
The cold water hit Ethan's face like a slap, jerking him awake from the thin blanket on the storage room floor. He gasped, choking on the shock, his eyes flying open to see his mother-in-law's twisted face looming above him.
"Get up, you useless piece of trash!" Mrs. Orlando shrieked, her voice shrill enough to pierce his skull. The empty bucket dangled from her wrinkled hand. "It's already six in the morning! Do you think you're some kind of young master who can sleep in?"
Ethan scrambled to his feet, his clothes soaked through, his body aching from another night on the concrete floor. Three years. Three years of sleeping in this windowless storage room that reeked of mildew and rat droppings. Three years of waking up to her abuse.
"I'm sorry, Mother. I'll get started right away." His voice came out hoarse. He had learned long ago that arguing only made things worse.
Mrs Orlando's lips curled into a sneer. "Sorry? Your sorry is worthless! The bathroom hasn't been cleaned, the breakfast isn't made, and Olivia needs her work clothes ironed before seven! What kind of husband are you? My daughter married a dog!"
She turned on her heel, her expensive silk robe swishing as she marched out. The door slammed behind her, the sound echoing in the cramped space that had become his entire world.
Ethan's hands trembled as he peeled off his wet shirt. Twenty-eight years old. A college graduate. Once, he had dreams. Once, he had a future. But that future died the day he married into the Orlando family, thinking love would be enough.
It wasn't.
He changed into his only other outfit, a faded grey t-shirt and worn jeans with holes in both knees, and shuffled toward the bathroom. His reflection in the cracked mirror made him pause. Hollow cheeks. Dark circles under his eyes. A purple bruise on his jaw from where Rodriguez, his brother-in-law, had punched him two days ago for "walking too loudly."
When had he become this ghost of a man?
The bathroom took forty minutes to scrub. Mrs. Orlando inspected it with white gloves like some kind of military officer, running her fingers along the tiles, checking behind the toilet.
"Adequate," she finally said, her tone suggesting it was anything but. "Now go make breakfast. Your father-in-law wants his congee at exactly seven. If it's one minute late, you'll skip meals today."
Ethan's stomach was already growling. He hadn't eaten since yesterday morning when they had given him the leftover rice that even the dog wouldn't touch. But he said nothing. He just nodded and hurried to the kitchen.
As he stirred the pot of congee, carefully watching the clock, he heard voices from the dining room. The Orlando family was gathering for breakfast. Through the doorway, he could see them taking their seats at the large mahogany table.
Olivia, his wife, walked in wearing the business suit he had stayed up until midnight ironing. She looked beautiful, as always. Her long black hair was pulled back in an elegant bun, her makeup perfect, her expression cold. She didn't even glance toward the kitchen. Didn't acknowledge his existence.
There was a time when she smiled at him. When she held his hand. When she whispered that she loved him.
That time felt like a lifetime ago.
"Ethan!" Mr Orlando's deep voice boomed from the dining room. "Where is my congee? It's seven o'clock!"
Ethan's heart sank. The clock on the wall read 6:58. He wasn't late. But contradicting the old man was suicide.
"Coming, Father!" He quickly ladled the congee into expensive porcelain bowls and carried them out on a tray, his hands steady despite the anxiety churning in his gut.
The Orlando family sat like royalty at their table. Mr Orlando at the head, his grey hair slicked back, his face perpetually fixed in a scowl. Mrs Orlando beside him, already sipping her imported tea. Rodriguez, twenty-five and insufferably arrogant, scrolling through his phone. And Olivia, sitting straight-backed and elegant, her eyes fixed on some distant point.
Ethan placed the bowls in front of each of them with practiced efficiency, careful not to make a sound.
"You're late," Mr Orlando said flatly, not even looking at him.
"I... the clock says..." Ethan started, then caught himself. "I apologize, Father."
"Apologies don't fill my stomach." Rodriguez picked up his spoon and tasted the congee. His face immediately twisted in disgust. "This is too salty! Are you trying to poison me?"
