
Ninety-Nine Heartbreaks, One Final Goodbye
The ninety-ninth time Jax Little broke my heart was the last time. We were the golden couple of Northgate High, our future perfectly mapped out for UCLA. But in our senior year, he fell for a new girl, Catalina, and our love story became a sick, exhausting dance of his betrayals and my empty threats to leave.
At a graduation party, Catalina "accidentally" pulled me into the pool with her. Jax dove in without a second's hesitation. He swam right past me as I struggled, wrapped his arms around Catalina, and pulled her to safety.
As he helped her out to the cheers of his friends, he glanced back at me, my body shivering and my mascara running in black rivers.
"Your life isn't my problem anymore," he said, his voice as cold as the water I was drowning in.
That night, something inside me finally shattered. I went home, opened my laptop, and clicked the button that confirmed my admission.
Not to UCLA with him, but to NYU, an entire country away.
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Chapter 4
Eliana POV:
Catalina preened under his praise, her cheeks flushed with victory as she shot me a condescending smirk. The game continued, a meaningless blur of noise and forced laughter. A few minutes later, the bottle, as if guided by a malevolent force, landed on Catalina again.
"Dare!" she chirped, her eyes once again locking onto Jax.
I couldn't take it anymore. I couldn't sit there and watch another second of this grotesque performance.
"I need some air," I mumbled to my friends, my voice barely a whisper. I stood up on shaky legs and walked away from the circle, heading toward the quiet of the house.
I made it to the guest bathroom and leaned against the cool marble counter, my reflection a pale, hollow-eyed stranger. I splashed cold water on my face, trying to wash away the feeling of his words, of everyone's pitying stares. I told myself to be strong, that this was the end, that his opinion no longer mattered. But it was a lie. It still hurt. It hurt like hell. The old wounds still pulsed, even if new ones weren't forming.
I decided to leave. There was no point in staying, no point in subjecting myself to any more of this torture. I would slip out the side door, call an Uber, and go home.
As I walked down the quiet hallway toward the side exit, I heard voices coming from the adjacent den. Jax's voice. My feet stopped of their own accord.
"Dude, that was harsh," I heard Mason, Jax's best friend, say. "In front of everyone? 'A far better kisser'? You know Ellie heard that."
I pressed myself against the wall, my heart pounding against my ribs.
Jax let out a bitter laugh. "She needed to hear it. She's been pulling this 'we're done' crap for months. It's just another one of her little dramas, her way of trying to get my attention." His voice was filled with a chilling condescension, entirely devoid of empathy. He saw my pain as a performance, a tactic.
"I don't know, man," Mason said, sounding hesitant. "She seemed different tonight. Calm. Too calm."
"It's an act," Jax scoffed, his voice dripping with condescending certainty. "She's threatening to break up to make me beg, like always. She thinks she can control me. Well, she needs to be taught a lesson. She needs to understand that I'm the one in charge here." His need for control, his belief in his own superiority, was laid bare.
A lesson. He was teaching me a lesson. The public humiliation, the cruel words-it was all a calculated punishment.
"So what's the plan?" Mason asked. "You're just going to keep hooking up with Catalina?"
"For a little while," Jax said, his voice dropping conspiratorially. "Let Ellie sweat. Let her see what she's losing. She can't live without me. We both know it. In a week, maybe two, when she's cried her eyes out and realizes I'm not coming back, I'll show up. I' ll say the right things, buy her some flowers. She'll be so relieved, she'll come running back, and she'll never dare to pull this stunt again."
A profound, soul-deep chill spread through my body. It was colder than the pool water had been, colder than his words. It was the cold of absolute disillusionment.
My love, my pain, my heartbreak-to him, it was all just a strategy. A tool for manipulation. A predictable pattern he could exploit for his own ego and deep-seated insecurities about abandonment, which he masked with control.
I didn't hear any more. I didn't need to. I backed away from the door, my movements silent and ghost-like. I slipped out the side gate and into the warm summer night.
The air was thick with the scent of jasmine, but all I could feel was the biting cold that seemed to emanate from my very bones. I walked, my feet moving automatically, with no destination in mind.
I remembered when he first told me he loved me. We were sixteen, sitting on the hood of his beat-up truck, watching the sunset. He' d looked at me with such awe, as if I held the entire universe in my eyes. "I'm never letting you go, Ellie-bear," he' d whispered.
He had been my first everything. My first love, my first heartbreak, my first real glimpse into the kind of pain that feels like it could physically kill you. I had grown so accustomed to his presence, to the gravitational pull of his orbit, that I had forgotten how to exist on my own.
When did it change? When did our love curdle into this toxic, one-sided obsession? When did his love become a demand, and mine a desperate plea?
Catalina. It all started with her.
For her, he broke every rule he' d ever made. He' d always been fiercely private, but he' d let her plaster their pictures all over social media. He hated clinginess, but he let her hang off his arm like a designer handbag. He' d always sworn I was the only girl he' d ever love, but he' d thrown that love away for a new, shiny toy.
And I had let him. I had fought, I had cried, I had threatened to leave, hoping each time that my pain would be the catalyst for him to wake up and see what he was doing. I thought if I just pulled away hard enough, he would finally grab hold and never let go again.
But my efforts were not seen as the desperate struggle of a drowning person. They were seen as childish, annoying, predictable. When you are no longer the one and only, even your pain becomes a mistake.
Lost in my thoughts, I barely registered that I had walked all the way home. As I approached my house, I saw the familiar mail truck pulling away from the curb. A uniformed postal worker was walking up my driveway.
And standing right in front of him, his back to me, was Jax.
He was holding a large, crisp white envelope in his hand. The return address was unmistakable: New York University. It was my official acceptance packet.
My heart leaped into my throat.
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8.4
Grace, after three years of silence from a crash that stole her voice and family, finally uttered a hoarse syllable. It was her first sound, a breakthrough she desperately wanted to share with Josiah, her childhood protector. Instead, through a slightly ajar door, she heard his careless chuckle, followed by a sharp, entitled voice.
Alexandria's voice sliced through the air: "Josiah, are you really planning to bring that little mute to the banquet? She's a walking trailer park tragedy. It's embarrassing." Grace froze, waiting for Josiah to defend her. He didn't. Instead, he sighed, calling her "a responsibility" and "a lifeless ghost," then pulled Alexandria closer.
The words were serrated blades. Her silent devotion, her self-erasure for his peace, had made her a punchline. He was relieved she was broken. The bitter realization of his betrayal ignited a cold, white-hot fury.
Wiping away tears, Grace met Josiah, feigning her usual submissive smile, and quietly refused his "hush money." As he walked away without a glance, her inner voice was clear, sharp, and resolute: "I'm done playing your game."

