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One Heart, Which Brother?
One Heart, Which Brother?
ผู้แต่ง: TemsRay

Chapter 1

ผู้เขียน: TemsRay
last update ปรับปรุงล่าสุด: 2025-05-27 03:36:03

I woke up to the sound of Daphnie’s loud knock against the thin wooden door of our apartment.

“Liana! Wake up! It’s our birthday!” she shouted from the hallway.

I groaned, rolling over in bed. My blanket clung to me like it knew I wasn’t ready to face the day. Not because I didn’t love birthdays but because turning eighteen meant stepping closer to… life. The real kind. The one that wasn’t always tucked away behind the DeLewunco estate’s pristine gates.

I heard my mom humming in the kitchen probably making her special birthday pancakes even though she had to be at work by seven. She was the senior housekeeper for the DeLewunco family, had been for almost twenty years. And me? Well, I’d always just been her daughter. The girl who wasn’t allowed to clean, or really do much of anything except stay out of the way and go to school. Mrs. DeLewunco insisted I focus on my education, and they’d paid for it all uniforms, books, everything.

I wasn’t staff. But I wasn’t exactly family either.

Still, growing up in the staff quarters on their estate meant I’d spent almost every day with Daphnie. We were born on the same day, raised under the same roof just opposite ends of it. Her in the mansion, me behind it. And despite everything, she’d never made me feel less.

“I swear to God, if you’re still in bed, I’m breaking in!” Daphnie’s voice snapped me out of my thoughts.

“Coming!” I called back, scrambling to get up.

When I opened the door, she was already halfway inside. Blonde curls bouncing, her pajamas way too fancy for sleep. She grinned, holding two paper crowns.

“Your Majesty,” she said dramatically, placing one on my head. “Eighteen. Officially grown women. The world isn’t ready.”

“Speak for yourself. I haven’t even combed my hair.”

“Details.” She waved her hand. “You can fix it after breakfast. First pancakes. Then planning.”

I narrowed my eyes. “Planning what?”

She grinned. “Our confessions.”

My stomach did a flip. “Daph”

“No backing out, Liana. Tonight, after the party, you’re telling Reuben how you feel. And I’m telling Jayson. No excuses, no delays, no what-ifs.”

I felt my cheeks burn. “He’s barely looked at me, Daphnie. He probably still thinks I’m the weird kid who used to chase frogs in the garden.”

“First of all, that was adorable. Second, you’ve grown up. Trust me, he’s noticed.”

I doubted that. Reuben was the firstborn, already neck-deep in family business. He was rarely home, and when he was, he wasn’t exactly... approachable. Sharp jawline, darker eyes, always dressed like he’d walked out of some luxury ad. But to me, he was just Reuben the boy I’d quietly loved for years, even though he never had a reason to love me back.

Then there was Kendrick. The second son. If Reuben was ice, Kendrick was fire warm, golden, and impossible to ignore. He treated me and Daphnie like equals. Like we mattered. He laughed at our dumb jokes, sat with us during breakfast, and never made me feel like I didn’t belong.

He was around more too. Even this morning, when the party prep had the house in chaos, Kendrick still managed to pop his head into the staff wing with a muffin in hand and a crooked smile.

“Birthday girls,” he’d said, offering it to Daphnie. “You’ve got frosting on your nose.”

“It’s a glow-up,” she replied proudly, licking it off.

He chuckled, then turned to me. “You okay?”

I nodded, feeling that strange flutter I always got when he looked at me like that. Like he actually saw me.

“Don’t forget,” he added, “you’ve got two hours before the house turns into a circus.”

“I won’t,” I’d promised.

And now, a few hours later, the mansion was already buzzing. Staff moving like clockwork, silver platters gleaming, florists running in and out. The DeLewunco family didn’t do simple. Their kind of wealth wasn’t just money it was power. Influence. Legacy. The kind of wealth that made politicians whisper and CEOs beg for dinner invites.

And somehow, in this big, gilded world… they’d made space for me.

The party was in full swing by late afternoon. Daphnie looked like a dream in her sapphire gown.

Daphne was effortlessly beautiful, the kind of girl who didn’t need to try to shine she just did. Her long, golden hair shimmered like sunlight,Her hazel eyes sparkled with mischief and warmth, always full of energy and unspoken plans. She was bold, outspoken, and unafraid to chase what she wanted, especially when it came to love. Daphne had a natural confidence, the kind that drew people in without effort. She could light up any room with her laughter and charm, and even though we weren’t related by blood, she was more than just my best friend she was my family, my anchor, my sister in every way that mattered.

 I wore something she’d picked out for me cream silk, subtle but beautiful. I felt like a guest, not a ghost in someone else’s house.

There were laughs, toasts, speeches. Kendrick danced with us, made us laugh so hard we cried. He even pulled my mom in for a dance, and she nearly fainted.

But Reuben never showed.

Daphnie tried to pretend it didn’t bother her, but I knew it did. He was her big brother too. And she wanted him there. For her, for me.

“You okay?” Kendrick asked as he handed me a glass of punch.

I smiled, a little too tightly. “Yeah. Just tired.”

He didn’t push. Just stood beside me, quiet for a moment. “He’ll come around, you know.”

I didn’t ask who. I didn’t need to.

“I’m not waiting for him,” I lied.

He gave me a small smile. “You don’t have to.”

The sun began to set, casting golden light across the backyard where strings of fairy lights blinked like stars. Music played low in the background, and the last of the guests lingered by the dessert table.

Daphnie pulled me aside, her eyes dancing. “Tonight. After everything winds down. You and me. Operation Confession.”

I laughed. “You’re serious?”

“As a heart attack. This is our year, Liana. Eighteen changes everything.”

