Follow
Chapters
Share
Lost Heiress of the Belfort Brothers

Lost Heiress of the Belfort Brothers

"Adrian, why would you lie to me? Why would you let her push my mum like that?" Yvonne's voice trembled, holding back tears. Adrian smirked. "Wake up, Yvonne. You really thought I wanted you when Tricia was right here?" That was how Adrian-her first crush, the boy she thought cared-chose to humiliate her in front of everyone as she was the cleaner's adopted daughter. But fate had other plans. Because the Diamond Belfort brothers-the heirs everyone adored were coming to their school in search of their missing heiress- baby sister. But the queen bee steals the chance that should have been hers. Then again, secrets don't stay buried forever. With her true identity waiting to explode, Yvonne must decide to rise from the ashes, claim her place, and bring down everyone who tried to destroy her. Because the real heiress doesn't beg. She takes rather. Now, Yvonne is done playing small. It's her time to rise, reclaim her crown, and make everyone regret ever doubting her.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

Yvonne's POV "Oh my gosh, Boo!" Tricia's voice cut through the hum of the corridor as she walked toward us. I felt my stomach drop the second I saw her, and then saw Adrian wrap his arms around her like she was the only person in the world. For a heartbeat I hoped it was nothing-just a friendly hug-but the way he held her said otherwise as it reeked of warm, possessive, and easy. Tricia laughed loudly and angled those long lashes right at me. The whole laugh landed like a slap on my face. "Look at her. She actually thought the principal's son would take the cleaning lady's adopted child to homecoming." The words were cold and loud, and the corridor got quieter as I noticed some students turned up instantly to watch. Normally, I would have started to cry. You don't always get used to being humiliated in public-but somehow I found a little reserve of courage. Maybe it was the dress still tucked in my arms. Maybe it was my mom's voice in my head telling me not to give them the satisfaction. I squared my shoulders and tried to let it slide. There was nothing I could do to change what the others wanted to believe. Tricia drifted closer, smiling like a queen she always claimed to be. She leaned in, as if sharing a secret. "Oh! I think you'll find...this isn't about you," she teased, touching my cheek with a finger that left the faintest trace of perfume. It was meant to humiliate as the gentle touch turned sharp but I kept my face still. I didn't want to start a scene. Not because I was ashamed-because I was afraid my mother would pay for it. The thought of my mom's job flashed in my mind as she could lose the very job that paid for our tiny apartment and for dresses like this. So I bit down the words that wanted to fight back. Then Tricia did the thing I had half-feared: she kissed him. No soft little peck-right there in the middle of the school hall. And in turn, Adrian melted into it like he'd been waiting all his life for the show. My brain refused to accept it; I felt like I was watching someone else's life. I stepped forward on instinct, needing to remind him of promises, to make him remember what he'd said to me. "Adrian, you told me you loved me." The question came out thin and small, but full of hope. Adrian pushed my hand away like I was a stain. "Get off me. Are you serious?" he spat. His voice was sharp, the kind that got more of the students' attention. Just then, my cheeks warmed with humiliation. Tricia clapped with a soft, satisfied sound, and Adrian announced, loud enough so everyone could hear, "Tricia is my girlfriend. You're literally the school's charity case." He sounded so sure of himself, and Tricia took a step back to pose, like a model in a magazine shoot. Around us, phones were already being raised and lenses turning toward me. The hallway filled with the low, cruel chuckles of students who loved nothing more than a public spectacle. Adrian kept going, like he couldn't stop now that he had everyone's attention. "Besides, you only got into this school on some DEI scholarship because your mum is a pathetic cleaner. You don't even have a proper uniform-always in that cardigan. And you imagined that I wouldn't come down to love a riffraff like you?" The words were precise, aimed like arrows. It felt like each sentence pushed the air out of my lungs. He was rubbing salt into something that had already been raw. If he didn't love me-if it had all been a lie-why did he let me hope? The questions churned in my head and I couldn't find an answer. Someone in