When Olivia's young mother faced an impossible choice—keep her child or lose her inheritance—she made the heartbreaking decision to abandon the newborn Olivia at an orphanage. Growing up, Olivia never stopped hoping that one day she'd find a family of her own. That chance came when she turned 14 and the wealthy Hilton family adopted her. But reality hit her hard as soon as she realized she was merely a replacement for the Hiltons' missing daughter, Caroline. On Olivia's 24th birthday, the Hilton family announced her marriage to Clayton Bradford, four years her senior, the most sought-after bachelor in town, and the man she had secretly loved from afar. She thought he could learn to love her too. But four years later, he still couldn't forget Caroline. Just as Olivia discovered she was pregnant, Caroline returned, shattering any chance she had of Clayton truly loving her. Faced with the painful reality that she could never compete with his first love, Olivia asked for a divorce and left her husband.
View More"Witch! Look at her weird eyes!"
The shouts rang across the rain-swept yard of St. Therese Orphanage. Fourteen-year-old Olivia quickened her steps and pretended not to hear a word. "Freak with the devil's eyes!" Asher, the oldest boy, yelled from behind her. He was sixteen and mean as an ogre; teasing her was his favorite pastime. Olivia kept her head down, watching her worn-out shoes make tracks in the mud, one foot after another. Just make it to the building. Just make it inside, she repeated the words in her head like a mantra. But she wasn't fast enough. A hard shove sent her face-first into a dirty puddle. Water and mud filled her nose and mouth. The children laughed; not a single one offered help. "Show us your witch eyes!" Sarah screamed. She used to be Olivia's roommate until she told Sister Anne that she was scared Olivia would curse her in her sleep, so she was transferred to another room. Olivia lifted her face from the ground, but Asher pushed her back with his knees. Her back hurt like hell, but she couldn't move an inch. She cursed her eyes for how they looked. Her eyes had two different colors, one blue and one green. It made her stand out, made the other children single her out and torment her endlessly. "Maybe if we wash her face enough, we can cure her!" Sarah suggested. Hands grabbed Olivia's head, and they dunked her face deeper into the dirty puddle. They held her under until her lungs burned. Just when she thought she would die, they yanked her head up. Olivia coughed while gasping for air. "Again!" someone shouted. But before they could push her down, a sharp voice cut through the chaos. "WHAT IS GOING ON HERE?" The hands holding Olivia disappeared instantly. She heard feet scrambling away, leaving her alone in the mud. "She fell, Sister Anne!" Asher was the one who spoke. "We were just trying to help her up," he added, and every kid present agreed with him. Olivia stayed on her hands and knees, water dripping from her hair and nose. She didn't have to look up to see the disdain in Sister Anne's eyes. She could feel it piercing her skin. "Is this true, Olivia?" Her fingers dug into the mud. What was the point of telling her now? Sister Anne never believed her anyway. "Yes, Sister," she whispered. "I fell." "Then what are you waiting for? Get up! We have the Hilton family visiting us! They're our most generous benefactors, and I expect you to be presentable when they arrive." Olivia felt a rush of shame. She slowly pushed herself off the ground. Everything hurt, her back where Asher had pinned her, her chest from fighting for air, her heart from the familiar ache of being so alone. Sister Anne's footsteps fade away. She heard Asher and Sarah laughing at her before they followed suit. Rain began to pour from the sky. Olivia looked up. At least no one could tell she was crying. — In the small room she shared with four other kids, Olivia peeled off her mud-soaked dress. Her reflection in the small mirror showed angry red marks on her back where Asher had pinned her down. They would turn into bruises by morning. She pulled on her only other dress, a plain pink one with a white patch on the elbow. It wasn't nice enough for meeting important visitors, but it was all she had. The brass bell rang, making her jump. Everyone would be gathering in the main hall to meet the Hiltons. She reached for the door handle. It refused to open. "No, no, no..." She rattled it harder, panic rising in her chest. Someone had locked her in. Probably Sarah. Or Asher. It was always one of them. Olivia could hear footsteps in the hallway. "Hello?" She knocked on the door. "Please, someone let me out!" Nobody answered. Minutes felt like hours. When she finally heard footsteps again, the door flew open. Sister Anne towered over her, her lips pursed into a thin, tight line. "I was locked in," Olivia stammered. "Someone—" "Enough excuses!" Sister