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The Family 4

The Family 4

Chapter 4 If You Don’t Self-Destruct, You Have to Go Insane
“Then I’d rather drive Ms. Jean to school.” The driver’s mouth twitched as he spoke with righteous resolve.
The Jean in front of him was clearly different.
The old Jean was quiet, withdrawn, and refused to engage. The driver had no desire to test her temper either. For as long as he’d known her, the two of them existed in silent disregard of each other.
But now, he hadn’t expected Jean to be the one to break the silence.
Jean tugged at the corner of her mouth and suddenly beamed, radiant. “Mister, you know what? It’s not trendy to use names anymore…”
The driver frowned in confusion. “Then what do people use?”
Jean’s smile widened. “We go with ‘Princess’ now.”
“P-Princess?” The driver’s eyes went wide, but then he thought about it—Ms. Jean was, after all, still just a little girl. It made sense. Every little girl dreams of being a princess.
So that’s what she liked being called.
He caught on immediately. Getting out of the car, he opened the rear door for Jean with exaggerated respect. “Your Highness, your carriage awaits.”
Jean nodded approvingly.
Once she was seated, the driver didn’t forget to remind her, “Princess, please sit tight. We’re departing shortly.”
Jean snapped her fingers with flair. “Let’s go.”

The Rolls-Royce stopped in a quiet alley near the school.
Jean didn’t like flashy entrances, so the driver had never taken her to the main gate.
With her backpack on, Jean hopped out of the car.
The driver escorted her to the school entrance and gave her a parting nod. “Ms… uh… I mean, Your Highness, please proceed…”
Jean laughed at his effort. “Okay, the princess roleplay ends here.”
Waving her finger, she smiled. “The princess has to pretend to be a commoner for a while…”
The driver looked puzzled. So now he wasn’t supposed to call her that?
Jean really was unpredictable…
She glanced up at the school gate, where bold, majestic letters spelled:
Who would’ve thought—after everything—Jean would come back to school like this?
The last time she’d been a student felt like eight hundred years ago.
Tugging her backpack strap, she strolled into the campus at a casual pace.
Stellarford Academy was the most prestigious private school in Blairford. Children of the elite and young prodigies alike studied here. The bar for entry was sky-high, and its reputation even more so.
It had branches for every stage of education—from kindergarten to university—all under one roof. A lifelong academic package, basically.
The host’s older brothers had gone through all their schooling right here, from baby babble to college degrees.
Jean found her seat in the classroom by matching the name printed on her schedule.
She wasn’t early.
Several students were already seated here and there.
The moment she walked in, conversations halted.
The students all turned to look at Jean, eyes lazy and mocking.
Jean could tell right away—
She wasn’t welcome here.
When she first got pulled into the novel, a flood of the host’s memories had poured into her mind.
But it wasn’t much—just a little more than what you’d get from reading the book.
The finer details were missing. Like how the host had gotten that six-pointed star badge. Or what her school life had actually been like…
Was she the weird outcast?
With a cold, closed-off personality like the host’s, it was no surprise she’d been unpopular at home and at school.
No wonder she got the cold shoulder…
“Ugh, here comes that creep again…”
“Shh, don’t let her hear you. She’ll give you that bitter lemon face, haha…”
Even the whispers reached Jean’s ears.
Oh wow, she’d guessed right.
So she really was the class pariah.
Jean pressed her lips together, dropped her bag, and plopped into her seat—
Crack!
She froze.
Oh no. She’d just broken something!
Instantly, the whole classroom exploded in laughter.
Some kids were doubled over, cackling like it was the funniest thing they’d ever seen.
The sound and mockery hit her all at once, making her clench her teeth.
Damn it!
She let her guard down. She’d been pranked.
Now she faced a terrible dilemma—
Should she stand up?
If she didn’t, she’d never know what she’d crushed.
But if she did… the red liquid from that broken whatever-it-was had already soaked her pants.
The whole class would tear her to shreds.
That was their plan all along.
A dumb, juvenile prank—and she fell right into it because she hadn’t been paying attention.
Don’t get mad.
Jean took a deep breath, trying to calm herself down before she snapped. Then—
She stood up like nothing happened.
The laughter around her hit a new high, echoing through the classroom.
She turned to look at her chair—
A small, fragile ball had been placed there. It had cracked under her weight and spilled red paint everywhere.
She didn’t need to look to know her pants were now marked with a bright, embarrassing stain.
“Hahaha!”
“Look! Her butt’s all messed up!”
The shrill laughter rang in her ears, over and over again.
Now she understood why people online were so eager to smack bratty kids and emo teens upside the head…
And right now, she felt the same way.
Technically, her soul was twenty-nine years old—she shouldn’t be getting into it with a bunch of students.
But Jean lived by one rule:
If you’ve got to choose between torturing yourself or losing your mind—go nuts and take someone down with you.
Self-destruction? Not an option.
You make her uncomfortable? She’ll go full crazy and show you exactly how “lovely” her mental state is.
She might be burned out, but that didn’t mean she had to take every hit lying down.
Jean grabbed the broken paint ball off the chair, turned around to face the class, and slammed it on the floor.
The red paint splattered everywhere.
The room fell silent.
No one had ever seen her do something like this before. They all stared, wide-eyed and stunned.
Everyone knew Jean as the weird loner who didn’t talk.
They’d treated her like a ghost, mocked her loudly, and she’d always ignored it.
Totally unbearable.
Today, they wanted to spice things up a little.
But they never expected—
Jean didn’t just sit there and take it this time…
“Who did it?” Her glare was cold and unyielding.
Her sharp voice was scarier than any angry teacher.
No one answered.
Of course not. No one wanted to admit it.
Jean let out a low, humorless chuckle. “Oh? Nobody’s owning up?”
“How about this—why don’t you all just say you’re tourists visiting Stellarford Academy? Because I seriously can’t believe the school’s future stars are this trashy…”
The students held their breath, clearly rattled by the sudden shift in her tone.

