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Sold For $1 To The Hawthorne Brothers
Sold For $1 To The Hawthorne Brothers
Author: apoeunice3

Chapter One

Author: apoeunice3
last update Petsa ng paglalathala: 2026-06-15 11:04:53

Alina’s POV

The man holding my arm doesn’t loosen his grip even when I stumble on the marble step.

“Walk,” he mutters under his breath, giving me a shove toward the stage.

My heels scrape awkwardly against the polished floor, the sound swallowed almost immediately by the low hum of voices filling the underground hall.

The room smells faintly of expensive whiskey and cigar smoke, the kind my stepfather used to brag about being able to afford.

I swallow hard, forcing my shoulders back even as humiliation crawls up my spine.

Rows of people sit in shadowed booths, their faces half hidden behind dim golden lights. Everyone looks relaxed and entertained.

Like they’re watching a show.

And I’m the entertainment.

The auctioneer stands behind a podium at the center of the stage. He’s older, silver-haired, dressed in an immaculate tuxedo that probably costs more than everything I’ve ever owned combined.

His eyes flick over me. “Next item,” he announces smoothly.

My stomach twists.

I search the room instinctively until my gaze lands on the only person I know here.

My stepfather sits near the front, a glass of whiskey on the table in front of him. He looks away when I catch his gaze, grabbing his drink.

His hand trembles as he brings it to his lips. Coward.

Two hours ago, he told me we were attending a business party. He told me that he needed me. That I was going to play a huge role in helping out our small family.

I was foolish enough to buy his lie.

Now I’m standing on a stage while strangers look at me like livestock.

The auctioneer clears his throat lightly. “Twenty-one years old,” he continues casually. “Healthy. Educated. No criminal record.”

Someone chuckles and heat floods my face.

My stepfather finally looks up, his face red with shame. He should be. He squandered the money my mother left behind when she died and gambled her company away.

The auctioneer taps the gavel lightly against the podium.

“Opening bid,” he says, voice carrying easily through the room, “ten thousand dollars.”

My head hangs low as I wait for someone to speak.

But there’s only silence. I dare to raise my head and my stomach drops, catching the amused glances in the audience. Someone in the back snorts softly.

***

Ten seconds pass.

Then twenty.

My throat tightens. No one’s bidding. Am I that undesirable?

The auctioneer shifts slightly, clearing his throat. “Five thousand,” he amends.

Still nothing. My face feels like it’s about to explode from the embarrassment. The humiliation is worse than I imagined.

Worse than anything.

Even as a debt payment, I’m apparently not worth the trouble.

The auctioneer sighs quietly, tapping the gavel again.“Very well,” he says. “One dollar.”

One dollar? I turn to him, my eyes wide as saucers as laughter ripples across my room. He shrugs, nonchalantly. One dollar. From five thousand to the lowest currency.

My stepfather looks shocked when I find him in the crowd, but he says nothing. He rubs the back of his neck, muttering something under his breath.

I’m not sure what he thought—that selling his daughter would make him a fortune. I was never worth much to him anyway.

I stare at the floor, wishing it would open and swallow me whole.

“One dollar,” the auctioneer repeats lazily. “Do I hear any bids?”

A long moment passes.

Then a low voice cuts cleanly through the air.

“One dollar and one cent.”

The room goes silent. My head snaps up and I scan the room frantically, searching for the buyer. I see a paddle towards the back, raised high.

Three men sit around a shadowed table near the back of the hall. They’re dressed in suits, leaning back into their chairs. An uneasy ripple race down my spine.

Are they friends? Brothers? The one at the right lowers his paddle, but I can feel him looking straight at me. My pulse skitters in warning.

I squint, but it’s hard to make out their faces from where I stand. Any of them at all.

I feel the auctioneer goes stiff beside me. My gaze strays over and he’s gone a shade lighter. He clears his throat; smiling tensely. “Sold to the Hawthorne Brothers for one dollar and one cent!”

The room erupts in a scatter of applause and more laughter, but my thoughts are racing faster.

Hawthorne.

I’ve heard the name before…somewhere. The man to the right moves slightly and I catch a glimpse of his face when it catches the light.

My blood turns ice cold. Adrian Hawthorn.

The Hawthorne brothers—Adrian, Julian, and Lucien. The ruthless owners of Hawthorne Holdings, the same company that swallowed my stepfather’s business whole two months ago.

A sharp, hollow laugh bubbles up in my chest before I can stop it.

Of course it’s them.

My stepfather didn’t just sell me tonight. He sold me to the men who ruined him.

For one dollar. And a cent.

