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The Billionaire's Surprise: Her Secret Twins

Chapter 4 No.4

Word Count: 676    |    Released on: 02/02/2026

chant, driving the price of the Midn

elve? Twelve million to th

ar, her earpiece hidden by her hair. "S

nk's compliance algorithm fla

ten minutes,"

on," the auct

on lifted his paddle la

t painting. Intelligence suggested it contained encrypted data trails leading

ranson Reeves took that painting into his R&D lab, it would be

she whispered

on the floor

was bidding against him? He raised

warned in her ear. You do

on the velvet pedestal. It was her ch

dows. She grabbed a spare

aid. Her voice wasn't loud,

er. The pink sequins fla

idened. It was her. The woman with the gaff

entin. "She's trying to drive the pr

toast to her, then signaled th

om the bank: Transaction Declined.

in her hand. She couldn't go higher. If she bid and couldn't pay, she

ered th

eves for fifty m

ed. It sounded

burning. She needed to

time she reached the lobby, Branson was coming down the g

He was tall, looming over her, sme

pping with condescension. "For someone who had

dry, burning with a cold fire. "You hav

eople like you. You think if you make enough noise, so

rsonal space. "Guard that canvas with your life," she whispered. "Because thi

him, knocking him

ard the exit. He felt a strange buzz i

ou?" Quentin asked, a

es narrowing. "I want to know who sent her.

phone. Her hands were shaking

s for the Reeves Tower's climate control syste

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The Billionaire's Surprise: Her Secret Twins
The Billionaire's Surprise: Her Secret Twins
“I returned to the Reeves estate after five years in exile, not as the rightful heir, but as an outcast. My father had been dead for only a month, and my uncle Julian had already claimed his mahogany desk, his face tight with a greed he no longer bothered to hide. Julian didn't even look up as he slid a check for a hundred thousand dollars across the wood. "A settlement," he sneered. "Sign the waiver, take your bastards, and disappear. We don't want you embarrassing the family name anymore." One hundred thousand dollars for a legacy worth billions-it was an insult designed to draw blood. When my five-year-old twins, Leo and Mia, ran into the room, Julian looked at them with pure disgust, calling them vermin and ordering them out. He threatened that if I didn't sign, I'd be on the street in a week, stripped of the Reeves name and every penny of protection. Even the family lawyer looked away as he helped facilitate my ruin. I tore the check to shreds and walked out into a freezing deluge, shielding my children while the doors of my childhood home slammed shut behind us. I spent years building a secret life as a high-level corporate fixer, yet when I crossed paths with Branson Reeves-the man who shared my son's eyes-he treated me like a common gold-digger. He outbid me for the "Midnight Orchid" painting, the only piece of evidence that could bring Julian down, mocking my "thrift store" clothes while my children slept in a borrowed guest room. How could they all be so blind? How could a family be so ready to destroy its own blood for the sake of a ledger? I was done hiding in the shadows. When Julian finally launched a hostile takeover to seize the entire empire, I walked into Branson's penthouse, dropped my "poor niece" facade, and threw a decrypted file onto his desk. "The game is over, Branson. Give me that painting, and I'll show you exactly how to bury the man who thinks he's already won."”