She Woke Up Rich, Then Broke The Plot That Wanted Her Kneeling-eirian

I woke up in a bedroom that looked like a magazine had swallowed a palace.

The ceiling was high enough for a chandelier, the curtains were thick cream silk, and the woman crying over me wore pearls at ten in the morning.

“Lena, baby, please look at me,” she said.

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I opened my eyes and nearly asked why my landlord had renovated.

Then the memories hit.

I was no longer the exhausted office worker who had blacked out after three coffees and one impossible deadline.

I was Lena Carson, only daughter of the Carson family, heiress to Carson Media, and one of the two richest fools in a romance novel I had read the night before.

The other fool arrived three minutes later.

Tessa Quinn burst through the door in a blue silk robe, stared at me, and whispered, “Did you also die from overtime?”

I almost cried from relief.

The housekeepers thought we had made peace after years of fighting over Brock Harlan.

They did not know Tessa and I had once split discount noodles in a rented apartment where the heater worked only when threatened.

They did not know we remembered the book.

In that book, Brock was a rising actor with a perfect jaw and the moral depth of a puddle.

He used my money to climb.

He used Tessa’s family connections to get endorsements.

Then he turned around and worshiped Mara Vale, the soft-voiced heroine who never seemed to ask for anything while somehow taking everything.

Original Lena nearly signed away half of Carson Media to prove she loved Brock more than Mara.

Original Tessa starved herself after Brock mocked her body, then ruined her brother’s career trying to lift Brock higher.

Tessa and I stood in my closet, surrounded by handbags worth more than our old annual salaries, and made a vow.

No more money.

No more begging.

No more feeding a man who called hunger devotion.

Brock texted first.

Send the Lamborghini. Tell Tessa to bring my new endorsement contract.

I called a freight company and ordered the oldest truck they had.

When we rolled up outside his private club in a dented silver hauler, his friends were already filming him waiting for a supercar.

“Your ride is here,” I said.

Tessa leaned across my lap and added, “It has room for your ego.”

The clip spread before lunch.

So did the cancellations.

Carson Media pulled its funding from his projects.

Quinn Entertainment froze every endorsement Tessa had once begged her family to give him.

Brock called us childish.

Then he ordered me to come pay his club bill.

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