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The Abandoned Daughter's Secret Golden Fortune

The Abandoned Daughter's Secret Golden Fortune

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10 Chapters
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After being kidnapped for years and finally rescued, five-year-old Izzy thought she was going home to her wealthy biological family. But when the social worker brought her to the freezing bus station, her biological father, Conrad, didn't even get out of his Mercedes. He took one look at her tangled hair and worn-out shoes, his lip curling in disgust. "I have a real family now. I'm not disrupting my life for this." He drove away, leaving her choking on his exhaust fumes. When her rough, grease-stained uncle Bryan forcefully brought her to the family mansion, things only got worse. Her biological mother refused to touch her, complaining that she smelled like a dumpster. Her half-sister Katelynn pushed her to the ground, making her bleed, and framed her for stealing. Instead of helping, Conrad roared at Izzy, calling her a wild animal and threatening to throw her back onto the streets. Izzy stood there shivering in her oversized rags, watching them stand together in a perfect, unbroken circle. She didn't understand why her own blood looked at her like she was a monster, or why they were so eager to throw a traumatized child back into the dark. But what her wealthy family didn't know was that Izzy had a secret: she could hear plants talking. And the greenhouse orchids were screaming at their cruelty. So, she climbed onto their expensive coffee table, pointed at her mechanic uncle, and made her choice. "I don't want Conrad to be my daddy. I want Uncle Bryan." She walked out of that loveless mansion forever, ready to follow the whispers of an old apple tree in her new backyard-a tree that was about to guide her to a buried fortune of gold.

Contents

The Abandoned Daughter's Secret Golden Fortune Chapter 1

Sandra's hand was warm, but her grip was too tight around Izzy's fingers.

The Greyhound bus hissed as it released its air brakes, the sound cutting through the cold evening air of the Rust Belt town. Sandra, the CPS worker, tugged Izzy forward, her face bright with a smile that didn't quite reach her worried eyes.

"Come on, sweetheart," Sandra said, her voice chirping like a bird trying to sing in a snowstorm. "Let's get that collar straightened out."

Sandra knelt down, her knees popping on the cracked pavement, and tried to smooth the frayed edges of Izzy's shirt. The fabric was so thin it felt like paper. Izzy stood perfectly still, her shoulders hunched up to her ears. Her eyes, dark and hollow, darted across the empty parking lot. The station was a concrete block of misery, the wind whistling through the broken benches.

Sandra stood up, looking around. "They should be here by now," she muttered, her breath pluming in the freezing air.

The parking lot was empty. A discarded newspaper tumbled past a rusted trash can. The silence was heavy, pressing down on Izzy's chest until it was hard to breathe.

Then, a voice-dry, crackling, like dead leaves scraping against asphalt-whispered from the base of the brick wall.

The cold one is here.

Izzy flinched. She looked at the corner where a scraggly patch of weeds was fighting for survival in the crack of the concrete. The weeds were shivering, their roots trembling.

Izzy raised a thin, trembling finger. She pointed toward the far end of the parking lot, where the shadows were deepest. "There," she whispered, her voice barely a breath.

A sleek, black Mercedes purred into the light. It looked alien against the grime of the bus station, its paint gleaming like a wet beetle. It stopped a few yards away.

The driver's window rolled down with a quiet hum. Conrad Solomon sat behind the wheel, a Bluetooth earpiece in his ear, his jaw clenched tight. He didn't look at the bus station. He didn't look for his daughter. He looked straight ahead, like he was waiting for a red light to change.

Sandra's face lit up. "Oh, there he is! Come on, Izzy."

Sandra pulled Izzy forward, her steps quick and eager. Izzy's sneakers scraped against the asphalt. She tried to dig her heels in, but she was too light, too small.

Sandra stopped at the window, bending down with a forced, bright smile. "Mr. Solomon? Hi, I'm Sandra with Child Protective Services. We spoke on the phone. We have Isidora."

Conrad finally glanced over. His eyes swept over Izzy-from her tangled hair to her worn-out shoes. His lip curled, a tiny, involuntary movement of disgust, like he had just stepped in something foul.

He didn't open the door. He didn't undo his seatbelt. He just stared at Sandra, his voice flat and cold. "I don't take this kind of trouble."

Sandra blinked, the smile freezing on her face. "I'm sorry? Mr. Solomon, she's your daughter. The paperwork-"

"The paperwork was a mistake," Conrad cut her off, his tone sharp enough to cut glass. "I have a family. A real family. I'm not disrupting my life for this."

Izzy stood frozen. The cold wind bit through her shirt, but it was nothing compared to the ice in his eyes. He looked at her like she was garbage. Like she was nothing.

"Sir, you have a legal obligation," Sandra said, her voice hardening as she pulled out her phone. "If you don't take custody, we'll have to involve the courts-"

"Go ahead." Conrad sneered. He leaned forward, his eyes locking onto Izzy's. "She hasn't been my responsibility since the day she disappeared. She's your problem now."

He shifted the car into drive.

"Wait!" Sandra reached out, but the Mercedes was already moving.

The tires spun on the asphalt. A cloud of gray exhaust spewed out of the tailpipe, hitting Izzy directly in the face.

The smell of burning oil and sulfur filled her nose. She choked, her lungs seizing up. A violent cough ripped through her chest, bringing a hot sting of tears to her eyes. She doubled over, her tiny frame shaking as the Mercedes sped out of the parking lot, its red taillights disappearing into the dark.

