Home / Urban / The Chosen Heir / Chapter 7: You can't win
Chapter 7: You can't win
Author: Nhelahsheere
last update2025-08-16 17:35:53

The next day, Ash woke before his alarm, though the shrill beep still cut into his thoughts like a warning he couldn’t shake. His eyes felt heavy, but he refused to stay in bed, today he had to see his brother and somehow make it to work on time.

He stood in front of the cracked mirror in his tiny bathroom, buttoning a pale blue shirt that had seen better years. The fabric was so thin from repeated washing that he feared if he moved too quickly, the seams might split. He pressed the ironed collar flat, though the cuffs had long lost their stiffness. His tie, a dull brown with frayed edges, dangled from his neck like an afterthought.

By 7:30 a.m., he was outside, the morning air sharp against his cheeks. He hailed a yellow cab, the driver barely glancing at him before jerking the car to the curb.

“County jail,” Ash said, sliding in and clutching the brown paper bag that held his brother’s breakfast. He’d woken early to buy it, scrambled eggs, sausage, and a small carton of juice. His brother hadn’t had a decent meal since being locked up, and Ash had pictured the relief on his face when he took that first bite.

The cab rattled through potholes, each jolt making Ash's stomach churn. He kept glancing at his watch, time was ticking, and he still had to get to work.

When they reached the jail, the driver muttered the fare. Ash paid quickly, but before he could take two steps toward the entrance, two uniformed officers emerged from the shadows near the gate.

“Hold up,” one said, his tone casual but his eyes sharp. “Visiting hours are packed today. Might be a long wait for you.”

Ash forced a polite smile. “That’s fine, I just need a few minutes with my brother.”

The second officer leaned in slightly, his breath tinged with coffee. “Or…” He paused, glancing at the first officer. “You could make things… faster.”

Ash understood instantly. His chest tightened. He wasn’t naive, he’d heard about “greasing the wheels” before. He didn’t have extra money to throw away, but the thought of leaving without seeing his brother made his decision for him.

“How much?” he asked quietly.

The first officer smirked. “Fifty.”

Ash’s heart sank. That was half of what he had left for the week. He hesitated, then pulled the bills from his wallet and handed them over. The officers exchanged a knowing look before waving him inside.

Inside, the air was damp, tinged with disinfectant and something sour beneath it. He walked past the metal detector, holding out the paper bag for inspection.

“What’s in here?” the guard asked.

“Breakfast for my brother,” Ash replied.

The guard rifled through it carelessly, poking the eggs with gloved fingers before handing it back. “Fine.”

Ash was led down a narrow corridor lined with peeling paint and flickering lights. The metallic clang of doors echoed in the distance, each one closing like a verdict. Finally, they reached the holding cell area. His younger brother, Ben, was sitting on a bench, his shoulders hunched, eyes fixed on the floor.

“Ash” Ben said softly, looking up. His voice was hoarse.

Ash crouched beside the bars, slipping the paper bag through the slot. “Brought you something good. Eggs, sausage… juice.”

Ben’s face softened. “Thanks, man. I’m starving.”

Before Ben could take a bite, another officer, this one with a stocky build and a face set in permanent disapproval, appeared. “What’s this?” he asked, yanking the bag from Ben’s hands.

“That’s my breakfast,” Ben said, his tone sharpening.

The officer looked inside, frowned, then reached into a cart nearby and pulled out a small plastic container. He shoved it through the slot toward Ben. “Policy change. Outside food can’t be given directly anymore. Here. Eat this.”

Ash stared at the container, the food inside looked like congealed oatmeal and something vaguely resembling meatloaf.

Ben’s jaw tightened. “This isn’t..”

“Eat it,” the officer barked, walking away with Ash’s carefully chosen breakfast still in hand.

Ash felt his cheeks burn, a mix of anger and humiliation. He had spent his last good bills on that meal. “Why would they...”

Ben cut him off with a shrug. Stupid boy. How did he even end up here. “It’s how it works here. You can’t win.”

Ash wanted to argue, but the guard by the door suddenly called, “Time’s up!”

“What? I just got here!” Ash protested.

The guard didn’t even look at him. “Rules. Move along.”

Ash stood there for a moment, gripping the bars. “I’m trying to get you out. I even talked to the officers at the gate. Gave them...”

Ben gave a bitter laugh. “You gave them money, didn’t you? And let me guess… they told you nothing.”

Ash’s stomach dropped. “How did you...”

“They’ve been doing it for years. Take cash from desperate people, promise a call to the right person, then forget about you as soon as you walk away.” He said as if he'd had been there for years or has been working there.

Ash’s voice cracked. “I just wanted to help.”

Ben shook his head slowly. “You can’t fix this with kindness, Ash.Not here.”

The guard clanged the door again. “I said move!”

Reluctantly, Ash stepped back. He glanced over his shoulder one last time at his brother, who was poking at the pale, lumpy food with a plastic spoon, his appetite gone.

As Ash walked back through the corridor, the damp smell clinging to his clothes, he realized he’d just lost both his breakfast money and half his dignity in under an hour. Outside, the officers at the gate gave him the same smirking nod they had earlier, as if they’d just watched a game they’d already won.

