
Married To The Ruthless Billionaire Husband
To save her dying mother, Adaline walked into the Waldorf Astoria to deliver a shirt to her fiancé.
She didn't know her stepsister, June, had swapped her keycard. Adaline stumbled into a pitch-black suite and was brutally assaulted by a stranger in the dark.
The nightmare didn't end there. June paid off the only bone marrow donor for Adaline's mother to flee the city, and stole Adaline's fiancé. Bankrupt and desperate, Adaline was forced to sell herself into a loveless marriage with the ruthless billionaire Ferris Finch just to secure a medical team.
But when Ferris saw the dark, violent bruises covering her body, his eyes filled with absolute disgust.
"You make me sick. Pack up your cheap tricks."
He mocked her, calling her a filthy woman who couldn't even wash her lover's marks off before crawling into his house.
Adaline swallowed her pride and endured his cruel humiliation. When June publicly taunted her about the hotel assault, Adaline finally snapped, ending up handcuffed in a freezing police cell.
She thought she was completely out of moves, waiting to rot in prison while her new husband despised her.
But back at the estate, Ferris had just pulled the hotel's security footage.
Staring at the screen, the arrogant billionaire's face turned completely ashen.
He finally realized that the innocent woman he had destroyed in the dark that night, and the wife he was currently torturing, were the exact same person.
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Chapter 5
Adaline walked down the long, silent corridor of the second floor.
The sleeves of the silk shirt hung past her fingertips. She rolled them up, her movements stiff and mechanical.
She reached the heavy oak doors at the end of the hall. The study.
The door was left slightly ajar. Inside, Ferris sat behind a massive mahogany desk. He was flipping through a stack of legal documents, his face an unreadable mask.
Adaline raised her hand. Her knuckles rapped twice against the wood. A dull, hollow sound.
Ferris didn't look up. "Enter."
She pushed the door open. The air inside was thick with the bitter scent of black coffee and the lingering smoke of a Cuban cigar. It felt suffocating.
Ferris picked up a thick bound document and tossed it across the polished wood. It slid rapidly, stopping just inches from the edge of the desk.
He finally raised his eyes. He looked at her as if she were a stain on his rug. "Sign the prenuptial agreement. Don't waste my time."
Adaline walked forward. She picked up the heavy document. She flipped open the first page. The legal jargon was dense, but the core terms were brutally clear.
She had absolutely no right to interfere in his personal life. If they divorced, she would leave with nothing. Zero alimony. Zero assets.
Ferris leaned back in his leather chair. He crossed his arms over his broad chest. He waited for the mask to slip. He waited for the gold digger to throw a tantrum when she realized she wasn't getting a dime of his money.
Adaline didn't blink. She didn't frown. She bypassed the middle pages entirely and flipped straight to the back.
She picked up the heavy Montblanc pen resting on the desk. Without a single second of hesitation, she pressed the nib to the paper and signed her name.
The scratching sound of the pen echoed loudly in the quiet room.
Ferris's eyes narrowed. A flash of genuine surprise crossed his face, but he quickly buried it under a layer of cynicism.
"You really are desperate to latch onto the Finch name," Ferris sneered. "Playing the long game. Impressive acting."
Adaline put the pen down. She ignored his insult. She placed both hands flat on the edge of his desk and leaned forward. She looked straight into his cold eyes.
She swallowed her pride. It tasted like ash. "I signed it. Now, please. I need you to use your network to find a matching bone marrow donor for my mother."
Ferris's expression darkened instantly. The temperature in the room plummeted. To him, this was the real shakedown. This was the greed he had been waiting for.
He stood up abruptly. He planted his hands on the desk, leaning in to match her posture. His massive frame cast a shadow over her.
"The Finch family is not a charity," Ferris said, his voice a lethal rumble. "You get the basic medical bills paid. That was the deal. Nothing more."
Panic seized Adaline's throat. "She doesn't have time! The basic treatment isn't enough. If you just make a few calls-I'll do anything you want."
Ferris caught the word "anything." His eyes dropped to her body, scanning the oversized clothes that hid the bruises he had seen earlier. A cruel, mocking sound left his throat.
"Your used body holds zero appeal to me," Ferris said, his words dripping with malice. "Keep your cheap tricks to yourself."
The words acted like a physical knife plunging into her chest. All the blood drained from Adaline's face, leaving her chalk-white.
She bit down on her lower lip. Hard. The metallic taste of blood flooded her mouth. She forced her eyes to stay wide open, refusing to let the tears fall in front of him.
Ferris watched her jaw clench. A strange, irritating tightness gripped his own chest, but he ignored it.
"We register at City Hall in three days," Ferris stated coldly. He pressed a button on his intercom. "Alistair. Escort her back to the guest wing. She is not permitted in the master wing."
Alistair appeared in the doorway immediately. He gestured for her to leave.
Adaline turned around. She walked out of the study like a ghost.
The heavy door clicked shut behind her, severing her last lifeline.
She made it back to the freezing guest room. The moment the door closed, her legs gave out. She slid down the wooden panels until she hit the floor. She pulled her knees to her chest and buried her face in her arms.
She stared at the intricate patterns on the Persian rug. The despair in her eyes slowly hardened into a cold, unbreakable ice. She was entirely alone in this house. She had to save her mother herself.
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7.2
I am a resident surgeon, secretly married to Dr. Barrett Walters, the Chief of Cardiothoracic Surgery. It was a transactional marriage; he paid my mother's mounting medical bills, and I was his secret, obedient wife in the dark.
But at the hospital, he was a cold-blooded tyrant who deliberately made my life a living hell. During a major medical conference, he viciously tore apart my successful surgical repair, looking me dead in the eye as he called me incompetent in front of all my colleagues.
The humiliation didn't stop there. With his tacit approval, the senior residents bullied me, assigning me every brutal night shift. When his beautiful, wealthy heiress "girlfriend" visited the ward, he publicly mocked my background to make her smile.
"Some people get in through the back door. They're not fit for the front lines."
Even when I was forced to work as a secret banquet waitress to cover the medical copays he ignored, he found me, ruined the job out of pure possessive jealousy, and then fined my meager resident salary the very next morning just to show his absolute control.
I endured his punishing kisses and cruel rebukes, sacrificing my dignity just to keep my mother alive. But I couldn't understand why he had to destroy every shred of my peace. If he wanted the perfect heiress, why did he refuse to let me go?
Staring at his cold, controlling eyes in the stairwell, my exhaustion finally overpowered my fear. I was done being his victim, and it was time to tear up this contract.

