
Runaway Lover: Escaping The Ruthless Billionaire
For fifteen years, I thought my mother had died in a tragic fire.
Then the wealthy Ross family's butler knocked on my door, revealing she was alive—locked away in the psychiatric annex of their massive estate.
I rushed into the lion's den to save her, only to run straight into Graydon Ross, the ruthless billionaire CEO.
He looked at my cheap clothes with pure disgust, convinced I was a bottom-feeding scammer trying to extort his family.
"Throw this bitch out into the snow."
He ordered his armed guards to drag me away, completely cutting off my only chance to see my mentally broken mother.
But as he violently grabbed my collar to throw me out, I saw a custom eagle-head cufflink hanging from his coat pocket.
My blood turned to ice, and a wave of paralyzing terror crashed over me.
Eight months ago, I accidentally slept with a masked stranger in a pitch-black hotel room and fled before dawn.
That cufflink belonged to him.
The man who took my virginity—the Wall Street tyrant I had been hiding from—was Graydon Ross.
If he ever found out I was that woman, he would literally destroy my life.
But to save my mother, I couldn't be thrown out.
When his grandmother suddenly appeared, I dropped to the floor, exposed the dark bruises Graydon had just left on my wrists, and sobbed.
I framed the billionaire for assault to secure my place in the mansion, forcing myself to live right next door to the monster whose bed I had fled.
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Chapter 2
Eight months later.
Caroline leaned against a concrete pillar in the second sub-level of a high-end Manhattan office building. She gasped for air, her lungs burning. She wore an oversized beige trench coat that swallowed her frame.
Footsteps echoed behind her. Three security guards were sweeping the garage.
A tactical flashlight beam hit the fire extinguisher three feet away. Caroline panicked. She shoved the freshly signed Non-Disclosure Agreement-the document she had just risked her life to secure-deep into the lining of her bra.
These eight months of living on the edge had taught her one thing: in moments of utter desperation, the instinct to survive overrides all fear. To survive, she could become anyone, including the shadow clutching forged credentials and infiltrating a core facility.
"Lock down the exits. She's still down here," a voice cracked over a radio.
Her escape routes were gone. She darted her eyes around the dimly lit garage, desperate for cover.
A black Maybach sat parked in the VIP spot. The license plate was arrogant. The rear passenger door was cracked open a fraction of an inch.
The heavy thud of combat boots grew louder. Caroline acted on pure survival instinct. She grabbed her thick canvas tote bag and shoved it under the front of her trench coat, molding it against her stomach to look like a late-stage pregnancy.
She lunged for the Maybach, yanked the heavy door open, and threw herself into the backseat.
The thick leather seats offered too much resistance. She lost her balance and crashed face-first into a solid, muscular chest. The scent of cold cedar and expensive cologne flooded her senses.
Graydon Ross let out a sharp grunt as the sudden weight slammed into him. The tablet he had been using to check stock reports slipped from his hand and clattered onto the floor mat.
His reflexes were instantaneous. He shoved his hands against the intruder's shoulders to push her off. His long fingers brushed against the hard, unnatural lump of the canvas bag hidden under her coat. He froze for a fraction of a second.
Outside, a guard marched up to the car. He slammed his fist against the tinted window.
"Roll it down! Security check!" the guard yelled.
Caroline lifted her head. Her face was inches from the man she had crashed into.
She stared into the cold, ruthless eyes of the billionaire from the Times Square billboard. Graydon Ross.
All the blood drained from her face. Her stomach plummeted into a bottomless void. The suffocation of that night, the torn silk, the silver fox mask vanishing down the storm drain—all the memories she had violently repressed reassembled in an instant, shooting an icy chill down her spine.
Graydon's dark brows snapped together. Pure, unadulterated disgust twisted his features. He opened his mouth to order his driver to throw her onto the concrete.
The next second, the pounding on the window and the crackle of radios outside yanked her back to reality. Getting caught meant the NDA being exposed, client retaliation, and the complete severance of any lead to finding her mother. Compared to total ruin and shattered hope, this man's disgust seemed trivial. Extreme fear bred extreme madness.
Caroline didn't think. She reached up, grabbed his jaw with both hands, and smashed her lips against his.
She swallowed his angry shout. Graydon's entire body went rigid. His severe germaphobia flared, sending a violent shudder of revulsion through his muscles.
His hands shot up, his fingers locking around her wrists like steel vices. He tried to rip her away.
Caroline pushed her fake pregnant belly down, using her entire body weight to pin him against the leather seat. Her heart hammered against her ribs. She was so terrified her teeth clashed against his, her tongue slipping and cutting his bottom lip.
The metallic taste of fresh blood bloomed in their mouths.
Graydon's eyes widened in shock, then darkened into absolute, murderous rage. He released her wrists and grabbed the back of her neck, his grip bruising.