the crowd jeered, "Give me my phone. The cleaner's adopted girl is getting served." Laughter rose like a wave. Phones clicked and flashes popped. I wasn't ready to let it end there. I had to try once more. "Adrian, you told me you loved me," I repeated, stronger this time. The reaction that followed was worse than any insult. The laughter spiraled into something mean and loud. "Oh my God! You actually believed that?" someone cried out. The worst part was how easily they all believed him-how quickly my face turned into an image for jokes. Tricia leaned in close, voice dripping with venom. "He only needed you to pass his classes. Now you can't even get him the key to the physics lab? You're not useful." My hands were trembling. I felt helpless, like I had slipped under ice and couldn't find the way out. Then the next humiliation came from Tricia as she held out a cup she had, turning the content from it right on my head. The cold content spread across my chest, soaking the dress my mom had saved a lot just to get for me. "Oops." Tricia tossed the empty cup at me as if it were confetti. It landed and stuck and just then, a chorus of laughter swelled from the students. More phones hovered everywhere Someone shouted, "Makeover of the year!" Another added, "Finally, a look that suits her." Someone else mimed the act of crying. I heard it all-each word another weight on my ribs. I lunged forward in a fury I didn't know I had. I grabbed that same cup that was beside me with the mess it held and shoved at Tricia in anger. Maybe they didn't expect resistance. Maybe they expected me to cower. But I wouldn't. And so, Adrian grabbed a tray from somewhere-having a cafeteria plate, leftover food and before I could move, he kneeled and poured the contents down my dress. The food slid, warm and greasy, staining everything. The smell hit me: tomato, oil and the likes. A dozen phones recorded the scene. I felt the slickness trickle down, warm paste sticking to my skin. I wanted to scream; instead I picked a piece of meat from the smear and flung it at his face. "How could you say that to me, asshole?" I snapped. He looked stunned, like he hadn't expected me to fight back. For a second, his smirk faltered. Tricia stepped closer, looking all dangerous and pleased. "Oh, you really outdid yourself now," she said, and then, like a queen bestowing mercy, she reached into her pocket and flashed a few dollars. "For your shit dress. At least get something better-don't waste it on that coat of many colors." The money hit everywhere across the floor. "You know, zoom in on her face," someone laughed, feeding the chaos. "She's about to start crying!" The voices blended into an ugly chorus. Someone shouted, "That bitch is the stupidest nerd I've seen. How could she think Adrian would ever date her?" The words felt like a thousand small knives. I was stacked on the floor, the mess cooling on my skin and the dress ruined. I looked up at Adrian, then at Tricia, and something hot and raw rose in my chest. It wasn't just shame. It was fury. But when I tried to stand, Adrian shoved me down with force-hard enough to make me breathe in a sharp pain. Tricia took one foot and pressed it against my chest, pinning me further to the ground so everyone could see. She laughed as if nothing could touch her. Then, above the din, I heard a new voice. It cut through like a bell. "That's enough. Leave my daughter alone." My heart lurched as I saw my mom was there in her wheelchair, her hands gripping the arms as if she'd pushed harder than seemed possible to get into the corridor. Her face was flushed and her eyes fierce. The crowd turned. For the first time since it started, the laughter dropped down a notch. Some students shifted uneasily, phones half-lowered. I felt tears build up, but they weren't the small, quiet kind. They were the kind that had been collecting for a while. My mom wheeled herself forward and she reached me in two big pushes, then stopped. Her breathing was heavy but controlled. She didn't shout and couldn't say anything at that point with pity all over her face judging with the way I was looking. She looked at Tricia and then at Adrian like she was measuring them. "You will not speak to my daughter like that," she said, with her voice steady and low. She didn't wait for them to protest. "Get up." Some students clapped. Not in a cheering way-more like a reflex, like they didn't know what else to do. Tricia smirked, and then, for the first time, her face flickered. "Oh, look. The cleaner's here," she sneered. "What are you going to do? Call security?" My mom's face tightened, but she didn't lose control.

