Finding Love In A Scripted Betrayal

Finding Love In A Scripted Betrayal

Hua Jian

5.0
Comment(s)
View
10
Chapters

I was the black sheep of the wealthy Jenkins family, the villain in my adopted sister Jami's perfect story. Everyone adored her, the sweet, innocent heroine. I was just the difficult one. Then, a system uploaded itself into my brain, showing me the script of my life. It wasn't just a story where I was the bad guy-it was a detailed blueprint for my entire family's destruction, all orchestrated by Jami. The script showed how she would drive one brother to suicide, frame another for a crime he didn't commit, and leave me for a gruesome "accidental" death, making her the sole heir to their fortune. My family saw her as an angel. They were completely blind, worshiping the very monster who was plotting to bury them all. But the system that showed me this horrifying future also gave me a weapon. It let me hear their thoughts. And then, at the family gala, I realized something even better. They could hear mine.

Chapter 1

I was the black sheep of the wealthy Jenkins family, the villain in my adopted sister Jami's perfect story. Everyone adored her, the sweet, innocent heroine. I was just the difficult one.

Then, a system uploaded itself into my brain, showing me the script of my life. It wasn't just a story where I was the bad guy-it was a detailed blueprint for my entire family's destruction, all orchestrated by Jami.

The script showed how she would drive one brother to suicide, frame another for a crime he didn't commit, and leave me for a gruesome "accidental" death, making her the sole heir to their fortune.

My family saw her as an angel. They were completely blind, worshiping the very monster who was plotting to bury them all.

But the system that showed me this horrifying future also gave me a weapon. It let me hear their thoughts.

And then, at the family gala, I realized something even better.

They could hear mine.

Chapter 1

Chloe Jenkins POV:

The world, as I knew it, shattered into a million pieces the day the system uploaded itself into my brain. It wasn't a whisper. It was a roar, a blinding flash of data that downloaded a complete narrative, a script for my entire life. And I, Chloe Jenkins, the estranged biological daughter of the wealthy Jenkins family, wasn't the protagonist. I was the villain, the catalyst for the rise of Jami Scott, the adopted "heroine" beloved by all, destined to ruin everything.

My life was a lie. A carefully constructed tragedy, meticulously plotted, and I was just the bad guy.

I stared at the glowing screen of my phone, the "system" – a rogue data stream pulsing directly into my consciousness – displaying the cold, hard facts. Years of feeling like an outsider, years of biting my tongue, years of being dismissed as "difficult" or "troubled" by the Jenkins family, suddenly made brutal, logical sense. It was all part of the script. My pain, their adoration for Jami, every single injustice – it was all leading to my inevitable downfall.

I remembered the countless dinners where Jami' s sweet, innocent remarks would implicitly highlight my sharp tongue. The charity galas where her graceful presence overshadowed my awkward attempts at conversation. Even my attempts to excel in investigative journalism were twisted in the narrative as "rebellious" or "attention-seeking." My family, the Cristophers and Carlottas of the world, never saw me. They saw the role assigned to me by the narrative: the villain.

And they ate it up. Every perfectly rehearsed line, every saccharine smile from Jami. They were blind. So utterly, hopelessly blind.

A bitter laugh escaped my lips. For years, I' d yearned for their acceptance, their love. I' d fought against this invisible current, trying to prove myself worthy. But the script was clear. My efforts were futile, my destiny sealed. A profound sense of release washed over me. The fight was over. I was tired of swimming upstream when the river itself was rigged.

I' d play my part then. For now. My newfound ability to hear thoughts – to access this system of "narrative truths" – was still raw, still a mystery. But it was also a weapon. And if I was to be the villain, I might as well be a damn good one.

The family gala. My grand return. The perfect stage for Jami to shine, and for me to confirm my role as the black sheep. I checked my reflection in the car window. My usual sharp, cynical gaze met me. Good. No cracks in the armor.

The gilded gates of the Jenkins estate loomed ahead, an oppressive monument to their wealth and my estrangement. My heart did a familiar clench, not from anticipation, but from a habit of resentment. I stepped out of the car, the gravel crunching under my heels, a sound too loud in the manicured silence.

