
The Jilted Heiress's Ruthless Billionaire Revenge
For five years, I abandoned my status as the heiress of the powerful Montgomery family to play the role of a poor, submissive housewife for Barrett.
Then, a bank notification popped up on my phone. Barrett had forged my digital signature and transferred our entire $50 million joint trust fund to a woman named Crista Reid.
When I called his boardroom to confront him, he humiliated me in front of a dozen Wall Street executives.
"Stop acting like a hysterical housewife. You're living in a penthouse I pay for, so don't embarrass yourself."
I broke into his encrypted laptop and uncovered the sickening truth. Crista was his mistress, and they had a five-year-old son together.
Barrett hadn't just stolen my money; he had spent years painting me as a helpless charity case he rescued, completely erasing the fact that my financial models built his entire company.
He thought I was just a discarded peasant he could manipulate, cheat on, and replace. He truly believed he held absolute power over my life.
He had no idea that I still possessed the highest security clearance of the Montgomery empire.
I pulled an old BlackBerry from a hidden wall compartment, plugged it in, and dialed my family's lawyer.
"Draft the prenup for Commodore Clayton IV," I ordered, choosing to marry Wall Street's most ruthless predator. "I'm done playing the peasant."
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Chapter 4
The next morning, the air in the penthouse was thick with the smell of stale coffee and desperation.
I sat at the marble kitchen island, sipping a glass of sparkling water. I was already dressed in a crisp silk blouse and tailored trousers, my posture perfect.
The front door unlocked, and Barrett walked in.
He looked like a corpse. Dark circles bruised the skin under his eyes. His suit was wrinkled. He had clearly spent the entire night at the office, trying to stop the bleeding from Gus Kowalski's sudden withdrawal.
He saw me and immediately plastered on a sickeningly sweet, exhausted smile.
He walked over to the island and placed a small, velvet Tiffany-blue box right next to my water glass.
"I'm sorry about yesterday," Barrett said, his voice thick with fake sincerity. "The stress of the merger... I lost my temper. I had my assistant run to Fifth Avenue this morning to get this for you."
I stared at the blue box. I didn't touch it.
I flicked the lid open with my index finger. Inside sat a silver pendant necklace.
"This is the Return to Tiffany heart tag," I said, my voice deadpan. "It was heavily discounted during last year's post-Christmas clearance. Your assistant has terrible taste."
Barrett's jaw tightened. A muscle ticked in his cheek.
"It's the thought that counts, Harlow," he forced out, trying to keep his temper in check.
He reached into his briefcase and pulled out a thick legal document, sliding it across the marble.
"It's a transfer of two percent equity in Marks Capital. To you. Sign this, at least in front of the other investors, so we look like a stable entity. We just need to weather this sudden market fluctuation, present a united front to stop the bleeding, and then we'll plan the wedding."
I looked at the document. I didn't need to read the fine print to know it was laced with impossible vesting schedules and clawback clauses. He wasn't giving me equity; he was trying to chain me to a sinking ship to keep the remaining investors from panicking.
I tapped my fingernail against the marble. Click. Click. Click.
Barrett watched my finger, sweating. He thought I was considering it.
Before I could speak, the doorbell chimed.
A sharp, authoritative ring.
Barrett frowned, annoyed by the interruption. He marched over to the front door and yanked it open.
Standing in the hallway was a man in his fifties, wearing an immaculate, bespoke English suit and white cotton gloves. He stood with the rigid posture of military brass.
"Can I help you?" Barrett snapped.
The man ignored Barrett completely. His eyes bypassed him and locked onto me sitting at the island.
He stepped past Barrett, invading the penthouse with an air of absolute authority. He walked straight to the kitchen island and stopped a respectful distance away.
"Arthur Finch," the man introduced himself, his voice a low, cultured baritone.
He reached into his breast pocket and produced a thick, cream-colored envelope. It was sealed with a heavy dollop of crimson wax, stamped with a deeply embossed crest.
The Clayton family crest.
Arthur extended the envelope toward me with both hands.
Barrett, who had followed him into the kitchen, froze. His eyes locked onto the wax seal. As a man desperate to climb Wall Street's ladder, he knew exactly what that crest meant. It was the symbol of old money, of untouchable power.
His pupils dilated in pure shock.
I took the envelope from Arthur. I broke the wax seal-the sharp crack echoing in the quiet room-and pulled out the heavy cardstock.
Commodore Clayton IV requests your presence.
Le Bernardin. 8:00 PM.
I slipped the card back into the envelope and gave Arthur a single, brief nod.
"Thank you, Arthur," I said.
Arthur bowed slightly from the waist. He turned on his heel and walked out of the apartment, never once acknowledging Barrett's existence.
The door clicked shut.
Barrett lunged forward, his hands grasping at the air near the envelope. "What is that? How do you know someone from the Clayton family?"
I slid the envelope into my leather handbag and zipped it shut.
"It's a client appreciation dinner," I lied smoothly, my face a mask of indifference. "For a subsidiary account I manage."
"A subsidiary account?" Barrett's voice pitched up in disbelief. "They sent a butler with a wax-sealed invitation for a subsidiary account?"
His phone started vibrating violently on the counter.
The caller ID flashed: Crista.
The buzzing was loud, obnoxious, and relentless.
Barrett stared at the phone, then at me, his face flushing with embarrassment and panic. He grabbed the phone, silencing it.
"I have to get back to the office," he muttered, grabbing his briefcase. He pointed a trembling finger at the equity contract. "Sign that, Harlow. We're a team."
He practically ran out the door.
The moment the lock engaged, I picked up the Tiffany box and dropped it straight into the stainless steel trash can.
Then, I picked up the two percent equity contract.
I walked over to the heavy-duty paper shredder in the corner of the living room. I fed the document into the slot. The machine whirred, grinding his pathetic attempt at manipulation into tiny white ribbons.
I walked into the bathroom and began my prep.
At five o'clock, I slipped back into the black velvet gown. I fastened a pair of heavy, heirloom emerald earrings to my lobes-jewelry my grandfather had given me, hidden away for five years.
I applied a coat of blood-red lipstick.
I looked in the mirror. The submissive, quiet girl Barrett thought he knew was dead.
I grabbed my clutch and walked out the door, ready to meet the most dangerous man in New York.
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9.3
She sells flowers. He spills blood. And he will stop at nothing to make her his. Elena Rossi has always lived quietly among roses and lilies, dreaming of love as gentle as the petals she arranges. She thought she found it in Daniel, the man she planned to marry. Until her wedding day when a dangerous stranger walked into the church and shattered everything. Adrian Volkov is a king in the underworld, a man feared for his ruthlessness and power. But to him, Elena is not just a prize. She is an obsession. A storm he cannot live without. And he will burn the world and anyone in it, to claim her. Torn from the life she knew, Elena resists him, manipulates him, and even runs from him. But Adrian is relentless. His love is dark, his touch both punishing and tender, and his obsession inescapable. When betrayal and bloodshed close in, Elena must face the truth: She doesn't just fear him. She doesn't just hate him. She loves him. Petals and Blood is a haunting, passionate tale of obsession, betrayal, and the dangerous kind of love that blooms in shadows.

