Reclaiming the Billionaire Heiress Throne
Instead of a wedding ring, the first thing I received at the altar was a bucket of red wine and chocolate cake dumped straight over my head.
Hundreds of guests had their eyes settled on me, waiting to watch the chaos, convinced I would swallow the humiliation and force a smile just to keep the peace.
But with the sticky, dark red liquid soaking into my custom white gown, I only looked at the man I was about to marry.
Dont make that miserable face, Elena. Youre ruining the mood. Its just a joke.
Tristans voice was light, carrying a low chuckle that echoed clearly through the grand hall.
Then, the laughter started. It came from the front row. From Tristans groomsmen. From his friends.
And standing right in front of me, holding an empty silver ice bucket, was Paula. Tristans "foster sister."
Oh my gosh, Elena, I'm so sorry! My hand just slipped!
My fingers trembled. The cold wine seeped into my skin, freezing me from the outside in.
I slowly turned my head, looking at Tristan. This was the man I was supposed to marry today.
I suddenly thought back to many years ago. When Tristan first started his company, we couldn't even afford rent. I took on extra shifts at a diner and a late-night data entry job just so he could keep his pride and his office space.
He held my hands back then, his eyes red, promising that one day, he would give me the grandest wedding in the city and that he would never let me suffer again.
Tristan... My voice shook, tears instantly welling up, burning my eyes. Tell them to stop.
I thought he would be furious. I thought he would take off his jacket, wrap it around my shivering shoulders, and yell at Paula for ruining our wedding.
Instead, Tristan let out another laugh.
Alright, Paula, thats enough playing around, he said casually, not a single hint of anger in his tone.
Then he turned back to me. Elena, stop acting like the world is ending. Paula is just being playful. Youre always so sensitive. Can't you just learn to take a joke?
The tears I had been trying so hard to hold back finally spilled over, mixing with the red wine on my cheeks, dropping heavily onto the ruined silk.
I'm not doing this.
I grabbed the heavy, wet fabric of my skirt and turned around, wanting nothing more than to walk away from this humiliating stage.
Elena! Stop throwing a tantrum! Tristans voice turned sharp behind me.
I didn't stop. I didn't want to look at him anymore.
But Paula suddenly stepped right into my path, blocking the stairs.
Elena, don't be mad at Brother Tristan, it's my fault
I didn't even raise my hands. I just brushed past her shoulder to get to the steps.
Ah!
Paula let out a sharp, dramatic scream. She threw herself backward, falling hard onto the marble floor. She grabbed her knee, her face instantly twisting in agony as tears poured down her cheeks.
My knee! Brother Tristan, it hurts so much!
The casual amusement on Tristans face vanished in a split second. Before I could even process what was happening, a heavy force slammed into my shoulder.
Tristan shoved me. He shoved me with so much force that my feet tangled in the heavy, wet silk of my dress.
The world spun. I fell backward, my body hitting the sharp edge of the stone altar steps with a sickening thud.
A sharp, tearing pain shot through my back and scraped along my legs.
I lay there, stunned, the breath knocked completely out of my lungs.
Are you crazy?! He rushed straight to Paula, carefully lifting her into his arms as if she were made of fragile glass. I just told you it was a joke, and you actually get violent? Tristan glared at me, his eyes filled with pure, unfiltered disgust. You are such a jealous, vicious woman, Elena.
My ears rang. The pain in my back was throbbing, but it was nothing compared to the coldness spreading through my chest.
I didn't push her, my voice came out weak, scraping out of my throat with effort.
I saw it with my own eyes! Tristan shouted.
He held Paula securely against his chest. She buried her face in his neck, sobbing pitifully, her arms wrapped tightly around him.
If you can't even tolerate Paula, then there's no point in this marriage.
The wedding is canceled.
The entire hall erupted into whispers, but Tristan didn't care.
He turned his back on me and carried Paula away, walking straight down the aisle and out the grand doors.
I sat alone on the ruined altar.
My custom gown was torn and stained with dark red wine that looked exactly like blood.
And maybe it was blood.
