
Falling For My Dead Husband's Ghost
To save my brother's life, I married a dead billionaire.
My new home was a freezing, high-tech mausoleum where I was ordered to hold a year-long vigil beside Byron Hyde's cryogenic pod.
But I wasn't alone in the dark.
Every night, a terrifying shadow smelling of whiskey and sandalwood pinned me to my narrow bed.
It tore my clothes and brutally claimed my body, leaving me bruised and trembling until dawn.
When I begged the housekeeper for help, showing her my torn skin, she just smiled cruelly.
"It seems the master's spirit has accepted you."
I thought I was being haunted by a vengeful ghost, until Byron's arrogant nephew broke into the tomb to assault me.
His tampering triggered the life-support system, and the heavy lid of the pod hissed open.
Byron Hyde sat up, his eyes lethal and his skin shockingly warm.
He was alive.
Looking at his broad shoulders, I caught the faint scent of whiskey and sandalwood.
The horrific truth hit me like a physical blow.
My nightly tormentor wasn't a ghost. It was my living, breathing husband.
When I confronted him, his eyes were cold and clinical.
"That was a necessary test. I had to know if my wife would break."
A white-hot rage choked me, but I didn't scream or run.
He slipped the priceless, heavy sapphire of the family matriarch onto my finger, offering me absolute power over the treacherous relatives who wanted us both dead.
To fight a monster, you can't be a victim.
I looked into his deep, dangerous eyes and accepted the ring.
If this was a cage, allying with the keeper was the only way to find the key.
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Chapter 4
For a heartbeat, Amelie's only impulse was to run. To flee the mausoleum, the estate, this entire nightmare. But her feet were rooted to the spot.
Her eyes darted from Byron's unconscious form to the emergency call button on the wall near the door, a feature Mrs. Gable had pointed out on the first day.
Her hand, still trembling, reached out and slammed it.
Within minutes, the heavy doors burst open. A team of men in dark uniforms with medical kits swarmed in. They moved with a quiet, unnerving efficiency, loading Byron onto a gurney. No one spoke to her. No one even looked at her.
She was escorted out of the mausoleum and into the main manor, a sprawling mansion that made the tomb look modest. They led her to a private medical wing, a state-of-the-art facility that could rival any hospital.
As the medical team disappeared with Byron into a room, a woman with an elegant, severe beauty and silver hair swept into a perfect chignon approached her.
Eleanor Hyde. The family matriarch.
"My dear child." Her voice was rich and cultured, but her eyes, the same dark blue as Byron's, were sharp and assessing. She took Amelie's hands in her own. Her grip was surprisingly strong, her skin cool. "Tell Grandmother what happened."
Amelie's throat was dry. She recounted the story, editing on instinct. She told them about Cal's intrusion, his aggression, his desecration of the pod. She described the pod opening and Byron... waking. She left out the part about the nightly visitations. It was a secret too raw, too confusing to speak aloud.
In the hour that followed, a tense and suffocating eternity, the corridor outside the medical wing slowly filled. The whispers started first, then the sharp clicks of heels on marble. One by one, drawn by the impossible news that had ripped through the estate, the Hyde clan began to assemble, their faces a gallery of shock, disbelief, and poorly concealed calculation. The older man, his face a mask of fury and shock, was Lachlan Hyde, Cal's father. The other, with a colder, more calculating demeanor, was the second brother, Sterling.
Lachlan saw his son's name in the narrative and his face darkened. "Where is Cal?" he demanded.
"He left," Amelie said simply.
The assembled family members exchanged dark looks, their hushed, urgent tones filling the hallway like the buzzing of wasps.
Finally, a doctor emerged from Byron's room.
"He's awake," the doctor announced to the waiting family. "But his condition is... complex."
They filed into the room. Byron was lying in the bed, looking pale and diminished against the stark white sheets, but his eyes were open and lucid.
"I'm not dead," he said. His voice was weak, but it landed in the silent room like a grenade.
Lachlan and Sterling exchanged a look-shock, yes, but underneath it, a flash of profound disappointment.
Byron gave them a plausible, unbelievable story. The accident had induced a rare comatose state, mimicking death. The pod's life-support systems had kept him alive. Cal's shouting and his attempts to tamper with the controls, he claimed, had miraculously stimulated his nervous system, pulling him back to consciousness. It was a perfect, unverifiable miracle.
"However..." Byron paused, ensuring he had everyone's complete attention.
The doctor stepped forward, his expression grave. "Mr. Hyde is reporting a complete loss of sensation in his lower extremities. We'll need to run a full battery of tests, including an MRI, to determine the cause and prognosis, but the initial assessment is... concerning."
Paralyzed.
The word hung in the air, unspoken but understood.
And in the eyes of Lachlan and Sterling, a new light began to dawn. A flicker of hope. A living, breathing Byron was a threat. A Byron confined to a wheelchair? That was manageable.
Eleanor rushed to the bedside, her face a mask of theatrical grief. "My poor, poor boy! But you're alive! That's all that matters. It's God's greatest gift!" She stroked his face, her touch gentle, her words dripping with love. But as her eyes met Amelie's over Byron's head, Amelie felt a strange, unreadable chill pass through her, so quick she dismissed it as a trick of the light.
Byron's gaze shifted, finding Amelie where she stood silently by the door.
"This is Amelie Glass," he announced to the room. "As of three weeks ago, she is Amelie Hyde. My wife."
He held out a hand toward her. The gesture was weak, but the command was absolute.
Hesitantly, she walked to the bed and let him take her hand. His skin was warm.
"During my recovery," Byron continued, his eyes sweeping over his brothers, "she will act on my behalf. Any disrespect shown to her is a direct challenge to me."
The veiled threats in the room seemed to recede. Lachlan and Sterling pasted on smiles, stepping forward to offer hollow words of welcome to Amelie and concern for Byron.
Byron closed his eyes, a convincing performance of exhaustion. "Leave us."
It was a command. They filed out, murmuring amongst themselves, the shock giving way to calculation.
The door clicked shut, leaving Amelie alone with him.
He opened his eyes. The weakness was gone. The pallor was still there, but his gaze was sharp as forged steel.
"Now," Byron Hyde said, his voice losing all its manufactured frailty. "Let's talk about our marriage, Mrs. Hyde."
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8.4
Ayleen Avery was just a struggling hotel worker trying to survive her shift. But during a sudden blackout, she accidentally stumbled into the pitch-black VIP suite of a ruthless billionaire driven mad by chronic insomnia.
Calmed only by her unique natural scent of roses and rain, the terrifying man attacked her from the shadows and forced himself on her. Terrified and broken, Ayleen fled at dawn, unknowingly leaving behind her late mother's antique rose necklace in his bed.
Her greedy coworker found the necklace, claimed to be the woman from that night, and was instantly swept into a life of luxury. Meanwhile, Ayleen was blackmailed into a forced marriage with her attacker—Cassius Doyle—to save her adoptive father from prison. Deceived by the stolen necklace, Cassius believed Ayleen was a manipulative spy. He brought the coworker into their home and paraded her around the master bedroom.
"In this house, you are lower than the dirt on my shoes."
He choked Ayleen, forced her to sleep in a damp storage room, and treated her with violent disgust while pampering the thief.
Ayleen was suffocating in absolute despair. She had lost her innocence, her freedom, and her mother's only relic to a vicious liar. She couldn't understand how this all-powerful man could be so completely blind. Why couldn't he recognize the very scent that had cured his agonizing madness?
Staring at the dark bruises he had just left on her neck, Ayleen wiped the blood from her lip. She would endure this three-month marriage to secure her family's safety, but once the contract ended, she would expose the truth and tear down the fake savior he cherished so much.