Anne grabbed her arm, fingers digging in like claws. "Always causing me trouble!" Sister Anne dragged her down the stairs, through the hallway, into the bright dining hall where everyone waited. Mr. Hilton froze the moment his eyes landed on Olivia, while Mrs. Hilton's hand flew to cover her mouth. “Honey, she looks like Caroline,” Mrs. Hilton mumbled under her breath. Sister Anne cleared her throat. "Mrs. Hilton, I apologize for keeping you waiting. I will help you select a child to adopt. We have many wonderful children here. Sarah, for example, is very pretty and the top of her class—" "We'll take her," Mrs. Hilton said, pointing at Olivia. Sister Anne couldn't contain her surprise. Her hand cradled her head as though she’s having a headache. "Olivia is... is a difficult child. Troublesome. Surely you'd prefer—" "We've made our decision." Mr. Hilton's deep voice left no room for argument. "We'll take her. Please prepare the paperwork right away, Sister Anne. She's coming with us today." Olivia stood frozen. This couldn't be real. Things like this didn't happen to her. Good things didn't happen to the girl with what the kids in the orphanage called ‘the girl with witch eyes.' But Mrs. Hilton was smiling at her, eyes brimming with tears. And for the first time in forever, someone was looking straight into Olivia's strange eyes without flinching away. "Would you like to come home with us?" Mrs. Hilton asked gently. Olivia couldn't speak. She could only nod. Behind her, she could feel Sarah's eyes slicing through her like a knife, Asher's angry curse, Sister Anne's teeth grinding. But none of it mattered anymore. Because someone had chosen her. Someone had looked at her, really looked at her, and wanted her anyway. — The car pulled up in front of an iron gate that slowly opened with a creak. Olivia pressed her face against the window as they drove up a long driveway lined with perfectly manicured trees. The house at the end wasn't just a house, it was a mansion, bigger than anything she'd ever seen. "Welcome home," Mr. Hilton said when the car stopped in the driveway. "Let me show you your new room," Mrs. Hilton said, taking her hand. Olivia entered her new room, her worn-out shoes sinking into the plush pink carpet. The space was bigger than any room she'd ever seen, with floor-to-ceiling windows draped in flowing pink curtains, a queen-sized bed with mountains of pillows, and topped with a delicate canopy that made it look like a princess would lie in it. Her fingers trembled as she touched the soft bedspread. At the orphanage, her thin mattress had lumps and springs that poked through her frame, and her blanket was scratchy wool that made her skin itch at night. "The bathroom is through here, dear," Mrs. Hilton said, leading her to another door. Olivia's jaw dropped. The bathtub could fit three people. Back at St. Therese's, she shared one tiny bathroom with twelve other girls, and the water was freezing cold. "Do you like it, dear?" Olivia nodded, not trusting herself to speak. Everything felt like a dream she might wake up from at any moment. They walked back into the room, and for the first time, her eyes landed on the portrait hanging on the wall. The girl appeared to be about her age and looked just like her; if it weren't for her eyes, Olivia would have thought it was a portrait of herself. “T-that's C-Caroline," Mrs. Hilton whispered. “My daughter." Olivia couldn't look away from the face resembling hers. "We lost her a year ago," Mrs. Hilton continued, dabbing at her eyes with a silk handkerchief. "We were on a cruise ship when she fell off..." Her voice broke completely. Olivia finally understood the Hiltons' instant decision to adopt her. She wasn't chosen because they wanted her. She was chosen because she looked like their dead daughter. She was just a replacement.“CODE RED. CODE RED. DR. HILTON TO EMERGENCY.”Olivia's butt barely touched her office chair when the loud voice boomed through the ceiling speakers. "Not now," she whispered, pushing herself up, regret in her blue and green eyes as she eyed her Starluxe coffee.Today was particularly grueling. This morning, she had spent countless hours assisting Dr. Wilson, the expert neurosurgeon, who performed three separate surgeries, one of which was a complex spinal tumor removal that lasted five hours. Her feet ached in her sensible shoes, and all she wanted was five minutes to sit down and drink the coffee that was now going cold on her desk.The emergency department was two floors down, and even though the elevator would be faster, she took the stairs. Too many times she'd been stuck in a slow elevator during an emergency.She practically sprinted through the hallway in an unladylike manner that would make Mrs. Hilton faint in horror if she saw her.Slightly out of breath, the familiar chaos