The Family

The Family

Score 9.9
Status: Ongoing Type: Native Language: English
The Family

Summary & Review: The Family

Jean Ginger was dead. A self-made woman who achieved financial freedom before thirty, her life was cut short in a tragic car accident. But instead of fading away, Jean woke up in an unfamiliar, overly frilly bedroom surrounded by stuffed toys. Her head throbbed as strange memories began flooding her mind — memories that weren’t hers. Within moments, Jean realized the unbelievable truth: she had transmigrated into the world of a book she once mockingly read online, The Real Heiress Awakens.

The story she remembered was an outrageously dramatic one about a poor girl named Sarah who discovered she was actually the real daughter of a wealthy family, the Gingers of Blairford. In her first life, Sarah had suffered greatly — betrayed, humiliated, and married to the wrong man. But after being reborn, she vowed to take back everything that had been stolen from her. She returned to the Gingers, exposed the impostor who had been living her life, and won over her powerful birth family and their love. Not only that, she even stole back her impostor’s fiancé — the male lead of the story.

It was a total wish-fulfillment fantasy: revenge, romance, and the triumphant rise of the “real” heiress. But for Jean, it was a nightmare — because she had been reborn as the fake heiress who loses everything by the end of the novel. Even worse, this character’s name was also Jean Ginger.

Still dazed, Jean checked herself in the mirror and nearly screamed. She wasn’t just the doomed heiress — she was thirteen years old. Her tall, elegant body was gone, replaced with short, chubby limbs and a round, childish face. On the bright side, she was years away from the events that would destroy her life. The real heiress hadn’t shown up yet.

Just as she was processing her situation, her phone pinged. It was a bank notification — $70,000 had just been deposited into her account. Jean blinked, counting the zeros again and again to make sure she wasn’t dreaming. Seventy thousand dollars. For a monthly allowance.

Her pain, confusion, and panic melted away in an instant. In her past life, she had worked herself to exhaustion for every dollar. Now she was rich — effortlessly. She didn’t have to hustle, fight, or struggle. The only thing she had to do was exist.

“Fake heiress?” she thought with a shrug. “Fine. I’ll take it.”

Jean quickly decided she wasn’t going to challenge the real heroine or get involved in any melodramatic family battles. She knew how the story would end — the Ginger family would fall into chaos, her brothers would lose their minds, and Sarah would rise as the hero who brought them down. There was no point trying to change fate. Instead, Jean made up her mind: she would relax, play the role of a harmless background character, and enjoy her wealthy lifestyle until the plot killed off the Gingers. By that time, she’d be long gone — comfortably rich, maybe even checked into a luxury psychiatric ward if that’s what it took to survive.

But peace never lasts.

Outside her room, she heard a maid calling her name, saying that dinner was ready but she hadn’t responded. Then another voice answered — calm, deep, and commanding. It belonged to Dominic Ginger, the eldest brother of the Ginger family. The moment he entered, Jean instinctively grabbed a plush bunny and held it to her chest like a shield.

Dominic was everything his reputation promised — tall, cold, and intimidating, with sharp features that could have been carved from marble. He was dressed in a sleek, tailored suit that looked more appropriate for a business meeting than a family dinner.

Jean’s eyes darted up at him. Even though she was technically his little sister now, he looked like a completely different species. She knew from the novel that Dominic was the strict, emotionless type — a perfectionist who treated family like subordinates. He was one of the five Ginger brothers who would later become antagonists in the story, each powerful and broken in their own way.

Still, Jean decided to play innocent. She widened her eyes, her pigtails bouncing, her cheeks pink, and clutched her bunny tighter. She looked like a lost doll — the perfect image of a fragile, harmless child.

Dominic’s icy voice broke the silence. “Dinner. Now.”

Jean blinked. He talks? she thought, startled. In the original story, Dominic barely spoke unless necessary. Her inner monologue continued, mocking his stiffness — but before she could stop herself, something strange happened.

Dominic’s gaze sharpened, and he responded quietly, as if answering an invisible question. “I just got back from work.”

Jean froze. She hadn’t said anything out loud. That meant — he could hear her thoughts.

Panic hit her like a truck. She quickly forced a nervous laugh and said aloud, “Oh, okay…” trying to cover her shock. But inside, her mind was spinning. What kind of weird twist was this? Was Dominic telepathic now? This wasn’t in the book!

Dominic, meanwhile, looked just as confused. His jaw tightened as he studied the small girl in front of him. He was sure he’d heard her voice in his head — clear, childish, and slightly sarcastic — but her lips hadn’t moved. It made no sense.

The tension between them filled the air. Jean tried to smile sweetly, pretending to be the clueless little sister, while her inner voice screamed at herself to stay calm. She couldn’t afford to let her thoughts run wild if her cold, powerful brother could actually hear them.

Still, beneath the fear, another thought flickered in her mind — maybe this was her chance. If Dominic could hear her thoughts, maybe she could use it to her advantage. After all, she knew the future of every character in this story. And she wasn’t going to end up in a psych ward this time.

Not if she played her cards right.

For now, though, Jean did what any smart person would do when facing a dangerously perceptive older brother who might read minds: she smiled, hugged her bunny tighter, and quietly followed him to dinner — already scheming about how to survive in this ridiculous new world where fiction had become her reality.

Because if there was one thing Jean Ginger was good at, it was surviving — and making money while doing it.

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