
Immune To The Billionaire's Toxic Regret
Elmore Thomas rushed into the emergency room, clutching his feverish seven-year-old son, Buddy, tightly to his chest.
When the privacy curtain was pulled back, the air in Elmore's lungs vanished. The attending physician standing under the harsh lights was his wife, Kendal—the woman everyone believed had burned to death eight years ago.
But there was no tearful reunion. Kendal looked at him, and her eyes froze into impenetrable ice. She treated him like a biohazard, strictly referring to him as the family member.
Worse, she didn't recognize Buddy. She comforted their crying son with the same gentle warmth she used to reserve for Elmore, completely unaware she was soothing the baby she thought had died.
Days later, Elmore watched from the shadows as she picked up another boy outside a prep school, her left hand flashing a massive diamond engagement ring.
When his butler accidentally recognized her, Kendal shielded her new stepson with pure disgust in her eyes.
"Tell that psychopath to sign the divorce papers immediately. I have a new family now."
The words 'new family' echoed in Elmore's skull, tearing him apart. For eight years, he had lived in a hell of guilt and madness, raising their son in the shadow of her ghost. How could she just erase their past? How could she give her tender smiles to a stranger and look at him with absolute revulsion?
Standing in a luxury ballroom, Elmore squeezed his hand until his crystal champagne flute shattered, thick blood dripping onto the rug. The murderous obsession in his dark eyes returned as he called his lawyer.
"Freeze her divorce application. Use every dirty trick in the book. She isn't leaving."
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Chapter 3
Elmore dragged his feet across the linoleum floor. He felt like a man walking to his own execution. He reached Cubicle Three, grabbed the edge of the curtain, and stepped back into the small, chemical-smelling space.
Buddy was sitting up slightly against the elevated pillows. A strip of white medical tape secured an IV needle to the back of his small, pale hand. Clear fluid dripped slowly through the plastic tubing.
When Buddy saw his father enter, a desperate spark of hope lit up his fever-glazed eyes. He pushed himself up a fraction of an inch.
Elmore pulled the cheap plastic chair closer to the bed and sat down heavily. He leaned forward, resting his elbows on his knees, and buried his face in his large hands. The pulse in his temples hammered a sickening rhythm against his palms.
Buddy noticed the rigid tension in his father's shoulders. The boy reached out with his free hand and weakly tugged at the cuff of Elmore's cashmere coat.
Elmore dropped his hands and lifted his head. His eyes were bloodshot. He looked at his son's face-the shape of the eyes, the curve of the jaw-it was a ghost of Kendal staring back at him. His chest tightened painfully.
Buddy bit his dry lower lip. His voice was a raspy, quiet whisper as he asked, "Father, is that her? The woman from the picture... is that my mother?"
The question exploded in Elmore's ears like a gunshot. His pupils blew wide open.
He instantly twisted his head, his eyes darting toward the gap in the curtain to make sure no one was standing outside. His body coiled tight, every muscle locking into a state of extreme defensive panic.
Buddy reached under his thin hospital pillow. His small fingers pulled out a heavy, tarnished silver pocket watch. He popped the lid open. Inside sat a faded, grainy photograph of Kendal's side profile.
The boy pointed a trembling finger at the picture, then pointed toward the hallway. His eyes begged for the truth.
Elmore stared at the watch. It was his watch. He used to hold it until the metal dug into his skin during his worst panic attacks. Buddy must have stolen it from his nightstand.
The image of Kendal's face contorting in absolute disgust in the hallway flashed behind Elmore's eyes. If she knew this boy was hers, would she look at the child with that same revulsion?
A darker, more terrifying thought gripped his throat. If she knew the child survived, she would take him. She would take Buddy and vanish, leaving Elmore with nothing but empty rooms and his own madness.
Driven by a sickening surge of selfish terror, Elmore lunged forward. He snatched the pocket watch out of Buddy's hand with brutal force.
Buddy flinched hard. His small shoulders shrank back against the mattress, and his eyes instantly filled with hot tears. He pulled his empty hand to his chest.
Elmore forced his jaw to lock. He stared at his crying son and stated in a cold, hard voice that the doctor was just a stranger who happened to look similar.
Buddy shook his head stubbornly. A tear spilled over his hot cheek. He argued in a broken voice that the doctor smelled exactly like the old scarf locked in his father's closet.
The boy's sharp senses felt like needles driving under Elmore's fingernails. He leaned in close and ordered Buddy to never bring it up again. His voice left no room for argument.
A heavy, suffocating silence fell over the bed. Buddy turned his face toward the wall, his small chest hitching with silent sobs.
The curtain suddenly swept back. Kendal walked in carrying a small glass vial of antibiotics.
Elmore shot up from the chair like a spring. His massive frame immediately moved to block the space between Kendal and the bed, trying to physically sever their line of sight.
Kendal stopped. Her brow furrowed in irritation at his erratic movement. She let out a short breath through her nose, her thumb pressing hard into her index knuckle.
Behind Elmore's back, Buddy leaned his head around his father's waist. He stared at Kendal with wide, tear-soaked eyes. The look on the boy's face was pure, unadulterated longing.
Kendal's eyes met the child's. A strange, heavy sensation dropped into the bottom of her stomach. A sharp ache flared in her chest, completely unprompted.
She assumed the aggressive man standing in front of her had just yelled at the sick child. Her jaw tightened with fresh anger toward Elmore.
She stepped entirely around Elmore, ignoring his presence, and moved to the far side of the bed. She reached deep into the pocket of her lab coat and pulled out a sugar-free cherry lollipop.
She leaned down until her face was level with Buddy's. Her voice dropped an octave, turning incredibly soft and warm. She pressed the plastic stick into Buddy's hand and told him he was doing a very brave job.
Buddy's fingers closed tightly around the lollipop. He felt the lingering warmth from her pocket on the plastic wrapper. Fresh tears spilled rapidly down his cheeks, dropping onto the white blanket.
Elmore stood frozen on the other side of the bed. He watched his wife comfort their son, a son who thought he was motherless, a wife who thought her baby was dead. The lie he had built was burning him alive from the inside out, the flames of his own deceit scorching his throat so badly he couldn't breathe as he witnessed the natural, undeniable bond he was actively destroying.
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8.7
Brought back from a humble life in Montana, Nora found out she was the true biological heiress of the ultra-wealthy Beaumont family.
But her biological parents didn't love her; they loved the fake daughter, Olivia, much more.
The moment she arrived, her father pushed an engagement termination agreement across his massive desk, forcing her to give up her wealthy fiancé so Olivia could have him.
Her mother looked at her with pure disdain.
"You should know your place. Don't reach for things that were never meant for you."
To break her spirit, they moved her into a cramped, dusty servant's room. They even ordered the butler to feed her cold kitchen scraps and gristle.
They wanted to humiliate her, to make her feel like a piece of trash rather than a daughter.
They expected her to cry, to beg, and to be absolutely crushed by the realization that her own flesh and blood saw her only as a liability to their reputation.
They thought the country girl would easily fold under their united front of cruelty.
But Nora felt no sting of betrayal, only the calculating clarity of a chess player.
She calmly signed the paper, pulled out the Beaumont family trust rules, and looked them dead in the eye.
"Since I am the legal heir, I demand what belongs to me. I'm taking the master bedroom."