Olivia arrived late because her car broke down in the middle of the road. It took the auto repair shop personnel thirty minutes to arrive and tow her vehicle. She took a cab to the Bradford Estate. The party was in full swing when she entered. The music was loud enough to break her eardrums, and the scent of alcohol and smoke wafted through the air. She had attended various parties before, but this one was different. People were everywhere, shouting and laughing. A woman in jeans stood on a table, finishing a beer mug. Two bare-chested guys were doing a sexy dance while the surrounding group cheered. For the first time in Olivia's life, she didn't mind the noise. The sound was a lullaby that soothed her soul, making her forget that her life was a mess. Here, she could be herself, drink to her heart's desire—although she hadn’t done that before. She could even dance if she wanted to. She pushed through the crowd, ignoring the hellos and waves from strangers. Clayton was easy to s
After the graduation ceremony, the Hiltons held a party for Olivia, and the whole graduating class was invited. Mrs. Hilton raised her crystal glass high in the air and made a toast, "For my daughter who graduated at the top of her class and whose awards and certificates could fill this room like wallpaper. Congratulations." Her adoptive mother was looking right at Olivia but seeing past her. In her mind, she was congratulating another child who no longer existed. Olivia hid her pain behind a smile, the same one she’d worn for years, which no one seemed to look at closely enough to notice the cracks beneath. Everyone raised their glasses. She raised hers too, congratulating herself not for her achievements but for being strong enough to keep living this ‘bullshit of a life’ with a smile on her face. Throughout the night, people kept coming up to her. She faced everyone with a smile until her jaw hurt. It was halfway through the party when she realized Clayton wasn't there. She
Four years had passed, and time had worked its strange magic. Olivia's eyes, which had once made her a target of cruel bullying at the orphanage and caused Clayton Bradford to call her a freak, had become her most striking feature. At seventeen, Olivia walked the halls of Cordova Academy with a grace that turned heads. Her mismatched eyes—one as green as spring leaves, the other as blue as a summer sky—had become an attraction. Boys stumbled over their words when she passed by in the hallways, and the art students begged to paint her portrait. In photography class, Olivia became the most requested model. The photography teacher, Ms. Shanon, called her "a work of art." Girls who once would have mocked her features back in freshman year now visited expensive boutiques, searching for colored contact lenses to mimic her look. But none could replicate the natural beauty she possessed. When prom season arrived, her locker overflowed with invitations. The football captain, a famous polit
Not long after the Hilton family left, a sleek black Rolls-Royce pulled into the orphanage driveway. Sister Anne was still fuming about losing Olivia when she emerged to greet the visitor. Her anger vanished instantly at the sight of the woman stepping out of the car. Four men in dark suits immediately surrounded her. The woman was breathtaking, but what made Sister Anne's heart stop and caused her breath to catch in her throat were her eyes—one green, one blue. "I'm looking for a child my father left in this orphanage fourteen years ago," the woman's voice was soft but commanding. Her perfectly manicured fingers brushed a strand of dark hair from her face. "My daughter wore a locket. She also has a mole on her back." Sister Anne's face drained of color. She had seen that mark on Olivia once when she changed her clothes. She also recalled seeing her wearing an old necklace, which she had thought was ugly, but now, considering its value, she no longer thought of it that way. "This
"Witch! Look at her weird eyes!" The shouts rang across the rain-swept yard of St. Therese Orphanage. Fourteen-year-old Olivia quickened her steps and pretended not to hear a word. "Freak with the devil's eyes!" Asher, the oldest boy, yelled from behind her. He was sixteen and mean as an ogre; teasing her was his favorite pastime. Olivia kept her head down, watching her worn-out shoes make tracks in the mud, one foot after another. Just make it to the building. Just make it inside, she repeated the words in her head like a mantra. But she wasn't fast enough. A hard shove sent her face-first into a dirty puddle. Water and mud filled her nose and mouth. The children laughed; not a single one offered help. "Show us your witch eyes!" Sarah screamed. She used to be Olivia's roommate until she told Sister Anne that she was scared Olivia would curse her in her sleep, so she was transferred to another room. Olivia lifted her face from the ground, but Asher pushed her back with his knee
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