I could feel a warm, sticky liquid slowly sliding down my calf from where I had hit the sharp stone steps.
The guests began to leave, tossing me looks of pity, disgust, and amusement.
Footsteps approached me from behind.
I slowly lifted my head, my eyes blurry with tears, hoping for a second that someone had come to help me up.
It was Leo and Mia.
Tristans eight-year-old twin siblings.
These were the children whose fevers I had stayed up all night to nurse. The children whose parent-teacher conferences I attended when Tristan didn't bother to show up. I had bought their favorite toys while skipping my own meals.
Leo looked at my ruined dress, his young face twisting into a cruel sneer that looked exactly like his brother's.
You're a bad woman for hurting Auntie Paula, he said.
Mia didn't say anything. She just stepped forward and spat right at the edge of my torn dress.
We want Paula to be our mom, not you!
Then, without a second glance, the two children I had loved with all my heart turned around and ran down the aisle, chasing after Tristan and Paula.
The heavy doors of the hall finally swung shut.
At that moment, the heart in my chest went completely quiet.
Five years of giving up my dreams, skipping meals, and loving a family that I thought would eventually love me back.
It all meant absolutely nothing.
"Miss Sterling," he said. "Are you aware that you are six weeks pregnant?"
The sterile smell of the hospital suddenly vanished. The hum of the fluorescent lights faded into absolute silence.
I stared at him, my lips parted, unable to form a single word.
Pregnant.
"The fall you took was severe," the doctor continued, his tone gentle but firm. "You are experiencing a threatened miscarriage. If you had hit that stone step even an inch harder, you would have lost the baby."
My hand instinctively moved from the mattress, hovering over my flat stomach.
"You need strict bed rest and zero stress," the doctor warned, writing a prescription. "Your body has been through a trauma. Please, take care of yourself, and your child."
When the doctor left, I sat alone in the quiet room for a long time.
The coldness that had frozen my heart at the altar began to thaw, replaced by a desperate, foolish warmth.
A child. We were going to have a family.
For five years, Tristan had told me he wasn't ready. He said his company needed him, that we didn't have the money, that the twins were enough of a burden. But now, the life growing inside me felt like a lifeline.
Maybe this was the wake-up call he needed.
Maybe, when he realized his violent shove had almost killed his own flesh and blood, the guilt would finally break through his arrogance. Maybe he would realize what he was throwing away for a spoiled "foster sister."
I wiped the dried tears from my face, a fierce, protective instinct rising in my chest.
I had to tell him. I had to save whatever was left of our family.
I pulled my heavy coat tightly over my stained gown, hailed a taxi, and headed straight back to the apartment we shared. The apartment I had paid the deposit for. The apartment I had scrubbed on my hands and knees.
When I pushed the front door open, the living room was dark and quiet.
I walked softly down the hallway, preparing the words in my head. Tristan, I'm pregnant. We almost lost it today.
But as I approached our master bedroom, I noticed the door was slightly ajar.
A sliver of warm, yellow light spilled out onto the hardwood floor.
And then, I heard the laughter.
"You really should have seen her face, Paula. She looked like a drowned rat."
"Brother Tristan, you were so mean to her today," Paulas sweet, sugary voice drifted through the crack in the door. "Aren't you worried she'll actually leave you?"
"Leave me?" Tristan scoffed, the sound dripping with absolute arrogance. "Where would she go? Shes an orphan with nothing. Shes been obsessed with me for five years. Shell be back on her knees apologizing by tomorrow morning."
"But what if she doesn't?" Paula pressed, her voice dropping into a pout. "What if you actually have to marry her? You promised me you wouldn't."
There was a rustle of fabric, the sound of someone shifting on the bed. My bed.
"I never planned to marry her, Paula," Tristan said. His voice was so cold, so casual, it felt like a physical blow to my chest. "I just needed her to keep paying the bills while my company got off the ground. Plus, shes a free nanny for Leo and Mia. Why would I throw away free labor?"
My breathing stopped.