9.5
For nine years, I poured my soul into proving I was worthy of my wealthy boyfriend, Clayton Wright. I endured his endless, humiliating "tests," sacrificing everything for a place in his world.
But at our engagement party, the final test was revealed. He stood by as his ex-girlfriend, Anjelica, framed me for shattering a priceless family heirloom.
"You manipulative bitch!" he snarled, slapping me across the face. He then ordered his bodyguard to force me to my knees, grinding them into the sharp, broken fragments of the watch.
As I bled on the floor, he pulled out his phone and gave a single command: demolish my childhood home, the last piece I had of my deceased father.
He destroyed my past and my dignity, yet minutes later, my phone buzzed with a message from him.
"The engagement is just for show. I'll still marry you. You're my destiny."
That night, clutching the last of my father's life insurance, I booked a one-way ticket and vanished. He thought he had finally broken his little project, but he had just unleashed a woman with nothing left to lose.

9.6
Antoinette stood on the manicured church lawn, the blinding summer sun stabbing her eyes. The funeral service for her parents had just ended.
A hand wrapped around her trembling shoulder, carrying the sharp, cloying scent of Fabian Cash's cologne. It was the exact same cologne her fiancé wore the night he locked her in a burning house to die in her previous life.
Now, wearing a mask of sorrowful devotion, Fabian tried to drag her to his car to control her parents' massive life insurance payout.
When she shoved him away in pure nausea, his mother Eleanor immediately shrieked to the crowd, deploying her usual guilt trip.
"She's lost her mind! The girl has completely snapped!"
The townspeople whispered and pointed fingers, watching Fabian play the victim as he tightened his bruising grip on her wrist, claiming she was hysterical and needed to be locked away.
Antoinette stared at the mother and son who had conspired to steal her family's estate and end her life. The rage inside her felt like battery acid pumping through her veins.
They didn't care if she lived or died; they only cared about the money. How could she let them strip her of everything again?
She didn't hesitate. She swung with every bit of strength she possessed, slapping Fabian across the face in front of the entire town.
"The engagement is over," she announced coldly.
Then, she turned her back on her greedy ex-fiancé and walked straight toward the terrifyingly powerful billionaire Hiram Graves, ready to let the world burn.

