Broken Doll's Revenge: The Heiress's Sting

Broken Doll's Revenge: The Heiress's Sting

Alfred

5.0
Comment(s)
1.3K
View
210
Chapters

I was Grayson Warren's "broken doll," a disgraced socialite kept on a short leash to pay off my family's debts. To the world, I was a fragile liability; to Grayson, I was a pet he could humiliate for sport, forcing me to play the role of a mentally unstable girl while I secretly gathered evidence against his empire. The cruelty peaked when Grayson forced me to break three years of sobriety in front of his investors, mocking my struggle before making me kneel on a golf course to scrub his shoes. He treated my life like a game, literally betting my sanity against a corporate board seat while he soft-launched a new relationship with a high-profile PR queen. When the pressure triggered a massive panic attack, Grayson abandoned me in a private clinic just so he wouldn't miss a dinner reservation. Even my own mother turned against me, threatening to leak my psychiatric records and brand me a "violent delusional" if I didn't beg for Grayson's forgiveness. I was trapped between a man who owned my debt and a mother who valued her estate over my daughter's life. I realized then that they would never let me go; they would only break me until there was nothing left. They thought they had erased my soul, but they forgot I was the only witness to the night my true love, Felix, was murdered. I was done being the victim. I faked a suicide jump off the Queensboro Bridge to go off the grid, then crashed Grayson's elite gala in a dress that signaled his downfall. Just as Grayson tried to physically crush me one last time, the room went silent. Felix Law, the man the world thought was dead for three years, walked out of the shadows with a federal warrant in his hand. "Take your hands off her, Warren." The game didn't just change; it ended. Felix was back from the dead, and this time, we were burning the empire to the ground together.

Broken Doll's Revenge: The Heiress's Sting Chapter 1 No.1

The phone vibrated against the cheap laminate of the table.

Anna Roth stared at the screen. The name flashing on the display was not a name at all. It was a location.

The Office.

That was Grayson Warren's way of dehumanizing her even before she picked up. She wasn't a girlfriend. She wasn't a partner. She was an asset to be managed, a liability to be contained, and right now, she was being summoned.

She didn't answer. She didn't need to. The vibration was the command.

Anna inhaled, the air in her small safe-house apartment in Queens smelling of stale coffee and the lemon pledge she used to scrub the floors herself. This was her sanctuary, the one place his cameras and trackers couldn't reach. Her real life-the gilded cage of his penthouse-was a forty-minute train ride away. She stood up, her movements mechanical. She walked to the mirror by the door.

The woman staring back had hollow cheeks and eyes that had learned to go flat on command. She smoothed her hair. She adjusted the collar of her blouse. She practiced the expression she needed to wear.

Submission. Fatigue. A little bit of fear.

It was a mask she had perfected over three years. It was the only armor she had left.

The ride to The Vault was quiet. The Uber driver didn't speak, and Anna watched the city blur past the window. Manhattan was a grid of lights and noise, a cage made of steel and ambition. She used to own this city. Now, she was just a ghost haunting its perimeter.

The Vault was one of those private clubs that prided itself on exclusion. The heavy wooden doors were guarded by men in suits who looked like they wrestled bears for fun.

Anna stepped out of the car. The humidity of the New York summer clung to her skin. She walked up the steps, her heels clicking on the stone.

The head of security, a man named Marcus who had known her father for twenty years, stepped in front of her.

"ID," he said.

He didn't look her in the eye. He looked at a spot somewhere above her left ear.

"Marcus," she said softly. "It's me."

"ID, Ma'am," he repeated. His voice was flat.

Anna felt the heat rise in her neck. It wasn't shame. It was anger, hot and sharp, but she swallowed it down. She opened her purse, her fingers trembling slightly as she fished out her driver's license.

She handed it to him. He pretended to inspect it, taking his time, letting her stand there while a group of men in bespoke suits walked past her without a second glance.

"You're clear," Marcus said, handing it back.

The door opened.

Grayson's assistant, a woman named Chloe who wore stilettos that cost more than Anna's monthly rent, was waiting in the lobby. Chloe didn't say hello. She just turned on her heel and started walking.

Anna followed.