The late nights typing his reports. The burned fingers from cooking his favorite meals. The years of wearing threadbare coats so he could look like a successful CEO.
"You're so bad," Paula giggled, though she sounded immensely pleased. "But... what if she gets pregnant? You know how she is. What if she tries to trap you with a baby?"
"If she gets pregnant?" Tristans voice turned dangerously cold, devoid of any human warmth. "I'd make her get rid of it."
My eyes widened in the darkness.
"I'm not having a child with a pathetic, boring woman like her," Tristan continued smoothly. "You're the only one I want a future with, Paula. You're the only one I want a family with."
The foolish, desperate hope that had brought me home shattered into a million jagged pieces.
He didn't love me. He had never loved me.
And if he knew about the fragile life inside my stomach, he wouldn't feel guilt. He would kill it.
A wave of absolute, suffocating horror washed over me. I couldn't breathe. The air in the hallway felt toxic.
I had to get out. I had to get away from this monster.
I took a shaky step backward, my vision blurring with fresh, agonizing tears.
But my foot caught on the edge of the hallway runner.
I stumbled, my shoulder hitting the narrow console table against the wall.
The expensive porcelain vase Tristan had bought for himself wobbled, tipped, and fell to the hardwood floor.
CRASH.
The sound was deafening in the quiet apartment.
The giggling inside the bedroom stopped instantly.
"Who's out there?" Tristans voice barked, sharp and alert.
I scrambled backward, my hands instinctively wrapping around my stomach to shield it, my heart pounding wildly against my ribs.
The bedroom door swung open violently, hitting the wall with a loud bang.
Tristan stood in the doorway, his shirt unbuttoned, his hair messy.
His eyes locked onto me, cowering in the dark hallway in my ruined, blood-stained wedding dress, my hands clutching my stomach.
For a second, surprise flashed across his face.
But it was immediately swallowed by a dark, venomous disgust.
"Spying on us now, Elena?" he sneered, his voice dripping with venom. "Are you really that pathetic?"
He didn't look at my pale face. He didn't look at my trembling hands.
He took a heavy, menacing step forward into the hallway, his hand reaching out to grab me.
"Sign the transfer papers, Elena, and I might just let you sleep on the couch tonight instead of the street."
His hand clamped around my wrist like a steel vice, his fingers digging brutally into my skin as he dragged me fully into the living room.
The heavy front door slammed shut behind us. The deadbolt clicked into place with a terrifying, final snap.
I stumbled, my knees hitting the hardwood floor hard. My free hand instantly flew to my stomach, curling inward to protect the fragile life growing inside me.
"What is this?" I whispered, my throat burning with the effort to speak.
"Compensation," Tristan said coldly, crossing his arms. "You humiliated Paula today. You physically assaulted her. Shes traumatized, Elena. The least you can do is make amends."
I slowly pulled myself up, my eyes dropping to the papers spilling out of the folder.
It was a transfer of ownership agreement.
For my company.
For the past three years, while I was working myself to the bone at diners and taking on late-night data entry jobs to pay Tristans rent, I had slowly built a small software startup. I coded at the kitchen table until my eyes blurred and my fingers cramped, all while Tristan slept comfortably in the next room.
It was finally starting to turn a massive profit. It was my only safety net. My only achievement that didn't belong to him.
And now, he wanted to steal it.
"You want my company?" I asked, my voice trembling with a mix of disbelief and absolute disgust. "To give to Paula?"
"Don't act like it's a big deal. It's just a tiny startup," Tristan scoffed, rolling his eyes as if I were being unreasonable. "Paula has always wanted to be a CEO. It will be a nice little hobby for her. She needs the allowance. Besides, you owe me. Who put a roof over your head for five years?"
I paid the rent. I paid for the groceries. I paid for the very shoes on his feet.
But looking at the arrogant, entitled monster standing above me, I realized arguing was completely pointless.
A sharp, agonizing cramp twisted deep in my lower abdomen.
My breath hitched. The doctors warning echoed loudly in my ears.
If I stayed here, if I fought him right now, the stress and his violence would kill my baby.
