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THE HEIR'S REVENGE Novel Cover

THE HEIR'S REVENGE

Steve Reynolds was a penniless student facing a world that despised him. His life shattered when his girlfriend abandoned him for a wealthy rival, leaving him humiliated. However, a sudden revelation of his true heritage grants him immense power and riches. No longer the victim, Steve transforms into a formidable billionaire. He returns to confront those who mocked him, ready to unleash a calculated revenge on everyone who fueled his downfall.
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Chapter 3

Three days after Lumière, Steve lost his first job.

The manager at Ming's Noodle House, a wiry man named Gerald who had never shown particular interest in Steve's existence, called him into the back office between the walk-in freezer and the mop closet. He didn't sit down. Neither did Steve.

"You're the kid from the video," Gerald said.

It wasn't a question.

"Gerald, I just wash dishes. What does a video have to do with..."

"Customers recognized you. One of them made a TikTok from the booth. 'Eating at the same restaurant as the Lumière guy.' We're a noodle house, Steve. We don't need that kind of attention."

"That kind of attention? I didn't do anything."

Gerald looked at him with the uncomfortable expression of a man who knew he was being unfair but had already made his decision. "Last check's in the mail."

The FreshMart let him go two days later. The shift supervisor, a woman named Dana who had once given him an extra granola bar when he looked particularly hollow, delivered the news while avoiding eye contact.

"Corporate saw the video. They have a social media policy. Any associate who becomes a... a distraction..."

"A distraction."

"I'm sorry, Steve. I really am."

She looked like she meant it. That somehow made it worse.

The tutoring program was the last to fall. Not because of the video directly but because the students stopped showing up. Two of them told him outright, via text, that they didn't want to be seen with "that guy." One of them added a laughing emoji. Steve stared at that emoji for a long time, trying to understand how a small yellow circle could carry so much cruelty.

In the span of one week, the video had been viewed 2.3 million times. Steve knew the number because he kept checking, the way a person keeps touching a wound to confirm it still hurts. The comments section was a landfill of opinions from people who knew nothing about him but felt entitled to dissect his worth as a human being.

"Bro was punching above his weight and didn't even know it."

"She did what she had to do. Survival of the fittest."

"Imagine being this broke AND this publicly humiliated."

His phone rang on a Tuesday morning. The caller ID said NYU Financial Aid. He answered with the specific dread of someone who already knows bad news is the only kind that calls.

His scholarship was under review. Not because of grades. Because the scholarship required proof of employment, and he had just lost all three sources. Without the scholarship, he could not afford the semester. Without the semester, four years of grinding through poverty and sleeplessness and sacrifice would amount to a piece of paper he would never receive.

Steve sat on his floor mattress and did the math. No income. Seventeen dollars, now whittled to eleven after subway fare and a bodega sandwich he had eaten standing up in the rain because the awning was already occupied. Rent due in nine days. Electric bill past due. A refrigerator that contained exactly one egg, a bottle of hot sauce, and hope that had curdled like old milk.

He picked up his phone and scrolled to Lois's number. His thumb hovered. Not because he wanted her back. The wanting had burned itself out somewhere around the fifty-thousandth comment. He hovered because he needed to understand. He needed some explanation that made the last two years and three months something other than a complete lie.

He put the phone down.

Then picked it up again.

Then put it down.

Then threw it at the wall.

The screen cracked. A spiderweb of fractures spread from the corner, distorting the notifications that continued to arrive like digital vultures circling something that was still breathing.

He skipped classes Wednesday. And Thursday. On Friday, he walked to campus because habit is a powerful thing and his body moved through routines even when his mind had checked out. He sat in the back of his macroeconomics lecture and took notes in handwriting that grew progressively smaller, as though he were trying to disappear into the margins.

After class, a girl approached him. He recognized her vaguely. Campbell something. Nursing program. She had dark brown hair and a face that held the kind of quiet beauty that doesn't demand attention but earns it anyway. She had spoken to him a few times before. Brief exchanges. A borrowed pen in the library. A shared opinion about the campus coffee being objectively terrible.

"Hey," she said. "Are you okay?"

Four words. Simple words. But they were the first words anyone had directed at him in eight days that did not contain pity, judgment, or a request for him to vacate a position he no longer held.

"I'm fine."

She studied him the way someone in a medical program studies symptoms. With attention. With the understanding that what people say and what is actually happening are rarely the same thing.

"You don't look fine."

"Then why'd you ask?"

She didn't flinch. Didn't retreat. Just tilted her head slightly and said, "Because sometimes people need to hear the question even if they're not ready to answer it."

She left before he could respond. He watched her walk away and felt something crack open in his chest that he immediately sealed shut because he could not afford to feel anything right now. Feeling was expensive. Feeling cost energy he did not have.

That night, he sat in his apartment with the lights off because the electric company had made good on their threat. Darkness and silence and the distant sound of a city that kept moving no matter who fell behind.

A knock on the door.

Steve didn't move. It was probably the landlord. Probably a conversation he was not equipped to have.

The knock came again. Louder. Deliberate.

"Mr. Reynolds. My name is Knox Ballantine. I'm an attorney with Whitfield, Ballantine, and Associates. I need to speak with you about a matter of considerable urgency."

An attorney. Steve almost laughed. What was left to take? His eleven dollars? His cracked phone? His single egg?

"I'm not in any legal trouble," Steve called through the door.

"No, Mr. Reynolds. You are not. But I have information regarding your father."

Steve went very still.

His father. A ghost. A name his mother never spoke. A silence so complete that Steve had eventually stopped asking and filled the void with the assumption that whoever the man was, he had not wanted Steve enough to stay.

"I don't have a father."

"That," said the voice on the other side of the door, "is precisely what we need to discuss."

Steve opened the door.

Knox Ballantine stood in the hallway in a suit that probably cost more than the building's monthly mortgage. He was mid-fifties, silver at the temples, with the kind of face that had been shaped by courtrooms and confidential conversations. He held a leather briefcase like it contained something alive.

"May I come in?"

Steve stepped aside. Knox entered, surveyed the apartment without visible judgment, and remained standing because there was nowhere to sit that wasn't the floor.

"Mr. Reynolds, what I'm about to tell you will fundamentally alter the course of your life. I need you to hear all of it before you respond."

"Just talk."

Knox opened the briefcase. Removed a file. Placed a photograph on the counter next to Steve's eleven dollars.

The photograph showed a man. Dark hair like Steve's. Same jawline. Same eyes. The kind of eyes that held something stubborn and burning and unkillable.

"This is Garrett Reynolds. He was the founder and CEO of Reynolds Global Technologies. He was worth approximately twelve point three billion dollars at the time of his death."

Steve looked at the photograph. Then at Knox. Then back at the photograph.

"He was also," Knox said quietly, "your father. And you, Mr. Reynolds, are his sole heir."

The room tilted.

Eleven dollars on the counter.

Twelve point three billion in a dead man's name.

And Steve Reynolds, standing in the dark between both numbers, trying to remember how to breathe.

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