
His Unwanted Wife, Now Unreachable Queen
Bailey, an invisible shadow to the powerful Douglas family, stood in the freezing rain, watching City Hall. For five long years, she’d been used to being forgotten. But today, her entire world shattered as her fiancé, Jameson, walked out with another woman, Haleigh, holding their fresh marriage certificates.
Jameson scooped Haleigh into his arms, treating her like fragile glass, convinced she’d saved him from a burning car five years ago. He never knew it was Bailey who pulled him from the flames, nor that Haleigh's "sickness" had left Bailey with an ugly scar from donating bone marrow, making her a mere family blood bank.
Watching them kiss, pure nausea rose from years of blame. Bailey later found a joyous celebration for Haleigh at the manor. Her wet arrival drew only cold annoyance; Jameson gave pitying instructions before all four men rushed to Haleigh’s side when she faked a cough.
Haleigh, with a sweet smile, presented Bailey a "gift"—a velvet box. Forced to open it, a venomous Brown Recluse spider dropped onto Bailey's hand, sinking its fangs deep. As white-hot agony exploded and her vision blurred, Haleigh theatrically screamed, deliberately scraping her forehead.
The men, blind with panic for Haleigh’s minor scratch, roared at Bailey, shoved her to the floor, and rushed Haleigh to the car. Left to die alone, struggling for breath as her body shut down, Bailey knew this was the end of playing their disgusting game. She had already activated her hidden trust fund, planning to buy a remote island and disappear forever.
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Chapter 5
Bailey Douglas POV:
Blinding white light pierced through my heavy eyelids.
I slowly opened my eyes. The harsh glare of the fluorescent tubes on the ceiling forced me to blink rapidly. The rhythmic, mechanical hiss of a ventilator filled the room.
The sharp, chemical stench of bleach and iodine burned my nose. I tried to swallow, but it felt like I was swallowing crushed glass. My throat was raw and torn from the emergency intubation tube they had shoved down my windpipe to keep me alive.
A doctor in blue scrubs stood next to my bed, writing on a clipboard. When he saw my eyes open, his shoulders dropped in a heavy sigh of relief.
He reached over and pressed the nurse call button. "Ms. Douglas, you're awake. You went into severe anaphylactic shock last night. Your heart stopped for nearly a minute in the ambulance. You are very lucky to be breathing."
I tried to lift my right arm to touch my throat. It wouldn't move. I looked down and saw my entire right arm wrapped in thick, heavy white bandages, elevated on a foam block. It felt like it was made of solid lead.
The heavy soundproof door to the ICU swung open.
Maria rushed into the room. Her eyes were bloodshot and swollen. The moment she saw me awake, she let out a loud sob and threw herself at the side of my bed.
She grabbed my uninjured left hand, pressing it against her wet cheek. "Oh, thank God. Thank God. I was so scared, Bailey. I thought you weren't going to make it."
I looked at her crying face. I forced a weak, trembling smile. My lips cracked. "Thank you," I rasped. My voice sounded like grinding stones.
Growing up in the Douglas house, I was taught never to thank the help. The family believed servants existed to be used. But Maria was the only person in that cold mansion who had ever looked at me like a human being.
The doctor finished writing his notes. "You need to stay in the hospital for at least a week of strict observation. The necrotizing venom is still in your system. If you leave, the tissue damage could spread." He turned and walked out of the room.
The room fell quiet, save for the hum of the machines.
Maria wiped her face with a tissue. Her sadness suddenly morphed into fierce, trembling anger. "They didn't come, Bailey."
I stared at the ceiling. I didn't say anything.
"I called them over twenty times last night," Maria cried, her voice shaking with rage. "Finally, Kane answered the phone. I told him you were dying. Do you know what he said?"
My heart monitor beeped in a steady, unbroken rhythm. I already knew.
"He said, 'Let her die,' and hung up the phone." Maria choked on a sob. "They rented out the entire VIP floor of St. Jude's Private Hospital across town. They brought in plastic surgeons. For a scrape on Haleigh's forehead. A scrape!"
I looked at the white fluorescent lights. My eyes were completely dry. There was no pain left in my chest. No anger. Just a vast, frozen wasteland.
On the bedside table, a cheap burner phone suddenly vibrated. The screen lit up. Maria had brought it from my room.
She picked it up and handed it to me, her eyes hopeful. "Maybe it's Mr. Jameson. Maybe he finally realized..."
I took the phone with my left hand. I swiped the screen open. It wasn't Jameson. It was an encrypted text message from Abernathy.
[Island preliminary screening complete. Background checks initiated. However, the trust liquidation has a deficit. You are three million dollars short for the purchase.]
My pupils dilated. Three million dollars. It was the only wall standing between me and my freedom.
I stared at the screen. My brain rapidly calculated my options. I would rather die than touch a single cent of the Douglas family's money.
Then, a name I had buried three years ago flashed in my mind.
*Hale.*
It was my mother's maiden name. It was also the alias I created on the dark web. When I was locked in the Douglas basement for weeks at a time, my only escape was drawing on the concrete walls with pieces of burnt charcoal. That pain had birthed a monster in the art world.
I gripped the phone tightly. My knuckles turned white.
I threw the thin hospital blanket off my body. Ignoring Maria's loud gasp, I swung my heavy, trembling legs over the side of the bed.
The moment my bare feet hit the freezing linoleum floor, my knees buckled. I almost crashed to the ground, but Maria lunged forward and caught my waist.
"Bailey! What are you doing? Get back in bed!" she screamed.
I ground my teeth together. The pain radiating from my right arm was blinding. I reached over with my left hand and grabbed the thick IV needle taped to the back of my hand.
I ripped it out.
A stream of bright red blood instantly spurted out, dripping down my fingers and staining my pure white hospital gown.
Maria shrieked in horror. She grabbed a towel and pressed it against my bleeding hand. "Are you insane? The doctor said you'll die!"
I pressed my thumb hard against the puncture wound to stop the bleeding. I looked Maria dead in the eyes. My gaze was harder than steel.
"If I stay in this bed, I will die in that house," I told her.
I leaned my weight against the cold wall, forcing my spine completely straight. I looked at my pale, ghost-like reflection in the room's mirror.
"Go process the discharge. I have a massive deal to make."
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9.6
For five years, I was Barron Santana's elite bodyguard and loyal shadow. I stood between him and bullets, giving him my youth and my entire heart.
But last night, the CEO announced his engagement to a flawless socialite on national television.
Heartbroken, I got blackout drunk and ended up crashing on the couch of Cassidy Gross, a billionaire tech CEO who saved me from a bar creep.
When I showed up late to work, Barron locked me in his freezing office. He pinned me against the glass, smelling Cassidy's cologne on my clothes.
"Are you already looking for your next meal ticket?"
He snarled the words, treating me like a cheap whore. When I defended myself, he pulled out a silk handkerchief and wiped his fingers, acting as if my very touch contaminated him.
Then, he coldly ordered his assistant to draft my termination papers.
Five years of risking my life for him, thrown away like garbage just because of his twisted ego.
Devastated, I ran out and collapsed in the hallway, sobbing uncontrollably until a kind coworker gently pulled me into his arms to comfort me.
I didn't know Barron had followed me out.
Seeing me clinging to another man, his legendary control completely shattered, replaced by a dark, violent possessiveness.
But it was too late. I was done playing his obedient dog, and it was time to take Cassidy up on his offer.