"I... I need a pen," I stammered, keeping my head down, letting my wine-soaked hair hide my face. "And I need to wash the blood off my hands before I sign."
"Make it quick. If you try to pull a stunt, I'll throw you out in that ruined dress without a single dime to your name."
I scrambled to my feet, clutching my stomach, and practically ran down the short hallway to the guest bathroom.
I slammed the door shut. I twisted the lock, then shoved my entire body weight against the wood, sliding down until I hit the cold tile floor.
My chest heaved. I clamped a hand over my mouth, biting down on my own palm to muffle the violent sobs tearing their way out of my throat.
But I didn't have time to mourn. I didn't have time to cry over a man who never loved me.
With shaking, frantic hands, I grabbed my purse from where I had dropped it by the sink earlier.
I dug my fingernails into the thick inner lining, ripping the cheap fabric apart.
Hidden deep inside the seam, wrapped in a protective sleeve, was a small, heavy, encrypted black phone.
It hadn't been charged in five years, but its battery was military-grade. The screen flickered to life instantly, glowing with a cold, blue light in the dim bathroom.
This phone was my past.
Five years ago, I ran away from a world of suffocating power, ruthless expectations, and absolute control. I hid my true identity. I became "Elena," a normal, poor girl who just wanted a simple life and a quiet family.
I thought I had found it with Tristan.
I was so incredibly stupid.
Tears streamed down my face, dropping onto the glowing glass screen.
There was only one number saved in the contacts.
My thumb hovered over the call button, trembling violently.
If I made this call, my quiet life was over. The dangerous, elite world I had desperately escaped would drag me right back in. There would be no hiding anymore.
Bang!
Tristans fist slammed against the bathroom door, making the wood rattle against my spine.
"Elena! What is taking so long? Stop crying in there and come sign these papers!"
Another sharp cramp tore through my stomach, stealing the breath from my lungs.
I closed my eyes, and I pressed the button.
The line rang once. Twice.
My heart hammered against my ribs like a trapped bird. Please. Please still have this number.
On the third ring, the line clicked open.
The silence on the other end was heavy, suffocating, and incredibly dangerous.
Then, a voice spoke.
Deep, powerful, and vibrating with an authority that commanded entire empires.
"Elena?"
Hearing his voice after five years completely broke whatever strength I had left.
The dam shattered. A pathetic, broken sob ripped from my throat, echoing in the small bathroom.
"Liam..." I gasped, my voice barely a whisper, choking on my own tears. "Liam... please. Save me."
The silence on the other end vanished.
The temperature in the room seemed to drop ten degrees just from the sound of Liam Hollss breathing shifting over the speaker.
When he spoke again, his voice wasn't just deep. It was deadly cold. A terrifying promise of absolute destruction.
"Who hurt you?" Liam demanded.
Before I could even open my mouth to answer, a deafening crash exploded right beside my ear.
Wood splintered. Metal shrieked.
Tristan violently kicked the bathroom door completely off its hinges.
The heavy door slammed into the bathtub, and Tristan stood in the doorway, his face twisted in a vicious, ugly rage, staring right at me and the glowing phone in my hand.
Who the hell are you calling?!
Tristans roar deafened me as his hand shot out, slapping the black phone out of my grip.
Before I could even gasp, his fingers clamped around my bruised arm like iron claws. He yanked me up from the floor, ignoring my cry of pain, and dragged me out of the bathroom.
My bare feet scraped against the hardwood. My free hand desperately clutched my stomach, trying to shield the fragile life inside me from his violent jerks.
He threw me toward the living room sofa. I hit the cushions hard, the breath knocking out of my lungs.
Sign the damn papers, Elena! Tristan screamed, slamming a pen onto the glass coffee table. Stop stalling and sign over the company, or I swear to God I will throw you out onto the street right now!
I trembled, staring at the pen.
My vision blurred with tears. The cramping in my abdomen was growing sharper.
I reached out, my shaking fingers hovering over the cold metal of the pen.
Then, the water inside a glass on the table began to ripple.
