
The Phantom Heiress: His Secret Obsession
After eighteen years, I finally returned to the billionaire Warren family, only to be treated like uneducated, rust-belt trash.
My stepmother shoved me into a freezing, windowless room, and my half-sister Kelly bought me an $89 plastic dress to humiliate me at the family's high-society gala.
When her petty bullying failed, Kelly took it a step further. Standing at the top of the grand marble staircase, she grabbed my wrist, screamed, and intentionally threw herself down the steps in front of hundreds of elite guests.
Lying in a pool of her own blood, she pointed a trembling finger at me.
"She pushed me! Corrie tried to kill me!"
The entire ballroom erupted in disgust. The guests called me a psychopath. My biological father, purple with rage, raised his hand to strike me, while my stepmother hid a victorious smirk behind her fake tears.
They thought they had perfectly framed the feral country bumpkin.
But they had no idea who they were dealing with.
They didn't know I was "Night God," the dark web's most legendary underground surgeon and hacker, currently being hunted by New York's most ruthless billionaire.
I didn't panic. I didn't cry.
I calmly pulled out my heavily encrypted phone and projected a crystal-clear, un-hackable security feed onto the ballroom's massive LED screen.
"Let's see the replay," I said.
Watching the color drain from their faces was just the beginning. I was going to tear this entire toxic family apart to find out who really burned my mother alive.
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Chapter 5
Corrie shoved violently through the panicked crowd of onlookers. Her shoulder slammed into a businessman, knocking him aside.
She dropped to her knees on the filthy concrete, the impact sending a sharp jolt up her shins.
She grabbed the thrashing boy's shoulders, pinning him flat. His skin was ice-cold and slick with a clammy sweat. His eyes were rolled back in his head, showing only the bloodshot whites.
His chest was locked. No air was moving. A horrific, high-pitched wheezing sound-like air being forced through a crushed straw-squeaked from his throat.
Corrie's fingers pressed hard into the side of his neck, hunting for the carotid artery. The pulse was erratic, racing at a terrifying speed before skipping beats entirely.
Her brain instantly categorized the symptoms. This wasn't a seizure. This wasn't a standard asthma attack. This was acute neurological airway spasms. The nerves controlling his trachea were misfiring, clamping his windpipe completely shut. CPR would do absolutely nothing. He was suffocating on dry land.
The sharp clicking of heels approached.
Kelly pushed her way to the front of the circle. She took one look at the boy thrashing in the dirt and violently recoiled, pressing a manicured hand over her nose.
"Corrie, what the hell are you doing?!" Kelly shrieked, her voice shrill and panicked. "Get away from him! He's probably a junkie! He's going to infect you with something, or sue us!"
Corrie didn't look up. She didn't stop moving.
She turned her head just enough to lock eyes with Kelly.
Corrie's eyes were pitch-black, devoid of any humanity. A wave of pure, concentrated killing intent radiated from her stare.
"Get the fuck back," Corrie snarled. Her voice was a low, guttural growl that vibrated in the air.
Kelly physically flinched. The color drained from her face. She stumbled backward, her heel catching on the curb, terrified by the monster she had just seen in her sister's eyes.
Corrie turned back to the boy. She had less than sixty seconds before brain death began.
She reached into the deep pocket of her oversized hoodie. Her fingers bypassed her phone and grabbed a small, sterilized metal tin she carried everywhere.
She flipped it open with her thumb.
The crowd gasped collectively as Corrie pulled out a gleaming, surgical-grade scalpel and a flexible, hollow medical tube.
"Oh my god, she has a knife!" a woman in the crowd screamed, pulling her phone out to dial 911.
Corrie drowned out the noise. Her focus tunneled. The world shrank down to the two inches of skin on the boy's throat.
Her hands, which had been perfectly still all day, moved with blinding, mechanical precision.
She ripped open a foil alcohol prep pad with her teeth. She aggressively swabbed the center of the boy's neck, locating the cricothyroid membrane with her index finger.
She didn't hesitate. She didn't shake.
She pressed the scalpel blade into the flesh and made a flawless, half-inch vertical incision.
Dark red blood instantly welled up, spilling over her fingers. She didn't flinch. She used her left thumb and forefinger to pinch the wound open, exposing the white cartilage beneath.
With a sharp thrust, she punctured the membrane.
A loud, wet hiss echoed in the quiet street as trapped air rushed out.
Corrie immediately jammed the hollow plastic tube into the bloody hole.
The boy's chest heaved violently. A massive, shuddering gasp of air sucked through the tube. His blue lips instantly began to flush with a faint, sickly pink.
"Holy shit," a man in scrubs standing in the crowd whispered, his eyes wide with absolute shock. "That's a perfect cricothyrotomy. I've seen trauma chiefs mess that up."
The boy was breathing, but his body was still twitching from the neurological misfires.
Corrie reached back into her tin. She pulled out a small glass vial filled with a clear blue liquid and a sterile syringe. There was no label on the vial. It was a proprietary neuro-stabilizer she had synthesized herself in an underground lab.
She jammed the needle into the vial, drew back the plunger, and found a vein in the boy's arm. She pushed the blue liquid directly into his bloodstream.
Within five seconds, the violent tremors stopped. The boy's muscles went completely slack. His breathing leveled out into a steady, rhythmic hiss through the tube in his neck.
His eyelids fluttered open. His pupils were blown wide, hazy and confused. He stared up at the girl in the gray hoodie, her face completely obscured by the shadow of the fabric.
Corrie quickly pulled a specialized hemostatic dressing from her pocket and taped it securely around the tube, stopping the bleeding completely.
In the distance, the wailing sirens of ambulances and police cruisers began to scream, rapidly growing louder.
Corrie's head snapped up.
She couldn't be here. The police would ask for ID. The paramedics would ask questions she couldn't answer. If her fingerprints ended up in a database, her life as Night God was over.
She wiped her bloody hands on the asphalt. She stood up, pulling the hood even further down over her face.
She walked back to where she had dropped the knockoff dress. She snatched the cheap fabric off the ground, shoved it under her arm, and turned away from the crowd.
She ducked into a narrow, trash-filled alleyway between two brick buildings and broke into a silent sprint.
Kelly, seeing the police cars turning the corner, panicked. She didn't want to be associated with a bloody street surgery. She ran to her Porsche, threw herself into the driver's seat, and slammed on the gas, peeling out of the parking lot.
Ten seconds later.
Three massive, black Rolls-Royce Phantoms tore around the corner, their tires screaming in protest. They slammed on their brakes, stopping diagonally across the street, blocking traffic completely.
The back door of the lead car was kicked open before the vehicle even fully stopped.
Barron Griffin erupted from the car. His face was a mask of pure, unadulterated terror. He shoved past two police officers who had just arrived, his massive frame clearing a path through the crowd.
He dropped to his knees beside Leo.
"Leo!" Barron roared, his voice cracking with a desperate agony that made the onlookers flinch.
A man in a tailored suit-the Griffin family's private physician-dropped down next to Barron. He immediately checked Leo's vitals and stared at the tube protruding from the boy's neck.
The doctor's jaw fell open.
"Mr. Griffin," the doctor breathed, his voice trembling with awe. "His airway was completely crushed by a neuro-spasm. Someone... someone performed a field cricothyrotomy. And they administered an unknown neuro-inhibitor. The cut is flawless. It's surgical perfection. Whoever did this saved his life with seconds to spare."
Barron's head snapped up. His chest heaved as he looked at the blood on the pavement.
He stood up, towering over the crowd. His eyes were wild, scanning the faces of the terrified onlookers.
"Who did this?" Barron demanded, his voice a lethal, booming command that silenced the sirens. "Who saved my brother?"
The man in scrubs pointed a shaking finger toward the alleyway.
"It was a girl," the man stammered. "Wearing a baggy gray hoodie. She had her face covered. She moved like a ghost, man. She just... cut him open and vanished into that alley."
Barron's heart slammed against his ribs. A violent, electric shock ripped through his nervous system.
He sprinted to the entrance of the alleyway. He stared down the dark, trash-filled corridor.
At the very end, just before the street turned, he saw a flash of gray fabric disappear around the brick corner.
Barron gripped the brick wall so hard his fingernails chipped. His breathing was ragged.
It was her. Night God. She was right here. She had just had her hands on his brother.
Barron turned back to Arthur, who was running up behind him.
"Buy this entire city block if you have to," Barron snarled, his eyes burning with a terrifying, obsessive fire. "I want every single frame of CCTV footage from every camera within a five-mile radius. I want her found tonight."
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9.3
They say you can't have it all. I'm about to prove them wrong-or destroy myself trying.
When my struggling mother married billionaire Richard Stone, I thought I was gaining a family. Instead, I found three stepbrothers who became my obsession, my downfall, and my salvation.
Dominic, the eldest, cold and commanding, who kisses me like he's claiming his kingdom and looks at me like I'm the only thing he can't control.
Julian, the charming playboy who hides a vulnerable soul beneath his perfect smile, making me feel like I'm the only woman he's ever truly seen.
Asher, the brooding artist who paints me like I'm his muse and touches me like I'm his masterpiece, seeing parts of my soul I didn't know existed.
They're forbidden. They're dangerous. They're everything I shouldn't want.
But when I discover my father didn't die by suicide that he was murdered by the very man who now calls himself my stepfather, these three powerful men becomes my unlikely allies.
First it was a forbidden attraction, now it's an arrangement that defies every rule.
The rules are simple:
I'll give each of them a chance.
I'll take everything they offer.
And in the end, I'll have to make the hardest decision of my life:
Choose one of them. Choose all of them. Or choose myself.