Ethan's mouth went dry. He had tasted it. It was perfect. But that didn't matter.
"I'm sorry, I'll make a new batch right away."
"No." Mr. Orlando set down his spoon with deliberate slowness. "I've lost my appetite. Thanks to your incompetence, my morning is ruined."
Mrs. Orlando chimed in immediately, as if on cue. "This is what happens when you let trash into the house. He can't do anything right. Olivia, I don't understand why you keep him around."
Olivia's chopsticks paused over her pickled vegetables. For a moment, Ethan thought she might say something. Defend him, even slightly. But she just sighed, a sound filled with resignation and disgust.
"He has nowhere else to go," she said quietly. "And someone has to clean the house."
The words stabbed deeper than any insult from her parents. This was the woman he had married. The woman he had given up everything for.
Rodriguez suddenly laughed, a harsh bark of amusement. "Did you guys see the video I posted last night? It already has fifty thousand views!"
Ethan's blood turned to ice. He knew exactly what video Rodriguez was talking about.
Mrs. Orlando pulled out her phone, her face lighting up with cruel delight. "Oh, this one! 'Watch my useless brother-in-law wash the car!' Ha! The comments are hilarious. Someone said he looks like a drowned rat."
They all laughed. Even Olivia's lips twitched in what might have been the ghost of a smile.
Yesterday, Rodriguez had made Ethan wash his new BMW in the driveway. Shirtless. In front of all the neighbors. For three hours in the cold autumn wind while Rodriguez recorded and gave "directions" that were really just humiliating commands.
"Bark like a dog!"
"Now do it again, but sexier!"
"Slower! I need good footage!"
The neighbors had watched. Some laughed. Some looked away in embarrassment. But no one helped. No one ever helped.
"Ethan," Orlando Qiang's voice cut through his thoughts. "Since you've ruined my breakfast, you don't get to eat today. Go clean out the garage. Rodriguez is bringing home a client tonight, and I want it spotless."
"Yes, Father." The words tasted like ash.
As Ethan turned to leave, Rodriguez called out lazily, "Oh, and Ethan? I need you to pick up my dry cleaning later. Here." He pulled out his wallet and tossed a single bill onto the floor. "That should cover the bus fare. Unless you want to walk?"
It was a five-dollar bill.
Ethan bent down and picked it up, his face burning with shame. "Thank you, young master."
More laughter followed him as he left the room.
The garage was a disaster. Oil stains, piles of junk, spider webs in every corner. It would take all day to clean. But Ethan was grateful for the work. Anything to escape the suffocating presence of the Orlando family.
As he scrubbed the concrete floor on his hands and knees, his mind wandered to dangerous places. Escape. Freedom. A life where he wasn't treated like something scraped off the bottom of a shoe.
But where would he go? He had nothing. No money, no job, no family. His parents had died five years ago in a car accident, leaving him alone in the world. The Orlando family knew this. They exploited it.
"YOU HAVE NOWHERE TO GO."
Olivia's words echoed in his head.
By the time he finished the garage, the sun was setting. His back screamed in pain, his hands were raw and bleeding from the harsh chemicals, and his stomach felt like it was eating itself.
Rodriguez's dry cleaning. He had forgotten.
Panic seized him. If he didn't get the dry cleaning, Rodriguez would beat him again. He checked his pocket. The five-dollar bill was still there, along with two one-dollar bills he had found in the garage. Seven dollars total.
The dry cleaning place was three miles away. If he ran, he could make it before they closed at seven.
Ethan ran.
His lungs burned, his legs felt like lead, but he pushed himself harder. The streets blurred past him. People stared at the crazy man sprinting down the sidewalk, but he didn't care. He couldn't face another beating. He couldn't take another bruise.
He burst through the dry cleaning shop door at 6:55, gasping for air.
The middle-aged woman behind the counter looked startled. "We're about to close..."
"Rodriguez," Ethan managed between breaths. "Pickup... for Rodriguez Orlando."