They moved through the corridor, the air growing cooler, the scent of expensive cigars and aged whiskey growing stronger. Chloe stopped at a heavy oak door at the end of the hall. She opened it and stepped aside.

Anna walked in.

The VIP room was dimly lit. Leather sofas lined the walls, and a low glass table was cluttered with crystal tumblers and bottles of liquor that cost thousands of dollars.

Grayson Warren sat in the center of the main sofa.

He was wearing a charcoal suit, the jacket discarded, his white shirt unbuttoned at the collar. He looked effortless. He looked like a king holding court.

He didn't look up when she entered. He was laughing at something the man next to him said. The man was fat, balding, and wearing a watch that was too big for his wrist.

Anna stood by the door. She folded her hands in front of her. She waited.

She was a piece of furniture. She was a lamp. She was a rug.

Minutes ticked by. The laughter died down. The clinking of ice against glass filled the silence.

Finally, Grayson turned his head. His eyes, the color of cold slate, landed on her. There was no warmth in them. There was only assessment.

He lifted a hand and curled his fingers. Come here.

It was the gesture one used for a dog.

Anna walked forward. Her legs felt heavy. She stopped in front of the table, the leather of the sofa brushing against her knees.

Grayson didn't tell her to sit. He held out his empty glass.

Anna took it. Her fingers brushed against his. His skin was cold from the ice. A jolt of revulsion went through her, starting in her stomach and traveling up her spine. She forced her face to remain blank.

"Well, look what the cat dragged in," the balding man said, his eyes raking over her. He knew exactly who she was. "Grayson, you still haven't managed to get rid of the Briggs family ghost? She looks more like a cheap waitress every time I see her."

Grayson smiled. It was a sharp, cruel thing.

"This is Anna," Grayson said. "The Briggs family legacy. Or should I say, their liability."

Laughter erupted around the room. It was loud and wet and ugly.

Anna felt the blood drain from her face. She turned away, moving to the bar cart in the corner. She needed to breathe. She needed to not scream.

She picked up the bottle of scotch. Her hands were shaking. She gripped the neck of the bottle tighter to steady them.

In the mirror behind the bar, she could see the reflection of the room. She could see Grayson.

He had placed his phone on the table. He was scrolling, his thumb flicking carelessly.

This was her chance. Anna poured the drink slowly. As she walked back to the table, she feigned a stumble, her body lurching forward.

"Watch it!" the balding man grunted.

Her hand, holding a cocktail napkin, shot out to steady herself against the table. The napkin landed directly beside the phone. For a fraction of a second, her lipstick case, which she'd palmed from her pocket, made contact with the back of his device. A tiny, imperceptible vibration confirmed the data transfer. It was a high-risk gambit, a data skimmer designed to clone short-range wireless protocols. It captured everything-recent texts, encrypted keys, location data. It was the digital equivalent of picking his brain.

Her heart hammered against her ribs. This was it. This was the leverage.

"Anna!"

Grayson's voice cracked like a whip.

She jumped, splashing a drop of amber liquid onto the mahogany counter. She turned around, the glass in her hand.

"Bring it here," he ordered.

She walked back to the sofa. She set the glass down in front of him.

Grayson didn't pick it up. He looked at her, then at the glass, then back at her.

"Toast with us," he said.

Anna froze. "I don't drink, Grayson. You know that."

"I know you pretend not to drink," he said. He reached for the bottle on the table and poured three fingers of neat scotch into a fresh glass. He held it out to her.

"Drink," he said softly.

The room went quiet. The other men were watching now, sensing the sport.

"Grayson, please," she whispered.

His eyes hardened. The playfulness vanished.

"For Warren Capital's quarterly earnings," he said. "Drink it. Or do you not want your allowance this month?"

It wasn't a request. It was a test of obedience. He wanted to see if she would break. He wanted to remind her who held the leash.

Anna looked at the glass. The liquid looked like poison.

She reached out and took it. Her hand trembled visibly now. She didn't care. Let them see the fear. It made the deception easier.

She lifted the glass to her lips. The smell of alcohol was overpowering. She tipped her head back and swallowed.

Fire.