8.8
On the eve of my glamorous Waldorf Astoria wedding, I went to the penthouse to surprise my fiancé, Hugh, wearing my late mother's heirloom pearls.
Instead, I heard my stepsister's familiar laugh and caught them tangled together on the sofa.
Through the cracked door, I heard Hugh slur that he was only marrying me for my family's financial backing.
"As soon as I secure my inheritance, she's the first thing I'm getting rid of," he promised her.
Floy giggled and asked for my mother's pearl necklace, my only legacy. Hugh agreed without hesitation, mocking my dead mother's naivety and my desperate dreams of building a family.
Every sweet word he had ever said was a lie, a knife he had been patiently sliding between my ribs for years. They planned to strip me of everything the moment I signed the prenup.
I didn't cry or scream. The crushing weight of their betrayal hollowed me out, leaving behind a terrifying, absolute calm.
Why should I be the one to lose everything while they stole my future and insulted my mother's memory?
I calmly walked down the hall, set the prenuptial agreement on fire, and vanished into the rainy night.
If Hugh wanted to play dirty for the Maxwell empire, I would play for keeps.
Using a forgotten, century-old family covenant, I was going to marry Hugh's uncle-the comatose, paralyzed war hero, Fleet Maxwell.
I would return not as a naive bride, but as their worst nightmare: his aunt, and the new lady of the house.

7.6
I was once the untouchable heiress to the Schroeder empire, until a corporate fraud conviction stripped away my life and threw me into federal prison for five brutal years.
On the day of my release, I stepped out into the freezing rain only to realize I had been utterly abandoned by everyone I loved.
My family sent no one. My former best friends blocked my number, and high-society women took photos of my shivering, pathetic state for laughs. To survive, I made a desperate deal to act as the fake fiancée of Kayden Washington, a ruthless, disgraced billionaire fighting his own blood. But the moment we joined forces, the nightmare escalated. Our safehouse was ransacked, we were hunted by tactical hitmen in the dark, and my adoptive brother stole my dead mother's diary just to bribe me into leaving New York forever. Worse, the digital trail of my framing traced back to a top-tier operative manipulating both our families from the shadows.
I didn't understand why my own family had sacrificed me like a worthless pawn to ignite a massive, invisible war. What dark secret was I actually taking the fall for?
Just as Kayden and I prepared to burn both empires to the ground, a mysterious courier dropped a package at my door. Inside rested the Schroeder Patriarch's solid gold ring—the ultimate symbol of absolute power—sent directly to me, the disgraced exile.
"They took your past, but I will give you the power to forge a new future."
The game hadn't just changed. The board had been flipped, and I was going back to take the throne.

