Plot Syndicate
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Rain poured down the quiet street at night. In front of a glowing jewelry store, a well-dressed boy in a brown coat knelt beside a dirty, crying boy in torn clothes.
He gently offered a piece of bread from his paper bag.
“Thank you… I was so hungry,” the dirty boy whispered between sobs.
The two boys hugged tightly on the wet pavement, the richer boy holding the other like a brother.
Suddenly, an elegant woman in a black coat and gloves stormed toward them.
“Get away from him!” she snapped, grabbing her son’s arm.
The well-dressed boy looked up at her, eyes full of tears.
“Mommy… he’s cold.”
The dirty boy slowly lifted his tear-streaked face and met the woman’s eyes.
“You promised you’d come back.”
The woman froze. Her hand slipped from her son’s shoulder. Her face went pale with shock.
The warm bakery smelled of butter and fresh croissants. A teenage boy in a faded gray hoodie held his sobbing two-year-old sister tightly. Her face was dirty, eyes red from crying.
He looked at the counter and asked quietly, “Do you have any bread from yesterday… that you sell cheaper?”
At a nearby table, an elderly man in an expensive black suit sipped his coffee, watching them with a stern face.
The boy’s voice trembled. “Her name is Lily… Our mom is gone.”
Then he reached into his pocket and slowly handed the old man a worn envelope.
On it, written in careful handwriting: “For my father.”
The old man took the envelope. His hands shook as he opened it and began to read. His expression changed from curiosity to deep shock.
Crystal chandeliers glowed over the marble ballroom. Guests in tuxedos and gowns toasted the handsome groom and his glamorous fiancée in her sleek black dress.
The little boy, who had never spoken a single word, suddenly broke free and ran straight to the young housekeeper in her white uniform.
He threw his arms around her and looked up with shining eyes.
“Mommy!”
The fiancée’s smile vanished. She lunged forward.
“Get him off her!”
The housekeeper held the boy tight, tears filling her eyes as she stared at the groom. The groom stood frozen, his face pale with shock.
Then the sharp sound of a slap echoed through the hall.
House of marble. a heart of glass. a truth revealed.
Inside the cold, gleaming foyer of a multi-million dollar mansion, a young woman kneels—not in prayer, but in forced labor. Tears hit the polished marble as she scrubs the floor with her bare hands, while her stepmother watches with a glass of wine and chilling indifference. But the perfect facade of the "happy family" shatters when the front door swings open.
The father stands frozen, his gaze locked on the maid’s uniform worn by his own daughter. In a single heartbeat, the professional silence of the house is replaced by a suffocating tension. As the stepmother’s face turns ashen and her wine sloshes in panic, the era of lies comes to a violent end. Some betrayals are too deep to be cleaned away.
Next Part Is In The Comment Section 👇👇👇
The old woman slowly stepped off the bus, leaning on her cane. She carried an elegant handbag, wore an expensive coat, and had a weary look in her eyes.
Suddenly, she tripped on the last step and fell to the ground.
The passengers stared, but few moved. Then a poor boy ran up to her.
"Ma'am, don't get up!" he said, taking her hand.
The old woman looked at him in surprise.
"Thank you, little one."
The boy opened his backpack and took out an old handkerchief to wipe the blood from her knee.
When the old woman saw the handkerchief, she froze.
It had embroidered initials on it, initials she herself had sewn twenty years earlier for her missing daughter.
"Where did you get that?" she asked, her voice trembling.
The boy replied:
"It was my mother's. Before she died, she told me that if I ever found a woman with eyes like mine, I should tell her the truth."
The old woman began to cry.
"What was your mother's name?" The boy said the name.
The cane fell to the ground.
"It was my daughter..." The boy looked at her, tears streaming down his face.
"Then you're my grandmother."
👉 But the handkerchief concealed a note that revealed who had kept mother and daughter apart for years. See the ending at the link.
Golden autumn leaves drifted across the quiet park. A wealthy man in a sharp gray suit sat protectively with his arm around a young blind girl holding a white cane.
A small dirty boy with tear-streaked cheeks stepped forward.
“I didn’t come for money. I came for her.”
The man’s face tightened.
“What do you know about my daughter?”
The boy’s voice cracked with quiet pain.
“My mom worked in your house… before she disappeared. Before she died. She told me your daughter wasn’t born blind. Someone hurt her.”
The rich man froze, color draining from his face. The girl’s small hand tightened on the white cane.
Crystal chandeliers glowed over racks of designer gowns in the exclusive boutique. An older seamstress in a simple apron gently touched the breathtaking red beaded dress on display.
The elegant woman in the gray suit stormed forward.
“Don’t touch that dress again. It’s not for hands like yours.”
Tears welled in the seamstress’s eyes as she held the shimmering fabric.
“I know this dress better than anyone…”
The rich woman froze, face draining of color.
The old woman’s voice cracked with quiet pain.
“Because I sewed it for my daughter… before you made her disappear.”
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S17208
Davis, CA
17208