8.8
Clara supported her boyfriend Leo for four years, paying his rent and buying his headshots while working dead-end extra gigs.
On his twenty-sixth birthday, she caught him in their bed with Veronica, a wealthy producer's daughter who constantly stole Clara's roles.
Leo mocked Clara as a "pathetic, poor stepping stone" who was just there until he got his foot in the door.
Veronica threatened to ruin Clara's career forever.
Clara dumped him, packed her bags, and impulsively entered a contract marriage with a cold stranger she met at City Hall.
But her nightmare wasn't over.
When her mother suddenly needed a $200,000 emergency brain surgery, Clara was forced to take a demeaning extra gig to survive.
There, Veronica and her starlet friend cornered Clara.
They mocked her cheap clothes, ridiculed her new wedding ring as fake glass, and intentionally poured scalding coffee on her feet.
"Well, maid, you better clean that up."
Veronica laughed, forcing Clara to her knees to wipe up the burning liquid while snapping photos.
Clara swallowed her burning humiliation, secretly recording their abuse on her phone.
She endured the pain, desperate for the $300 day rate to save her mother's life, feeling entirely crushed by their overwhelming wealth and power.
What she didn't know was that outside the soundstage, her new contract husband—the man she thought was just a struggling, broke tech worker—was sitting in a sleek black Maybach.
He watched his wife kneeling on the floor, and his dark eyes filled with a lethal, terrifying rage.

