Ethan's POV
The house looked the same as always. Two-story colonial. Manicured lawn. Double garage with Michael's BMW visible through the window. The porch light glowed warm and inviting, a lie I'd believed for fifteen years.
My feet stopped at the edge of the driveway.
Winston had said not to come here. Stay somewhere safe. Wait for morning.
But I needed to see them. I needed to look at their faces now that I knew the truth. Now that every hug, every birthday, every "we love you son" had been reframed as a transaction. Two million dollars' worth of lies.
I walked up the driveway, each step feeling heavier than the last.
Something was wrong.
The porch light illuminated three large garbage bags piled by the front door. Black plastic, tied at the top, bulging with contents I couldn't identify from this distance.
I climbed the steps.
Through the nearest bag's stretched plastic, I saw fabric. My fabric. The blue hoodie I'd bought at Goodwill two years ago. The corner of my calculus textbook. My spare work shoes.
My belongings.
They'd packed my belongings in garbage bags and left them outside like trash.
The front door opened before I could knock.
Dad stood there. Gerald Cross. Fifty-six years old. Graying hair. Expensive suit even though it was almost ten at night. He looked at me the way someone might look at dog shit on their shoe.
"Take your things and go," he said.
"We need to talk."
"There's nothing to talk about." He started to close the door.
I caught it with my hand. "Yes, there is. I know what you did. I know everything."
His expression didn't change. "I don't know what you're talking about."
"Yes, you do."
"Gerald?" Mom's voice came from inside. Patricia Cross. Fifty-three. Former beauty queen. Still beautiful in that cold, maintained way. She appeared behind Dad, her arms crossed. "Is he still here?"
"Just leaving," Dad said.
"No, I'm not." I pushed past him, into the house I'd called home. The house that had never been home at all.
The living room looked exactly as I'd left it this morning. Leather furniture. Expensive art on the walls. A chandelier that cost more than I made in six months. Everything perfect. Everything pristine.
Everything paid for with my inheritance.
"How dare you force your way in here." Mom's voice turned shrill. "After what you did to Michael. After you attacked him."
"I didn't attack him. He swung at me first."
"He has a split lip, Ethan. A split lip because you were jealous he was dating your ex-girlfriend."
"She wasn't my ex when I found them together."
"Oh, please." Mom waved her hand dismissively. "Lena broke up with you weeks ago. Michael told me everything. She tried to let you down gently and you wouldn't accept it. You kept buying her things she didn't want, showing up unannounced, acting obsessive."
The words hit like bullets. Each one a carefully crafted lie.
"That's not true."
"Michael doesn't lie." Dad moved to stand beside Mom, presenting a united front. "Unlike you."
"Me? I'm the liar?"
"You told us you were working tonight," Mom said. "You lied to get the night off. You snuck into Lena's apartment with that key she probably didn't even know you still had. You spied on them. Then you assaulted your brother."
"He's not my brother."
The room went quiet.
"What did you say?" Dad's voice dropped to something dangerous.
"I said he's not my brother. And you're not my parents. You were paid to pretend. Two million dollars over eight years. That's what I was worth to you, wasn't it?"
Mom's face went pale. Just for a second. Then the color rushed back, red and angry.
"Who told you that?"
"Does it matter? It's true."
"You ungrateful little bastard." She stepped forward, her finger jabbing toward my chest. "We saved you. Pulled you out of that disgusting group home. Gave you a name, a family, a life. And this is how you repay us? With accusations and conspiracy theories?"
"You were paid," I repeated. "Paid to hide me. To keep me away from my real family."
"Your real family?" Dad laughed, sharp and bitter. "Your real family abandoned you in that group home. Left you there to rot. We're the ones who took you in. Fed you. Clothed you. Sent you to school."
"You sent Michael to private school. I went to public."
"Because you weren't ready for private school," Mom said. "Your test scores weren't high enough."
"My test scores were higher than Michael's. I saw them. Ninth grade. I scored in the ninety-eighth percentile. He scored in the seventy-fifth."
"That's not the point."
"Then what is the point?" My voice rose. I couldn't help it. Fifteen years of swallowed words, of biting my tongue, of accepting scraps while Michael feasted. "Why did Michael get everything while I got nothing? Why did he get new clothes while I wore his hand-me-downs? Why did he get a car at sixteen while I rode the bus? Why did you pay for his college while I worked three jobs?"
"Because he's our son," Mom said simply. "Our real son."
The words landed like a physical blow.
"You made that very clear," I said quietly. "Every single day."
"If you were unhappy, you should have left." Dad crossed his arms. "Nobody forced you to stay."
"I was a child."
"You're twenty-three now. An adult. And you're still here, still mooching off us, still taking up space."
"Taking up space." I looked around the living room. At the couch I'd never been allowed to sit on. At the TV I could only watch when Michael wasn't home. At the family photos on the mantle where I appeared in exactly three pictures, always on the edge, always slightly out of focus. "Yeah. I guess I was."
