
My Awakening: His World Falls Apart
My husband Hudson had kept me a medicated ghost for three years, convinced I was unstable. But a cheap pink hair clip, tangled with golden blonde hair in his car, ripped through the chemical haze. The bitter pill he forced me to take wouldn't numb the burning truth, only fuel my awakening.
I was an architect once, but now I was just Cora, a docile wife trapped in his suffocating world. When he saw my shock, his concern was sickeningly sweet as he offered another Xanax. I pretended to swallow the poison, letting it dissolve under my tongue, a constant reminder of my awakening.
Back at the mansion, his massive car deliberately blocked mine, a crude barricade confirming his control. Then, a message from an old intern confirmed my darkest fears: this was domestic abuse. He urged me to check Hudson’s closet, to record everything.
I knew then I was living with a dangerous monster, and my denial shattered. The anger burned, fueled by the bitter taste of that undissolved pill.
That night, Hudson walked in, wearing a hideous, sloppily tied red polka-dot tie. It was a clear, undeniable sign of another woman. My architect’s mind was awake, cold and calculating. "Game on, Hudson." I would make him taste this bitterness back a thousand times.
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Chapter 4
Cora POV:
The next morning, Hudson stood in front of the massive floor-to-ceiling mirror in his walk-in closet, adjusting his collar. I sat on the edge of the mattress, watching him with the quiet, docile stillness he expected. His hands moved with practiced precision, looping a thick, deep navy blue silk tie into a flawless Windsor knot.
As an architect, I noticed details. Textures, colors, the geometry of how things fit together. I had an eidetic memory for the things he wore.
He turned around, shrugging into his tailored suit jacket. He walked over, leaned down, and pressed a soft kiss to my forehead. "I'll see you for dinner, darling," he murmured, his mask completely impenetrable.
Fast forward to six o'clock in the evening. The electronic keypad on the heavy mahogany front door beeped three times. He was home, right on schedule.
I stood in the foyer, holding his indoor slippers in my hands. The perfect, subservient wife waiting to greet her provider. It made my skin crawl, but I knew that extreme submission was the only way to lower his defenses.
The door swung open. Hudson stepped inside, bringing a rush of damp, freezing Seattle air with him.
I looked up, a greeting dying on my lips. My eyes locked onto his chest. My lungs seized, the air completely knocked out of me.
He wasn't wearing the navy blue silk tie.
Hanging from his collar, knotted with a sloppy, uneven hand, was a hideous, bright red tie covered in cheap white polka dots. The fabric looked thin, almost synthetic. It was a violent clash against his expensive bespoke suit. It was a tie someone else had tied for him.
I dug my fingernails so hard into the leather of his slippers that the skin of my palms threatened to tear. I forced the muscles in my face to hold my placid smile, fighting the sheer panic and rage threatening to rip me apart.
I stepped forward, offering the slippers, and took his heavy wool overcoat. "You changed your tie," I said. I kept my voice light, casual, barely interested.
Hudson’s arms froze halfway out of the coat sleeves. It was a micro-second of hesitation. A tiny glitch in the matrix.
He recovered instantly, stepping into the slippers. "Ah, yes," he chuckled, shaking his head. "Spilled half a cup of black coffee down my front during the two o'clock deposition. Complete disaster."
He tugged at the red fabric, his face twisting in genuine distaste. "I had my assistant run down to the lobby kiosk to buy a replacement. It’s an absolute eyesore, isn't it?"
He was smooth. By insulting the tie, he was trying to align himself with my taste, disarming any suspicion.
I didn't do what the old Cora would have done. I didn't ask if the assistant was a man or a woman. I didn't raise my voice. I just smiled softly.
"It's not that bad," I lied smoothly, turning my back to him to hang his coat in the closet. "You make anything look handsome."
When I turned back around, I caught a flicker of surprise in his eyes. He stared at me for a long moment, searching my face for the paranoia he was so used to seeing. Finding nothing but empty sweetness, his shoulders finally relaxed. He really believed the medication had lobotomized me.
At two in the morning, the house was dead silent. Hudson was flat on his back, his chest rising and falling in the deep, rhythmic breathing of REM sleep.
I slipped out from under the duvet like a ghost. My bare feet sank into the plush carpet, making absolutely no sound. My body had learned how to move through this house without disturbing the air.
I crept out of the bedroom, down the dark hallway, and pushed open the door to the laundry room at the back of the house.
The room was pitch black, save for a single beam of moonlight cutting through the high transom window, illuminating the woven wicker hamper in the corner.
I dropped to my knees on the freezing tile floor. I lifted the lid and plunged my hands into the pile of his dirty clothes. The smell of his cologne mixed with sweat made me want to gag, but I kept digging. I pushed past dress shirts and trousers until my fingers brushed against a pool of cold, smooth silk at the very bottom.
I yanked it out.
I held the fabric up into the beam of moonlight. It was the navy blue tie from this morning.
I brought it inches from my face, my eyes scanning every square inch of the expensive silk. Top to bottom. Front to back.
There was no coffee stain. Not a single drop of brown liquid. The front was perfectly clean.
But as I flipped the tail end of the tie over, my thumb brushed against something stiff. Right on the back, near the tip, was a large, crusty white patch. It was completely dried, stiffening the silk into a rigid board.
I ran the pad of my thumb over the rough edge of the stain. My brows pulled together in the dark.
I brought the silk right up to my nose.
"Not coffee."
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9.3
I woke up in a freezing, desolate wasteland, my body weak and covered in sores. A mechanical voice in my head informed me that I was a defective rabbit-mutant, and if I didn't conceive within twenty-four hours, I would die permanently.
The terror was suffocating, but the system left me no choice. To survive the brutal cold and the decay of my own heartbeat, I had to force a pregnancy with a stranger.
I stumbled through the snow, my fingers turning blue, until I found a massive, wounded Arctic Fox-mutant in a dark cave. He was a Tier-9 predator, dying and radiating the exact heat I needed to stay alive. I threw away my dignity, crawling into his fur to merge our energies, desperate to trigger the life-reset protocol before my time ran out.
I felt like a monster, forcing myself onto a man who didn't even know I existed, just to keep my own heart beating. How could I ever face him if he woke up? Why did I have to be the one to pay the price for this twisted, mechanical ultimatum?
The fusion was a success, but when I woke up the next morning, the apex predator had me pinned under his massive claws, his fangs inches from my throat. I didn't beg for mercy. I stared into his feral, ice-blue eyes and made a deal that would change everything: I would be his anchor, and he would be my protector. But then I dropped the final, terrifying truth: I was pregnant, and he was the only one who could save us.

