
The Runaway Heiress's Accidental Contract Marriage
To escape an abusive ex who blacklisted her from every job in the city, Annabelle fled to New York with nothing but her late grandfather's secret marriage token.
Destitute, she was unexpectedly taken in by the ultra-wealthy Barrera family.
Meeting their sweet, handsome nephew, Davion, she naturally assumed he was her arranged fiancé.
Seeing that Davion already had a girlfriend he loved, Annabelle felt a deep sense of guilt about the secret contract.
Sitting in his passenger seat one morning, she confessed her true identity and offered to help him secretly break the marriage alliance.
But Davion just looked at her in sheer panic.
"What engagement?"
Before Annabelle could explain, his phone accidentally went on speaker.
A low, terrifyingly calm voice echoed through the car.
It was Jasper Barrera—the ruthless, cold-blooded head of the family, and the terrifying tyrant Annabelle had accidentally offended in the estate's greenhouse just days ago.
He had heard every single word of her plan to break the sacred family trust.
Davion's face went completely ashen as he hastily pulled the car over, his hands shaking violently on the steering wheel.
"Anna," he whispered, looking like he had just seen a ghost. "Who do you think you are engaged to?"
That was when the horrifying realization crushed the air out of her lungs.
She wasn't engaged to the sweet nephew. She was engaged to the monster.
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Chapter 8
The weekend arrived, bringing a violent, unseasonal rainstorm to Long Island. The sky was the color of bruised iron, and thunder rattled the windowpanes of the main house.
Seeking an escape from the noise of the staff cleaning the hallways, Annabelle wandered deep into the estate grounds until she found the massive glass conservatory.
Inside, the air was thick, warm, and smelled intensely of wet earth and blooming orchids. The heavy rain pounded against the glass dome roof, creating a loud, rhythmic white noise that instantly relaxed her.
She found a vintage wicker chaise lounge hidden behind a row of giant ferns. She curled up on the cushions, opening a thick art book. The warmth and the sound of the rain were hypnotic. Within minutes, her eyelids drooped, and she fell into a deep sleep.
She didn't know how much time had passed when a sound pierced through her dreams.
It was a slow, heavy footstep on the stone path.
Annabelle shifted in her sleep, a sudden, inexplicable chill running down her spine. Her brow furrowed. She slowly opened her heavy eyelids.
Her vision was blurry for a second. When it cleared, the breath was violently sucked from her lungs.
Less than ten feet away stood a man. He was incredibly tall, with broad shoulders that seemed to block out the light. He was dressed in a stark black dress shirt, the sleeves rolled up to reveal muscular forearms.
He was standing with his back to her, looking at a rare blue orchid.
In his right hand, he held a vintage silver Zippo lighter. His long, elegant fingers flipped the metal lid open and shut.
Clink. Clack. Clink. Clack.
The metallic sound was sharp and menacing, cutting through the noise of the rain.
As if sensing her sudden spike in heart rate, the man stopped moving. The lighter snapped shut. He slowly turned his head, looking over his shoulder. The movement was agonizingly deliberate, like a predator locking onto a sudden disturbance in its territory.
Annabelle's heart stopped.
His face was a masterpiece of sharp angles and deep shadows, devastatingly handsome. But his eyes-they were the color of a frozen ocean. They held absolutely no warmth, no mercy. It was the gaze of an apex predator looking at a rabbit.
The sheer, suffocating pressure of his aura pinned Annabelle to the wicker chair. Her stomach cramped with pure terror.
She scrambled to sit up. The heavy art book slid off her lap and slammed onto the stone floor with a loud bang. She flinched, but the man didn't even blink.
"I-I'm sorry," Annabelle stammered, her voice shaking uncontrollably. "I didn't mean to intrude. I was just reading, and I fell asleep."
The man fully turned to face her. He looked down at her, his icy eyes slowly dragging over her panicked face, her messy hair, her trembling hands. His gaze felt physical, a cold weight pressing against her skin, dissecting her every micro-expression. He didn't say a single word. The silence stretched, thick and terrifying.
Annabelle's palms began to sweat. She gripped the edge of the wicker chair, her knuckles turning bone-white. She felt like she was suffocating. Every instinct screamed at her to run, but her muscles were entirely locked under his paralyzing stare.
Finally, after what felt like an eternity, the man gave a single, microscopic nod.
He let out a low, vibrating hum-a sound so deep it vibrated in Annabelle's chest. Then, he slipped the Zippo lighter into his pocket, turned around, and walked away. His long strides carried him deeper into the jungle of the conservatory until he disappeared.
Annabelle collapsed back against the cushions. She dragged in a ragged breath, realizing she had been holding it the entire time. A layer of cold sweat coated her forehead.
She didn't care about the book. She jumped up from the chair and practically ran out of the conservatory.
She sprinted through the rain, bursting through the back doors of the main house. She nearly collided with the butler, who was carrying a silver tea tray.
"Miss Anna?" he asked, startled.
"Sorry!" she gasped, running past him.
She dashed up the stairs, ran into her room, and slammed the door shut. She locked it with a loud click. She backed away from the door, pressing her hands against her racing heart.
Whoever that man was, he was terrifying. She prayed to God she would never cross paths with him again.
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7.3
I found out my husband of three years had cheated on me and his mistress is the one who told me-because he didn't have the balls to do it himself.
I move out and get a new apartment, a job as a bartender, and try to move on with a broken heart. I wonder where it all went wrong, if I hadn't been enough for him, if I'd been stupid for marrying him in the first place.
I'm at work one night when he walks inside-the most beautiful man I've ever seen. He sits at the bar and a forest fire burns between us. I was depressed the moment before he entered, but the second I look at his blue eyes, I forget the dumpster fire that my life has become. I invite him back to my place and it's the most passionate night of my life. I expect to never see him again.
I just want him as an anti-depressant-but he wants me all to himself. I just got my heart ripped out of my chest so I want something easy and no-strings-attached, but he wants all the strings because he's hooked.
I don't get much of a say in the matter, and that's not surprising when I learn why-because he's the Butcher. The crime lord of all crime lords, the boss that overshadows all of Paris, that makes everyone abide by his rules-or pay.
And now I'm his.