It burned her tongue, her throat, her esophagus. It hit her empty stomach like a fist. She coughed, a harsh, racking sound that made her eyes water.

Grayson smiled. He reached out and patted her back. His hand was heavy between her shoulder blades.

"Good girl," he murmured, leaning in close so his breath brushed her ear. "Remember, your trust fund is just a signature away from disappearing."

Anna felt bile rise in her throat. She clamped a hand over her mouth.

"Bathroom," she choked out.

Grayson waved a hand dismissively. "Five minutes. Don't make me send Chloe."

Anna turned and walked as fast as she could without running. She pushed through the heavy door, down the hall, and into the women's restroom.

She locked the stall door. Her knees gave out, and she sank to the floor.

She didn't vomit. She didn't cry.

She reached into her purse and pulled out the tube of lipstick. She twisted the base, connecting it to a small burner phone hidden in a secret compartment of her bag. The cloned data began to upload to a secure server.

A preview of the text files appeared on the tiny screen.

`offshore accounts routed through Cayman...`

`short position on Tressel confirmed...`

`RICO implications if we don't clear the ledger...`

She took a shaky breath, her voice a raspy whisper into the phone's encrypted app. "Tressel Industries. Short position. Cayman routing. RICO implications. He's moving the money tonight."

She wiped the device and shoved the lipstick back into her bag.

She stood up and walked to the sink. She turned on the cold water and splashed it on her face. She looked at herself in the mirror.

The fear was gone. The submission was gone.

Her eyes were sharp. Her jaw was set.

She dried her face with a paper towel. She took a deep breath, letting her shoulders slump, letting the life drain out of her expression again.

She unlocked the door.

It was time to go back to work.

Continue Reading

Other books by Alfred

More
Reborn Surgeon: The Billionaire’s Secret Obsession

Reborn Surgeon: The Billionaire’s Secret Obsession

Modern

5.0

Standing on the edge of a limestone quarry in the pouring rain, I thought we were just having another family argument. Then my mother, Ardell, screamed that I’d let the life insurance lapse, and my brother, Hakeem, stepped out of the shadows with a cold, calculating look in his eyes. I told them I knew the truth—that Hakeem had cut the brake lines on my father’s car—but they didn't flinch. Instead, Hakeem shoved me hard, sending me tumbling into the abyss. I hit a jagged ledge thirty feet down, the sound of my spine snapping like a dry branch echoing through the rain. As I lay paralyzed and broken, my mother watched from above, asking if I was dead yet, before Hakeem whistled for the starving wild dogs that lived in the quarry floor. "Nature will clean up the mess," Hakeem said, walking away while the first set of teeth sank into my throat. The agony was a tidal wave, but the rage was hotter, a nuclear hatred for the family that stole my future and the daughter I’d never see grow up. I died in that dirt, consumed by fire and teeth, wondering how a mother could choose a car payment over her own child's life. But then, I gasped for air, sitting bolt upright in my old trailer bedroom. I looked at the calendar: May 12, 2014. I was seventeen again, but I wasn't the same girl. Inside this malnourished body was the mind of a world-class trauma surgeon and the elite hacker known as 'Phantom.' This time, I wasn't going to the quarry; I was going for their throats.

He Chose A Fake Heir Over His True Wife

He Chose A Fake Heir Over His True Wife

Mafia

5.0

My husband studied the fertility report on his desk with the same cold precision he used to order executions. On our fifth anniversary, he didn't give me diamonds. He checked his Rolex and delivered the sentence that ended my life. "Your genetic profile is defective, Catarina." He didn't just ask for a divorce. He pressed a button on his intercom, and a woman walked in. She was loud, chewing gum, and wearing a dress that was too tight. "This is Aria," Alex said, his voice flat. "She is a vessel. She will carry the heir your body cannot produce." He claimed it was just business, that she would be exiled once the child was born. But at my birthday gala, when Aria tripped into a champagne tower, the truth shattered along with the glass. I was the one bleeding, a jagged shard slicing my arm. But Alex didn't look at me. He threw his body over her. He cradled his mistress, screaming for a doctor to check the baby, while I stood there with blood dripping onto the marble floor, completely invisible. I watched him give his own blood to save her in the clinic later that night. I saw the way he looked at her—not like a vessel, but like a prize. He thought I would stay. He thought I was the obedient Mafia wife who would raise his mistress's child to save the family image. So when he handed me a stack of papers to "protect the assets," he was too arrogant to read them. He didn't notice the header read *Decree of Divorce*. While he was busy buying baby clothes for a child that didn't even exist, I wiped my identity from the servers, signed the papers he blindly authorized, and boarded a one-way jet to Paris. By the time he realizes his "heir" is a fraud, I will already be a ghost.