I looked around at the life I’d always known, the people I’d always loved, and the boy I couldn’t stop thinking about… even when he wasn’t there.

Maybe she was right.

Maybe it really would.

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  • One Heart, Which Brother?   Chapter 13

    Chapter 13 — The Gala NightIt was the night everyone had been waiting for the Delwinco family's gala event.An annual affair of class and spectacle. But this year, it was more than just tradition. This year, it was about me and Ruben.Our engagement was finally going to be announced publicly.The mansion was alive with glowing chandeliers, golden threads of laughter, and the clinking of glasses. The Delwuncos were hosts, yes but more than that, they were thrilled. The engagement meant more than just a celebration. It was a symbol. A merging of two very different worlds: theirs and mine.Even my mum was glowing with silent pride.She never said it directly, but I could feel it in her eyes. She was given the whole day off to prepare her first in months. She practically danced around the house, humming old love songs, fussing over the perfect dress, turning our small space into a fitting room full of scattered shoes and hair pins.“Lia,” she beamed, spinning in her wine-colored gown, “D

  • One Heart, Which Brother?   Chapter 12

    The week moved slowly, dragging its weight across my shoulders like wet cloth. At school, whispers chased me down the hallways. I could feel the stares, even when I didn’t look up.People noticed. Of course, they did.I didn’t wear the engagement ring. I didn’t even know where it was. Ruben hadn’t brought it up since that evening, and I hadn’t asked. He gave me space but not too much. Like he was hovering, waiting for me to say yes again, this time when there weren’t twenty people watching.Daphne still wouldn’t speak to me.She passed me in the halls like I was invisible. I wanted to pull her aside, tell her everything tell her how it wasn’t planned, how none of this was but every time I opened my mouth, my heart dropped into my stomach.Because she was right. I hurt Ken. I hurt her. I hurt myself.Prom was just days away now. The posters were everywhere: “A Night Under the Stars” printed in cursive gold. My friends asked if I’d still go. I said maybe. I lied. I knew I wouldn’t.Coll

  • One Heart, Which Brother?   Chapter 11

    I didn’t sleep that night.Even long after I changed out of the dress and washed off the makeup, Daphne’s words clung to my skin like something I couldn’t scrub off. You’re a whore. The way she said it like I wasn’t her best friend, like she didn’t know me sliced deeper than anything Ruben or Ken had ever done.I kept replaying everything. The garden. Her face. Her voice. The storm in her eyes.I didn't even say yes. Not really. I nodded like a coward caught in headlights. But maybe the damage had already been done long before then.I didn’t go to school the next day. My chest felt too tight. My head, too heavy. I stayed in bed, staring at the ceiling, trying to remember who I even was before all this. Before Ruben. Before Ken. Before that dinner table that turned my entire world inside out.By afternoon, my mother knocked gently and peeked in. “You okay, Lia?”I didn’t answer immediately. I just nodded, and that seemed to satisfy her. She didn’t push. She never did.Later, I finally g

  • One Heart, Which Brother?   Chapter 10

    It had been two weeks since I last saw Ken.Two weeks of silence… of pretending… of guilt burrowed so deep in my chest, I could barely breathe without tasting it.School didn’t help. It was numbing and mechanical. I moved through the halls like a ghost. No one noticed not even Daphne. Not the way she used to. And honestly, I was thankful for it. I didn’t want to lie to her again.That evening, I came home exhausted. My feet ached, my brain fogged from back-to-back review classes and college forms I hadn’t even started filling out. When I passed by the Delwunco estate, I heard music, laughter spilling out of the windows, distant clinking of glass but I didn’t stop. Whatever celebration they were having, I didn’t want any part in it.I took a shower, changed into something simple, and collapsed onto my bed… until my phone lit up.Daphne: Family dinner, hope your attending.I couldn't say I wouldn't attend, even mum would attend.My mum was already getting dressed by the time I walked int

  • One Heart, Which Brother?   Chapter 9

    I stayed home from school that day. Not because I needed rest though God knows I did, but, because Mom hadn’t been feeling well. She’d woken up with a pounding migraine, barely able to sit up, and I couldn’t imagine leaving her alone.Her job meant everything to her, and the fact that she agreed to stay home without protest told me how badly she needed the break.“Sweetheart, can you go to the Delwunco house and grab the lavender oil from the cabinet in my workroom?” she mumbled, shielding her eyes from the light. “Mrs. Delwunco uses it for her sinus aches. I think it’ll help.”“Of course,” I said, kissing her temple before slipping on my jacket.The estate felt different today quieter somehow, colder even in the morning sun. I walked through the gate with ease, a privilege that came with being part of the house even if unofficially. The guards nodded at me like they always did, but everything still felt… off.I made my way up the side entrance, the one my mother used, and quietly ste

  • One Heart, Which Brother?   Chapter 8

    School should’ve been my escape. But nothing felt like mine anymore, not even my mind.Senior year was supposed to feel like freedom. A slow, nostalgic glide toward the finish lineBut for me? It felt like I was stuck. Most of my classmates were floating on air, counting down the days to prom, graduation, and summer plans. Me? I was counting down the days I had to keep pretending everything was fine.My mornings started the same dull announcements crackling over the PA as I walked into World Literature, where we were dissecting Shakespeare’s, Mrs. Dunn loved assigning tragic love stories as if we all had time to romanticize betrayal and passion. Ironic, considering my life felt like a walking tragedy lately.Next came Financial Math, my favorite class. Numbers didn’t lie. They didn’t break hearts or make false promises. They made sense. Mr. Allen said I had a natural knack for marketing calculations and budgeting strategy “You’ll do great in Business School,” he’d say with a wink. I’d

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