8.5
"You are getting married, huh?" A shrill voice asked me from behind. "You don't look happy.'
"It's a complicated situati..." He cut me off.
"I can make you happy."
My eyes darted between his lips and eyes, he noticed my indecision and locked his lips with mine.
While battling with betrayal, Iris melts into a mafia's touch without knowing who he is. Now she must bear all the consequences that follow.

9.8
Erica Murphy had spent three years rotting in a freezing prison cell.
She thought she was serving time for a tragic accident, but the truth was much darker. Her husband, Colten, had framed her for his mistress's drunk hit-and-run, stolen her fortune, and left her to take the fall.
The day Erica was finally released, a speeding car intentionally slammed into her, shattering her spine. As she lay dying on the emergency room table, flatlining on the monitor, Colten and his pregnant mistress didn't come to save her. Instead, they tossed a stack of divorce papers onto her bloody hospital blanket. They wanted her to sign away her last remaining shares and take on thirty million dollars of toxic corporate debt.
"Sign it," Colten demanded coldly, looking at her crushed body with utter disgust. "Consider this the last bit of dignity I'm giving you."
The original Erica died right there, suffocating in despair and betrayal, unable to understand how the man she loved could be so monstrous.
But when the flatline on the monitor suddenly spiked and her eyes snapped open, the traumatized victim was gone.
Replaced by the cold, calculating consciousness of a future special ops commander. With microscopic nanobots rapidly fusing her shattered bones together, Erica picked up the pen, preparing to burn Colten's entire empire to ashes.

9.4
I was lying in a sterile hospital room, dying of cancer, with only a fake infertility report to keep me company.
Right before my heart monitor flatlined, a stranger walked in and handed me a medical file.
He told me that my fiancé, Garret, had zero sperm viability. The baby my adoptive sister, Beryl, was carrying wasn't his.
When Beryl got pregnant years ago, my adoptive parents forced me to break my engagement and take the blame for being barren.
I was discarded by Garret, mocked by Beryl's triumphant smiles, and kicked out of the house.
I was left to rot alone in a hospital bed while they lived the perfect life stolen from me.
My entire existence had been a cage built on a single, disgusting lie.
The anger burned away my despair. Why was I the only one who didn't know?
Why did I let them use me as a maid and a shield for their filthy secrets?
As the darkness swallowed me, I prayed for just one more chance.
I opened my eyes to the sound of my adoptive mother yelling my name.
The calendar on the wall read March 15, 2019—the exact day they forced me to give up Garret.
This time, I didn't cry or beg.
"You want Beryl to have Garret? Fine," I told my shocked adoptive parents. "But I want a cash buyout, and we are legally severing this adoption."
Then, I set my sights on Douglass Ward—the stranger from the hospital room.

8.0
Twenty-one-year-old Hazel has always lived in a safe, comfortable bubble, meticulously guarded by her fiercely protective older brother. Her life is predictable, quiet, and perfectly ordinary. Until he steps into it.
Silas is twenty-four, dangerously captivating, and her brother's best friend. He brings with him an aura of dark secrets, ink-stained skin, and a predatory gaze that strips away all her carefully built defenses. He is everything she has been taught to avoid, yet living under the same roof makes him impossible to escape.
What starts as a temporary living arrangement quickly spirals into a suffocating web of stolen glances, unspoken desires, and a dangerous obsession. Silas isn't just looking for a place to crash; he's looking at her. And once he pins her in his sights, the thorns of their forbidden attraction will bind them together in ways that could destroy them both.
In a house where walls have ears and her brother is always watching, giving in to the madness is a risk. But Silas is a temptation she might not survive.