
The Ruthless Heir's Five Million Bride
I dragged a bleeding man out of a flooded alley to get the five million dollars he promised me.
He woke up with severe amnesia, so I hid him in my cramped apartment, desperate to secure the cash for my seven-year-old son's life-saving asthma medication.
But while washing his ruined, custom-tailored suit, I found a heavy gold signet ring hidden inside the seam. It was deeply engraved with a vicious falcon gripping a broadsword.
My blood instantly ran cold.
Ten years ago, the ruthless Wall Street billionaire who dismantled my father's company and drove my parents to suicide wore that exact ring.
I had just saved the monster who destroyed my family, and now he was sleeping in my bed, right down the hall from my little boy.
I stood in the kitchen, gripping a heavy butcher knife until my knuckles turned white. He was completely helpless in the next room, burning with a severe infection.
I could drive the blade into his chest right now and finally end this ten-year nightmare.
But then I looked at the astronomical pharmacy bills and the eviction notices pinned to the fridge. Vengeance wouldn't buy my son's next breath.
"I am not interested in you, I am only interested in your money."
I put the knife down, grabbed the medical supplies, and walked into the bedroom to nurse my sworn enemy back to health.
Revenge could wait, but until I got my five million, the devil was mine to keep.
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Chapter 1
The rain in Brooklyn didn't fall.
Elsie gripped the steering wheel of her beat-up Honda, her knuckles turning a translucent white. The windshield wipers shrieked against the glass, smearing the heavy downpour rather than clearing it. It was 2:00 AM. Her shift at the diner had ended three hours late, and her spine felt like it was made of crushed glass.
She turned the corner onto her street. The headlights cut through the sheets of rain, illuminating the flooded asphalt.
Then, the beams hit something solid.
Elsie slammed her foot on the brake pedal. The worn tires locked. The Honda hydroplaned, the chassis shuddering violently before slamming to a halt inches from the mouth of a dark alley.
Her heart hammered against her ribs, the frantic thumping echoing in her ears.
A massive, dark shape lay motionless on the pavement, half-submerged in a filthy puddle.
Elsie's breath hitched. She reached over to the passenger seat and grabbed the small canister of pepper spray she bought at CVS. Her fingers trembled as she popped the safety tab.
She pushed the car door open. The freezing rain instantly soaked through her thin waitress uniform, plastering the polyester to her skin.
She took a cautious step forward.
Under the flickering orange glow of a broken streetlight, the shape resolved into a man. He was face down, wearing a dark, custom-tailored suit that clung to his broad shoulders.
Then she saw the water around him. It wasn't just muddy. It was thick, swirling with dark, heavy ribbons of crimson. The blood was pouring from a horrific gunshot wound in his abdomen, washing straight into the storm drain.
Bile rose in Elsie's throat. Her stomach violently contracted.
She took a step back. She needed to get back in the car. She needed to call 911.
Before her foot could touch the asphalt, a massive, ice-cold hand shot out from the puddle.
Fingers like steel clamps wrapped around her ankle.
Elsie screamed, the sound tearing her throat raw. She aimed the pepper spray directly at his face, her thumb pressing down on the trigger.
The man rolled onto his side. He forced his eyes open.
They were the color of a starless night, pitch-black and terrifyingly sharp. Even bleeding out in the gutter, his gaze carried a suffocating weight. It pinned her in place.
His Adam's apple bobbed. When he spoke, his voice was a wet, gravelly rasp.
"Don't call the cops."
Elsie kicked her leg, trying to break his grip. "Let go of me!"
His fingers dug harder into her skin, bruising her flesh. "Help me."
"I'm not getting involved in a gang war!" she yelled over the thunder, her chest heaving. "Let go!"
He stared unblinkingly into her terrified eyes.
"Five million dollars."
The words barely left his pale lips, but they hit Elsie with the force of a physical blow.
Five million.
The number echoed in her skull, drowning out the rain. It wasn't just money. It was Ethan's asthma medication. It was a way out of this rotting neighborhood. It was life.
She bit the inside of her cheek until she tasted copper. She looked left. She looked right. The street was dead.
She shoved the pepper spray into her pocket.
Elsie dropped to her knees in the bloody water. She shoved her arms under his massive armpits. The fabric of his suit was soaked and heavy.
"Get up," she grunted, her muscles burning as she hauled him upward.
He was dead weight. His massive frame crushed against her frail shoulders. They stumbled through the mud, a grotesque three-legged race toward the Honda.