8.5
"And that is the reason why I said those words. I like your fear, not because it is a normal thing. I love it because deep down you are a monster like me, schiava. You fear me on a primal level, you can feel my power and dominance, and you know you aren't the strongest here. So you don't fear Renzo Valentino the human, you fear the monster that lurks inside."
My life changed the night of my birthday. What started as a funny dare ended with blood and having a price on my head.
I thought Renzo was the hero who saved me that night, but he was the devil who owned me forever.
I, Misha Yakov, princess of the Russian mafia became Renzo Valentino's slave.
He broke me, tortured me, and molded me into something new, something I hated and craved at the same time.
I, Misha Yakov became my master's pet.

7.5
She was dead. Or at least, that's what they thought. Now, five years later, Ivy Richardson stood at her own grave, ready to face the man who put her there.
Ivy, in a custom coat, stood at her cold, black marble gravestone. "Beloved daughter and fiancée," the inscription read—a cruel joke mirroring her heart's wasteland.
A gravedigger dropped his shovel, face ashen. Trembling, he pointed, gasping, "Oh my God... you look exactly like her." He saw a ghost; Ivy was alive.
She paid for silence. Then, Clayton, her former fiancé, appeared, shaking: "Ivy? Where have you been?" She crushed his cheap lilies, her lethal gaze replacing the girl he'd abandoned.
He snarled, blaming her, justifying her "Do Not Resuscitate" order for his mistress, Ainsley. Ivy's cold laugh mocked his pathetic lies.
"Fiancé?" she echoed, revealing her new wedding ring. "That title expired when you signed the DNR... and Ainsley was watching, wasn't she?" With an icy "Go to hell," Ivy left him slipping in the mud.