9.1
Cora crash-landed her escape pod on a brutal alien planet, only to be immediately hunted by a massive six-eyed beast.
A colossal black wolf dropped from the canopy and crushed the beast's neck to save her. But before she could even breathe, the wolf transformed into a towering, naked primitive man with glowing gold eyes.
He hauled her back to his savage tribe, where she was instantly treated like garbage. The women sneered at her fragile human body, and the men eyed her like fresh meat.
The tribe leader's jealous daughter even handed her a waterskin laced with a terrifying alien breeding drug, hoping to turn Cora into a mindless spectacle of lust in front of the entire settlement.
"Drink. You look like you're dying," the daughter sneered, waiting for Cora to lose her mind.
Cora was terrified and completely out of her depth. She didn't understand why this lethal Alpha warrior looked at her with such dark, consuming possessiveness, or why he was willing to slaughter his own people just to protect her.
How was a stranded human supposed to survive in a terrifying world where every plant, beast, and local wanted her dead?
"BEEP! Critical Warning! Liquid contains high concentrations of alien aphrodisiac herbs," her implanted AI assistant suddenly echoed in her skull.
Looking at the hostile tribe and the fiercely protective Alpha shielding her, Cora silently activated her tech interface. She wasn't just going to be a helpless pet in this savage world.