You'll also like

While I Was Bleeding Out, He Lit Lanterns For Her

While I Was Bleeding Out, He Lit Lanterns For Her

Katie Oettgen

As I lay on the floor of our manor, bleeding out from a ruptured ectopic pregnancy, I used my last ounce of strength to call my husband, Cole. I begged him for help, my vision blurring. But the only thing I heard was the clinking of champagne glasses and his mistress's giggle in the background. "Stop the drama, June," Cole snapped, his voice cold. "We're about to go on stage. Don't call again." He hung up, leaving me to die alone on the Persian rug while he accepted an award with another woman on his arm. I woke up in the hospital days later. My baby was gone. They had removed my fallopian tube. Cole finally arrived, smelling of expensive scotch and his mistress's perfume. He didn't hug me. He didn't cry. Instead, he leaned over my hospital bed, pressing his knee into the mattress until my fresh stitches tore open and bled. "You embarrassed me by calling an ambulance," he hissed. "My mistress, Alycia, says you're faking it. Clean yourself up." He left me bleeding again to go announce a $10 million donation to Alycia's "groundbreaking" medical research. I stared at the TV screen, numb. The research Alycia was taking credit for? It was mine. I wrote that patent years ago under a pseudonym. They thought I was just a poor, orphan housewife who needed Cole's money to survive. They had no idea I was actually a billionaire scientist hiding my identity. I pulled the IV needle out of my arm. A drop of blood fell onto the divorce papers I had been hiding. I didn't wipe it off. I signed my name right over it. Then I walked into the bank, reactivated my dormant account with $128 million, and bought the penthouse directly overlooking Cole's house. The mourning widow is dead. The avenger is born.

No Longer Mrs. Cooley: The Architect's Return

No Longer Mrs. Cooley: The Architect's Return

Xiao Xiaosu

I went to the City Clerk’s office for a routine copy of my marriage license to finalize a trust fund audit. I expected a simple piece of paper, but the clerk’s pitying look told me my entire life was a lie. "The license was never finalized, Ms. Oliver. In the eyes of the state, you are single." The three-hundred-guest wedding at the Plaza and the Vogue features meant nothing. My husband, Gray Cooley, had intentionally filed the documents with a "procedural defect" so he could discard me without a legal divorce. Moments later, an iCloud invite titled "Our Little Secret" popped up on my screen. It was a photo of my best friend, Brylee, holding a positive pregnancy test at our Hamptons estate. Gray’s text to her was the final blow: "Happy anniversary, babe. This baby is the best gift. Once the trust unlocks today, we’re done with the charade." I soon discovered they were even stealing my career, reassigning my architectural masterpiece to Brylee while preparing my eviction notice. Gray's mother called me a "barren mule" in a leaked recording, mocking the infertility I suffered after saving Gray’s life in a construction accident. I wasn't a wife; I was a three-year placeholder used to secure his inheritance. How could the man I bled for treat me like a disposable prop? How could my best friend carry his child while pretending to comfort me through my darkest moments? The betrayal burned until it turned into a cold, hard stone of fury. I didn't cry. Instead, I walked into the penthouse of the Barretts, the Cooleys' most powerful rivals. I signed a marriage contract with Kane Barrett, the man the tabloids called the "Beast of Wall Street." "I want a wedding," I told his father, my voice steady and lethal. "Bigger than the one I had with Gray." If they wanted me gone, they would have to watch me become the woman who owns their world.

