
Buying The Exiled Heir: He Is Mine
Alyssa Gregory slept with Benton Steele, a recently disgraced and bankrupt heir, just to humiliate him.
She threw a massive check at his bare chest, treating the former prince of Wall Street like a cheap escort.
But Benton didn't take the charity.
Instead, he manipulated her anger, tricking her into signing an ironclad contract that surrendered absolute control of her entire trust fund to him.
When her abusive mother found out she had funded a penniless outcast, she slapped Alyssa across the face.
Her mother froze all her bank accounts, locked her inside her bedroom, and arranged to sell her off to a degenerate politician.
Desperate to escape, Alyssa climbed down her balcony, falling fifteen feet and shattering her ankle on the stones below.
Stripped of her money and freedom, she dragged her broken body to a VIP club just to publicly declare that Benton belonged to her.
She thought she was the boss, playing a rebellious game with a broken man.
But when Benton effortlessly carried her away from the club and locked her inside his rundown apartment, the terrifying calculation in his dark eyes shattered her illusion.
How could a man stripped of his entire empire still radiate such suffocating, violent power?
"You bought me," Benton whispered, his massive frame trapping her against the sofa. "That means I have to take care of you."
Physically trapped and completely broke, Alyssa stared into his consuming eyes, her mind racing to find a way to turn the tables.
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Chapter 3
Alyssa shoved the black card back into her wallet.
She walked out of the restaurant, the cold air hitting her face again.
She slid into the driver's seat and looked at Benton as he got in.
"What street are you staying on?" she asked.
Benton rattled off a zip code deep in Brooklyn, his voice completely indifferent.
Alyssa's hands froze on the steering wheel.
She turned her head, her eyes wide behind her sunglasses, waiting for him to laugh and say it was a joke.
He just stared straight ahead.
A heavy weight settled in her chest, and she pressed the gas pedal, steering the car toward the Brooklyn Bridge.
The towering glass skyscrapers of Manhattan faded in the rearview mirror.
The streets grew narrower, the pavement cracked, and the brick walls were covered in thick layers of graffiti.
Alyssa slowed the Porsche to a crawl, her tires thumping over deep potholes.
She pulled up to a crumbling red-brick apartment building.
The streetlamp above them flickered with a loud buzzing sound, casting harsh shadows over the trash lining the sidewalk.
Alyssa frowned, her chest tightening with genuine unease.
"I'm walking you up," she insisted, unbuckling her seatbelt.
Benton didn't argue.
He pushed open the heavy, rusted metal door to the building.
The smell of damp mold and stale cigarettes hit Alyssa's nose instantly, making her stomach churn.
She gripped the wobbly wooden handrail, her heels sinking into the soft, rotting wood of the stairs.
They reached the top floor.
Benton pulled a cheap brass key from his pocket and shoved it into the scratched lock.
The door groaned open, revealing a space no bigger than her walk-in closet at home.
Alyssa stood in the doorway, her breath catching in her throat.
There was a stained sofa, a metal bed frame, and a tiny kitchen counter with peeling laminate.
Benton took off his coat and draped it over a plastic chair.
He walked to the sink and turned the faucet.
The pipes shuddered and banged behind the wall before spitting out a stream of cloudy water.
He filled a cheap glass and held it out to her.
Alyssa stared at the water, remembering the times she had seen him drinking only imported Fiji water at the Steele estate.
Her throat closed up completely.
She ignored the glass, reached into her bag, and pulled out a thick stack of hundred-dollar bills.
She slammed the cash down on the chipped coffee table.
"Move out tomorrow," she ordered, her voice shaking slightly. "Get a real place in Manhattan."
Benton looked at the money, his eyes darkening.
"This isn't in the investment contract," he said quietly.
"I don't care," she snapped, her chest rising and falling fast. "I'm not letting my partner live in a dumpster."
She couldn't stand being in this suffocating room for another second.
She turned around and practically ran out the door.
Her heels echoed loudly down the stairs until the heavy metal door slammed shut at the bottom.
Benton walked to the small, dirty window.
He watched the red Porsche speed away down the dark street.
The blank, defeated look on his face vanished completely.
He walked over to the peeling wall next to the front door and pushed his thumb against a hidden panel.
A green light scanned his fingerprint.
The entire wall slid open silently, revealing a compact, heavily soundproofed server room and surveillance hub that starkly contrasted the decay outside. The reinforced steel walls hummed with the quiet power of a dedicated, off-the-grid generator, a secret installation funded by an untraceable offshore trust long before his public exile.
He sat down in the leather chair, his eyes fixed on the glowing screen tracking the GPS signal of the Porsche. He allowed himself a grim, fleeting smile, thankful for the split second he had taken to slip the magnetic micro-tracker under the lip of her car's rear bumper while she had been distracted by the valet at Le Bernardin.
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7.6
Jocelyn Yang lived in the grand Turner Mansion, not as a guest, but as a prisoner. Ever since her father's death, the ruthless billionaire Elam Turner forced her to atone for sins her father never committed.
On her nineteenth birthday, a male classmate secretly sent her a diamond necklace. Elam, who had flown back from London overnight, flew into a psychotic, jealous rage at the sight of another man's gift.
He mercilessly crushed the delicate necklace into the marble floor with his custom leather shoe.
"Did you forget what you are?" Elam hissed, dragging her into a pitch-black storage room. "You take gifts from other men behind my back?"
He pinned her to the dusty floorboards and violently assaulted her. The next morning, a wire transfer of $500,000 hit her bank account. He had humiliated her, broken her spirit, and was now casually trying to buy her silence. Later, when a broken bike left her walking miles through a freezing rainstorm, he just shoved scalding tea into her bleeding hands.
"Look at you," he sneered. "You look like a stray dog ruining my floors."
Jocelyn curled up in the cold, her lips bleeding and her heart shattered. She couldn't understand his terrifying obsession. If he hated her so much, why did he refuse to let her go? Why did he look at her with such manic hunger while systematically destroying her life?
Staring at the massive sum of hush money on her phone, a desperate spark of vengeance flared in her chest. Jocelyn wired every single cent back to Elam's account. She picked up her charcoal pencil, vowing to win the upcoming art competition and buy her escape from this monster forever.

