
Betrayed Bride, Billionaire's Beloved Queen
The heavy prison gates clanged shut, ending three years. I scanned the empty lot for Julian, my fiancé. Deserted.
Biting December wind my only welcome. Calls to Julian, father, mother: unanswered/disconnected.
Shivering, Julian's tracker showed an unfamiliar Long Island estate. A freezing cab left me penniless; I walked through the blizzard. Through a mansion window, I saw Julian, my stepsister Clara, a small boy—a perfect family. Julian, who hated children, doted on him, and Clara wore *my* engagement ring.
I overheard Julian's call: he, my father, conspired to frame me for Clara’s medical error, saving their company and future. My family hadn't just abandoned me; they plotted my destruction.
A delayed text from Julian popped up, lying about a "cross-border meeting," promising to pick me up tomorrow. Despair vanished, replaced by a cold, terrifying smile. Typing "Understood," I turned from their stolen life, walking into the blizzard, fueled by burning rage.
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Chapter 1
The heavy prison gates clanged shut, ending three years. I scanned the empty lot for Julian, my fiancé. Deserted.
Biting December wind my only welcome. Calls to Julian, father, mother: unanswered/disconnected.
Shivering, Julian's tracker showed an unfamiliar Long Island estate. A freezing cab left me penniless; I walked through the blizzard. Through a mansion window, I saw Julian, my stepsister Clara, a small boy—a perfect family. Julian, who hated children, doted on him, and Clara wore *my* engagement ring.
I overheard Julian's call: he, my father, conspired to frame me for Clara’s medical error, saving their company and future. My family hadn't just abandoned me; they plotted my destruction.
A delayed text from Julian popped up, lying about a "cross-border meeting," promising to pick me up tomorrow. Despair vanished, replaced by a cold, terrifying smile. Typing "Understood," I turned from their stolen life, walking into the blizzard, fueled by burning rage.
Chapter 1
Aurora POV:
The heavy steel gates of the New York State Women's Correctional Facility slammed shut behind me with a deafening boom.
The sound vibrated through the soles of my cheap shoes, echoing in my chest exactly like the judge's gavel had three years ago. That was the moment my life ended. Today was supposed to be the day it began again.
A biting December wind ripped through the thin fabric of my faded gray trench coat.
I instinctively pulled the collar tight against my neck and hunched my shoulders. The cold was a physical assault, a sharp contrast to the suffocating heat of the prison laundry room where I had spent the last thousand days.
I lifted my head and looked across the desolate highway toward the visitor parking lot.
It was empty, save for a few abandoned cars covered in a thick layer of dirty snow. There was no sleek black Rolls-Royce idling by the curb.
My heart skipped a beat, and the warm anticipation in my chest instantly turned to ice.
Three years ago, standing on this exact spot, Julian had held my face in his hands. He had looked into my eyes and sworn that the very second I stepped out of those gates, he would be waiting to take me home.
I took a deep breath, forcing the freezing air into my lungs to calm my racing pulse.
It was a blizzard. The roads were terrible. A traffic delay was normal. I repeated the logical excuses in my head, refusing to let the panic settle in.
With stiff, freezing fingers, I tore open the seal of the clear plastic bag holding my personal effects.
I pulled out my old smartphone. It felt heavy and foreign in my hand after three years of not touching a screen.
I held down the power button. The screen flickered, died, and then struggled to light up, casting a pale glow over my cracked, dry hands.
Immediately, the phone let out a shrill beep, flashing a low battery warning.
I tapped the contacts icon, my thumb shaking as I scrolled to the number saved as 'Fiance'.
I pressed the call button and lifted the phone to my ear. The long, rhythmic ringing echoed in my ear, each second stretching out and slicing at my nerves.
A mechanical female voice finally clicked on, directing me to voicemail. I bit down on my lower lip hard enough to taste copper and hung up.
I quickly dialed my father's number. Richard Vance always answered his phone.
The line rang once before it was abruptly disconnected. A harsh busy signal filled my ear. He had hung up on me.
A familiar ache bloomed in my chest. Growing up, my father never had the patience for me. Every ounce of his attention was always reserved for my stepsister, Clara. I pushed the memory down and dialed my mother, Eleanor.
The phone rang until it timed out. No answer.
A sudden gust of wind whipped a sheet of snow directly into my face, the ice crystals stinging my skin like tiny needles.
I opened my text messages, desperate for any explanation. A flat tire. A delayed meeting. Anything.
My inbox was completely empty. The very last message was from three years ago, sent the night before my sentencing. It was from Julian, and it simply read: I love you.
My eyes started to burn. The familiar sting of tears threatened to spill over, but I blinked rapidly, forcing them back.
Prison had taught me a brutal lesson of survival: you never show weakness out in the open.
I needed to know where Julian was. I opened the security tracking app we used to share our locations.
The app dragged, the loading bar crawling across the screen like a snail due to the outdated software and the terrible reception.
Finally, the map materialized. The little blue dot representing Julian was nowhere near the corporate headquarters in Manhattan.
I pinched the screen to zoom in, my eyebrows pulling together in a tight frown.
The blue dot was stationary, pinned to an exclusive, ultra-luxury private estate along the coastline of Long Island.
I stared at the completely unfamiliar address, my brain working frantically to make sense of it.
It was a Tuesday. Julian was a workaholic CEO. He would never take a random vacation to a Long Island estate in the middle of the week.
A harsh warning popped up at the top of the screen: 5% battery remaining. I immediately pressed the side buttons, taking a screenshot of the map and the address just as the screen dimmed.
I shoved the phone deep into my coat pocket and stepped out toward the road. An old, beat-up yellow cab was creeping along the icy asphalt. I threw my hand up, stepping directly into its path to force it to stop.
I pulled open the back door and slid onto the cracked vinyl seat. I looked at the rearview mirror, watching the massive iron gates of the prison disappear behind the blowing snow.
"To Long Island. Oyster Bay."
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7.8
Alexis signed the divorce papers, leaving her with no assets, no alimony, and just the clothes on her back.
To forget her abusive husband Carlos, she got drunk and bought a high-end gigolo for the night with her last 800 dollars.
But the man she slept with wasn't an escort. He was Jarrett Hughes, a ruthless billionaire CEO.
And while she was gone, her ex-husband was busy destroying her entire life.
Carlos framed her with fake photos of her cheating to justify the penniless divorce.
Then came the real nightmare.
Carlos and her own aunt secretly drained her family's corporate accounts, driving her father to jump off a building.
At the hospital, her grieving mother blamed her for the tragedy, violently attacking her in the ER.
To top it off, her cousin Josie—who was secretly sleeping with Carlos—held her father's ashes hostage.
"Crawl on your knees and pick it up, or the ashes go in the river," Josie sneered, throwing cash into the freezing slush.
Stripped of her marriage, her father, and her dignity, Alexis sat bleeding in the snow.
She couldn't understand why the people she loved most had coordinated such a brutal slaughter against her.
But Carlos and Josie made one fatal mistake.
They didn't know the "gigolo" Alexis had accidentally bought was the most powerful man in New York.
Alexis looked at the towering billionaire standing behind her, a vengeful fire burning in her eyes.
"I need you to get my father's ashes back," she said, pulling him into a kiss right in front of her ex-husband. "I don't care what it takes."