Flash Marriage To My Best Friend's Father

Flash Marriage To My Best Friend's Father

Madel Cerda

I was once the heiress to the Solomon empire, but after it crumbled, I became the "charity case" ward of the wealthy Hyde family. For years, I lived in their shadows, clinging to the promise that Anson Hyde would always be my protector. That promise shattered when Anson walked into the ballroom with Claudine Chapman on his arm. Claudine was the girl who had spent years making my life a living hell, and now Anson was announcing their engagement to the world. The humiliation was instant. Guests sneered at my cheap dress, and a waiter intentionally sloshed champagne over me, knowing I was a nobody. Anson didn't even look my way; he was too busy whispering possessively to his new fiancée. I was a ghost in my own home, watching my protector celebrate with my tormentor. The betrayal burned. I realized I wasn't a ward; I was a pawn Anson had kept on a shelf until he found a better trade. I had no money, no allies, and a legal trust fund that Anson controlled with a flick of his wrist. Fleeing to the library, I stumbled into Dallas Koch-a titan of industry and my best friend's father. He was a wall of cold, absolute power that even the Hydes feared. "Marry me," I blurted out, desperate to find a shield Anson couldn't climb. Dallas didn't laugh. He pulled out a marriage agreement and a heavy fountain pen. "Sign," he commanded, his voice a low rumble. "But if you walk out that door with me, you never go back." I signed my name, trading my life for the only man dangerous enough to keep me safe.

The Placeholder Bride's Secret Billionaire Revenge

The Placeholder Bride's Secret Billionaire Revenge

Luo Ye

For two years, I was the invisible force behind tech billionaire Kieran Douglas, convinced that our "private" romance was his way of protecting us from the tabloid spotlight. I managed his mergers, warmed his bed, and waited for a future that didn't exist. The illusion shattered at 6:00 AM when a Page Six alert debuted Kieran's "real" romance with socialite Aspen Schneider. Before I could even process the betrayal, Kieran sent me a cold, professional text: "Order flowers for Aspen. Pink peonies. Her favorite." When I tried to walk away, my own mother called me a disgrace and threatened to lock my inheritance forever unless I married a sixty-year-old businessman to save her failing estate. At a high-society gala that same night, Aspen intentionally crushed my burned hand in front of the cameras, while Kieran stood by and dismissed me as a "mediocre assistant" who had overstayed her welcome. I stood in the cold New York rain, drenched in champagne and humiliation, realizing that every sacrifice I made for Kieran was a joke. I was a ghost in a penthouse that was never mine, discarded the moment his "soulmate" returned. To the world, I was just a placeholder whose time had run out. But Kieran forgot one thing: my father's multi-million dollar trust fund unlocks the moment I legally marry. I didn't need love; I needed a signature and a shield. I walked into a discreet law firm and signed a marriage contract with a man I believed was the city's most notorious, scandal-ridden playboy. I thought I was marrying a degenerate "beard" to buy my freedom and secure my revenge. I didn't realize the man who signed that paper wasn't a playboy at all, but Gaston Collins-the most powerful and dangerous man on Wall Street-and he had no intention of letting our fake marriage stay fake.

Cheated On Me? I Married a Tycoon

Cheated On Me? I Married a Tycoon

Rum Runner

I spent three years building my husband, Axel Farrell, into Silicon Valley's ultimate "family man." As his lead PR strategist, I carefully managed his public image, making sure the world saw him as a perfect, devoted husband while I worked in the shadows of our estate. The illusion shattered when he came home one night smelling of sandalwood and roses, with three deep fingernail scratches carved into his back. When I tried to check his phone, the passcode we had used for years-our wedding anniversary-had been changed. The betrayal got worse the next morning when his mother called me a "defective product" and tried to force me into a fertility clinic. Axel didn't defend me; instead, he shoved me against a marble bar at a public gala to protect his mistress in front of the world's elite. By the time I tried to leave, Axel had frozen my bank accounts and filed a forged legal petition to have me declared mentally incompetent. He planned to have me legally kidnapped and locked in a private psychiatric ward just to stop me from filing for divorce. He even blocked every major law firm in the city from taking my case, leaving me with no money, no identity, and no one to turn to. I couldn't understand how the man who "saved" me from the mud years ago could be the same monster now trying to legally erase my existence. Was our entire marriage just a grooming process to exploit my genius for his billion-dollar empire? As the deadline for my forced commitment approached, I stopped crying and opened my laptop. I leaked the video of his affair to every tech journalist in the country, watching his stock price crash in real-time. "Axel thinks starving me out will make me crawl back to him," I whispered as I walked into the headquarters of his biggest rival. "But he forgot that the most valuable part of his company is in my head." I was no longer the abandoned wife; I was the one who was going to take his throne and burn it to the ground.