She disappeared into the back and returned with three suits wrapped in plastic. "That'll be thirty-eight dollars."
Ethan's world tilted. "Thirty-eight? But last time it was only twenty..."
"Prices went up. You want them or not?"
He stared at the seven dollars in his hand. It might as well have been seven cents.
"I... I don't have enough. Can I come back tomorrow with the rest?"
The woman's expression hardened. "No credit. Cash only. Come back when you have the money."
She turned away, conversation over.
Ethan stood there, his mind racing. If he went home without the suits, Rodriguez would explode. The last time he had failed a task, Rodriguez had locked him in the storage room for two days without food or water.
He stumbled out of the shop, his vision swimming. What was he supposed to do?
His feet carried him aimlessly down the street as the sky darkened. Seven dollars. It was nothing. He couldn't even buy a decent meal with seven dollars. He couldn't solve any of his problems with seven dollars.
A neon sign flickered ahead. "Lucky Dragon Convenience Store."
Through the window, he could see the lottery machine, its digital display flashing the current Mega Fortune jackpot: $500,000,000.
Ethan stopped walking.
Half a billion dollars.
It was absurd. Laughable. The odds of winning were astronomical. But as he stood there in the gathering darkness, a strange thought crystallized in his mind.
What did he have to lose?
With seven dollars, he couldn't solve anything. Couldn't buy the dry cleaning. Couldn't buy food. Couldn't buy his freedom. The Orlando family would punish him anyway. He was already at rock bottom.
But a lottery ticket...
One in three hundred million odds. Impossible. Stupid. The dream of desperate fools.
But wasn't he already a fool? Hadn't he already lost everything?
Ethan walked into the convenience store, the bell above the door chiming softly. The teenage clerk barely looked up from his phone.
"One Mega Fortune ticket," Ethan heard himself say.
"Two dollars."
Ethan pulled out the crumpled bills. He stared at them for a long moment. These two dollars were supposed to buy Olivia's birth control pills tomorrow. She had told him this morning, shoving the empty packet into his hand with obvious disgust.
"Don't forget this time. I'm not having your baby. Ever."
The memory burned, but it also hardened something inside him.
He slid the two dollars across the counter.
The machine whirred and spit out a small slip of paper. Random numbers. Meaningless digits. A worthless piece of paper that represented the last two dollars to his name.
Ethan took the ticket and stared at it under the fluorescent lights.
03 - 17 - 23 - 31 - 42 - 08
"Good luck," the clerk said without interest.
Ethan folded the ticket carefully and slipped it into his jacket pocket, over his heart. Then he walked back out into the night, toward the Orlando family mansion, where punishment waited.
Latest Chapter
Chapter 11: Bad News
Ethan left his suite a little after noon and took the elevator down to the hotel restaurant.The ride was smooth and silent. As the elevator descended through the floors, he caught his reflection in the polished metal wall again. Clean clothes. Proper shoes. A calm face that no longer looked like it belonged to a man sleeping in a storage room.When the doors opened, the soft sounds of conversation and clinking glass drifted through the restaurant entrance.The dining room was elegant but comfortable. Large windows let in warm daylight, and polished wooden tables were arranged neatly across the floor. Well-dressed business professionals sat in quiet conversations while wealthy tourists admired the skyline view.Ethan paused for a moment before stepping inside.A hostess standing near the entrance greeted him with a bright, professional smile.“Good afternoon, sir,” she said warmly as she picked up a menu. “Table for one?”“Yes, please,” Ethan replied politely, nodding slightly.“Right
Chapter 10: Everything Is About To Change
Ethan stood on the sidewalk outside the lottery commission building, watching the steady stream of traffic roll past. Cars moved through the intersection in waves, engines humming, horns sounding now and then as impatient drivers hurried through the morning rush. The sun had climbed higher into the sky, and its warmth spread across the concrete beneath his shoes.For a moment he simply stood there, breathing slowly.He had no phone.No transportation.No real plan for what came next.But he had something he had not possessed in three long years.Choice.The thought alone made his head feel light. For years every part of his life had been controlled. What he ate. Where he went. Who he spoke to. Every decision had belonged to someone else.Now it didn’t.He could walk anywhere he wanted. He could speak to anyone he chose. He could decide what his life looked like.The realization was so overwhelming it made him slightly dizzy.Ethan ran a hand through his hair and exhaled slowly. First