Sandra frantically dialed her phone, her fingers slipping on the screen. "Come on, come on... Evette Solomon isn't answering either," she panicked, pacing in circles.

Izzy straightened up, wiping her stinging eyes. The exhaust lingered in her throat. She looked at Sandra's panicked face, at the empty parking lot, at the dark road where the car had vanished.

She was left behind. Again.

A wave of dizziness hit her. The world tilted sideways. From the corner, the weeds let out a high-pitched wail, a sound only she could hear, a screech of despair that matched the roaring in her ears.

Izzy clamped her hands over her ears, her knees giving out. She crouched on the cold asphalt, her body curling into a tight ball. She couldn't breathe. The panic was a physical weight, crushing her chest, squeezing the air out of her lungs.

"I have to call the office," Sandra said, her voice trembling. "Stay right here, honey. I'll be right back."

Sandra walked away, her phone pressed to her ear, leaving Izzy alone in the dark.

The roar of an engine shattered the night.

It wasn't a quiet purr. It was a guttural, rumbling growl, like an angry beast waking up. Headlights swept across the station, blindingly bright.

A Ford F-150-covered in mud, dented, with rust eating at the wheel wells-slammed to a halt at the curb. The tires skidded on the loose gravel.

The driver's door flew open.

Bryan Solomon jumped out. He was tall, broad-shouldered, wearing a grease-stained mechanic's uniform. His arms were covered in dark ink that snaked up from his wrists, and his knuckles were raw. His face was set in a hard scowl, his brow pulled down low over his eyes.

He looked like trouble. He looked like the kind of man you crossed the street to avoid.

Izzy shrank back, pressing herself against the concrete pillar. Her heart hammered against her ribs, so fast it hurt.

Bryan strode toward her, his heavy boots thudding on the pavement. He stopped a few feet away. He looked down at her-this tiny, shivering creature-and his hard expression cracked.

He dropped to one knee. The concrete crunched under his weight. He was huge, towering over her, but he made himself small. He reached out a hand-rough, calloused, stained with oil-but he stopped an inch from her face, hovering there, afraid to touch her.

"Hey, little one," Bryan said. His voice was deep, a low rumble, but it was soft. Clumsy, like he wasn't used to speaking gently. "I'm your Uncle Bryan. I'm here to take you home."

Izzy looked up. She expected to see anger, or disgust, or the cold indifference that Conrad had shown her.

Instead, she saw fire. Bryan's eyes were blazing with a fury that wasn't directed at her-it was directed at the world that had hurt her. But beneath the fire, there was something else. A warmth. A fierce, protective glow that wrapped around her like a shield.

Bryan shrugged off his jacket. It was a heavy flannel, worn soft from years of use, smelling of motor oil, sawdust, and cheap tobacco.

He draped it carefully over her shoulders. The weight of it was immense, almost swallowing her whole. The fabric was warm from his body heat. The smell was sharp and masculine, nothing like the sterile, frightening smells of the hospitals or the damp mold of the Hawkins's basement.

It smelled like safety.

Sandra rushed over, her phone still in hand. "Who are you? You can't just-"

Bryan stood up, turning his broad back to Izzy, shielding her from the social worker. His eyes were like chips of ice as he looked at Sandra.

"I'm family," Bryan said, his voice dropping an octave. "And I'm taking her."

"Sir, I can't release her to you without authorization," Sandra stammered, stepping back from the sheer intensity of his presence. "Do you even have a stable home? A job?"

"I have a truck and a roof," Bryan shot back, his jaw tight. "That's more than that son of a bitch offered her. Conrad is my brother. Arthur Solomon is my father. Call the old man if you don't believe me. His number is in the system. Or you can leave her here to freeze while you wait for your supervisor to call you back. Your choice."

Sandra opened her mouth, then closed it. She looked at the tiny girl hiding behind the giant man, clutching the hem of his flannel shirt like a lifeline.

Bryan turned back to Izzy. He bent down, sliding one arm under her knees and the other around her back. He lifted her up with a careful, deliberate gentleness that contradicted his rough exterior. He held her like she was made of spun glass, fragile and precious.

Izzy's face pressed against his shoulder. She could feel the hard muscles beneath his shirt, and deeper still, the steady, rhythmic thump of his heart. It was slow. Calm. An anchor in the storm.

Her rigid muscles unspooled. The panic that had gripped her throat loosened. She let out a shaky breath, her fingers curling into the fabric of his shirt.

Bryan carried her to the truck. He opened the passenger door, setting her gently on the worn cloth seat. He reached across her, pulling the seatbelt down. The metal clicked into the buckle, and he tugged it tight, making sure it sat across her chest without choking her. He adjusted the headrest, pushing it forward so her head wouldn't loll.

He closed the door with a solid thunk.

Bryan walked around to the driver's side, glancing in the direction the Mercedes had gone. His hands curled into fists for a second, his knuckles turning white. A silent promise hung in the air-this wasn't over.

He climbed in, slamming his door shut. The engine roared to life, vibrating through the seats.

Bryan shifted into drive and pulled out of the parking lot. The lights of the bus station faded in the rearview mirror. The heat cranked up, filling the cab with a dry warmth.

Izzy's eyelids grew heavy. The adrenaline drained out of her, leaving behind an exhaustion that went bone-deep. She slumped against the headrest, her small hand still tightly gripping the edge of Bryan's shirt.

As the truck drove into the night, she fell asleep, the steady rumble of the engine lulling her into the first peaceful rest she had known in years.

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