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The Billionaire's Secret Twins: Her Revenge

Chapter 4 No.4

Word Count: 749    |    Released on: 12/01/2026

ked plastic, and a driveway filled with Bentle

cost more than a small house, but it did nothing to hide the cruelty in her eye

ping champagne. "I heard she's living in a motel in

oup ti

lass of water, trying to be invisible. Her family's pharmaceutical supp

ed her. Her

ilot fish," Candi sneered, l

"Hello, Candi.

is she? Did she roll here? Or d

n't like that anymor

or screen lowered from the ceiling behind the small stage.

as Katarina from five years ago, mid-bite in

erupted i

ghed. "Disgusting. She wa

She stared at the floor, wishing

O

the ballroom were thrown open with enoug

d. The laught

acklit by the foyer lights. A long t

Click

the marble floor echoe

oat. She shrugged it off, letting the expensive

led throug

shed high on the thigh, low on the back. Her skin was luminous, glowing

crowd. She walked str

at?" a man

t a cel

ed. The woman walked with a confid

reached out a hand, her fingers long an

d. Her voice was smoky, ric

into those eyes-the only

Bella b

isper

hrieked. "That

The movement was fluid, lethal. She looked at C

Katarina said. "

shaking finger. "You're a fake! You had surg

he walked over to the projector controls. She h

otos," Katarina said, walkin

screamed. "Dadd

he saw Katarina. His eyes didn't show love; they showed calcul

said, spreading his

lding up a hand. She didn'

a stack of the printed photo

next to Francis, his jaw practically on the floor. H

on breathed

e with Candi. Candi was wearing heels, bu

otos so much?" Kat

the stack

t t

-

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The Billionaire's Secret Twins: Her Revenge
The Billionaire's Secret Twins: Her Revenge
“I was four months pregnant, weighing over two hundred pounds, and my heart was failing from experimental treatments forced on me as a child. My doctor looked at me with clinical detachment and told me I was in a death sentence: if I kept the baby, I would die, and if I tried to remove it, I would die. Desperate for a lifeline, I called my father, Francis Acosta, to tell him I was sick and pregnant. I expected a father's love, but all I got was a cold, sharp blade of a voice. "Then do it quietly," he said. "Don't embarrass Candi. Her debutante ball is coming up." He didn't just reject me; he erased me. My trust fund was frozen, and I was told I was no longer an Acosta. My fiancé, Auston, had already discarded me, calling me a "bloated whale" while he looked for a thinner, wealthier replacement. I left New York on a Greyhound bus, weeping into a bag of chips, a broken woman the world considered a mistake. I couldn't understand how my own father could tell me to die "quietly" just to save face for a party. I didn't know why I had been a lab rat for my family's pharmaceutical ambitions, or how they could sleep at night while I was left to rot in the gray drizzle of the city. Five years later, the doors of JFK International Airport slid open. I stepped onto the marble floor in red-soled stilettos, my body lean, lethal, and carved from years of blood and sweat. I wasn't the "whale" anymore; I was a ghost coming back to haunt them. With my daughter by my side and a medical reputation that terrified the global elite, I was ready to dismantle the Acosta empire piece by piece. "Tell Francis to wash his neck," I whispered to the skyline. "I'm home."”