7.6
I woke up to the suffocating smell of copper and sulfur, my fingers wrapped around a blood-soaked leather whip.
Hanging from an obsidian cross in front of me was a boy with silver hair and dead, golden eyes.
His pale chest was torn open to the bone.
I recognized those eyes immediately. I had spent three years describing them on my laptop.
He was Kamari Monroe, the tragic, overpowered protagonist of my own web novel.
And I wasn't just a bystander. I was Benedict Guerrero, the sadistic academy headmaster. The ultimate villain.
A reel of images flashed in my mind: my original ending. Kamari, fully awakened, skinning me alive and burning my soul in a furnace for forty-nine days.
My loyal attack dog, Gideon, stepped forward with a basin of glowing green liquid.
"Headmaster, let me wake him up with this bone-rot acid so you can resume."
If that acid hit Kamari, his hatred would become permanent. My gruesome death would be sealed.
But if I broke character and apologized, the magical world would sense the shift, and Kamari would just think it was a sicker, more twisted trap.
How was I supposed to survive a death sentence I wrote myself?
I couldn't show weakness. I had to play the monster to survive.
Suppressing my terror, I smashed the acid basin, healed his ruined flesh with agonizing dark magic, and lied straight to his face.
"Someone had to be the monster to push you into the fire."
This time, I will rewrite my own fate.

