Chapter 1
True Tycoon Her Empire, Her Rules
Chapter June blazed with a passion as fierce as the midsummer sun.
Winnie Henderson barely crossed the threshold of the sprawling mansion when a suitcase thudded to the ground beside her with a resounding bang.
An elegantly dressed woman, the epitome of affluent disdain, stood at the entrance, her gaze descending upon Winnie. Her eyes flitted across Winnieâs delicate features and smooth skin, a flicker of envy quickly giving way to unmasked contempt..
âIâve had your things packed up,â she announced with icy finality. âAs of today, youâre out of this house. Go back to your biological parents!â
Winnie didnât even glance at the suitcase lying forlornly at her feet. Instead her cold gaze locked with that of Suzan, the woman she had called âMotherâ for seventeen years.
The commotion at the door drew the attention of people inside the house. Soon enough, accompanied by his son and daughter, Barton Henderson emerged from the depths of the home.
Barton eyed the suitcase at Winnieâs feet, then his wife, his tone tinged with reproach. âSuzan, what are you doing? No matter what, weâve been raising Winnie for eighteen years.â
âSheâs nothing but an ungrateful bitch!â Shouting, Suzan glared at Winnie, âI made it clear that I wanted her to step aside for Kathryn in the cityâs ambassador selection. She ignored my wishes completely! She wouldâve kept it from us if I hadnât checked the final list. She wouldnât have stolen this from her sister if she had any conscience!â
After hearing her motherâs words, Kathryn Henderson allowed a shadow of resentment to pass fleetingly across her eyes before she masked it with an air of hurt innocence. With feigned sadness, she said, âMom, please donât be like this. Getting to represent our city is a unique opportunity. I can understand if Winnie didnât want to let it go. Maybe thereâs something Iâm not doing well enough, or why wouldnât they choose me?â
âYou are every bit as good as Winnie. What she has is thanks to our family.â Suzanâs voice softened as she comforted her daughter.
Winnie silently watched the motherâdaughter act, a scene sheâd been audience to countless times throughout her life. Her heart remained calm, and she Three days prior, Winnie had been struck by a car while saving Kathryn, flung twenty meters through the air. Everyone thought she wouldnât make it.
When Suzan and the Henderson family arrived at the scene, their first concern wasnât for Winnieâs injuries but to console a crying Kathryn, who was scared out in the accident.
Lying on the ground, Winnie felt a chill in her limbs, but what froze her heart was overhearing Barton and Suzanâs conversation.
âWith the carâs front smashed in, she probably wonât survive.â
âThatâs for the best. If Winnie dles, itâll show sheâs shielded Kathryn from the bad luck. She wasnât raised for nothing.â
Winnie had always known she was only a tool for the Henderson family, meant to shield Kathryn from Ill luck.
As a child, she couldnât understand why she had to attend to Kathryn around the clock. whenever Kathryn fell ill, and why Kathryn always recovered quickly under her care, while she would then fall severely sick.
It wasnât until she met her mentor and received his insights that she learned about the cosmic balance between her and Kathrynâs destinies. And she was the better half of that balance.
The Henderson family had raised her with Kathryn to use her fortune to counterbalance the misfortune in Kathrynâs life. With each disaster, her good fortune was diverted to Kathryn, whose destiny improved while her own took a turn for the worse.
Had Winnie not been prepared, she might have exhausted her luck and died in that car accident. three days ago.
That very accident had led her biological parents to her doorstep unexpectedly.
âAre you done? Can I leave now?â Winnie asked icily.
Having heard the cold discussion of her potential death, the last shred of expectation Winnie held for the Henderson family had vanished. She felt no attachment to leaving the Henderson family.
âWinnie, donât blame your mother. You were in the wrong here.â Barton finally stepped forward, his face as stern as ever. âNow that your birth parents have come for you, you should go with them.â
Kathrynâs voice was tender and timid as she spoke. âWinnie, donât get mad at Mom. Sheâs doing this for me.â
Then, she unexpectedly handed an envelope, her gesture seemingly considerate. âHereâs a thousand dollars. I heard from Dad that your real parents live way up,in the mountains and they are poor. I wanted to give you more, but Dad said those from.mountainâ¦â Kathryn hesitated. âWell, itâs better not to carry too much cash there.â
Suzan cut in bluntly. âKathryn, youâre too kind. Thereâs no need to sugarcoat it. Weâve heard. that men in the mountains buy their wives because they canât find one. Winnie, with your looks, you might get sold off when you arrive. Besides, you wonât get into college if your grades are average. Marriage might be the best thing for you.â
She scoffed, continuing, âDonât say we havenât remembered our years of kindness. A thousand dollars is more than enough for year in the mountains. Weâve been more than good to you.â
Winnie looked at Suzanâs selfârighteous expression and couldnât be bothered to argue. As for the money, she had no intention of accepting it.
She reached for her suitcase, ready to leave, but then her gaze caught the bracelet on Kathrynâs wrist.
With a swift motion, Winnie grabbed Kathrynâs wrist. âHow did you get this bracelet?â
Kathryn had intentionally prepared cash instead of a bank transfer, aiming to flaunt her charity and the bracelet. Winnie had noticed it and grasped her wrist so abruptly that she feigned shock and yelped in pain. âOuchâ¦â
When Kathryn cried out, Suzanâs face darkened, and she quickly pulled Winnieâs hand away.
âWinnie! What are you doing?â
But Winnieâs eyes remained fixed on Kathryn, her voice cold. âThatâs the bracelet Grandma left for me.â
âWhat are you talking about? Itâs not your bracelet,â exclaimed Suzan, her voice rising. âThat heirloom was for the Henderson girls, and youâre no longer one of us. The bracelet rightfully belongs to Kathryn!â
Winnie clenched her jaw, her grip on her suitcase tightening a little before she released it and turned to face Barton, the patriarch of the Henderson family.
âI could leave without taking a thing from this house, but that bracelet is different. Itâs all I want. Thatâs what Grandma left for me.â
If there was anything in the Henderson family that still tugged at Winnieâs heartstrings, it was her grandmother. She was the only one who had ever shown Winnie genuine affection in the family. Even in her final moments, her grandmother fretted about how Winnie would cope without her.
That bracelet was the only token of remembrance from a woman who meant the world to her.
Barton listened to Winnieâs plea, his expression hardly changing. âYou may be adopted, but Iâve always treated you as my flesh and blood. The Henderson family is respectable, and we donât send our daughters away emptyâhanded to fend for themselves. Your birth parents might not be wellâoff, but you should take what belongs to you.â
However, when it came to the bracelet, Barton remained conspicuously silent.
At that moment, Kathryn interrupted with a strained innocence. âWinnie, I know how much your cherish that bracelet, but it was Grandmaâs. How about this? Iâll transfer some money to you, okay? Would ten thousand be enough? Or maybe twenty thousand?â
The insinuation was clear. Kathryn suggested that Winnieâs attachment to the bracelet was merely a means to get money.
Winnieâs gaze turned icy as she fixed Kathryn with a steely look.