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.

9.6
She was sold as a broodmare. He was a warrior with no memory. Together, they'll burn down the world.
Lyra has been called many things: half-blood, mongrel, dirty blood. Rejected by every pack she's approached, she's given one final chance-as a bride to Ronan, the cruel Alpha of Red River Pack. But when her wedding night becomes a nightmare, she stabs her new husband and flees into the frozen wilderness.
Stellan remembers nothing. Not his name, not his past, not the ancient tattoos covering his body. He only knows that when he sees a terrified woman falling from a cliff into an icy river, he must save her-even if it kills him.
On the run from a vengeful Alpha and his army of hunters, Lyra and Stellan discover an impossible bond growing between them. The moon has chosen them as mates. But Stellan's memories are returning, and with them, a devastating truth: he's not just any wolf. He's the Alpha of the North Star Pack. And a half-blood can never be his Luna.
Now Ronan's brother has sworn revenge, an ancient prophecy awakens, and three packs prepare for war. Lyra must prove that bloodlines mean nothing-and that the most powerful bond of all is forged in ice and fire.
He lost his memory. She lost her freedom. Together, they'll find everything.

7.5
After spending five grueling years securing the Madden Pack's empire, I thought my Alpha mate and I were finally building a perfect family.
But on my birthday, I returned home to find a thick, impenetrable wall of ice in our Mate bond.
Caden had completely shut me out to throw a lavish party for my half-sister, Adalynn.
He let Adalynn pollute our penthouse with her cheap perfume and brainwash my five-year-old daughter, Elara.
"Auntie Adalynn is a million times better than Mommy!"
Elara chirped happily to a camera, while Caden watched with a doting smile.
He publicly humiliated me, commanded the servants to ignore me, and deliberately fed Elara severe allergens just to spite my maternal rules.
When my pup ended up in the pack hospital gasping for air, Caden confiscated her tablet and roared at her to stop crying for the mother who "abandoned" her.
My heart shattered into a million irreparable pieces.
I couldn't understand how the man destined to protect my soul could twist my love into cruelty and use our helpless cub as a punching bag for his ego.
But the weeping, pathetic Luna died right there.
I calmly signed the divorce papers, surrendered all my assets, and walked out into the cold night.
Opening my encrypted laptop, I reclaimed my hidden identity as the global elite hacker "Ghost" and initiated a lethal protocol.
It was time to burn his entire world to the ground.

8.1
I lived my entire life in a beautiful, naive bubble, completely trusting my husband and my best friend.
That was until they tied me to a chair, slit my vocal cords, and set my family's estate on fire.
As the flames crept closer, my husband Demarco calmly crushed my diamond wedding ring under his leather heel.
My best friend Cristin walked in, leaning against his shoulder and pouring her champagne onto the floorboards to fuel the fire.
"Your grandfather didn't just have a stroke. The medication swap was incredibly easy to arrange."
Looking down at my bleeding body, they casually confessed to murdering the only person who had ever truly protected me, all to swallow the Bridges empire.
I couldn't even scream. I could only suffocate in the thick black smoke as they turned their backs and locked the heavy oak door behind them.
Why was I so blind? How could the two people I loved most treat me like disposable garbage?
In my final moments of agonizing pain and pure, concentrated fury, I pulled out the detonator my grandfather had secretly left me.
I pressed the button, blowing the estate and all of us to hell.
But the burning stopped.
When I opened my eyes, I was staring up at a pristine crystal chandelier.
I was fifteen years old again, lying in my childhood bedroom, right before my treacherous uncle and those parasites started tearing my family apart.
And I didn't come back empty-handed.
This time, I am not the naive heiress.