
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 8
The gala dragged on, but the atmosphere had permanently shifted.
The air in the ballroom felt thick, suffocating. The whispers followed Dean and Kelly everywhere they went, a relentless, buzzing swarm of social execution.
Corrie felt the heat of the room pressing against her skin. The smell of expensive perfumes and roasted meats was making her throat itch.
She set her half-empty glass of sparkling water on a silver tray. Without a word to anyone, she turned and walked toward the grand staircase, seeking the cold, empty air of the second-floor gallery.
She climbed the stairs, her hand trailing lightly against the polished mahogany banister.
Down below, Kelly was standing near the restrooms. Her face was stained with ruined mascara. Two of her closest friends had just made a pathetic excuse to leave her side, treating her like a leper.
Kelly looked up and saw Corrie's back disappearing onto the second-floor landing.
A violent, blinding surge of hatred exploded in Kelly's chest. Her blood pounded in her ears, drowning out the classical music. She lost every ounce of rational thought.
She grabbed the heavy skirts of her ruined Chanel dress and sprinted up the stairs, her heels digging viciously into the carpet.
Corrie was standing near the edge of the second-floor balcony, looking down at the crowd. The area was dimly lit, far away from the chandeliers.
"You bitch!"
The venomous hiss came from right behind her.
Corrie didn't jump. She slowly turned around.
Kelly was standing three feet away. Her chest was heaving, her face contorted into an ugly, unrecognizable mask of pure rage. Spittle flew from her lips as she breathed.
"You did that on purpose," Kelly snarled, her voice a ragged whisper. She took a step closer, invading Corrie's personal space. "I stood behind the heavy velvet curtain of the second-floor window and watched you step out of that car on your first day," Kelly hissed, her eyes wild with manic hatred. "I saw the cheap dirt on your boots. I knew immediately you were a parasite!" "You humiliated my mother. You ruined my life in front of everyone!"
Corrie looked at her. She didn't see a threat. She saw a pathetic, rabid dog barking at a wall.
Corrie took a sip of her water. The ice clinked softly against the glass.
"You bought the trash, Kelly," Corrie said, her voice a dead, emotionless flatline. "I just wore it. If the truth ruins your life, maybe you shouldn't be such a cheap, malicious little brat."
The words hit Kelly like a physical slap to the face.
Kelly's eyes darted wildly. She looked over the balcony railing. Down below, directly in their line of sight, a group of wealthy investors and their wives were looking up, their attention drawn by Kelly's aggressive posture.
A dark, psychotic light flashed in Kelly's eyes.
If she couldn't win the social war, she would destroy Corrie's life.
Kelly lunged forward. She threw her hands out and clamped her fingers around Corrie's left wrist. Her acrylic nails dug brutally into Corrie's skin, drawing tiny beads of blood.
Corrie's combat instincts flared instantly. Her muscles coiled. Her right hand twitched, ready to deliver a palm strike to Kelly's throat that would crush her windpipe.
But Corrie's hyper-vigilant brain processed the angle, the audience below, and the psychotic gleam in Kelly's eyes in a fraction of a second.
She aborted the strike. She froze her body completely, turning herself into a statue.
Kelly threw her head back. She opened her mouth and let out a blood-curdling, ear-piercing scream that ripped through the ballroom, shattering the polite chatter. The string quartet below abruptly stopped playing in shock, plunging the cavernous space into a sudden, deadly silence.
In that perfectly timed void, Kelly violently ripped her own hands away from Corrie's wrist and hurled her upper body backward.
"Corrie, no! Please don't push me!" Kelly shrieked as she fell, her voice echoing perfectly off the vaulted ceilings for every single guest to hear.
She intentionally threw herself down the grand staircase.
Her body hit the first carpeted step with a heavy thud. She tumbled backward, her limbs flailing, her expensive dress tearing as she rolled violently down the steep incline.
She hit the marble floor at the bottom of the stairs with a sickening, bone-jarring crack.
The entire ballroom erupted into absolute chaos.
Women screamed. Glasses shattered on the floor.
"Kelly!"
Dean's voice tore through the room, a raw, animalistic shriek of terror. She shoved past a waiter, sending a tray of champagne crashing to the floor, and threw herself onto the marble next to her daughter.