Continue to read this book for free
Scan the code to download the app

Latest Chapter

  • Chapter 48: You're my best creation

    The Langston mansion was always too quiet.Not the comfortable kind of silence, but the kind that followed obedience.At seventeen, Sienna had learned how to make silence sound like love.Her father taught her that.Mr. Langston was a man who never raised his voice; he didn’t have to. His words could break ribs without leaving a bruise. Every syllable came laced with the same authority he used in boardrooms, cold, exact, inescapable.He’d stand behind her as she practiced the piano, his hands folded neatly behind his back.“Again,” he’d say when she missed a note.“Smile, Sienna. Perfection should look effortless.”When she got it right, he’d rest his palm on her shoulder, not a pat, but a claim.“You’re my best creation,” he’d whisper.She was seventeen, and she didn’t know what that meant.Every Sunday, they had dinner alone.Her father at the head of the table, her opposite him. Always opposite.“Wine?” he’d offer.“I’m not eighteen yet,” she’d reply.He’d smile. “You are when I sa

  • Chapter 47: The Walls Close In

    The first thing Asher noticed wasn’t the locks.It was the silence.The house had grown too quiet, like the air itself was listening. The hum of the old refrigerator was gone, the distant chatter of staff had vanished. Even the wind, somehow, seemed to pause before brushing past the window panes.Sienna called it “peace.”He called it wrong.He hadn’t realized when she started installing things — the new door bolts, the subtle shimmer of reinforced glass on the windows. It was all “for safety,” she’d said. Safety from the outside world. Safety from everything that might take him away from her. “You need to feel protected,” she’d told him with that soft smile that always made him forget how she’d gotten under his skin in the first place. “You’ve been through enough, Ash. Let me take care of you.”Ben was the first to act like it was normal.He moved through the house like a shadow, quiet, obedient, his movements careful, almost rehearsed. He delivered messages, breakfast trays, even A

  • Chapter 46: The Fight

    The morning was too quiet. The kind of quiet that felt deliberate. Sienna sat by the window, a cup of tea untouched beside her, her eyes following the way the sunlight folded itself across the marble floor. Ash was trying to fix the broken clasp of his wristwatch, one of the many things Sienna had got him. Ben lingered near the doorway, restless, pretending to scroll through his phone. Ben hadn't been in good terms with Sienna since Day 1. He had begun to flinch when she called his name and Ash though quiet was noticing too much.“You’re not even trying to get better,” Ben snapped after he couldn't take it anymore.His voice cracked through the morning silence like a thrown stone. The Langston Mansion, still smelling of polished marble and Sienna’s lavender candles, had a stillness that made every sound echo.Ash looked up from the couch where he sat, half-dressed in the crisp shirt Sienna had laid out for him. His bruises were fading, but his eyes had the dullness of someone who hadn

  • Chapter 45: Chains of care

    Sienna stood by the doorway, her hair unkempt from the wind, her eyes fever, bright. “Don’t you remember me?”Ash looked up from where he sat on the edge of the bed, the question slicing through the silence like a blade. She had never showed any hint that they knew each other before and now this. He was confused. “What?” he asked, his brow furrowing. “Remember you?”She smiled, the kind of smile that hides too many years of waiting. “You really don’t, do you?”Ash hesitated. “Sienna, what are you talking about?”Her laugh came out half-broken, half-bitter. “I should’ve known. You never looked twice at me back then either.”She walked toward him, barefoot, her steps soundless against the marble. For the first time, her confidence seemed cracked, not gone, just trembling beneath the weight of memory.“High school,” she said softly, stopping in front of him. “You were two grades ahead. You played basketball, wore that stupid smile everyone loved.” Her lips curled faintly. “You don’t re

  • Chapter 44: The Possessive Bloom

    “You don’t need the world, Ash. You only need me.”Her voice was velvet and steel all at once. Sienna stood by the window, morning light spilling across her satin robe. Ash sat on the couch, still in the clothes she’d picked for him. “You’ve lost weight,” she murmured, tracing his jaw with her perfect manicured finger. “You shouldn’t skip breakfast again.”Ash’s mouth curved in a faint, careful smile. “I wasn’t hungry.”“You will eat.” She lifted a silver tray from the table. “I had your favorite made.”He didn’t remember ever mentioning a favorite.The Langston Mansion was quiet except for the low hum of the city beyond the tinted glass. Every step she took made the space smaller. He chewed obediently, feeling her eyes study every movement.Ben’s voice echoed faintly in his head from the night before, “Bro, she’s watching you like a hawk. Are you sure you’re good?”He had told Ben to stay in the guest room, to stay quiet. Now he wasn’t sure if that had been protection or surrender.

  • Chapter 43: You deceived me

    “Still thinking about him?”The voice slid through the dimly lit room like ice. Tessa turned sharply, startled. She hadn’t heard the door open. Brooklyn stood by the doorway, one hand in his pocket, the other holding a glass of something dark and expensive. His tie was loosened, shirt slightly open at the collar which was quiet unusual for the few times she saw him at the hospital.“Can’t you knock?” she asked quietly, folding her arms.“Should I, when you look like you’re waiting for ghosts?” he replied, stepping in. The faint scent of his cologne followed, cold cedar and smoke. “You’ve been staring at that wall for twenty minutes. Don’t tell me you’re still thinking about him.”Tessa bit down the flicker of anger that rose. “Ash has a name, Brooklyn.”“Oh, I know,” he said smoothly, setting the glass on her shelf as though he owned the place. “Asher Booker. The broke ex-husband who couldn’t afford to pay rent or buy groceries. Quite the romantic tragedy, really. I’m surprised Netfli

More Chapter
Explore and read good novels for free
Free access to a vast number of good novels on MegaNovel app. Download the books you like and read anywhere & anytime.
Read books for free on the app
Scan code to read on App