Chapters
Read Now
Download Book
Broken Doll's Revenge: The Heiress's Sting Broken Doll's Revenge: The Heiress's Sting Alfred Billionaires
“I was Grayson Warren's "broken doll," a disgraced socialite kept on a short leash to pay off my family's debts. To the world, I was a fragile liability; to Grayson, I was a pet he could humiliate for sport, forcing me to play the role of a mentally unstable girl while I secretly gathered evidence against his empire. The cruelty peaked when Grayson forced me to break three years of sobriety in front of his investors, mocking my struggle before making me kneel on a golf course to scrub his shoes. He treated my life like a game, literally betting my sanity against a corporate board seat while he soft-launched a new relationship with a high-profile PR queen. When the pressure triggered a massive panic attack, Grayson abandoned me in a private clinic just so he wouldn't miss a dinner reservation. Even my own mother turned against me, threatening to leak my psychiatric records and brand me a "violent delusional" if I didn't beg for Grayson's forgiveness. I was trapped between a man who owned my debt and a mother who valued her estate over my daughter's life. I realized then that they would never let me go; they would only break me until there was nothing left. They thought they had erased my soul, but they forgot I was the only witness to the night my true love, Felix, was murdered. I was done being the victim. I faked a suicide jump off the Queensboro Bridge to go off the grid, then crashed Grayson's elite gala in a dress that signaled his downfall. Just as Grayson tried to physically crush me one last time, the room went silent. Felix Law, the man the world thought was dead for three years, walked out of the shadows with a federal warrant in his hand. "Take your hands off her, Warren." The game didn't just change; it ended. Felix was back from the dead, and this time, we were burning the empire to the ground together.”
1

Chapter 1 No.1

30/01/2026

2

Chapter 2 No.2

30/01/2026

3

Chapter 3 No.3

30/01/2026

4

Chapter 4 No.4

30/01/2026

5

Chapter 5 No.5

30/01/2026

6

Chapter 6 No.6

30/01/2026

7

Chapter 7 No.7

30/01/2026

8

Chapter 8 No.8

30/01/2026

9

Chapter 9 No.9

30/01/2026

10

Chapter 10 No.10

30/01/2026

11

Chapter 11 No.11

30/01/2026

12

Chapter 12 No.12

30/01/2026

13

Chapter 13 No.13

30/01/2026

14

Chapter 14 No.14

30/01/2026

15

Chapter 15 No.15

30/01/2026

16

Chapter 16 No.16

30/01/2026

17

Chapter 17 No.17

30/01/2026

18

Chapter 18 No.18

30/01/2026

19

Chapter 19 No.19

30/01/2026

20

Chapter 20 No.20

30/01/2026

21

Chapter 21 No.21

30/01/2026

22

Chapter 22 No.22

30/01/2026

23

Chapter 23 No.23

30/01/2026

24

Chapter 24 No.24

30/01/2026

25

Chapter 25 No.25

30/01/2026

26

Chapter 26 No.26

30/01/2026

27

Chapter 27 No.27

30/01/2026

28

Chapter 28 No.28

30/01/2026

29

Chapter 29 No.29

30/01/2026

30

Chapter 30 No.30

30/01/2026

31

Chapter 31 No.31

30/01/2026

32

Chapter 32 No.32

30/01/2026

33

Chapter 33 No.33

30/01/2026

34

Chapter 34 No.34

30/01/2026

35

Chapter 35 No.35

30/01/2026

36

Chapter 36 No.36

30/01/2026

37

Chapter 37 No.37

30/01/2026

38

Chapter 38 No.38

30/01/2026

39

Chapter 39 No.39

30/01/2026

40

Chapter 40 No.40

30/01/2026