You may also like

Betrayed At The Altar, Married For Revenge
8.3
Betrayed at the altar. Replaced by her own sister. On what should have been the happiest day of her life, Amara loses everything-her fiancé, her dignity, and her future. But that same night, a dangerous man steps out of the shadows with an offer she can't refuse. Marriage. Power. Revenge. Now bound to a ruthless CEO, Amara is ready to destroy everyone who betrayed her. There's just one problem... Her new husband knows more about her past than he should. And the closer she gets to revenge- the more she realizes she may have married the man who ruined her in the first place.
Bound By The Billionaire's Cruel Contract
9.7
Clarissa rushed into a crowded nightclub for one simple reason: to save her wildly drunk best friend. But her ruthless billionaire husband, Giovanny, was watching from the VIP room. After effortlessly ruining a man just for grabbing her wrist, Giovanny punished Clarissa for breaching their public image contract with an impossible curfew. When she inevitably arrived back at his penthouse late, he didn't just yell. He forced her to her knees by his bathtub to wash his back, making her watch an explicit, humiliating video as punishment. A sudden family medical emergency dragged them to his parents' estate. Still in her soaked, transparent dress and his misbuttoned shirt, Giovanny's mother caught them. She joyfully assumed they had been passionately intimate. Instead of clearing her name, Giovanny pulled Clarissa close and lied to his mother's face. "We are working very hard on the family's future, Mother." He locked her in the guest suite, tossed a sheer silk nightgown on the bed, and literally shattered the tablet holding their "no-contact" prenuptial agreement. He then slapped a file against the window—he had secretly bought all her father's toxic debt. Clarissa was terrified. They were supposed to be business allies bound by a strict contract. Why was he suddenly acting like a predator determined to own her body and soul? "Give me an heir, or your father goes to federal prison," he whispered. Stripped of all choices, Clarissa picked up the white silk. She would surrender tonight to save her family, but as his shadow swallowed her, she made a silent vow to survive this monster, and one day, tear his empire to the ground.
Fake Vows, Real Love: The CEO's Wife
8.3
For three years, I hid my identity as a billionaire heiress to build a life with the man I loved. I gave up everything to support Ben's career, believing we were creating a future together from the ground up. The day before our engagement, I overheard him with his boss, Haylie. He called me a "stepping stone," a poor, simple girl he was using to climb the corporate ladder and get closer to her. He laughed about our "humble" life and mocked the silver ring on my finger, calling it a necessary prop. He was sleeping with her, taking credit for the multi-million dollar deal I secretly engineered, and saw my love as a naive distraction. The man I sacrificed my entire world for saw me as less than nothing. My love didn't just die; it turned into ice-cold rage. So I walked out of his life and straight into the arms of my family's biggest rival. He offered me a deal I couldn't refuse. "Marry me," Jaxson Banks said with a smirk. "And together, we'll burn their world to the ground."
From Useless Dud To The Alpha's Queen
8.9
For three years, Alana acted as the sole tactical brain for the Dawnbreaker squad, keeping them alive despite being labeled a useless "Dud" Conduit. But right before the crucial Ascension Trials, squad leader Cash handed her a corporate sponsorship contract. The condition? She had to become the "private companion" to a greasy corporate heir just so the squad could get high-tier gear. When she refused, the teammates she had bled for unanimously voted to kick her out. "You're just window dressing, a liability." They revoked her safehouse access, burned her belongings, and the academy advisor even tried to force her into a state-sanctioned breeding program. They left her to freeze in the slums, betting she would desperately crawl into the rich man's bed. What they didn't know was that her inability to summon an Eidolon wasn't a lack of talent. Her teammate Dallin had been secretly sabotaging her rituals for years, crippling her potential just to keep her chained as their free tactician. Stripped of everything and pushed to the absolute brink, Alana's despair morphed into a deadly resolve. Using a million-credit black market loan and a forbidden blood matrix, she forcibly anchored an Apex-Tier cosmic wolf disguised as a harmless silver pup. When her ex-squad tried to publicly humiliate her and burn her new "pet" alive in the cafeteria, a flash of silver light severed Dallin's hand instantly. Looking at her screaming former teammates, Alana finally smiled.
Jilted Bride: Now Call Me Auntie, Darling
8.8
On the eve of my glamorous Waldorf Astoria wedding, I went to the penthouse to surprise my fiancé, Hugh, wearing my late mother's heirloom pearls. Instead, I heard my stepsister's familiar laugh and caught them tangled together on the sofa. Through the cracked door, I heard Hugh slur that he was only marrying me for my family's financial backing. "As soon as I secure my inheritance, she's the first thing I'm getting rid of," he promised her. Floy giggled and asked for my mother's pearl necklace, my only legacy. Hugh agreed without hesitation, mocking my dead mother's naivety and my desperate dreams of building a family. Every sweet word he had ever said was a lie, a knife he had been patiently sliding between my ribs for years. They planned to strip me of everything the moment I signed the prenup. I didn't cry or scream. The crushing weight of their betrayal hollowed me out, leaving behind a terrifying, absolute calm. Why should I be the one to lose everything while they stole my future and insulted my mother's memory? I calmly walked down the hall, set the prenuptial agreement on fire, and vanished into the rainy night. If Hugh wanted to play dirty for the Maxwell empire, I would play for keeps. Using a forgotten, century-old family covenant, I was going to marry Hugh's uncle-the comatose, paralyzed war hero, Fleet Maxwell. I would return not as a naive bride, but as their worst nightmare: his aunt, and the new lady of the house.
Rising From Ashes: The Swapped Heiress
8.2
My son Leo had just died, and the silence in our cramped apartment felt like a physical weight crushing my chest. Before I could even process the grief, my husband, Preston, kicked the door open and threw divorce papers onto the table. Behind him stood Gloria, wearing a pristine cashmere coat and the diamond pendant Preston swore he had pawned to pay for Leo's hospital bills. "Sign it," Preston said coldly. "You get nothing." Gloria smirked, mocking me for failing to keep my sick child alive. When I tore up the papers in a blinding rage, Preston slapped me to the floor. Then, my biological mother, Jerilyn, walked in. Instead of helping me, she pulled a serrated kitchen knife from her bag and plunged it deep into my stomach. As I lay dying in a pool of my own blood, Jerilyn leaned in and whispered the devastating truth. "I swapped you in the nursery. Gloria is my blood, and you belong in a Manhattan mansion. I can't let you ruin her life." Until my lungs stopped working, I was consumed by a roaring, violent hatred. My own mother had traded my life of privilege for poverty, let my son die, and then murdered me to protect the fake. Opening my eyes again, the dingy ceiling and the agonizing pain were gone. I was sitting at a wooden desk, surrounded by the chatter of teenagers. I was back in high school. And this time, I was going to make them pay.