9.2
Averie spent hours preparing a perfect third-anniversary dinner for her billionaire husband, Jarett Sharp.
Instead of celebrating, she received an anonymous photo of him intimately holding another woman.
When Jarett finally arrived, he didn't even look guilty.
"Candida. It's okay. Don't be scared. I'm on my way."
He simply took a call from his mistress, shoved Averie aside, and walked right back out the door.
That same night, Averie's father suffered a massive heart attack.
The hospital demanded a half-million-dollar deposit before they would operate.
But when Averie frantically tried to use the emergency medical trust card Jarett had given her, it was declined.
Jarett had deliberately frozen her access to the funds just hours earlier.
While she begged his assistant on the phone, Jarett refused to be disturbed, busy wrapping his expensive coat around his mistress in the hospital garden.
Averie collapsed in the hallway, realizing the man she loved was deliberately letting her father die.
In the end, a childhood friend stepped in to pay the bill and save her father's life, while her billionaire husband later pinned her to their bed, throwing a check at her and reminding her he had bought her for three million dollars.
Averie didn't shed a single tear.
She slowly ripped his check into pieces, left her massive diamond ring on the dresser, and walked out into the cold New York night with nothing but her old suitcase.
She pulled out her phone and dialed her old ballet professor.
She wasn't just going to leave Jarett Sharp. She was going to destroy him.