"Well, well, look what the cat dragged in."

Cannon Jenkins, my eldest brother, stood at the imposing front door, arms crossed, a sneer twisting his perfectly sculpted features. Beside him, Joel, the sensitive musician, looked torn, while Brady, the hot-headed athlete, just glared, his fists clenched.

Oh, how original. Did you rehearse that line, Cannon? It' s almost as stale as your corporate presentations.

Cannon' s eyes widened slightly. His sneer faltered, replaced by a flicker of confusion. Joel shifted uncomfortably. Brady' s glare intensified, but it also held a hint of bewilderment.

"What did you just say?" Cannon demanded, his voice tight.

I blinked, feigning innocence. "Good evening, Cannon. I said nothing. Just admiring the new landscaping." The lie tasted like ash.

His face. It's truly a work of art when confusion warps that arrogant mask. They' re so used to me reacting, reacting angrily. This must throw them off.

Cannon' s jaw tightened. "Don't play innocent, Chloe. We know why you're here. Always stirring up trouble, always looking for a handout."

Right, the standard villain monologue. It' s like they have cue cards. How many times have I heard this tired accusation? It' s almost boring.

"I' m here because Mom and Dad invited me," I replied, my voice smooth, devoid of the usual bite they expected. "Family gala, remember?"

Brady scoffed. "As if you care about family. You just come back to make Jami feel bad, don't you?"

Poor Brady. Always the hothead, always so easily manipulated. He'll be the first to fall, just like the script says. Such a predictable tragedy.

Brady recoiled, his face paling, as if I' d slapped him. Joel, startled, took a step back, bumping into Cannon.

"What did you say?" Brady stammered, his eyes wide with a fear I'd never seen him direct at me.

"I said 'Good evening, Brady'," I replied, my tone deliberately calm. "Is something wrong? You look a little... green."

Joel, suddenly agitated, stepped forward. "You always do this, Chloe! You always twist things, make us feel like we're the bad guys!" He lunged, grabbing my arm, his grip surprisingly strong. "Just leave Jami alone!"

"Joel! Let go of your sister!" Carlotta Jenkins, my mother, swept into the foyer, her voice a whip-crack. She wore a pristine emerald gown, her face a mask of elegant disapproval. Close behind her, Cristopher, my father, his silver hair perfectly coiffed, his expression more weary than angry.

Cristopher gently pulled Joel back, then turned to me. "Chloe, my dear." He offered a practiced, slightly stiff embrace. His cologne, expensive and familiar, filled my nostrils.

Funny, how his eyes crinkle just like mine when he smiles. A shame it' s usually for the cameras. And this hug... it' s so perfunctory. Like checking a box on his social calendar.

His body tensed against mine for a fleeting second, a subtle tremor that spoke of discomfort. He pulled back, his smile strained. "We're so glad you could make it."

Carlotta, meanwhile, was already focused on her sons. "Honestly, the three of you! Can't you behave for one evening? It' s a gala, not a wrestling match."

They're still playing their part. Blind to the truth, blind to Jami's venom. They'll pay for it, eventually. All of them. The script is clear on that.

Suddenly, the entire foyer went still. Cannon, Joel, and Brady froze, their eyes wide, directed at nothing, yet everything. Cristopher, his arm still loosely around my shoulder, visibly flinched. His hand, resting on my back, tightened into a painful vice, his knuckles turning white. I could feel the sharp edges of his wedding band digging into my flesh.

"Dad?" I asked, genuinely confused, my voice laced with a concern I didn't entirely feel. "Are you alright? You're squeezing my arm."

He blinked, releasing me abruptly. He cleared his throat, his gaze distant. "Perfectly fine, Chloe. Just a sudden cramp, old age, you know." He forced a laugh, a hollow sound.

I rubbed my arm. "Right. Well, I' m fine, if you were wondering."

Honestly, their acting skills are pathetic. They hear my thoughts, don't they? This is getting interesting. Their brains must be short-circuiting trying to process the dissonance between my polite facade and my inner monologue.

