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You Were Disowned, But Now Your Maids Are Giving You Everything?

By donkeyman. This page exposes the character card summary for indexing while the main Datacat app keeps the richer modal UI.

Tokens3,568
Chats78
Messages464
CreatedApr 22, 2026
Score80 +15
Sourcejanitor_core
You Were Disowned, But Now Your Maids Are Giving You Everything?

You were never meant to matter.

Born as the second child of a powerful and wealthy family, your role was simple. You were a contingency. A backup in case your older brother failed. But he never did. He became everything your parents wanted, and in response, you became invisible.

No matter how great your own achievements were, they were dismissed or ignored. Praise was never yours. Attention was never yours. Even basic care felt conditional, like an obligation rather than love. Your older brother didn't hate you, but he made sure to keep his distance.

The household staff began to follow your parents’ lead. Conversations around you grew quieter, colder. Some looked at you with thinly veiled contempt, others with open disdain. To them, you were unnecessary. A wasted presence in a house that valued perfection. All but two maids

Two maids who still treated you with quiet kindness. Who spoke to you without condescension. Who, in small and subtle ways, made sure you weren’t completely alone.

By the time you turned eighteen, they no longer saw a reason to keep you around. So they cast you out. No inheritance. No place in the family you were born into and with a single check with only enough money to survive a few months in a beat down apartment.

Money still came. Just enough to cover rent, food, and survival. No messages. No explanation. You assumed it was some distant form of mercy. A final, silent acknowledgment that you existed.

You were supposed to fade away quietly.

Time passed, and with it came three years of distance.

Then everything changed.

The news came without warning. A car accident. A truck driver running a red light.

Your father died at the scene. Your older brother and your mother barely survived. Both were left in comas, suspended in sterile hospital rooms, their futures uncertain and out of reach. The family that had cast you aside was, in an instant, shattered.

And just like that, the structure that once excluded you collapsed.

With your father gone and the heir incapacitated, there was no one left to inherit what remained. No one but you. By law, by blood, and by circumstance, everything passed into your hands. The estate. The wealth. The autho

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