Chapter 2
Truth be told, since she’d body hopped into this body, she hadn’t really taken a good look at the ce
she was living in.
The house was a quaint two–story cottage with a yard, the kind you’d find out in the countryside. It had
red brick walls topped with ck shingles, and the walls were untouched by paint or tiles. In some
areas, due to the passage of time. dark, moldy streaks had etched their presence into the surface. All
in all, it was the epitome of 1980s
architecture–undeniably old and tattered.
Mirabe touched the tip of her nose and mused that she had lived in these rough conditions for over a
year with rtive ease.
Just then, the shrill voice inside the house ceased. Mandy emerged, dressed in a ckce gown and
a violet silk scarf tied around her neck. Her makeup was impable, her hair pinned up with a
diamond clip, exuding an aura of a high–societydy. She paused upon seeing Mirabe standing in
the yard, taken aback.
But quickly, Mandy gathered her wits, concealing theplex emotions in her eyes, and asked with
indifference, “What are you doing here?”
Mirabe regarded Mandy calmly, her eyes a serene pool, her mind drifting.
A year ago, she’d jumped in this body for reasons unknown. Back then, the original body wasn’t called
Mirbe but Mirabelle, a pampered daughter of a newly wealthy family in Ashford.
A few months ago, she was abruptly informed that this body was not a true Gilbert family child but was
switched at birth by a nurse. Her biological parents were just an ordinary working couple, not only
Mandy, her foster mother standing before her, discovered that her biological daughter lived in poverty
while she raised a poor family’s child in luxury. Perhaps Mandy felt her dormant maternal instincts stir
due to this stark contrast. She saw her biological daughter appear gracious and sweet–spoken, so she
quickly brought her back home, renaming her and inviting her to the family with haste as if to
compensate for any past neglect.
As for the faux heiress Mirabe, though born into wealth, she was never truly cherished by the Gilbert
family. She spent her childhood in a small town, raised by Mandy’s mother, and was rarely visited, even
once a year.
With the real daughter reimed, the counterfeit had to step aside. So, before the Davis family came to
reim Mirabe, Mandy told her she didn’t deserve the Gilbert name nor to stay there–a sentiment as
clear then as Mandy’s cold demeanor now.
Mirabe collected her thoughts and nonchntly withdrew her gaze from Mandy.
Mandy, noticing the shift, furrowed her brows, her anger ring. “What kind of attitude is that?” she
snapped.
Hearing the rage in the question, Mirabe raised an eyebrow yfully and replied with a sly smile,
“And what, may I ask, is your current title?”
N?vel(D)rama.Org''s content.
At that, Mandy’s well–maintained face darkened instantly. Clearly, no matter how long you raised
someone else’s child, they remained wild and without a shred of manners or propriety.
At that moment, Mandy’s thoughts turned to her biological daughter, Summer. Raised in a modest
household, she exuded elegance and grace, excelled in her studies, and possessed diverse talents.
Now scouted to be a star, Summer was seemingly born to bring pride to the Gilbert family. In contrast,
Mirabe, the foster daughter, was no match for Summer in any way, save for her looks.
Mandy took a deep breath, recalling the purpose of her visit. Her eyes hardened as she pondered for a
few seconds, then she reined in her anger.