"Michael said you've been obsessed with Lena for months," Mom continued. "Spending money you don't have. Making a fool of yourself. We should have stepped in earlier. Should have gotten you help."
"Help?" The word came out as a laugh. "You mean control. You want to control me like you've been doing my whole life."
"We want you to stop embarrassing this family," Dad said. "But since you can't seem to do that, we're making it easy for you. Your things are outside. Find somewhere else to stay."
"You're kicking me out."
"We're setting you free." Mom smiled, cold and sharp. "Isn't that what you wanted? Independence?"
I looked at them both. Really looked. Searching for something. Some hint of the people who'd taken me to my first day of school. Who'd celebrated my birthdays, even if the presents were always practical, never fun. Who'd sat through parent-teacher conferences and signed permission slips and done all the things parents were supposed to do.
But there was nothing. Just two strangers who'd played a role for money.
"I know about the Sterling family," I said. "I know who I really am."
Dad's jaw tightened. "I don't know what you're talking about."
"Yes, you do. You've always known. That's why you treated me like this. That's why you kept me small, kept me poor, kept me broken. Because someone paid you to."
"Get out." Mom's voice turned to ice. "Get out of my house right now."
"Gladly."
I turned toward the door. Toward the garbage bags holding everything I owned. Toward a future that had suddenly become very different.
"Wait." Mom's voice stopped me. "Before you go. I want you to understand something."
I looked back.
"You were nothing when we found you," she said. "A crying, dirty little boy nobody wanted. We gave you fifteen years. Fifteen years of our time, our resources, our patience. And you threw it back in our faces by seducing Michael's girlfriend and attacking him. You're not just ungrateful. You're pathetic."
"I didn't seduce anyone. He was sleeping with her while we were together."
"Lies." Dad shook his head. "More lies. You can't help yourself, can you?"
"Thomas, Robert," Mom called toward the hallway. "Come in here, please."
Two men appeared. Large men. The family's live-in servants, though they looked more like security guards. Thomas was six-foot-four, former military. Robert was shorter but built like a tank.
"Yes, Mrs. Cross?" Thomas said.
"Ethan is leaving," she said sweetly. "But I think he needs help understanding that he's not welcome back. Ever. Perhaps you could make that clear to him?"
Thomas and Robert looked at each other. Some unspoken communication passed between them.
"How clear?" Robert asked.
"Very clear." Mom's smile widened. "Nothing permanent. Just memorable."
My stomach dropped. They were going to hurt me. Actually hurt me. And my parents, the people who'd raised me, were ordering it done like they were asking someone to take out the trash.
"You can't be serious," I said.
"Oh, I'm very serious." Mom settled onto the couch, crossing her legs. "You raised your hand to my son. My real son. That requires consequences."
Thomas and Robert moved toward me. Slow. Deliberate. Professional.
I backed toward the door. "Stop. Just stop. I'm leaving. You'll never see me again."
"That's not good enough," Dad said. "You need to learn your place."
My back hit the door. Thomas reached for me, his hand closing around my arm like a vise.
Then the world outside exploded with light.
Bright. Blinding. Like someone had pointed stadium lights at the house.
Car doors opened. Multiple. The sounds crisp and synchronized.
Thomas's grip loosened slightly. Everyone turned toward the windows.
Through the glass, I saw them. Three black SUVs. Top of the line. The kind with bulletproof glass and diplomatic plates. They'd pulled up in formation, blocking the entire street.
The center vehicle's door opened.
A woman stepped out.
She was maybe thirty-five. Tall. Asian. Wearing a charcoal suit that probably cost five thousand dollars. Her hair was pulled back in a severe bun. Her heels clicked against the pavement like gunshots.
Behind her, six men emerged from the other vehicles. Big men. Professional. Wearing dark suits and earpieces.
Bodyguards.
The woman walked up the driveway, her pace measured and unhurried. The bodyguards flanked her, moving with military precision.
She stopped at the edge of the porch. Her eyes scanned the scene. The garbage bags. Thomas's hand still on my arm. Mom and Dad frozen in the doorway.
Then her gaze locked onto mine.
"Stop," she said.
The word wasn't loud. Wasn't shouted. But it carried absolute authority. The kind of voice that expected obedience and always received it.
Thomas's hand dropped from my arm immediately.
Nobody moved. Nobody breathed.
The woman climbed the steps, her bodyguards following. She stood in front of me, examining my face with an intensity that made me want to look away.
"Ethan Sterling?" she asked.
My mouth had gone dry. "Yes."
"My name is Margaret Chen. I'm the CEO of Zenith Corporation." She glanced at Mom and Dad. "And I believe we need to have a conversation about how you've been treating my employer."
Everyone froze.