"What was that, Chloe?" Cannon barked, stepping forward, his face flushed. "What did you just say?"

"I said I'm fine, Cannon," I replied, a small, innocent smile gracing my lips. "Did I perhaps miss something?"

Cristopher stepped between us. "Enough, Cannon. Let's not make a scene. Dinner is being served." He turned to me. "Come, Chloe. Join us."

I nodded, following them into the cavernous dining room. The table was laden with crystal and fine china, a feast fit for kings. I chose a seat near the end, away from the immediate family circle, a familiar spot.

"Chloe," Cannon said, his voice clipped, "Jami's had a rough week. Try not to... well, don't stir anything up."

I simply nodded, picking up my fork. "Understood. Wouldn't want to upset the delicate balance of the universe, would we?"

The delicate balance of Jami's carefully crafted victim narrative, more like. She's only 'fragile' when it suits her. And they fall for it every single time. It's infuriating, really. How can they be so blind to her manipulation? Or is it that they want to be blind? Guilt is a powerful anesthetic.

Cannon flinched, his eyes darting around the room, as if checking for hidden cameras. Joel looked downright ill. Brady just stared at me, his mouth slightly agape.

The double doors at the far end of the dining room swung open. A soft, ethereal light seemed to emanate from the doorway. Jami Scott stepped in, a vision in a flowing ivory gown, her hair glistening, her eyes downcast, as if burdened by her own beauty. A collective sigh went through the room.

Carlotta clutched Cristopher' s hand, a silent plea for peace. I remained impassive, watching the show unfold.

And here she is, the star of the show. Cue the dramatic music. The poor, misunderstood angel, gracing us with her presence. Too bad this particular performance ends in a bloodbath, and she's conducting it.

My thought felt loud, echoing in my own head. Jami, halfway across the room, stumbled. Her eyes, wide and suddenly furious, locked onto mine.

"Chloe," she whispered, her voice a silken threat that only I could hear. "You won't ruin this for me."

Continue Reading

Other books by Hua Jian

More
The Mafia Don's Regret: Torturing His True Savior

The Mafia Don's Regret: Torturing His True Savior

Modern

5.0

My husband crushed the metacarpals of my left hand—my drawing hand—with a heavy leather-bound book. This was Punishment Ninety-Six. The offense? I had missed a single phone call from my stepsister, Joyce. According to Don Austen Ballard, ignoring the woman who allegedly saved his life fifteen years ago was akin to high treason. "Discipline is the highest form of love, Alana," he whispered, watching the violet bruise spread across my skin. He calls shattering an architect's hand "love." He believes Joyce dragged him from a burning building when he was a boy. He treats her like a living saint and me like a punching bag to pay his life debt. But it is all a lie. Fifteen years ago, Joyce was at a cheerleading camp three towns away. I was the one in that crawlspace. I was the one who found the bleeding boy in the dark. I was the one who called him "Stellen" because he was too terrified to tell me his real name. He has spent our entire marriage torturing his true savior to please a fraud. Tonight, the pain finally burned away my fear, leaving only cold resolve. I didn't cry. I waited until the house was silent, then I retrieved a burner phone hidden in a false bottom of a box in the bathroom. I dialed the number of his sworn enemy, Don Dalton Underwood. "I have the blueprints," I said, my voice steady despite the agony in my hand. "And I have the controlling shares of Ballard Industries. I'm ready to burn his kingdom to ash."