The floorboards beneath my feet vibrated.
The heavy glass windows of the apartment suddenly rattled, a low, rhythmic thumping echoing through the walls. The sound grew louder, faster, until it became a deafening, mechanical roar.
A helicopter.
It was hovering directly outside our living room window, its massive searchlights cutting through the blinds and bathing the room in a blinding, chaotic white light.
Tristan froze, his face paling as he looked toward the window in sheer confusion.
Tires screeched on the asphalt down on the street below. The sound of a dozen heavy car doors slamming shut echoed all the way up to our floor.
What the hell is going on? Tristan muttered, taking a step back.
He didn't get an answer.
CRACK.
The heavy, steel-reinforced front door of the apartment didn't just open. It exploded inward, the deadbolt completely sheared off the frame.
The wood splintered, hitting the hallway walls as a towering figure stepped through the dust.
He was flanked by six men in immaculate black suits, heavily armed corporate security who instantly fanned out, securing the room in terrifying silence.
But my eyes were only on the man in the center.
Liam Holls.
The billionaire tech mogul. The ruthless king of the financial world.
And the man I had run away from five years ago.
He saw my torn, blood-stained wedding dress. He saw me cowering on the sofa, clutching my stomach.
Hey! Who the hell are you?! Tristan shouted, trying to mask his panic with false bravado. He took a step toward Liam. You cant just break into my
Liam didn't even look at him.
He just raised one hand and shoved Tristan.
Tristan flew backward, his back slamming brutally against the drywall. He slid to the floor, gasping for air, his eyes wide with shock.
Liam walked straight to me.
Im here, Liam whispered, his deep voice thick with an emotion that made my heart ache. His large, warm hand cupped my pale cheek. Ive got you, Elena. Nobody will ever touch you again.
I leaned into his palm, a fresh sob tearing from my throat. The sheer relief was intoxicating.
Across the room, Tristan finally caught his breath. He stared at Liam, his eyes widening as recognition finally set in.
You... youre Liam Holls, Tristan stammered, scrambling to his feet. The CEO of Holls Industries. What are you doing here?
Tristans eyes darted to me, then back to Liam, his arrogant mind quickly coming to the only conclusion it could comprehend.
Wait. Are you here about her software startup? Tristan asked, dusting off his shirt, his greedy confidence returning. Look, Mr. Holls, Im her fianc. I handle all her business. You don't need to deal with her. Shes just a hysterical woman. Honestly, shes damaged goods. We can negotiate the buyout directly
Liam slowly stood up.
Liams security detail unholstered their weapons in unison, the metallic clicks echoing loudly in the silent room.
Tristans face drained of all color. He threw his hands up, taking a terrified step back.
Liam, I whispered.
Please. My stomach hurts. Just take me away from here.
Liam looked down at me. The rage in his eyes softened instantly.
Without a word of hesitation, he leaned down and scooped me up into his arms, lifting me bridal style. I pressed my face into his chest, inhaling the clean, expensive scent of cedar and rain.
As Liam turned to walk out the broken doorway, his lead assistant, a man with cold, calculating eyes, stepped forward.
He tossed a thick, gold-embossed folder onto the glass coffee table, right on top of Tristans cheap transfer papers.
You wanted her assets, Mr. Evans, the assistant said, his voice dripping with absolute mockery. Here is her full portfolio.
I didn't look back as Liam carried me down the hallway.
But as we stepped into the waiting elevator, I rested my chin on Liams shoulder and looked through the open doors of the apartment one last time.
I watched Tristan sneer, his greed overcoming his fear. He snatched the gold folder off the table, clearly expecting a multi-million dollar buyout contract for my startup.
He ripped it open.
I knew exactly what was inside.
It was the legal dossier I had buried five years ago. The truth I had hidden to live a normal life.
Elena Williams.
Sole Heiress to the Williams Global Empire.
Net Worth: $500 Billion.
And stapled right to the front of that dossier was a copy of the medical report the hospital had printed for me that morning.
Patient: Elena Sterling.
Status: Six weeks pregnant.
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