
Erase My Love, Forget His Face
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.
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Chapter 3
Ellery POV:
Brendan laughed, a rich, confident sound that filled the kitchen. He thought I was joking, being dramatic. The arrogance of it was staggering.
"You' d never leave me, El," he said, squeezing my shoulders. "We' re endgame. You and me."
He tried to pull me into a hug, but I resisted, a subtle tensing of my muscles that he, for once, seemed to notice. A flicker of something-annoyance? suspicion?-crossed his face before he smoothed it away.
I could smell her perfume on his shirt, mingled with the scent of pancakes and stale sex. It was suffocating.
"I' m going to be late for my meeting," I said, slipping out from under his hands and moving towards the door. I needed to get out of there before I shattered into a million pieces.
"Wait, El," he called after me. "What about your designs for the waterfront project? You said you needed to drop them at the city planning office. I can take them for you."
My blood ran cold. He was testing me. Checking to see if my routine was unchanged, if his world was still securely in its orbit.
"It' s fine," I said without turning around. "I can handle it."
"You' re sure?"
"I' m sure," I said, pushing the door open and stepping out into the cool morning air, gasping for breath as if I' d been held underwater.
I didn' t go to the office. I didn' t go to the city planning department. I drove, aimlessly at first, the pristine glass and steel towers of the city I had helped shape blurring past my window. My city. My life. A beautiful, intricate facade built on a foundation of lies.
I drove until I found myself in a part of town I rarely visited, a gritty, anonymous neighborhood of pawn shops and check-cashing places. I parked in front of a small, nondescript office with a sign that read "Documents & Duplicates."
Inside, a man with tired eyes and a practiced, incurious expression looked up from his computer.
"I need a new identity," I said, the words feeling foreign and powerful on my tongue.
He didn't blink. He just nodded toward a chair. "It'll cost you. Rush job costs more."
"I don't care about the cost," I said, pulling a bundle of cash from my purse-the emergency fund I had always kept, a relic from my foster care days when I knew I could only ever truly rely on myself.
An hour later, I walked out with a pristine driver' s license, birth certificate, and social security card. The face in the photos was mine, but the name was different.
June Bennett.
I said the name aloud in the confines of my car. It felt clean. Unburdened.
That afternoon, I met Evans at his lab. It was a sterile, white space, humming with the quiet energy of cutting-edge technology. He looked at my pale face and the dark circles under my eyes, and his professional demeanor softened.
"Ellery," he said gently. "Talk to me."
So I did. I told him everything. The sounds in the night, the name I heard, the sickening discovery. I told him about the four years of mentoring Kiya, the tuition I paid, the trust I' d placed in her. I told him about Brendan' s lies, the way he' d looked at me that morning as if I were the center of his universe while his mistress sat feet away in his t-shirt.
I didn' t cry. I was beyond tears. My voice was a flat monotone, reciting facts, each one another shovelful of dirt on the grave of my old life.
When I finished, he was silent, his expression a mixture of pity and horror.
"The procedure…" I began.
He held up a hand. "Wiping the memories is the easy part, relatively speaking. The serum-the 'special element' -is what makes a true clean slate possible. It creates a state of temporary, heightened neuroplasticity. It helps the brain accept a new narrative, a new identity, without the psychological schisms that would normally occur. It essentially... reboots your sense of self."
He looked at me, his eyes full of a terrible weight. "It' s never been tested on a human. The risks are astronomical. We' re talking about the very fabric of your consciousness, Ellery."
"I' ll take the risk," I said without hesitation.
He nodded slowly, as if he' d expected this. He knew me. He knew that when I made up my mind, it was set in stone. "I can have the serum synthesized and shipped. It will have to be done discreetly, through international channels. It will take a few days."
"How many?"
"Three," he said. "It will arrive on the 24th."
Brendan' s birthday. The universe had a sick sense of humor.
"Fine," I said. "I' ll book my flight."
When I got home that evening, Brendan was waiting for me, his face a mask of anxious relief.
"Ellery! Where have you been?" he exclaimed, rushing to me and pulling me into a suffocating hug. "Your phone was off, you weren' t at the office… I was about to call the police!"
I stood stiffly in his arms, the smell of him making my stomach turn. "My phone died," I said, my voice flat. "I went for a drive."
He pulled back, his hands still gripping my arms, his eyes searching my face. "A drive? All day? But… I saw the boxes in your closet. The ones you packed with your clothes."
Fear, sharp and sudden, pierced through my numbness. He' d been snooping.
"I' m donating them," I said quickly, the lie coming easily. "To the women' s shelter. It' s time for a clear-out."
The relief that washed over his face was instantaneous and absolute. He believed me. He wanted to believe me.
"Oh," he said, his grip loosening. "Oh, thank God. El, you scared me. Don' t you ever do that to me again. Don' t you ever, ever leave me." His voice was thick with emotion, a masterful performance of a terrified, loving husband.
I just looked at him, my heart a dead, heavy stone in my chest. "I won' t," I promised.
He would leave for his "business trip" with Kiya in two days. I had until then to finish erasing Ellery Rich.
The next day, I took my wedding ring to a custom jewelry shop in a part of town Brendan would never visit. It was a simple, elegant platinum band with a flawless three-carat diamond, a ring he had designed himself.
I slid it off my finger. It felt strange, my hand suddenly light and free.
"I need you to melt this," I told the jeweler, placing the ring on the velvet mat.
He stared at me, then at the ring, his eyes wide. "Melt it? Ma' am, this is a beautiful piece. Platinum, a VVS1 diamond at least… Why would you want to melt it?"
"Just do it," I said, my voice leaving no room for argument. "Melt the platinum band into an unrecognizable lump. Give me the diamond back separately."
He looked like I' d asked him to commit a murder. But the look in my eyes, and the cash I slid across the counter, convinced him.
I left the shop with a small, black velvet box. Inside was a single, perfect diamond and a small, ugly lump of gray metal that had once symbolized forever.
When I pulled up to the house, the scene was one of chaos. Two police cars were parked in the driveway, their lights flashing. Brendan was on the front lawn, talking animatedly to an officer, his expression frantic.
He saw my car and his face crumpled in what looked like profound relief. He ran to me as I got out, pulling me into a crushing, desperate hug.
"Ellery! Oh my God, Ellery!" he cried, his voice breaking. The police officers and our housekeeper watched with sympathetic expressions.
"What' s going on?" I asked, my body rigid in his embrace.
"I came home, you were gone, your car was gone… I thought…" He buried his face in my neck, his body trembling. Another command performance.
"I told you, my phone died," I said, pulling away. "I went to run some errands."
"All day? Without a word?" one of the officers asked, his tone skeptical.
Before I could answer, Brendan jumped to my defense. "It' s my fault. I' ve been smothering her. She just needed some space." He turned back to me, his eyes pleading. "But please, El, just tell me where you' re going next time. I can' t lose you. I would die if I lost you."
He was a phenomenal actor. I almost had to admire the commitment.
Then his eyes fell on the small black box in my hand.
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8.0
On the night of their third wedding anniversary, Ashley was ready to reveal a secret to her husband-
She was pregnant.
But moments after their passionate intimacy, her Alpha coldly delivered the blow-he wanted a divorce.
His fated mate had returned.
Stripped of her wolf spirit, abandoned by the pack, and carrying his child, Ashley was cast aside like a disposable Omega.
Just as she prepared to leave alone-
The boy she had once rejected had now risen as the most formidable Alpha King. The possessive hunger in his gaze sent shivers through her-did she dare face him? Was this vengeance, or something more? But did she even have a choice?