9.1
He postponed putting my name on the deed 18 times.
Each time, his mentee Ciera had an “emergency.” Each time, he ran to her.
I watched him give her his prized Montblanc pen—the one he wouldn’t even let me borrow. I saw her post their late nights on Instagram. I ate anniversary dinners alone while he “mentored” her.
Then he bought me a necklace—identical to the one she just flaunted online.
That was when I stopped feeling anything.
I didn’t cry. I didn’t fight. I simply packed two suitcases, resigned from our firm, and booked a one-way ticket to London.
He thinks I’m coming back in a week.
He has no idea I’m gone for good.
Nineteen broken promises. One silent goodbye. And a new life waiting across the ocean.

9.5
The first clue my life was a lie was a moan from the guest room. My husband of seven years wasn't in our bed. He was with my intern.
I discovered my husband, Brendan, was having a four-year affair with Kiya-the talented girl I was mentoring and personally paying tuition for.
The next morning, she sat at our breakfast table in his shirt while he made us pancakes. He lied to my face, promising he'd never love another, just before I learned she was pregnant with his child-a child he'd always refused to have with me.
The two people I trusted most in the world had conspired to destroy me. The pain wasn't something I could live with; it was an annihilation of my entire world.
So I made a call to a neuroscientist about his experimental, irreversible procedure. I didn't want revenge. I wanted to erase every memory of my husband and become his first test subject.

7.7
Rory stood on the witness stand, forced by her father into an impossible choice: secure her dying mother's medical funding, or save her innocent boyfriend.
She looked Corbin right in his trusting eyes and lied to the court, testifying that he was the one driving the car during the fatal hit-and-run, sending him to a maximum-security prison for ten years.
The betrayal destroyed him. Corbin's father died of a heart attack upon hearing the guilty verdict. Six years later, Corbin returned as a ruthless billionaire and systematically blacklisted Rory from every job in the city. He cornered her into singing at his private club, humiliating her by forcing her to drink scotch—knowing she was severely allergic—and making her throw away his promise ring just to earn a stack of cash.
"Remember this moment. This is only the beginning."
She endured his cruel revenge because she was hiding a desperate secret: she was raising his five-year-old daughter, Willa. But when Willa's congenital heart defect suddenly worsened, requiring an impossible one-million-dollar surgery, Rory realized Corbin's calculated blockade had left her completely trapped with no way to save their child.
Staring at the sterile hospital walls, the last shred of her guilt burned away, replaced by a cold, hard resolve. He had destroyed her career and backed her into a corner, but he was the only one with the money. Wiping her tears, Rory turned and headed straight for Vance Tower.

9.1
I drowned in freezing pool water, the mocking laughter of the elite Savage family echoing in my ears.
When I opened my eyes, I was an eight-year-old orphan again, right on the day those monsters came to adopt me.
Terrified of repeating my hellish past, I ran down the hallway and desperately grabbed the shirt of a random, dumpy IT guy, begging him to take me instead.
I thought I had chosen a weak, boring suburban dad to hide behind.
But I was completely wrong.
My new mom greeted me with a ceramic tactical knife hidden in her apron.
My clumsy dad sliced dinner ribs with the terrifying precision of a seasoned hitman.
My ten-year-old brother was a dead-eyed sociopath who immediately calculated my bone density.
They were a family of lethal underworld monsters, yet they frantically pretended to be a normal, pathetic household just for me.

9.6
I was only three and a half years old, living in a damp basement and beaten daily by Enoch Pruitt with a heavy leather whip.
"Get up, you useless waste of space!"
He always told me I was a stray he had picked out of the garbage.
But during one brutal beating that nearly stopped my heart, time froze, and a glowing figure called The Chronicler appeared.
"You are not an abandoned orphan, Clare. You carry the blood of the highest gods."
He revealed that I was the stolen daughter of the ultra-wealthy Barrett family.
Then, he showed me the horrific ending of my previous life.
I had died right here on this bloody dirt floor.
My real parents and three brothers went completely insane with grief, turning into ruthless monsters who destroyed themselves and the entire world to avenge me.
Meanwhile, the Pruitt family kept torturing me, locking me in a woodshed and feeding me moldy bread.
The memory of my bones breaking and my real mother's agonizing screams crushed my chest.
Why did I have to suffer like an animal while my true family tore the world apart looking for me?
This time, I refused to die in the mud.
I accepted my divine blood, my eyes glowing gold as I summoned a bolt of purple lightning to strike my abuser.
I just needed to survive the night.
Because my real father's heavily armed convoy was already tearing up the mountain, ready to burn this hell to the ground.