
The Betrayed Wife's Spectacular Sweet Revenge
Alia bought her four-million-dollar Manhattan townhouse in cash the day before she married Jerel.
For three years, she worked eighty-hour weeks as a top architect to build their life, until an anonymous text shattered her reality.
It was a high-definition photo of her husband kissing his junior partner, followed by an eight-week ultrasound.
Alia didn't scream. She went home, only to find her mother-in-law throwing IVF brochures at her, screaming that she was a selfish, barren workaholic for not giving the family an heir.
Jerel played the perfect, gentle husband, wrapping his arms around her and urging her to rest.
But later that night, Alia caught them on a secret call with a lawyer.
They were plotting to blindside her with a divorce, claiming his minor financial contributions entitled him to the property, aiming to kick her out with a measly fifty-thousand-dollar settlement.
They wanted to steal her hard-earned home to raise his pregnant mistress's child.
Alia's jaw tightened until her teeth ached. She had paid for every single inch of that estate.
Did they really think her dedication to her career made her blind, weak, and easy to destroy?
She didn't shed a single tear.
Instead, she walked into the office of the city's most ruthless private equity billionaire and struck a dangerous deal to lock away all her assets in an irrevocable trust.
Days later, when Jerel handed her the settlement with a fake, sympathetic smile, Alia poured cold black coffee directly over the ink.
"Tell Tiffany she is never stepping foot inside my house," Alia said smoothly. "I'll see you in court."
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Chapter 1
Alia pushed open the frosted glass door of her office at Legatum Designs. The heavy glass clicked shut behind her, cutting off the hum of the architectural firm.
She looked down at her phone. The screen lit up with an anonymous text message.
She swiped her thumb across the glass. A high-definition photograph filled the screen.
It was Jerel. He was standing outside a high-end restaurant in Greenwich Village. His arm was wrapped tightly around the waist of a blonde woman.
A heavy, sour block of nausea hit the bottom of Alia's stomach. The saliva in her mouth turned metallic. She swallowed hard, forcing the bile back down her throat.
Her fingers clamped around the edges of the phone. The metal casing dug into her skin.
A second message chimed. It was an ultrasound photo. The text beneath it read: He's finally going to be a real father.
Alia did not drop the phone. She did not scream. Her chest stopped moving as her lungs held the stale office air.
She tapped the screen, syncing the screenshots directly to her encrypted cloud drive. If the sender tried to unsend the messages, the files were already locked away.
She grabbed her trench coat from the back of her chair. She snatched her car keys from the desk.
She walked out of the office. Her assistant, Nina, stood up from her cubicle, holding a tablet.
"Ms. Garner, your dinner meeting with-"
Alia walked right past her. She pushed the elevator button and stared at the metal doors until they opened.
The Manhattan evening traffic was a gridlock of red taillights and blaring horns. Alia sat in her car, both hands gripping the leather steering wheel. Her knuckles were stark white against the dark interior.
Her brain played a loop of that morning. Jerel standing in the hallway, adjusting his tie. He had leaned in, kissed her forehead, and told her to have a good day at work.
Her jaw locked. The muscles in her neck pulled tight, sending a dull ache into the base of her skull.
She navigated the car down the narrow streets of Greenwich Village. She pulled up across the street from the restaurant. She ignored the valet stand and parked the car in the deep shadow of a closed boutique.
She rolled down her window. The crisp, cold autumn air rushed into the heated cabin. It hit her face, forcing her eyes to stay open and alert.
She looked across the street. The restaurant had massive floor-to-ceiling windows.
She found them immediately. They were sitting at a VIP table right against the glass.
Jerel was wearing the custom navy suit she had bought for his birthday last week. He leaned across the table. He picked up the blonde woman's hand and pressed his lips to her knuckles.
Alia recognized the woman. Tiffany. A junior partner at Jerel's law firm. They had clinked glasses at the firm's holiday party last December.
Alia picked up her phone. She opened the camera and switched to the telephoto lens. She hit record.
Through the screen, she watched Jerel reach across the table. He placed his hand flat against Tiffany's stomach.
Jerel smiled. It was a wide, genuine smile. It was the exact look of anticipation her mother-in-law, Christy, constantly demanded, but one Jerel had never shown inside their home.
A sharp cramp twisted Alia's gut. She kept her hands completely still. She recorded them for three full minutes. She captured the hand-holding, the stomach-touching, and the long, intimate kiss they shared over the table.
A sharp rap on the glass made her flinch. A beat cop stood outside her car, pointing a flashlight at her tires. He motioned for her to move out of the loading zone.
Alia stopped the recording. She put the phone down, nodded to the cop, and shifted the car into drive.
She pulled into the flow of traffic. Her eyes burned, the tear ducts swelling, but she blinked rapidly, forcing the moisture away. The heat behind her eyes turned into a cold, heavy pressure in her chest.
She pressed the Bluetooth button on her dashboard and called Clara.
Clara answered on the second ring. The background noise was a loud, thumping bass line and the clinking of glasses.
"Alia, you have no idea how boring this PR mixer is. Save me," Clara complained.
"Jerel is cheating on me," Alia said. Her voice was completely flat. "The woman is pregnant."
The background noise on the phone vanished as Clara walked into a quiet room. The silence stretched for three seconds.
"I am going to kill him," Clara hissed. "Where are you? Let's go in there right now and flip the table."
"No," Alia said. She pressed her foot on the brake as a cab cut her off. "If I confront him now, he'll drain the joint accounts. I need to lock down the Manhattan townhouse first."
"You bought that house before you married him," Clara said.
"He's a lawyer, Clara. He will find a way to drag it out. Meet me at the jazz bar in the Lower East Side in an hour."
Alia hung up. She looked in the rearview mirror. The glowing sign of the restaurant faded into the distance. It looked like a burning building she had just escaped.
Her phone vibrated in the cup holder. It was a text from Jerel.
Stuck at the firm with a massive client. Going to be a late night. Eat without me. Love you.
Alia stared at the words. A cold, mechanical laugh pushed out of her throat.
She typed a reply.
Don't work too hard. See you at home.
She added a red heart emoji and hit send.
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8.6
Lilac Stone once wanted nothing more than being unnoticed. But everything changed the moment she met Adrian Cole, the new lecturer.
He's distant and completely off-limits. She's quiet, guarded, and unprepared for the way he sees right through her.
What begins as harmless conversations after class quickly turns into something far more dangerous-something neither of them can stop no matter how hard they try.
But then they're living in a world where rules are meant to be followed, and their connection is one line they were never supposed to cross.
Whispers turn to accusations. Secrets are exposed. Their futures are at risk.
They are merely two opposites-a lecturer and a student, a male and a female-but they are bound to destroy each other as long as they are huddled in one space at the same time.
What then can they choose: forfeit their futures and embrace their happiness, or let the latter slip while keeping their careers intact?