9.3
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.

8.1
She thought patience would earn her love.
She was wrong.
After years of waiting for her best friend to finally see her, she meets the one man she should never want-his older brother. Dark, forbidden, and dangerously perceptive, he sees through every excuse she's ever made for being overlooked.
Now she must choose between a safe fantasy that keeps breaking her heart and a dangerous truth that offers no escape once it begins.
Because the brother who looks at her like that?
He doesn't believe in halfway love.

9.8
When Dawn Collins agrees to marry a stranger, love is the last thing on her mind.
All she wants is to protect her siblings and give them a better life. But fate leads her into the arms of Adam Manchester-a man whose heart belongs to a wife lying in a coma.
As Dawn slowly melts the ice around Adam's heart, she begins to believe that maybe, just maybe, love can bloom from sacrifice.
But on the night she's ready to claim her happiness, Adam's wife wakes up.
Now, caught between guilt, love, and heartbreak, Dawn must decide whether to fight for the man she's grown to love... or walk away from the life she risked everything to build.
Because some hearts never let go-and some love stories were never meant to have an easy ending.

9.5
One night, I was a girl seeking vengeance in a velvet mask. He was the stranger who took me against a cold stone wall, his touch a silent, lethal promise.
Now, he is Caspian Blackwood-the most feared architecture professor at Aethelgard. When my "perfect" boyfriend, Dominic Calloway, cheats on me and sabotages my degree, Caspian offers a lifeline with a razor-thin edge: Be his silent, nude model for thirty days.
The rules are absolute. I must wear a silk mask and a weighted collar. I must never speak. I must hold the poses he demands until my muscles scream for mercy. In the lecture hall, he ignores me with arctic indifference. In the studio, his gaze is a physical weight, stripping me faster than his hands ever could. But as the charcoal scratches against the paper, I realize the "deal" isn't just for art. It's for the soul I accidentally gave him in the dark. Will the deal destroy his career, or consume me first?

8.7
I was dying in a cold hospital bed, listening to the monitor count down my final seconds.
As a ghost, I watched my own funeral. My popular friends and wealthy family soon moved on, but one person stayed.
Cas Riley. The invisible outcast from the back of my history class.
He brought a white rose to my grave every single day, withering away until he collapsed on the frozen ground, dying of a broken heart for a girl who barely knew his name.
Opening my eyes again, the hospital smell was gone. I was reborn back in my high school classroom.
I immediately tracked him down, only to witness the brutal hell he was trapped in.
He was humiliated by a cruel foreman for pennies, violently slapped by his uncle over his sick mother's medical money, and forced into bloody street fights.
He was starving, covered in bruises, and completely alone.
When I tried to buy him medicine and step into his life to protect him, he violently pushed me away in the pouring rain.
"Stay out of my life! To protect you, I have to fight, and when I fight, I lose everything!"
He wasn't rejecting me out of hate. He was terrified that his dark, violent reality would drag me down with him.
Standing soaked in the rain, my resolve hardened like steel.
Gentle kindness wasn't going to save him from this hell.
To protect the boy who died for me, I had to become ruthless enough to tear down his entire rotten world and build him a new one.