Kelly lay crumpled on the floor. A thin stream of dark red blood trickled from a gash on her forehead, staining the white marble. She was crying hysterically, her body shaking.
Kelly lifted a trembling, blood-stained finger. She pointed straight up the stairs.
"She pushed me," Kelly sobbed, her voice echoing in the dead silence of the horrified crowd. "Corrie tried to kill me."
Hundreds of eyes snapped upward.
They locked onto Corrie, who was standing perfectly still at the top of the stairs, a glass of water still in her hand.
The whispers instantly turned into a roar of condemnation.
"Monster," a woman hissed.
"Call the police! She's a psychopath!" a man yelled.
George Warren pushed through the crowd. His face was purple with rage. The veins in his neck bulged against his collar. He took the stairs two at a time, his heavy footsteps shaking the wood.
He reached the landing and stopped inches from Corrie's face.
"What have you done?!" George roared, his spit hitting Corrie's cheek. His hands were shaking so violently he looked like he was having a seizure. "Are you insane?! You tried to murder your sister?!"
Brad ran to the bottom of the stairs, pointing up. "Throw her out! Lock her up! She's a freak from the slums!"
Corrie looked at George's purple face. She looked down at Dean, who was cradling Kelly, shooting Corrie a look of absolute, victorious venom.
Corrie didn't panic. Her heart rate didn't even elevate.
She took a slow, deliberate sip of her water.
"Call the police," Corrie said. Her voice was calm, cold, and projected perfectly over the screaming crowd. "And while we wait, have Davis pull the security footage from the second-floor hallway camera."
Dean's heart leaped with a dark, vicious thrill. That camera? She had personally taken a pair of wire cutters to its power supply two days ago. There was absolutely no way it caught anything.
"The camera?" Dean yelled, her voice dripping with fake tears and real venom. "The camera in that hallway has been broken for two days! You knew that! You planned this in a blind spot, you sick, twisted girl!"
The crowd gasped. The narrative was set. Premeditated attempted murder.
George raised his right hand. His palm was open, his muscles trembling as he prepared to strike his eldest daughter across the face.
Corrie didn't flinch.
She calmly reached into the pocket of her deconstructed dress with her free hand. She pulled out her matte-black smartphone.
Her thumb swiped across the screen, bypassing the lock. She tapped an icon that looked like a jagged lightning bolt.
"Broken?" Corrie asked, her lips curling into a terrifying, razor-sharp smirk. "That's funny. Because my feed looks crystal clear."
She hit a single button on her screen.
Behind George, in the center of the ballroom, hung a massive, 100-inch LED screen that had been displaying the Warren Foundation logo all night.
The screen suddenly went black.
A loud, electronic chirp echoed through the room's surround-sound speakers.
The screen flared back to life.
It wasn't showing a logo. It was showing a high-definition, night-vision enhanced security feed. The timestamp in the corner read exactly two minutes ago.
The entire ballroom froze. George slowly turned his head to look at the screen.
The video played in absolute silence.
It showed Corrie standing perfectly still, holding her glass. It showed Kelly sprinting up the stairs, her face twisted in rage.
The crowd watched in breathless horror as the high-definition camera captured Kelly lunging forward. They saw Kelly's hands clamp onto Corrie's wrist. They saw Corrie freeze like a statue.
And then, they saw Kelly scream, let go of Corrie, and violently throw herself backward down the stairs.
Corrie hadn't moved a single muscle.
The video ended, and immediately looped back to the beginning, playing the damning evidence over and over again.
The silence in the ballroom was absolute. It was the silence of a vacuum.
Kelly, lying on the floor, stopped crying. The blood drained from her face so fast she looked like a corpse.
Dean stared at the massive screen. Her mouth hung open. A cold, paralyzing dread seized her heart, squeezing it until she couldn't breathe.
She had personally cut the wires to that camera two days ago. It was physically impossible for it to be recording.
Unless the girl standing at the top of the stairs wasn't just a rust-belt dropout.
Corrie looked down at Dean's terrified, pale face. Corrie's eyes were black voids.
The trap hadn't been set by Kelly. The trap had been set by Corrie. And they had walked right into it.
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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."