Tracy couldn't believe it.
'Elaine is really going to leave and go back to that godforsaken countryside? No way,' she thought. 'This has to be another one of her tantrums, a cheap trick to get everyone's attention, like always.'
In the past, every argument between Elaine and Bianca ended with Elaine threatening, "Fine, I'll just go back to the countryside!"
And every time, it was all talk. She'd sulk, cry, and eventually swallow her pride, sticking around like nothing had happened. The idea of actually leaving? Never.
So this time, everyone just shrugged it off, smirking to themselves. 'Same old Elaine,' they thought. 'She's bluffing again.'
What they didn't realize was that this wasn't the same Elaine anymore. The weak, desperate girl they remembered was gone. Even Shawn didn't see it. He assumed it was just another cry for attention.
After all, Elaine had a track record. When she first came to the Yeats family, she'd worn heavy makeup, hung out with street punks, even gotten into fights.
To Shawn, she was like a kid throwing a tantrum for candy. As long as she didn't step on Bianca's toes, he didn't care. He'd even play the kind older brother when it suited him.
"Well, if that's what you want, there's nothing more I can say." Shawn's voice dripped with false sympathy. "Just make sure you don't come crawling back later, saying I was too harsh."
Elaine's eyes flashed with cold amusement. She knew Shawn's game all too well. He always managed to come off as the reasonable one, even while stabbing someone in the back. It was pathetic.
But honestly, she didn't care anymore.
Her calmness threw him off. Something about her felt different.
"Elaine, stop being so damn stubborn," Robert snapped, his brows furrowed.
"Stubborn?" Elaine arched a brow, her tone sharp and cold. "Weren't you the one who gave me a choice? Now that I've made it—to leave—you're calling me stubborn?"
'Do they really think the threat of sending me back to the countryside would scare me? That I'd beg them to let me stay? Pathetic.' she thought.
They didn't realize that the moment she decided to walk away, none of them mattered anymore. Leaving wasn't punishment—it was freedom.
"Is apologizing to Bianca so hard for you?" Robert's voice rose, his anger barely contained. "Don't think cutting your wrists will get you out of this! If it weren't for you, she wouldn't have fallen into the water! Her lungs are weak as it is!
"God, how did I end up with a daughter as cruel as you? I should've strangled you the day you were born!"
"You've been in this house for years, and I thought you'd finally grown up. But no—you're still the same selfish brat," Tracy Cash snapped, her anger fueled by the thought of Bianca's frailty.
It all started when Elaine and Bianca were standing by the pool. Bianca slipped and fell in, and of course, Elaine was the obvious scapegoat.
Shawn, playing the self-righteous older brother, had given her two options: apologize and accept punishment, or pack her bags and leave for the countryside.
Back then, Elaine had no idea what really happened. But none of that mattered. They'd already decided she was guilty. No one listened to her protests. No one cared about her side of the story. She was branded a liar, a troublemaker, a bad seed.
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Don't know whether to feel happy to read the novels for free or feel frustrated for horrible language and the jumbled letters/words and not able to understand what's written in the chapters 😞😞...