7.5
For five years, I was locked away in the freezing royal dungeon, starved and used as a bloody plaything by the kingdom's sadistic Cabinet Minister, Brandt Fischer.
He tortured me daily for one twisted reason: I simply looked like someone else.
When he visited my cell to casually announce my father's execution and drag a silver dagger across my neck, he expected me to beg.
Instead, I laughed, sank my teeth directly into his carotid artery, and was violently thrown against a jagged stone wall to my death.
As my skull cracked and my blood stained the moss, I thought about my so-called family. The moment Brandt had demanded me, my father, the Duke, handed me over without a single hesitation to save his own political career.
I was nothing but a disposable pawn, left to rot in the dark while the monsters who ruined my life thrived.
I died suffocating on my own blood and absolute, destructive vengeance.
Then, I opened my eyes.
I was lying in my silk-sheeted bed, reborn as my fifteen-year-old self.
Today was the exact day Lord Daryl Langley, the God of War, would be ambushed and crippled—the event that allowed Brandt to seize ultimate power.
I immediately stole a horse, rode to the palace gates, and threw myself directly in front of Daryl's moving carriage.
"I just didn't want to see a hero die like a slaughtered pig."
I didn't care if I had to shatter my own ankle to hijack his convoy. This time, I was going to save the general, and he would become the blade I use to slaughter them all.