Too Late for Her Regrets

Too Late for Her Regrets

Romance

5.0

The world came back in pieces: gasoline, twisted metal, and a searing pain in my leg. Through the shattered windshield, I saw my wife, Olivia, scramble not to me, her injured husband, but to the passenger door, frantic over our "assistant," Liam. She cradled his head, her voice filled with a tenderness she hadn't shown me in years. "Liam? Liam, can you hear me? Oh my god, you're bleeding." Ignoring my gasps, she finally looked at me with pure irritation: "Ethan. Your phone. Call an ambulance. Liam is hurt." The cold clarity hit me: I didn't exist for her. Then, in the hospital, I learned my leg was shattered, and Olivia's first words concerned the hospital bill, not my well-being. Liam, she announced, was out with a concussion, making our household a "disaster." I was just a logistical problem. As she left, a nurse brought "my favorite chicken soup," supposedly from Olivia. But Liam's Instagram later showed the identical thermos, captioned: "Best boss in the world! Nothing like Olivia's homemade chicken soup to make you feel better." It was never for me. The final blow came when I found a positive pregnancy test and a receipt for a "Surgical Procedure" in Olivia's hidden box, dated the same week she claimed a "solo business retreat." She'd been pregnant with Liam's child and terminated it, all while pushing me to continue IVF. The numbness shattered. My marriage, my decade of love, was a cruel, pathetic joke. Now, amidst the wreckage of my shattered life, I picked up my phone, my hands steady, and dialed the fertility clinic, then a divorce lawyer. It was time for my truth.

The Gilded Cage: Her Fierce Escape

The Gilded Cage: Her Fierce Escape

Billionaires

5.0

My world revolved around the resonant strings of my cello and the man I loved, Ethan. Even after the devastating miscarriage, I tried to find solace in music, in the quiet rhythm of our opulent New York life. But that life shattered on a single, horrific night. Ethan claimed he wanted to cheer me up with a party, but it was a trap. As his "associates" brutalized me, he stood by, silently recording every agonizing detail. He used the footage to force a divorce and strip me of everything. The video went viral, branding me a "sick debauchee" and turning my family against me. I was a pariah, utterly alone. Then, Caleb, Ethan's rival, emerged, offering solace and protection. I fell into his arms, believing him my savior, only to discover on our wedding day that he was the true architect of my public humiliation, the one who purposefully leaked the video to snag me. My gilded cage marriage to Caleb was a new hell. He subjected me to constant psychological torture, culminating in the ultimate public re-traumatization: replaying my complete, unedited assault video at a high-society charity gala for everyone to see. Broken and hollow, I became a captive ghost in my own life. How could I be so completely betrayed, not once, but twice, by the men closest to me? The raw injustice, the ceaseless pain, threatened to consume me. What unspeakable darkness festered beneath the surface of their ambition, driving them to destroy me so utterly? Just as despair threatened to swallow me whole, a call from my revered cello maestro ignited a faint, burning ember of hope. He called me a phoenix and promised not just survival, but an inferno of revenge. My destruction had merely been the prelude to a symphony of retribution.

You'll also like

He Thought I Was A Doormat, Until I Ruined Him

He Thought I Was A Doormat, Until I Ruined Him

SHANA GRAY
4.5

The sterile white of the operating room blurred, then sharpened, as Skye Sterling felt the cold clawing its way up her body. The heart monitor flatlined, a steady, high-pitched whine announcing her end. Her uterus had been removed, a desperate attempt to stop the bleeding, but the blood wouldn't clot. It just kept flowing, warm and sticky, pooling beneath her. Through heavy eyes, she saw a trembling nurse holding a phone on speaker. "Mr. Kensington," the nurse's voice cracked, "your wife... she's critical." A pause, then a sweet, poisonous giggle. Seraphina Miller. "Liam is in the shower," Seraphina's voice purred. "Stop calling, Skye. It's pathetic. Faking a medical emergency on our anniversary? Even for you, that's low." Then, Liam's bored voice: "If she dies, call the funeral home. I have a meeting in the morning." Click. The line went dead. A second later, so did Skye. The darkness that followed was absolute, suffocating, a black ocean crushing her lungs. She screamed into the void, a silent, agonizing wail of regret for loving a man who saw her as a nuisance, for dying without ever truly living. Until she died, she didn't understand. Why was her life so tragically wasted? Why did her husband, the man she loved, abandon her so cruelly? The injustice of it all burned hotter than the fever in her body. Then, the air rushed back in. Skye gasped, her body convulsing violently on the mattress. Her eyes flew open, wide and terrified, staring blindly into the darkness. Her trembling hand reached for her phone. May 12th. Five years ago. She was back.

Chapters
Read Now
Download Book