8.5
After four years of marriage, my wealthy husband Brad handed me a $50,000 severance check outside the Manhattan Family Court.
He linked arms with his mistress, Jenna, who flaunted the diamond ring that used to be mine.
"Just take it, Hayley. Take the money and get out of our lives," he sneered, looking at me with absolute disgust.
I tore the check into pieces, but my nightmare was just beginning.
To access my grandfather's trust fund, I had exactly seventy-two hours to get legally married, so I desperately proposed a one-year contract marriage to a poor insurance salesman I met in a dive bar.
When Brad found out, he and his arrogant family cornered me at their estate.
Brad mocked my new husband for being a penniless, money-grubbing parasite, while my former mother-in-law slapped me hard across the face, knocking me to the ground.
"You are trash, just like your mother," she spat, watching my knee bleed onto the sharp gravel.
Jenna gleefully kicked my phone away, shattering the screen and cutting off my only lifeline.
Lying there in the dirt, I stared at the broken glass in absolute despair.
I didn't understand why four years of quiet devotion had earned me nothing but cruel betrayal and endless humiliation from the people I once called family.
Just as I thought I had completely lost, a black Lincoln Navigator slammed to a halt at the gates.
My "penniless" new husband stepped out, radiating a terrifying, righteous fury that made the entire Patton family freeze in horror.

7.9
For five years, April Gamble loved Julian Travis with everything she had, trusting him completely.
But on a stormy night, he casually tossed a liquidation agreement at her feet, single-handedly destroying her grandfather's company.
He coldly admitted he only dated her to steal Vance Group's internal financial data.
"You were convenient," Julian said, swirling his whiskey without a shred of guilt.
Before April could even process the brutal betrayal, a breaking news alert lit up her phone.
She watched in absolute horror as her grandfather jumped from the ledge of the Vance Tower on live television.
Julian looked at her writhing, screaming form with utter boredom and simply ordered his bodyguard to throw her out.
Blinded by grief and tears, April sped into the torrential rain, only to be completely crushed by a hydroplaning transport truck at an intersection.
As the shattered glass tore into her skin and the metal crushed her ribs, she died with a hatred so pure it made her teeth ache.
Why did five years of devotion mean absolutely nothing to him? Why did her family have to die just to feed his ruthless greed?
When she opened her eyes again, the harsh hospital lights blinded her, but the familiar burn scar on her arm was gone.
She wasn't the betrayed financial analyst April Gamble anymore.
She had woken up in the body of Altagracia Blanchard, the most notorious, obscenely wealthy heiress in New York.
Julian had taken everything from her, but now, armed with a billionaire's empire, she was going to bury him.

9.1
I was supposed to be celebrating my twenty-first birthday and my engagement to the man I loved.
Instead, I was bleeding out in a crushed car, listening to my fiancé Greggory and my stepsister Alta laughing over the car's Bluetooth.
They had cut my brakes.
As the steering wheel crushed my shattered ribs, they cheerfully clinked their champagne glasses, celebrating their hostile takeover of my family's media empire.
I tried to scream for help, but my lungs wouldn't work.
Then, Alta's sweet voice delivered the final, fatal blow over the speaker.
"Your mother? I took care of her too."
I died in the freezing rain, my heart frozen with absolute hatred as I realized every touch and whispered promise was just a calculated step toward my murder.
I gave them everything, treating them like my closest family.
Why did they have to kill my innocent mother? Why did I blindly trust two vipers who only wanted to drain my blood?
Opening my eyes again, the smell of gasoline was gone.
I was back in my bedroom, safe and unharmed, on the exact day of my twenty-first birthday party.
The day the tragedy began.
Downstairs, my murderers were waiting to spring their trap, expecting me to blindly accept Greggory's proposal.
But this time, I put on a blood-red dress, grabbed the photo of their secret affair, and walked down the stairs to choose a new fiancé—the most ruthless billionaire in the room.

9.4
I was the eldest daughter of the powerful Kirk family, sent away to a Swiss sanatorium to recover from my supposed mental illness.
But my stepmother, Johnie, never intended for me to get better. She sent her personal cleaners to drag me onto a plane back to Washington D.C.
In my past life, I didn't know they were assassins. I was forcefully injected with heavy sedatives and locked in a secret torture chamber inside our luxury estate.
My stepmother and cousin skimmed my inheritance while watching me suffer.
They framed me as a crazy addict, and my own father, a sitting Senator, turned a blind eye to protect his political career.
"Her political value is gone, just get rid of her quietly."
That was the last thing I heard my father say before I was brutally slaughtered by my own family.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand why they hated me so much.
Why did my father let them force those pills down my throat?
Why was my life worth less than my stepmother's public image?
Opening my eyes again, the freezing sensation of lake water filling my lungs vanished.
I was back in the VIP room of the St. Moritz Sanatorium in 2023.
It was the exact morning before the cleaners walked through my door with uncapped syringes.
This time, I wouldn't just survive. I was going to cut the throat of the Kirk family.