Latest Chapter
CHAPTER 10: The Board Kneels
Ethan's POVThe call came at seven in the morning.I'd spent the night in my new office, unable to face the empty hotel suite. Sleep wouldn't come anyway. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw the Cross family's faces. Heard Mom's voice calling me ungrateful. Saw Michael's smirk as he held Lena.My phone lit up with Sophia's name."Turn on the financial news," she said without greeting. "Channel six."I found the remote, powering on the television mounted on my office wall. The screen filled with a anchor's serious face and a red banner scrolling across the bottom."Cross Capital Management suffered major losses overnight. Investors pull millions. Gerald Cross unavailable for comment."The anchor's voice continued, detached and professional. "The small but respected investment firm saw its stock plummet forty-three percent in after-hours trading. Multiple clients have withdrawn their portfolios, citing concerns about the firm's financial stability and management practices."They cut to f
CHAPTER 9: The First Fear
Ethan's POVMorning came with a knock on the suite door.I'd barely slept. Every time I closed my eyes, I saw Lena's face. Michael's pale expression. The garbage bags on the lawn. My brain wouldn't shut off, wouldn't stop replaying the last twenty-four hours like a movie stuck on loop."Chairman Sterling?" Sophia's voice came through the door. "May I come in?"I opened it. She stood there with two assistants, all three carrying tablets and briefcases. Behind them, a hotel cart held covered dishes that smelled like actual food."Breakfast first," she said, wheeling the cart inside. "Then business."The food was incredible. Eggs cooked perfectly. Toast that melted in my mouth. Fresh fruit that actually tasted like fruit instead of the mushy stuff from discount grocery stores. Coffee that didn't come from a gas station.I ate while Sophia talked."Your grandfather will see you this afternoon. Two o'clock. His private estate." She swiped through her tablet. "Before that, we have your firs
CHAPTER 8: Regret Knocks First
Ethan's POVThe phone buzzed again before I could decide whether to respond.Another message from Lena: "Please, Ethan. I need to see you."Then another: "I'm outside your building."Part of me wanted to ignore her. Delete the messages. Block her number and never think about her again.But another part, the part that had loved her for eight months, that had starved itself to buy her gifts, that had believed she was different, needed to hear what she had to say.I typed back: "I'm not at my apartment."Three dots appeared immediately. She was typing."Where are you? I'll come to you."My fingers hovered over the keyboard. Giving her this address felt wrong. Like inviting my old life into my new one. But maybe that's exactly what I needed. To face it head-on. To close that door completely.I sent her the hotel address.Her response came instantly: "That's the Grand Regency. Ethan, what's going on?""Just come. Lobby. Twenty minutes."I didn't wait for her reply.The closet held clothes
CHAPTER 7: Overnight King
Ethan's POVThe hotel suite occupied the entire top floor.I stood in the entrance, unable to move, unable to process what I was seeing. Floor-to-ceiling windows overlooked the city. Lights sparkled below like fallen stars. The living room was larger than my entire apartment. Correction. Larger than the apartment I used to share with two roommates."This way, Chairman." Sophia moved through the space like she owned it. Maybe she did. Maybe Zenith Corporation owned the whole building. "Your bedroom is through here. The master suite has a walk-in closet, full bathroom with a soaking tub and rain shower, and a private balcony."I followed her, my feet sinking into carpet so plush it felt like walking on clouds. Everything was white and gold. Clean. Expensive. Untouched.The bedroom could have fit three king-sized beds. It had one, positioned in the center, with silk sheets that probably cost more than my monthly Walmart salary."I can't stay here," I said."Why not?""Because." I gesture
CHAPTER 6: The Woman Who Changes the Game
Ethan's POVMargaret Chen's eyes never left mine, but when she spoke again, her words were directed at everyone."I apologize for the confusion. Allow me to properly introduce myself." She reached into her jacket and produced a business card, holding it between two perfectly manicured fingers. "My name is Sophia Vale. I'm the special representative of Zenith Corporation. And more importantly, I represent the Sterling family."The night air felt thick. Heavy. Like the atmosphere before a lightning strike.Mom found her voice first. "The Sterling family?" She laughed, but it came out forced, nervous. "I'm sorry, Ms. Vale, but I think there's been some mistake. This is a private matter. Family business.""Family business." Sophia repeated the words slowly, testing them. "How interesting that you should use that phrase, Mrs. Cross." She turned her attention to Mom and Dad, her expression unchanged. Professional. Cold. "Tell me, does family business usually involve assaulting someone on yo
CHAPTER 5: Kicked Out Like Trash
Ethan's POVThe house looked the same as always. Two-story colonial. Manicured lawn. Double garage with Michael's BMW visible through the window. The porch light glowed warm and inviting, a lie I'd believed for fifteen years.My feet stopped at the edge of the driveway.Winston had said not to come here. Stay somewhere safe. Wait for morning.But I needed to see them. I needed to look at their faces now that I knew the truth. Now that every hug, every birthday, every "we love you son" had been reframed as a transaction. Two million dollars' worth of lies.I walked up the driveway, each step feeling heavier than the last.Something was wrong.The porch light illuminated three large garbage bags piled by the front door. Black plastic, tied at the top, bulging with contents I couldn't identify from this distance.I climbed the steps.Through the nearest bag's stretched plastic, I saw fabric. My fabric. The blue hoodie I'd bought at Goodwill two years ago. The corner of my calculus textbo
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