The guard outside pounded harder on the glass.
In the front seat, the driver immediately raised the soundproof partition to block the back. He rolled his window down halfway.
"Ross Consortium," the driver said, his voice like ice. He held up a black VIP pass.
The guard's face went pale. He saw the embossed logo and immediately bowed at the waist. "My apologies, sir."
The guard tried to peek into the back window, but the heavy tint only showed the blurred, intertwined silhouettes of a man and a woman in a heavy embrace. The guard swallowed hard and backed away quickly.
The second the footsteps faded, Caroline tore her mouth away. She scrambled backward, trying to retreat to the other side of the massive seat.
Graydon didn't let her. His hand stayed clamped on the back of her neck, pinning her in place.
He pulled a silk handkerchief from his breast pocket and wiped the blood from his split lip. His eyes were lethal.
"Who sent you?" His voice was a low, terrifying whisper. "Which corporate spy agency do you work for?"
Caroline avoided his piercing gaze. She wrapped her arms around her swollen stomach, her hands shaking. Her trembling was half performance, half the genuine aftershock of survival. That impulsive kiss had drained every ounce of courage she had mustered in the crisis.
"Please," she stammered, forcing a pathetic tremble into her voice. "I'm just a pregnant woman. I was running from an abusive ex. Please don't hurt me."
Graydon's eyes dropped to her stomach. His gaze was analytical, cold. He noticed the sharp, rectangular edges poking through the beige fabric. It defied basic human anatomy.
He didn't say a word. He reached out and grabbed the front of her trench coat.
With one violent yank, he ripped the coat open. Buttons popped and flew across the car. The canvas tote bag slipped out and hit the leather seat with a heavy thud.
The fake pregnancy was gone.
The air in the car turned to solid ice. Caroline's face burned with intense humiliation. She forced a stiff, awkward smile, her lips twitching as she tried to play off the exposed lie.
Graydon's eyes narrowed into dangerous slits. He reached over and pressed a button on the console.
The central locks engaged with a heavy, definitive clunk. She was trapped.
He leaned closer. His massive frame blocked out the dim garage light, trapping her against the door.
"You are pathetic," he sneered, his breath ghosting over her face. "Faking a pregnancy to extort a payout? Is that how low the rats in this city have sunk?"
The sheer force of his presence triggered a violent flashback. The dark hotel room. The crushing weight of his body. Her chest tightened. She had to get out of this car right now.
Escape routes sealed, pitiful disguise torn apart. When words and deception failed, only primal resistance remained. This was no longer a calculated operation; it was a cornered animal fighting back. Caroline slid her hand down to her leather boot. Her fingertips touched cold metal—something she carried for self-defense during late-night walks home, never imagining she'd actually brandish it. Her fingers wrapped around the cold handle of a tactical folding knife.
She pulled it out and jammed the tip hard into the custom Hermès leather seat, right between Graydon's thighs.
"Unlock the damn door," she hissed, her voice trembling but laced with pure, desperate malice. "Or I swear to God I'll scream loud enough to bring every guard in this building down on us."
Graydon looked down at the cheap, scuffed blade threatening his multi-thousand-dollar upholstery. The muscle in his jaw ticked.
"You are threatening me with a five-dollar toy?" he mocked, a cruel smile playing on his lips. "You really are stupid."
Caroline gripped the handle tighter. As she leaned in, the scent of his custom cologne hit her again. Cold cedar and smoke. It was chillingly familiar, stirring a dark, suffocating memory she had violently suppressed.
Her hand violently jerked.
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7.6
Isolde Mitchell knew her wealthy husband was cheating on her, but the true nightmare began when her mother-in-law summoned her.
The older woman coldly announced that the mistress was pregnant with a boy and would be moving into their estate.
Because Isolde's family had gone bankrupt and she had only given birth to a frail daughter, she was deemed completely worthless.
When Isolde packed her bags and demanded a divorce, her husband Clark just laughed.
He threatened to use their ironclad prenup to leave her penniless and take full custody of her daughter just to torture her.
To make matters worse, he forced Isolde to secure a failing business deal with the ruthless billionaire Jacques Valdez, essentially ordering her to sell her body to get the signature.
"If you fail, you will never see Bria again."
He even sent his goons to snatch the little girl from her preschool to prove his point.
Isolde was completely cornered, trembling with a mix of rage and absolute despair.
How could the man she married be such a monster? She would rather die than let them destroy her daughter, but how could a bankrupt mother fight a powerful dynasty with absolutely nothing?
Out of options, she looked at the private business card the terrifying billionaire Jacques had unexpectedly given her daughter.
Swallowing her pride, she decided to make a deal with the devil himself, ready to use his power to tear her husband's family apart.