8.2
My son Leo had just died, and the silence in our cramped apartment felt like a physical weight crushing my chest.
Before I could even process the grief, my husband, Preston, kicked the door open and threw divorce papers onto the table.
Behind him stood Gloria, wearing a pristine cashmere coat and the diamond pendant Preston swore he had pawned to pay for Leo's hospital bills.
"Sign it," Preston said coldly. "You get nothing."
Gloria smirked, mocking me for failing to keep my sick child alive. When I tore up the papers in a blinding rage, Preston slapped me to the floor.
Then, my biological mother, Jerilyn, walked in. Instead of helping me, she pulled a serrated kitchen knife from her bag and plunged it deep into my stomach.
As I lay dying in a pool of my own blood, Jerilyn leaned in and whispered the devastating truth.
"I swapped you in the nursery. Gloria is my blood, and you belong in a Manhattan mansion. I can't let you ruin her life."
Until my lungs stopped working, I was consumed by a roaring, violent hatred. My own mother had traded my life of privilege for poverty, let my son die, and then murdered me to protect the fake.
Opening my eyes again, the dingy ceiling and the agonizing pain were gone.
I was sitting at a wooden desk, surrounded by the chatter of teenagers.
I was back in high school. And this time, I was going to make them pay.

9.0
Grace's engagement to Dillan Hayes was nothing but a cold business transaction to secure funding for her family's company.
But when Dillan violently shoved her into a marble bar over his ex-girlfriend, leaving her bleeding, Grace didn't hesitate.
She called 911, had her fiancé arrested on the spot, and broke off the engagement.
Returning to the Albert estate, she expected chaos, but not absolute betrayal.
Her family didn't care that she had just been physically assaulted.
They were in a sheer panic because her cousin Ashly had just fled the country, abandoning a terrifying arranged marriage.
The groom was Hudson Turner, a man known across Manhattan as a disgraced, violent psychopath, paralyzed from the waist down in a severe crash.
To save themselves from the Turner family's wrath and financial ruin, Grace's aunt and father ordered her to take Ashly's place.
"You eat from this family, you live in this house! It is time you paid us back!"
Her father even threatened to freeze her bank accounts and faked a heart attack to force her compliance.
For three years, Grace had single-handedly kept the family business afloat while they squandered the profits.
Now, they were throwing her to a monster without a second thought, expecting her to rot as a crippled man's miserable nursemaid.
But they picked the wrong sacrifice.
Grace ruthlessly extorted a legal severance from her family, taking her shares and cutting all ties forever.
She walked straight into Hudson Turner's private gallery to propose a mutually beneficial, cutthroat business marriage.
However, when the prenuptial was signed, the "paralyzed" billionaire placed his hands on his wheelchair.
Slowly, deliberately, Hudson stood up to his full, imposing height of six-foot-three.
"The wheelchair is a necessary illusion for my enemies," Hudson stated calmly. "But it will never be an illusion between you and me."

8.5
As Aurora lay dying of organ failure in the freezing ICU, she used her last ounce of strength to call her husband on their son's fifth birthday.
Instead of his voice, she heard the pop of champagne and the sweet laugh of his mistress, Jessica.
Conrad snatched the phone, impatiently ordering Aurora not to "ruin the mood" with her irrelevant calls.
But what truly pushed her into cardiac arrest was her five-year-old son's excited voice ringing through the speakerphone.
"I wish for Auntie Jessica to be my new mommy!"
"As long as you like it, Daddy will give you anything," Conrad promised without a second of hesitation.
Aurora gagged on her own blood and flatlined, the heart monitor erupting into a piercing red alarm.
She had swallowed her pride and wasted five years playing the perfect, submissive housewife, only to be thrown away like garbage by the two people she loved most.
She couldn't understand why her absolute devotion ended with her dying completely alone on a sterile mattress.
But she didn't die. Snatched from the jaws of death by a mysterious billionaire from her past, she woke up in a luxury suite, fully healed.
Looking at her pale, cold reflection in the window, the pathetic old Aurora died.
She packed her battered suitcase, signed a brutal postnuptial agreement waiving every single cent of her husband's wealth, and dropped the divorce papers on the table.
This time, she was leaving for good.