9.6
Haylie waited nervously at the Wall Street charity gala for her boyfriend Bryan, but a spiked drink hit her hard, leaving her stumbling into a VIP lounge.
There, Chester Steele, the ruthless CEO of Steele Industrial, found her—drugged and vulnerable. What started as a frantic claiming in the shadows ended with him whispering she was his.
But moments later, a security alert shattered everything: data breach traced to Haylie's terminal. Chester's fury exploded. He saw her brush past a Logan Group rival on footage and dumped her in the rain, firing her as a corporate spy.
Bryan answered her desperate call with ice: "It's over." Reporters swarmed her door, branding her a traitor. Arrested at the office by FBI agents, she watched smug coworker Erin wave goodbye.
Thrown in a cell, chained and grilled with fake evidence—offshore accounts in her name—Haylie learned the worst: charges now included her sick father, Ernest, framed for laundering the leak money. Plead guilty or he dies in prison.
Innocent and raging, she couldn't fathom who planted it all—the gala bump, the logs, the forgeries. Why her? Who hated her enough to destroy her life?
Chester burst in, posting unlimited bail but forcing her signature on a slave contract: live in his penthouse, serve him 24/7. As she collapsed in his arms, trapped in his gilded cage, Haylie vowed silently—she'd uncover the real traitor and make them pay.