7.2
After a one night stand with the woman whose house Jason broke into, his life has never been the same. Like a siren's call, he can't get the nymphomaniac woman off his mind. Weeks later, while getting intel for the crew's next heist, Jason lays eyes upon the woman and follows her into a secret strip club. She appears to lead a double life. One where she's the CEO of a multimillion company and her father's golden child. The other side of her life is that she owns a strip club and is extremely erotic. Can Jason learn to live with her as she is? Will he put his pride aside to be with the woman? ... especially when his crew is hired to kidnap a woman who turns out to be the love of his life.

7.4
I was Z, the world's most lethal hacker. But after I died, I woke up gasping for air in a massive, freezing bathtub.
Memories that didn't belong to me slammed into my brain. I was trapped in the body of Zero Vance, a notorious "trashy young master" of a wealthy family, who was actually a girl hiding in plain sight.
The original owner of this body was a pathetic, lovesick stalker obsessed with an esports god named Maverick Thorne.
She wore ridiculous rainbow hair and cheap makeup, sending him thousands of desperate, unread texts every single day.
When he completely ignored her, she became the ultimate laughingstock.
Bullies at her elite academy spray-painted "freak" on her locker, shoved her around, and her own family looked at her with exhausted disappointment.
Unable to take the endless humiliation and his cold rejection, she swallowed a bottle of pills and slipped into the icy water.
Looking at the ruined, tear-stained reflection in the mirror, physiological disgust washed over me.
Why would anyone throw their life away for an arrogant, frozen block of ice?
I grabbed the grooming scissors and sheared off the neon hair until only a sharp, silver-blonde crop remained.
I deleted his contact, blocked his number, and put on a perfectly tailored black suit.
When the school's head cheerleader pointed a finger at my nose, warning me to stay away from Maverick, I snapped it backward.
"I have zero interest in Maverick Thorne."
I am alive. And as the new Zero, I am going to take everything back.

7.7
I gripped the wheel of my Porsche through a Manhattan downpour, staring at the positive pregnancy test on the passenger seat. Haden's voicemail was my only answer.
A semi swerved into my lane. Brakes failed. I slammed into the guardrail, airbags exploding, pain ripping through my gut.
Headlights pierced the rain. My sister Corrie stepped out under an umbrella, smiling coldly. "Beauvais Fashion is liquidated. Dad's dying." Haden stood beside her, eyes dead, shoving equity papers through the window. "Sign, or no ambulance."
I tore them up. Corrie lit a flare, tossed it onto the gas-soaked seats. Flames whooshed as they walked away.
I woke strapped to an operating table, agony tearing me apart. "No heartbeat," the doctor said. Nurses pinned me down. Instruments invaded. Corrie dropped a death certificate on my chest, then set the room ablaze with alcohol and a cigarette flick.
Smoke choked me. A cabinet blocked the door. I collapsed, burning. Then a man in black burst in, scent of cedar and tobacco, scooping me from the fire.
Five years later, I'd rebuilt myself as Sloane, flawless and cold. I signed a sham marriage to Donavan Mason, nursing his dying grandfather in their estate—the house that swallowed my father's legacy.
Betrayed by my lover and sister, child ripped away, identity erased—how could they do this? Who was the man who saved me?
Now, I infiltrate their world, armed with secrets and scars, ready to burn them all down.

7.6
🔞🔞🔞🔞🔞🔞
Aria Bennett is the perfect daughter, a decoration in her father's massive business empire. But for one night, she decides to break every rule. At a secret underground club, she meets Adrian, a man who knows exactly how to please her and awaken desires she never knew she had. They promise each other nothing but one night of pleasure and desire.
But when Aria wakes up to find him gone, leaving only a cold note behind, she thinks the fantasy is over. That is, until she walks downstairs the next morning to see the same man standing in her driveway.
Now, the man who knows her darkest secrets is her father's new driver. Forced to face him every day while pretending they are strangers, Aria is caught in a suffocating game of cat and mouse.
Adrian on the other hand is dangerous, cold, and hiding a secret that could destroy her father's empire.
And the closer she gets to him, the more she risks losing everything, including herself.

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."