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  • Sold For $1 To The Hawthorne Brothers    Chapter Forty-Three

    I flinch as a motorcycle pulls up beside me, engine revving. Shane swings off it, yanking his helmet free. “Hey.” He falls into step beside me without missing a beat. “I haven’t seen you all week. Two weeks, actually. I thought about messaging you, but after what happened at the club…” He trails off, rubbing the back of his neck. “Also, I realized I didn’t have your number.” I frown slightly. The club? Oh. With everything I’d been through this past week — almost getting kidnapped, having some combination of black market paralytic agents injected into me, fighting for my life, the nightmares, the flashbacks to my teenage years, the hospital checkup where I nearly fainted in the waiting room — I completely forgot that I’d ditched Shane the night Marcus dragged us out, because Julian showed up out of nowhere and whisked me to the pizza place. And the Russians. I can’t forget the Russians. They’d kicked the whole thing off — showing up at the house, then ambushing

  • Sold For $1 To The Hawthorne Brothers    Chapter Forty-Two

    “Are you sure?” he asks again. I nod. “I need you.” His hands guide me without rushing, and I tilt my head back, meeting his darkened gaze, full of heat and affection that makes my heart stutter and swell. His arousal nudges at my entrance, and I turn, with some help, to straddle him. I reach into the water, stroking him with the soapy water slipping between my fingers. He groans as he leans in, kissing me. “god, you’re perfect.” I lift a little and sink again, taking him inch by inch. My body protests from the aches all around, but the pressure only makes me want him more. The stretch, as I take him in, is so exquisite it steals my breath. I gasp against his lips as his arms circle my waist. “Don’t move,” he whispers. “Not yet.” We stay like that—joined and breathing in each other as the water lapped at our skin and sloshed over the tub’s edge. “You’re tight,” he murmurs as he kisses my neck, resting his head on my chest. His hands slide up and down my back and st

  • Sold For $1 To The Hawthorne Brothers    Chapter Forty-One

    The ride home from the hospital is quiet. Adrian doesn’t let go of my hand the entire way, his shoulder carrying the weight of my droopy head. When the car stops and he carries me inside like I weigh nothing, his arms are careful not to press against the bruises I can’t even see yet. “I asked Grace to run a bath for you,” he says. I realize, when he doesn’t take the stairs, that he’s not taking me to my bedroom. He pushes open a door, carrying me through space with muted wall colors, and then he pushes through another door. The faint smell of lavender and warm sandalwood fills the air as he carries me into the bathroom. Steam curls lazily from the surface of the massive marble tub in the middle. My body feels like it has been run over by a truck, and every muscle screams when he gently sets me down. “I’ll be outside,” he murmurs, walking away and closing the door softly behind him. I manage to get the thick pair of cotton sweatpants off, pausing several times

  • Sold For $1 To The Hawthorne Brothers    Chapter Forty

    “You don’t know what the fuck is wrong with her?” a voice snarls somewhere nearby. “It’s your job. Your goddamn job to make sure she stops passing out every fucking second.” I toss from side to side, my head lolling against the pillow as I fight to surface through the thick fog weighing down my body. Every sound feels distant, muffled, as if I’m listening from underwater. “Sir—” another voice cuts in, calmer, male. A doctor, maybe. “I promise you, we’re doing everything we can.” My eyelids flutter, but they refuse to stay open. “We couldn’t properly identify what was in her system before,” the doctor continues, “but we’ve administered the right antidote. She should be awake any minute now.” A sharp exhale follows. “Any minute now?” the first man snaps. “That’s what you said three hours ago.” My brow furrows. I know that voice. The anger in it feels familiar, wrapped around something raw and desperate. “Her vitals are stabilizing,” the doctor says carefully. “That’s

  • Sold For $1 To The Hawthorne Brothers    Chapter Thirty-Nine

    Julian clears his throat. “Ahem. I think I’ll wait outside so you two can talk.” I don’t look at him. Adrian doesn’t, either. I take a deep breath as the door closes, feeling the heat of his gaze as it clouds the room. “It was my fault,” I launch into my explanation before he can speak, “so I should be the one to fix it.” “You?” His brows arch sharply as he crosses the room in angry strides. “Did you meet up with the man Gerald wanted to sell you off to, agree to be drugged with a black-market drug, while planting the Russians to ambush me?” He bites the words out one by one, his eyes darkening and his voice rough. “Did you tell him the only way to stop Julian from tearing the head off his body for laying a hand on you was to kill him?” I shake my head slowly, the fight—that I didn’t have in the first place—in me dying. My chest tightens as his gaze softens, his hand closing around mine. I bite my lip, fighting tears as his thumb strokes my inner palm, soothing the ache in

  • Sold For $1 To The Hawthorne Brothers    Chapter Thirty-Eight

    I wake up to a glare too bright for my eyes to focus, and a marching band taking up all the room in my head, banging their drums mercilessly. I struggle to adjust to the light, lifting my hand that weighs a thousand pounds to my face to shield some of the glare. Muffled sounds reach my ears, like jumbled speech underwater, and a moment later, the room dims. “Alina?” A rough, warm voice fills my ears. My eyes fly open, my neck twisting to the side with a surge of realization. “I…” my throat protests as I try to speak, leaving me with a desert-dry cough. A cup of water touches my lips almost immediately, with the same voice gently urging me to drink. Fingers slip through my hair, cradling my head in support as I swallow. I’m carefully lowered to the bed again, and my throat feels less parched. “Alina?” The voice is clearer. Excitement and relief surge through me so fast I barely have time to think about how heavy my body feels. I shoot up, needing to tell someone. To te

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