8.9
For seven years, I hid my MIT Ph.D. and my identity as a top haute couture designer to be the perfect, obedient wife to billionaire Cornelius Lambert.
But on our anniversary, while I waited at home with a cold dinner, I found him at a Michelin restaurant with his childhood sweetheart, Halle.
My seven-year-old son sat between them, laughing loudly.
"Mom is too boring. I wish Aunt Halle was my real mom."
Cornelius didn't defend me. He just smiled and affectionately ruffled the boy's hair.
When I finally packed my bags and left, I accidentally triggered an old AI robot prototype Cornelius had given me years ago.
A hidden recording played his voice from the very night he proposed.
"Why marry her? Because she's easy to control. Halle doesn't want to settle down yet, so Cassidy is just a perfect, temporary shield."
Later, when I caught them being intimate in a dark parking garage and snapped a photo, Cornelius watched with cold, dead eyes as his massive bodyguard shoved me against a concrete pillar.
My arm was torn open, blood dripping onto the floor, as they forced me to delete the evidence of his affair.
For seven years, I filed down every sharp edge of my brilliance for a man who saw me as nothing but a pathetic, disposable placeholder.
My heart turned to absolute ice. He thought I was just a weak, powerless housewife.
But he forgot who he was dealing with.
As his luxury car drove away, I pulled up the hidden command terminal on my phone and recovered the encrypted cloud backup of the photos.
I looked at my lawyer with a bleeding arm and a cold smile.
"Let's go. Now, we have a weapon."

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?

8.3
Alena landed at JFK, eager to call her fiancé of three years.
But a sudden message from her best friend shattered her world: a high-resolution photo of Darrin passionately kissing another woman. The woman was Katrina, her older sister.
Alena rushed to the grand ballroom and confronted them in front of New York's elite. Instead of an apology, her own mother slapped her across the face.
"You jealous, spiteful girl. Trying to ruin your sister's happiness because you can't handle your own failures."
Darrin coldly wrapped a protective arm around Katrina. The nightmare worsened when they ambushed Alena at her apartment, demanding she sign an NDA to cover up the affair and save their family's failing business. If she refused, her father threatened to tell her frail grandfather the truth, knowing the shock would trigger a fatal heart attack.
Alena was suffocated by the sheer magnitude of the betrayal. Her family was weaponizing the only person who truly loved her, treating her like a disposable pawn to protect the sister who stole her life. How could her own flesh and blood be so sickeningly cruel?
Cornered and entirely out of options, Alena pulled a matte-black business card from her pocket.
It belonged to Andrew Spencer, the ruthless billionaire who had rescued her from the freezing rain, and the apex predator Darrin feared most. He had offered her a transactional marriage. If her family wanted to destroy her, she would become their worst nightmare. She picked up her phone and dialed his number.

7.9
Eileen Goff was a nobody, scrubbing diner tables to survive while her greedy family bled her dry.
On the eve of her twentieth birthday, the government's mandatory marriage algorithm matched her with a spouse.
It wasn't a plumber or a teacher. It was Harrison Butler, the ruthless, untouchable billionaire king of Butler Industries.
At the registry, Harrison's glamorous intended fiancée threw a half-million-dollar check at her.
"Take the money, get out of here, and never show your face again."
The registry supervisor even offered her a million dollars to sign a cancellation agreement, trying to erase her from the system.
At their first high-society gala, Harrison's stepmother and the fiancée locked Eileen in an empty room, plotting to humiliate her and prove she was just cheap trash.
Eileen was terrified and confused. Men like Harrison Butler didn't just accept federal matches with girls who smelled like fried onions.
But instead of abandoning her, Harrison smashed the door open, publicly banished his own family, and kissed her in front of the entire city's elite.
Why was this billionaire going to such extreme lengths to protect a complete stranger?
Then she overheard his assistant talking about a marriage clause in his grandfather's trust fund.
He didn't love her; he just needed a powerless, state-mandated wife to lock his parasitic family out of his empire.
Realizing she was a highly valuable pawn, Eileen stopped trembling, looked the billionaire in the eye, and spoke.
"I believe we can have more than just a legal relationship. We can have a business arrangement."