9.2
I woke up suffocating in the dark, only to find my mind trapped inside a tiny, plump, and entirely uncoordinated body.
A cold, mechanical voice echoed in my brain, announcing that I was dead in my original world and had transmigrated into a corporate revenge novel as the six-month-old illegitimate daughter of Edward McClure, the story's ruthless villain.
The system mercilessly outlined my doomed fate. Tonight, my cold-blooded father would abandon me to a state orphanage. By age two, he would officially sign my rights away, leaving me to die miserably at the hands of human traffickers. Outside my nursery, I could hear his terrifying footsteps approaching, his voice devoid of any human warmth as he debated throwing me out like garbage. I was completely helpless, trapped in a baby's body, staring up at a man who looked at me with pure, visceral disgust.
Why did I have to be reborn as the tragic cannon fodder of a tyrant destined to put a bullet in his own head? How was I supposed to win over a severe germaphobe when my unequipped infant reflexes made me literally pee and vomit all over his pristine Tom Ford suits?
"Your ultimate mission is to prevent Edward McClure's self-destruction. Step one: Survive tonight's abandonment crisis."
Hearing the system's terrifying ultimatum, I swallowed my adult panic, forced a pool of pitiful tears into my large eyes, and reached my chubby little hands toward the monster.

7.4
The house was a living inferno, the heat devouring the air in my lungs as I clutched my five-year-old daughter to my chest. Emily was dead weight, her skin already cooling even as the room turned into a furnace of orange and black.
Through the stinging smoke, I saw my husband, Kenney, crawling toward the door with a wet handkerchief pressed to his face. He didn't look back at the crib, and he didn't call my name; he was simply leaving us to burn.
I lunged forward and grabbed his ankle, my nightgown catching fire, but he didn't reach down to save me. He recoiled in horror at the sight of my burning hair and our dead child, kicking me back with a panicked shriek.
"Let go!" he shrieked.
I died as a massive, flaming timber snapped from the ceiling and crushed us both into silence. I couldn't believe that the man I loved would leave his family to die just to save his own skin, but the rage I felt was colder than the death that followed.
But then the burning stopped instantly, replaced by a cold so sharp it made my teeth ache. I gasped, jerking upright in my bed to find the velvet duvet cool under my palms and the nursery quiet, with Emily still breathing softly in her crib.
I had returned to the winter morning two years before the fire, the exact day Kenney finalized the deal to sell me to the King for a promotion. As Kenney stepped into the room with a practiced mask of concern, I realized I was no longer the victim of this story.
"A nightmare, my love?" he asked, reaching out to touch my shoulder.
I flinched away, my eyes burning with a hatred he couldn't yet understand. Tonight was the Winter Masquerade, the night he planned to offer me to the King as a prize, but this time, I was going to turn his social ladder into a gallows.

9.3
Ginny was chained to a concrete pillar in an abandoned warehouse, bleeding and betrayed by the two people she trusted most.
Her fiancé, Brant, and her adopted sister, Coretta, had just slashed her face open. Brant coldly admitted she was nothing but a disposable key to a vault, right before he tossed a lighter onto the gasoline-soaked floor.
As Ginny burned alive in the roaring inferno, the heavy iron doors were violently smashed open. Bedford Parks—the notoriously ruthless, germaphobic "monster" of Silicon Valley whom Ginny had always feared—charged straight into the flames. Ignoring the blistering heat, he shielded her charred body with his own. A massive steel beam collapsed, snapping his spine.
"I love you."
He coughed up blood, whispering his final words against her blackened skin before dying to protect her.
Hovering as a ghost, Ginny's soul screamed in agonizing realization. She had spent her life terrified of Bedford, yet he was the only one who truly loved her, while her supposed family laughed at her gruesome murder.
Suddenly, a blinding white light swallowed the warehouse.
Ginny gasped for air, opening her eyes to find herself sitting in the back of a luxury Maybach. She was eighteen again, wearing the humiliating clown makeup Coretta had tricked her into wearing on the day she was brought back to the wealthy Steele estate.
Ginny stared at her reflection, her dark eyes turning cold and sharp.
This time, she would tear her betrayers apart piece by piece, and she would protect her "monster."