Chapter 9: The BEGINNING OF THE ORLANDO FAMILY'S END
The next morning, Sunday, the Orlando family woke late. The celebration had continued well past midnight, and the house reeked of expensive alcohol and overindulgence. Ethan woke at his usual time and went through his morning routine with precision.As he was mopping the kitchen floor, Mr. Orlando appeared in the doorway, looking haggard but triumphant. His eyes were bloodshot, and he moved carefully, as if his head hurt."Ethan," he said, his voice rough. "Come to my study. Now."Ethan set down the mop and followed him. The study was a large room lined with bookshelves that Mr. Orlando never read, expensive furniture he never used, and diplomas from schools he barely attended. It was a room designed to impress, not to function.Mr. Orlando sat behind his massive mahogany desk and pulled out several sheets of paper. Rodriguez stood by the window, arms crossed, watching with barely concealed amusement."This is the document I mentioned," Mr. Orlando said, sliding the papers across the
Chapter 8: Perfect Performance
The garage door closed with a dull thud.Then silence followed.The sound of footsteps faded across the driveway, growing softer and softer until they disappeared completely inside the house.Ethan remained on his knees, and for a moment, he didn’t move. His chest rose and fell slowly as he forced air back into his lungs. His stomach still burned from the punch. His cheek throbbed where the slap had landed. His ear rang faintly, like a distant bell that refused to stop.But none of that mattered now.Only one thing mattered.The ticket.His heart suddenly began to pound, hard and fast, because a terrible thought had just pushed its way into his mind.What if they had taken the real ticket?The possibility made his stomach tighten.Everything had happened too fast. Rodriguez had grabbed it. His father had folded it and slipped it into his pocket. Ethan had been on the floor, barely able to breathe.He hadn’t even looked.He didn’t know.For all he knew, the real ticket was already insi
Chapter 7: The Theft
The bus let Ethan off four blocks from the Orlando estate, the same as always.Ethan walked the familiar route with his head down and his hands in his front pockets. The houses grew larger as he walked. The cars parked along the curbs grew newer. The noise of downtown fell away behind him, replaced by the sound of sprinklers and the distant bark of a dog and the low hum of central air conditioning units mounted on the sides of houses that cost more than most people would earn in a lifetime.His left hand pressed once against the outside of his right back pocket as he walked, a motion that had already become involuntary in the hour since he'd left the café.Still there.He turned the last corner and the Orlando estate came into view at the end of the block, and he slowed his pace without meaning to.The house was large by any reasonable standard. A two-story colonial with a wide front lawn and a circular driveway and white columns flanking the front entrance that had always struck Etha
Chapter 6: Already Free
Ethan remained on his spot for close to a minute, thinking of how he could get the thirty-five dollars he needed. Suddenly, an idea popped into his head. The pawn shops. There was a pawn shop three blocks from here. He could pawn his phone. It was a cheap model, barely worth anything, but maybe it would get him thirty-five dollars.Twenty minutes later, Ethan stood in front of Golden Phoenix Pawn Shop, his phone in hand. The shop smelled of dust and desperation, crammed full of other people's failed dreams. Guitars, jewelry, power tools, electronics, all bearing small price tags.The owner, an elderly man with thick glasses, examined the phone with practiced disinterest."Twenty dollars," he said finally."Twenty? But it's nearly new. It's worth at least fifty."The old man shrugged. "Twenty dollars or nothing. Your choice."Ethan closed his eyes. Fine. Twenty dollars plus his one remaining dollar made twenty-one. He still needed fourteen more."What about this?" He pulled off his jac
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