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Too Late To Beg The Heiress Novel Cover

Too Late To Beg The Heiress

For eighteen years, Arielle was raised in a cramped trailer park, treated as nothing more than a walking blood bag to keep her sick sister, Kimora, breathing. But today, her adoptive family hurled her belongings into a muddy pothole and kicked her out into the freezing rain. "Get the hell out, you ungrateful parasite! You'll rot in the gutter!" Kimora’s wealthy biological mother threw a check at her chest, warning her to stay away, while Kimora stepped out of a Porsche to mock her in the mud, flaunting her upcoming violin solo at Lincoln Center. They didn't care that Arielle was the one locked in a basement, forced to write that very violin piece until her fingers bled. They had drained eight hundred milliliters of her blood every month to keep up the illusion of Kimora's health, and now that they were done using her, they threw her away like garbage. Did they really think she was just a fragile, broken country girl who would starve without them? They had no idea she was a top-tier hacker who had just frozen a third of their offshore assets with a single keystroke. As a massive, armored Maybach pulled up to take her back to her true bloodline—the ultra-wealthy Chandler empire—and her terrifyingly powerful billionaire fiancé, Arielle wiped the mud from her face. Manhattan was waiting, and she was going to burn their world to the ground.
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Chapter 1

The rusted metal door of the trailer slammed against the exterior siding with a screech that vibrated through the floorboards.

Arielle's fingers froze on the zipper of her faded canvas duffel bag.

Mabel stormed into the cramped space, her heavy boots tracking mud across the peeling linoleum. She didn't hesitate. She grabbed the strap of Arielle's bag and hurled it out the open doorway. It landed with a sickening splash in the center of a muddy pothole. The filthy rainwater immediately soaked through the bottom fabric.

Arielle didn't flinch. The temperature in her chest plummeted, leaving behind a hollow, freezing void.

"Get the hell out, you ungrateful parasite!" Mabel screamed, her face flushed a mottled, ugly red. Flecks of spit flew from her lips. "Eighteen years! We fed you for eighteen years just to keep Kimora breathing, and this is how you repay us? You're nothing but a walking blood bag!"

Arielle shifted her weight, tilting her head just enough so the flying saliva missed her cheek. She kept her face entirely blank.

Next door, the faded floral curtains of Mrs. Higgins' trailer twitched. The elderly woman peeked out, her eyes wide, but the second Mabel shot a venomous glare in her direction, the curtains snapped shut.

There was no help here. There never had been.

"The keys," Mabel demanded, taking a heavy step forward. She thrust out a meaty palm. "Hand over the spare keys. Now."

Arielle reached into the pocket of her thin, worn jacket. Her fingers brushed the jagged metal of the key. She pulled it out and, without breaking eye contact, opened her hand. The key dropped, landing with a soft clink in the thick mud caking the floorboards.

Mabel let out a guttural sound of rage and bent over to snatch it.

The second the older woman's eyes left her, Arielle stepped over the threshold and walked straight into the torrential downpour. The icy rain hit her instantly, plastering her cheap cotton shirt to her skin and sending violent shivers down her spine.

"Don't you ever think about coming back!" Mabel's voice cracked over the roar of the storm. "You won't get another cent from the Tysons! You'll rot in the gutter!"

A crack of thunder swallowed the rest of the threat. Arielle didn't break her stride.

She reached the pothole and crouched down. The mud coated her knuckles as she grabbed the handles of her duffel bag. She didn't care about the cheap clothes inside. Her thumb pressed against the false bottom, feeling the hard, rectangular outline of the micro-computer. Intact.

Tires crunched over the gravel behind her.

A massive, black Lincoln Navigator turned into the narrow dirt lane of the trailer park. The heavy tires hit a puddle, sending a wave of brown sludge splashing up. Arielle took a sharp half-step back, her shoulder blades hitting the wet wood of a telephone pole.

The Lincoln's engine purred. The passenger door swung open.

Brenda stepped out, a designer umbrella popping open to shield her pristine blowout. She looked down at her beige leather heels, her upper lip curling in disgust as the mud touched the soles.

Mabel practically tripped over her own feet running out of the trailer. She slapped a fake, sickeningly sweet smile onto her face and used the sleeve of her flannel shirt to wipe a stray drop of water off the Lincoln's door.

Brenda ignored her mother-in-law's groveling. She reached into her Birkin bag, pulled out a crisp check, and shoved it into Mabel's chest.

"For taking care of the trash," Brenda said, her voice dripping with condescension.

A short, breathy laugh escaped Arielle's lips. It was barely a sound, but in the heavy rain, it cut through the air like a razor.

Brenda's head snapped toward her. Her eyes raked over Arielle's soaking wet form, lingering on the mud on her face. "Keep away from Kimora. If I even hear a rumor that you've tried to contact her, I'll ruin you."

Arielle lifted her chin. The rain washed the dirt from her cheeks, leaving her pale skin stark against the darkness.

"Tell me, Brenda," Arielle said, her voice dead flat. "When you drain eight hundred milliliters of my blood every month to keep up the illusion of your daughter's health, do you sleep well at night?"

Brenda's face drained of color. Her eyes darted frantically toward the neighboring trailers, her chest heaving. She took a step closer, lowering her voice to a frantic hiss. "Shut your mouth."

Arielle closed the distance between them. "Congenital erythropoietic porphyria with a secondary autoimmune deficiency." She recited the medical terms with mechanical precision.

Brenda stumbled backward, her heel sinking into the mud. Panic flared in her eyes, quickly replaced by explosive rage. She raised her hand, the massive diamond on her ring finger catching the dim light, and swung it hard toward Arielle's face.

Arielle didn't blink.

Her hand shot up. Her fingers clamped around Brenda's wrist mid-air. The impact sent a shockwave up Arielle's arm, but her grip was like a steel vise. She twisted her wrist sharply to the left.

Bone popped.

Brenda let out a blood-curdling shriek.

Arielle shoved the arm away. Brenda lost her footing, her heels sliding in the sludge. She crashed backward into the mud puddle, her expensive trench coat instantly soaked in brown filth.

"You sociopathic bitch!" Mabel screamed, lunging forward to grab her daughter.

Arielle stood over them, her chest rising and falling in a slow, controlled rhythm. "That is the last time any of you will ever touch me."

She turned her back on them and walked toward the dirt path leading to the interstate.

"I'll make sure you never work in this state again!" Brenda shrieked, her voice cracking with hysteria. "You'll starve!"

Arielle kept walking. Once she was swallowed by the shadows of the trees, she reached into her wet pocket and pulled out a battered flip phone.

She pressed the power button. The harsh backlight illuminated her expressionless face.

The moment it booted up, thirty encrypted messages flooded the screen. Arielle's thumb moved over the keypad in a blur, entering a sixteen-character hexadecimal password.

The screen flickered, dropping the fake interface and revealing a pure black dark-web terminal.

A message from a contact named Nico flashed: Are you clear of the surveillance?

Arielle typed with one hand. Clear. Cut the offshore funding for all Tyson shell companies. Now.

A rusty pickup truck rattled down the highway, its high beams cutting a hazy tunnel through the heavy sheet of rain. Arielle didn't even flinch. She simply tilted the screen away from the glare, her focus unbroken as the truck rumbled past.

She pulled the collar of her soaked jacket tighter against her neck and marched toward the neon sign of a motel three miles down the road. Her steps were even. Unshaken.

Behind her, in the distance, a massive explosion ripped through the air. A shower of blue sparks rained down over the trailer park as the main transformer blew.

The entire block plunged into absolute darkness, erasing every trace she had ever been there.

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