7.4
Four years ago, to protect the man I loved from losing his billionaire empire, I drugged his drink, told him I only used him for his money, and vanished.
Now, at a high-society gala, Callum Wyatt is back. He isn't just a CEO anymore; he's a ruthless predator, and the second his eyes lock onto me, I know I am his prey.
When my wealthy half-sister publicly humiliated me, calling me the cheap bastard child of a homewrecker, Callum stepped out of the shadows. He nearly snapped her wrist in half and declared to New York's elite that anyone who touched me would be dismantled.
In the back of his Maybach, he pinned my arms above my head, his eyes burning with psychotic obsession.
"If you run again, Aubrey, I will burn your entire world to the ground just to keep you."
My heart bled. I had spent four grueling years tearing myself apart to keep him out of my messy, blood-soaked revenge against the family that watched my mother die.
But his terrifying protection only made my biological father's family target me harder, using their massive capital to buy out my movie set and crush my acting career.
They thought I would cower.
But as I walked onto the soundstage, facing the heiress trying to steal my role, I took off my sunglasses. I wasn't running anymore; it was time to make them pay.

7.1
For seven years, I hid my identity as a wealthy heiress to be with my boyfriend, Ewing. I followed him across the country and made myself small so he could feel big.
On Thanksgiving, he ditched our celebration for his first love, Bree, who supposedly had a "burst pipe."
Later, she posted an intimate selfie with him, calling him her "hero."
Then she sent me a video of him at a bar, laughing with his friends.
"She's just being dramatic," he slurred, smirking at the camera. "A new necklace and she'll forget all about it. She's easy."
Easy. Seven years of my life, my love, my sacrifice-all reduced to that one word. I realized I was never his partner. I was just a placeholder.
I didn't cry. I packed my bags, booked a one-way flight to New York, and sent him one final text before blocking his number.
"Don't bother coming home. I'm getting married."

9.2
Nica caught her boyfriend, Chris, and her best friend, Ella, in a shocking betrayal. Chris was kissing Ella while caressing her close, and Ella only smirked at Nica as if she had won. Nica got pissed off and swore she would not let their betrayal go unpunished. What happens next? Read the story and find out for yourself.

7.7
Alondra spent three hours making soup for her husband, only to find him at the hospital tenderly holding another woman's hand.
"I'm four weeks pregnant, Gerard," the woman said softly.
Gerard coldly handed Alondra a divorce agreement, claiming their three-year marriage was just a placeholder because this woman had once saved his life.
Heartbroken, Alondra fled in her car, only to realize her brakes had been completely disabled.
She spun out of control and crashed head-on into a massive delivery truck.
As she lay trapped in the mangled wreckage with her ribs crushed and blood filling her mouth, Gerard's black Maybach pulled up to the curb.
He stared at her dying body through the window with a completely blank expression.
He didn't call an ambulance or even open his door.
He simply rolled up his tinted window and drove away into the rain.
A raw, suffocating hatred burned in her chest, hotter than the pain in her shattered bones.
She couldn't understand how the man she had loved and served so devotedly could just coldly watch her die like a piece of trash.
Opening her eyes again, Alondra gasped for air.
She had returned to the exact morning two years ago, right before she was supposed to deliver that pathetic soup.
When Gerard walked in and threatened her with divorce, she didn't cry or beg.
"I agree. Let's divorce," she said calmly, packing her bags to reclaim her true identity as a billionaire heiress.

7.7
Jaclyn woke up in the sterile hospital room after falling down the stairs. The nurse delivered the devastating news: she had bled heavily and lost her baby.
But before she could even cry, her trusted cousins, Katelyn and Cherri, locked the door and revealed the horrifying truth.
"It wasn't an accident," Katelyn smirked, pinning Jaclyn's arm down. "The lubricant on the top step was a very deliberate choice."
They needed her broken and unstable. They had forged her signature, draining her massive trust fund to save their uncle's bankrupt business.
What shattered Jaclyn's world was the fresh hickey on Cherri's neck. Her lover, Bradford, had helped plan the entire murder.
When Jaclyn tried to scream, they smothered her with a pillow, framing her as a lunatic having a mental breakdown.
Two weeks later, when she confronted them, Bradford violently shoved her through a second-story glass window to silence her forever.
As she fell to her death, the husband she had spent her life hating—the ruthless billionaire Gaines—burst through the doors.
He threw himself forward, his face filled with pure terror, desperately trying to catch her.
When her body hit the stone patio, Gaines fell to his knees in her blood, weeping and begging her not to close her eyes.
Until her last breath, Jaclyn was consumed by suffocating regret. Why did she trust the monsters who killed her, and hate the only man who truly loved her?
Opening her eyes again, she was back in the penthouse, exactly one month into her marriage with Gaines.