8.7
Kaylee woke up to the smell of rotting leaves and blood, realizing she had transmigrated into the grimdark fantasy novel she was reading last night.
A robotic system in her head immediately delivered a death sentence: she was the tribe's vicious cannon fodder, and the male lead—a brutally tortured slave named Elijah—was currently dying on a totem pole outside.
"If he dies, you will face instant soul-detonation."
Kaylee rushed to the plaza, using her villainous authority to stop the execution and drag his mangled body back to her hut.
But saving him was a nightmare.
The original owner's sadism had traumatized him so deeply that her gentle touches and clean bandages only triggered his PTSD.
His feral energy spiraled out of control, his golden eyes burning with paranoid terror as he waited for a new, twisted psychological game.
To keep his energy from detonating and killing them both, Kaylee was forced to act like a monster.
"I didn't save you because I care. A dead slave is useless to me."
Only her cruel insults and threats of future torture calmed his broken mind.
Adding to her despair, she stumbled upon the novel's supposedly innocent heroine in the forest, only to hear her system detect a terrifying anomaly.
The fragile heroine had her own cheat system.
Trapped with a paranoid future-tyrant and a rival player manipulating the tribe's strongest warriors, Kaylee shoved a bowl of hot stew at the bleeding slave with a mocking sneer.
To survive this hell, she had to play the villain perfectly.

8.7
Adelia thought she was just heading upstairs to rest in the hotel suite arranged by her caring stepsister.
But her champagne had been heavily drugged. In the pitch-black room, her rational thoughts melted away as she was violently pulled into the darkness by a terrifying stranger.
The next morning, the heavy suite door was kicked open, and blinding camera flashes shattered her world.
Her fiancé stormed in, hurling their prenuptial agreement directly at her bleeding cheek.
"You make me sick! Violating our agreement like this. You are a disgusting, unfaithful whore!"
Her stepsister squeezed to the front of the crowd, crying perfectly rehearsed tears of horror for the tabloid reporters, while her eyes gleamed with pure, unadulterated triumph.
Desperate and trembling, Adelia begged her father for help, explaining she had been framed.
But her father, the family CEO, only cared about his plummeting stock prices. He coldly stripped her of her inheritance, froze her trust funds, and had massive security guards physically drag her out of Manhattan.
She hadn't just been betrayed; she had been completely slaughtered by the people she loved most. As the elevator plummeted toward the lobby, her tears dried into a bloody, silent vow.
Six years later, Adelia stepped out of JFK Airport, flanked by her terrifyingly smart six-year-old twins.
She was no longer a disgraced, pathetic victim. She had returned as a legendary, untouchable ghost surgeon, ready to rip her family's empire apart.
And her very first move involves saving the life of the ruthless Wall Street predator who ruined her that night.

8.0
For two years, I hid my lethal past as a top-tier Delta Force operator to play the perfect, submissive wife to Kason.
But on the eve of the absolute deadline to claim my parents' ashes, he forced me out of our car into a freezing rainstorm.
He had received a frantic call from his mistress crying over her missing dog.
"Are you seriously using dead people to compete for my attention?" Kason sneered.
He slapped my phone away, hurled my bag with my classified military ID into a muddy ditch, and left me stranded on the highway.
I knelt in the freezing mud as his luxury car sped away. I had swallowed his mother's insults and secretly saved his company from bankruptcy three times. Yet, to him, my parents' remains were just a box of dust compared to his mistress's pet.
The suffocating pain in my chest suddenly evaporated, replaced by a terrifying, absolute zero coldness.
The pathetic, submissive wife he thought he owned died on that highway.
I walked to a dingy motel, washed the gritty mud from my face, and traced the jagged scar on my collarbone.
I picked up the landline and dialed a twelve-digit encrypted number to the Pentagon.
It was time to wake up the ghost operator and burn Kason's world to the ground.

9.0
Angelena was the proud heiress of the wealthy Beasley family, until a single drink shattered her life.
Drugged by her jealous cousin and best friend, she stumbled into the wrong hotel suite and lost her innocence to a terrifying, authoritative stranger.
The next morning, reporters burst through the door, their camera flashes blinding her.
"Look at this mess! You were so desperate for money you'd sleep with some old man?"
Her cousin orchestrated the entire scandal to steal her inheritance. Her grandmother publicly disowned her, stripped her of her trust fund, and banished her from New York in absolute disgrace.
Seven months later, bleeding out in a freezing off-the-grid cabin, Angelena gave birth to quadruplets.
But as she slipped into unconsciousness, a corrupt black-market midwife stole her two newborn sons and sold them into the blizzard, leaving Angelena with only her twin daughters.
She clutched the single platinum cufflink the stranger had left behind, her heart shattered. She couldn't understand why her own blood relatives would destroy her so viciously, or who the monster was that took her innocence.
But the agonizing betrayal ignited a white-hot, burning vow for revenge.
Five years later, she returned to the city not as a broken outcast, but as a legendary underground doctor and a ruthless biotech CEO.
And the very first billionaire she clashed with was Fabian Richmond, a paranoid tyrant who unknowingly possessed her stolen sons—and the exact same platinum crest.