jodi slipped into a severe black silk gown and crashed an exclusive Hamptons gala to intercept the tech CEO herself.
This time, she wasn't playing the obedient lover. She was going to clear her name and burn Armand's empire to the ground.

7.9
In my past life, I was the naive surrogate who fell desperately in love with Karson King, an untouchable Wall Street billionaire.
I thought my blind devotion would earn me a place in his family. Instead, his cruel mother forced me to sign away my parental rights to my three-year-old daughter.
I was locked in a dark, freezing basement. I watched helplessly as his arrogant relatives tormented my child, pushing her down a flight of marble stairs and shattering her tiny arm.
When we finally died in a horrific car crash, my face covered in blood amidst the shattered glass, Karson didn't shed a single tear. To him, my death was just the convenient erasure of a cheap mistake.
I sacrificed my dignity for his approval, but they treated us worse than stray dogs. Why did my innocent daughter have to pay the ultimate price for their ruthless arrogance?
Opening my eyes again, the harsh glare of a massive crystal chandelier pierced my vision. I was back in the grand foyer of the King estate, exactly five years ago.
"Sign it. You are nothing but a gold digger."
My soon-to-be mother-in-law slammed the thick legal contract onto the marble table, demanding I give up my daughter.
This time, the paralyzing fear evaporated, replaced by absolute, icy clarity.
I didn't cower. I picked up the pen, looked right at the billionaire who despised me, and prepared to manipulate his entire empire.