7.5
I was the adopted daughter of the wealthy Ruiz family, but the moment their true heir appeared, I was thrown away like trash.
Not long after being kicked out, my adoptive father and uncle hired a hitman to stage a fatal car crash on Mulholland Drive.
Pinned under an overturned Porsche with a shattered leg, I watched the hitman point a suppressed pistol between my eyes.
"The Ruiz family sends their regards."
Before this, my reputation had already been completely destroyed by a director, a pop idol, and a reality TV star, leaving me blacklisted and universally hated.
My adoptive family didn't just want me ruined; they wanted me permanently silenced to tie up loose ends.
The hitman pulled the trigger, and the original Alicia died in despair, tasting only rain and blood.
Until her last breath, she didn't understand.
Why did the family she loved treat her like a disposable object? Why did those three men maliciously frame her and turn the world against her?
Opening my eyes again, the fear was gone, replaced by an ancient, cosmic indifference.
I, the Arbiter, had taken over this deceased vessel.
Moving faster than the human eye, I crushed the hitman's steel gun with my bare hand and turned his soul into dust.
Looking at the memories of those who wronged this girl, I signed a contract for the very reality show they were starring in.
Since I borrowed this body, taking out the trash is a required courtesy.

9.7
Sienna woke up in a hospital room, her body screaming from a severe car accident. Through the glass, a man paced with violent rage, a dark shadow she felt absolutely nothing for.
Her friend Julia burst in, eyes bloodshot, dropping a bomb: "He didn't even try to help you." Dante, Sienna's fiancé, had protected another woman, Valeria, in the crash, leaving Sienna to burn alive.
Her past life unspooled – seven years sacrificed, an architecture degree abandoned, all to serve Dante. Her phone was a shrine to him: his photos, his "taboos," and even "Valeria's preferences," with no trace of Sienna herself.
But amnesia brought no heartbreak, only a cold, calculating fury. She felt disgust for the "idiot" she'd been, stripped of dignity. The memory loss was a release, a blank slate.
With chilling resolve, Sienna deleted every trace of Dante. Ripping out her IV, she declared, "The wedding proceeds." Not for love, but as a weapon: "I need to take back everything that belongs to me before I disappear."

9.4
My retirement was finally approved, and I was supposed to be sipping drinks on a sunny beach.
Instead, a cold system voice forced me into a nightmare scenario: "Cursed Mates Who Want Me Dead." I woke up in a stinking cave, trapped in the body of a psychopathic tribal princess.
The memories that flooded my brain made me sick. The original owner of this body had forcibly marked seven of the continent's most powerful beast-men and reduced them to tortured pets. She had ripped the shimmering scales off Jordi the Merfolk prince, gouged out a proud wolf-man's power crystal, and snapped an eagle-man's magnificent wings.
Now, Jordi was a mutilated, terrified mess hiding in a corner. He was so traumatized that he tried to slit his own throat just to escape me. His sister was actively trying to assassinate me.
To make matters worse, the system warned me that if I didn't heal these seven ticking time bombs, my soul would be erased. Yet the future timeline clearly showed that these men would eventually unite, burn my tribe to the ground, and dismember me alive.
I was paying for a monster's sins. Every time I tried to show mercy, they thought it was a sick new torture method. Words were useless, and my very presence was a trigger.
But I am a Tier-S operative, and I don't play the victim. I forced the system to unlock my powers and strapped on my tactical gear.
"Stay here and don't starve."
I left the trembling Merfolk behind and walked into the deadly primitive forest, heading straight for the powerful Oasis Tribe to take back his stolen scales by force.

9.0
Once a pampered princess, Alaina now clutched a deactivated American Express card, staring out at Central Park. Her family’s fortune was gone, her life, over.
Her family's Hamptons estate, a four-generation legacy, was seized by Dyer Capital. The name hit her: Hardin Dyer, the poor boy she’d once scorned, had returned.
Hardin marched in, serving a divorce agreement. He'd orchestrated her family's downfall for revenge, giving her 24 hours to vacate his property. Penniless, her father faced prison, needing $50 million. Her mother forced her to beg Hardin, who sneered, offering the money for her body. Alaina ripped up the contract.
Hours later, her father had a heart attack. Desperate, she became "Lexi," a club girl enduring humiliation. In the Viper Room, Hardin's lackeys demanded she lick whiskey off his shoe for $10,000. Hardin watched. Outside, her brother Ashton's hand was threatened for a $3 million debt. Spirit shattered, Alaina returned, knelt on broken glass, offering to sign. But Hardin declared her family "dead," offering $10 million for her body, commanding her to use her mouth.
In a furious act of defiance, Alaina threw whiskey in his face, snatched the check, and fled. Yet, when he finally took her, a searing, foreign pain and blood on the sheets revealed a shocking truth: he had never touched her three years ago. Why had he let her believe such a monstrous lie?