9.8
When I woke up on the muddy bank of the freezing river, I unlocked a brutal, unfiltered preview of my actual future.
For the past six months, I had been the town's ultimate joke, chasing after a city boy who looked at me like a diseased insect. Everyone thought I jumped into the river because he rejected me.
But the nightmare didn't stop there. In the future I foresaw, my entire family was destroyed. My eldest brother was handcuffed and dragged into a squad car. My second brother died in a pool of blood on the asphalt. My parents passed away from sheer grief and humiliation, and our farm was foreclosed.
Meanwhile, Bart Hawkins—my family's sworn enemy, the boy everyone accused of pushing me, but who actually jumped in to save my life—became a billionaire tech mogul. I ended up starving to death in a damp, moldy basement, completely alone.
I finally understood that I was just a pathetic, tragic side character meant to drag my family into hell. My own sister-in-law, Felicie, had been stealing our food and money, laughing at my misery behind my back.
But right now, my mother was still alive, my brothers were safe, and the farm was ours.
When Felicie walked into my bedroom, playing the devoted sister-in-law with a bowl of clear, meatless broth while a stolen roasted chicken thigh leaked grease through her apron pocket, I didn't play along.
"What's in your pocket, Felicie?"
This time, I was going to tear that horrific future apart with my bare hands.

7.1
Bonnie Galvan woke up to the suffocating scent of lilies, staring at the mirror in the exact same seven-figure wedding dress she had worn seven years ago.
In the doorway stood her so-called best friend Itzel and her secret lover Erwin, desperately urging her to elope.
They warned her that her soon-to-be husband, the billionaire Arlington Townsend, was a crippled monster, and marrying him would ruin her life forever.
In her previous life, she blindly believed their lies and ran away from the altar.
Because of her public betrayal, the ruthless Townsend family completely bankrupted her father's company in retaliation.
Erwin and Itzel swooped in as her saviors, only to steal whatever was left of her family's wealth and power.
When she was finally stripped of her value, Erwin pushed her down an icy mountain slope during a brutal blizzard.
With a shattered ankle, she could only watch as Itzel smirked and Erwin coldly walked away, leaving her to be buried alive under the freezing snow.
As her lungs burned and her heart gave out in the agonizing cold, she was consumed by hatred.
Why did the man who swore to protect her and the friend she trusted with her life plot so meticulously to destroy her?
Opening her eyes again, Bonnie was back in the bridal suite, minutes before the ceremony.
This time, she didn't run.
She walked straight down the aisle, looked the terrifying Arlington Townsend in the eye, and firmly said her vows.
"I do."

8.2
Ashley was tied to a rusted iron pillar in an abandoned warehouse, the noxious fumes of gasoline soaking her clothes.
Her fiancé Devon and her stepsister Brittany stood before her, revealing a horrifying truth. Devon never saved her from that fatal car crash three years ago; he merely stole the credit.
Worse, Brittany smirked and confessed that Ashley's own father had orchestrated her mother's murder. Before Ashley could process the betrayal, Devon callously tossed a lighter. A wall of blistering heat instantly consumed her. Even when Bennett Hawkins, the cold and untouchable billionaire, rushed into the inferno to shield her with his body, they were both swallowed by the explosion.
As the fire melted her skin, Ashley died with agonizing hatred. Why did her own flesh and blood want her dead? What dark secret were they hiding about her mother's tragic death?
Opening her eyes again, freezing saltwater violently flooded her lungs.
She was back at her twentieth birthday yacht party, right after Brittany had secretly pushed her into the freezing Hudson River.
Staring at the hypocritical faces of her family pretending it was an accident, Ashley didn't cry or beg. She calmly snatched a phone and dialed 911.
"Yes. I need to report an attempted murder."