9.2
Rebirth with a Twist.
Fawn Jones doesn't get a chance to resolve the issues with her marriage. No, she gets murdered in her own bathtub. Drowned by the husband she hated after he had moved his mistress into their bed, Fawn's last lucid thought is a promise before death. "I will not stay weak. I will make you pay. If not in this life, then the next." Then she wakes up. Different room. Different body. Different life. Cassandra Huntington – rich, infamous, beautiful in a way Fawn never had been. Cassie had been in a coma for six months after a car crash. Her billionaire husband, Blake, had just signed the paperwork to turn off her life support when she suddenly started breathing on her own. Now everyone thinks Fawn is Cassandra. The media calls it a miracle. Blake calls it complicated. The woman wearing his wife's face is softer, sharper, funnier... and so tempting he hates himself for wanting her. Fawn calls it an opportunity for revenge. Her killers are still out there. Her old body is in the ground under a lie. And the only weapons she has now are Cassandra's money, Cassandra's reputation... and Cassandra's husband. So, she plays the role. Learns to walk in six-inch heels. Smiles for the cameras. Seduces a man who once couldn't stand his wife and now can't seem to stay away from her. While she quietly buys into the company that ruined her old life. While she gets close enough to the man who killed her to watch him crack. They drowned the wrong woman. Now she's awake. And she's not done.

9.3
On her wedding night at The Plaza Hotel, Clara went looking for her husband.
Instead, she found him in the dimly lit parking garage, passionately pinning down her bridesmaid.
She couldn't even scream or expose them. Just hours before the ceremony, Julian had tricked her into signing away her twenty percent shares of their co-founded company, leaving her completely penniless and unable to pay her grandmother's life-saving medical bills.
Fleeing in absolute despair, a sudden hotel blackout plunged her into a second nightmare. She was dragged into a pitch-black room and brutally violated by a heavily drugged stranger.
When a shattered Clara returned to the office to audit the books and reclaim her power, Julian demoted her to a dusty desk by the trash cans.
He flaunted his mistress in the executive suite and deliberately sent Clara into a horrifying trap. He arranged for vicious clients to drug and assault her, demanding high-definition blackmail photos so he could divorce her with absolutely nothing.
"Since you want to play rough, you can service Mr. Petrocelli tonight," the thug sneered, locking the VIP room door.
Clara was pushed to the brink of hell. Why was the man she devoted three years of her life to trying to destroy her so completely? And why did the freezing cedarwood scent of the stranger who ruined her in the dark perfectly match Conrad Vance, the ruthless CEO and Julian's untouchable uncle?
Rather than let Julian win, Clara smashed a glass bottle, held the jagged edge to her own throat to force the men back, and threw herself off the second-floor balcony into the freezing night.
But the bone-crushing impact never came. A massive figure shot out from the shadows and caught her, and her brutal counterattack finally began.

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.

7.7
Eva Brooks, a 25-year-old woman, was set up by her best friend. Her fiancé broke up with her and demanded compensation for allegedly cheating on him.
Eva had a one-night stand with the richest CEO in Dominic City, Ethan Owen. He was arrogant and offered her a job as his secretary.
As his secretary, Ethan couldn't shake his fondness for Eva. He became obsessed with her, worrying that she was cheating on him.
He broke up with his fiancée to become engaged to Eva, but will his fiancée let him go? Will Eva accept a relationship with her boss?

9.6
To escape my sister-in-law selling me off to a local thug, I married a complete stranger I met at City Hall.
My new husband, Drake, claimed to be a broke Uber driver who could barely make rent.
He even made me sign a brutal ten-page prenup just to ensure I wouldn't take his rusted, beat-up Ford sedan if we ever divorced.
I thought I was just sharing a decaying Brooklyn apartment with a struggling man at the bottom of the ladder.
But things quickly stopped making sense.
When that local thug cornered me at a restaurant, my "weak" husband didn't cower.
Instead, he dismantled three massive mobsters in ten seconds with the terrifying, fluid speed of an apex predator.
"I used to be a human punching bag in an underground boxing gym to pay off debts."
I believed his excuse, until his supposedly homeless grandfather showed up at our door in a moth-eaten sweater, begging to sleep on our lumpy sofa.
Before going to sleep, the old man casually pressed a heavy, intricately engraved pocket watch into my hand as a wedding gift.
He claimed it was a cheap flea market find that didn't even keep time.
But the sheer weight of the solid rose gold and the flawless mechanical gears inside screamed otherwise.
Why did a destitute driver have the aura of a man who controlled empires?
And what kind of homeless old man casually hands over a priceless, museum-grade antique?
I had no idea the "broke driver" sleeping on my floor was actually a ruthless billionaire CEO, and I had just walked straight into his trap.