She practically threw him into the backseat. His blood instantly soaked into the cheap, frayed fabric.
Elsie slammed the door, sprinted to the driver's seat, and floored the gas.
The car smelled like cheap vanilla air freshener, expensive cedarwood cologne, and hot, raw pennies.
Ten minutes later, the Honda limped into the underground parking garage of her decaying apartment building.
She dragged him out of the car. He was semi-conscious now, his breathing shallow and ragged. She threw his arm over her shoulder, avoiding the blind spots of the security cameras, and hauled him toward the fire stairs.
Three flights. Every step felt like lifting a boulder.
They reached the third-floor hallway. As they passed Mrs. Brenda's door, the man let out a low, agonizing groan.
Cold sweat broke out on the back of Elsie's neck.
She slammed her hand over his mouth and shoved him hard against the peeling wallpaper. She held her breath, her chest pressed against his arm, waiting for the sound of Brenda's deadbolt turning.
Silence.
Elsie let out a shaky exhale. She fumbled with her keys, her hands shaking so badly she dropped them twice before finally unlocking her door.
She dragged him into her bedroom and dumped him onto the squeaky iron-frame bed.
She ran to the bathroom, grabbed her plastic first-aid kit, and rushed back. She took a pair of scissors and ruthlessly cut open his expensive shirt.
She poured hydrogen peroxide directly into the bullet hole.
The man's entire body went rigid. His abdominal muscles locked tight, veins popping on his neck, but he didn't scream.
Elsie taped a thick square of gauze over the wound.
Then, she looked at him. He was a predator. Even unconscious, he radiated danger.
A fresh wave of terror washed over her. She couldn't just leave him loose in her home.
She remembered the rusted toolbox her deadbeat ex-husband had left behind. She opened the bottom drawer of her nightstand and pulled out a handful of thick, industrial plastic zip ties he used to use for securing car parts.
She grabbed his thick wrists. She wrapped the plastic bands around his skin and the rusted iron bars of the headboard, pulling them tight until they clicked and locked into place.
Elsie dragged a wooden chair to the corner of the room, furthest from the bed. She picked up Ethan's aluminum baseball bat, gripped it with both hands, and sat in the shadows, staring at the monster she had just brought home.
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7.8
Alayna was working a grueling catering shift in worn-out heels to support her broke college boyfriend, Caiden, who claimed to be studying at the library.
But through the crack of a VIP suite door, she saw him wearing a bespoke suit and a Patek Philippe watch, sipping expensive liquor.
"It's a little poverty role-play. Keeps things interesting."
He was laughing with his rich friends, mocking her as his clueless "charity case."
To make matters worse, she was forced into a humiliating mascot costume just in time to watch him passionately kiss his wealthy ex-girlfriend.
That same night, Alayna's mother collapsed with gastric cancer, requiring a half-million-dollar surgery.
When a desperate Alayna begged Caiden for help, he refused.
"Why don't you just apply for Medicaid? That's the path for people like you."
For two years, she had starved herself to buy his textbooks, his tickets, and his shoes.
He had stolen her sweat and her sacrifices, all for a cruel game.
The sheer audacity of his betrayal made her blood run cold.
When a billionaire stranger stepped in to pay her mother's medical bills in exchange for a one-year fake marriage, Alayna didn't hesitate to sign the contract.
She slipped the flawless diamond ring onto her finger, opened a spreadsheet, and sent Caiden an invoice for every single cent.
This time, she was going to dismantle his entire life.

7.2
In the roaring flames of the abandoned warehouse, my skin blistered and peeled.
Through the crackling fire, my sister Elara's malicious voice echoed. She told me my husband, Damien, was dead, and it was all my fault.
For years, I had treated Damien like a monster. I fought him, threw tantrums, and desperately tried to escape our marriage, all because I blindly followed Elara's advice.
"Remember, the harder you fight, the more disgusted he'll get."
She texted me things like that, telling me to smash vases over his head and run away, claiming she was protecting me.
In reality, she was poisoning my mind, stealing my valedictorian spot at university, and plotting to crawl into my billionaire husband's bed.
My foolish rebellion cost me everything, ultimately leading to Damien's tragic death and my own fiery end.
As the massive explosion tore my consciousness to shreds, I finally understood who truly loved me and who the real monster was.
I died suffocating on my own agonizing regret, wishing I could tear Elara apart.
Then, a rush of freezing air punched into my lungs.
I opened my eyes to the crisp scent of cedar and mint. I was back seven years ago, on the very night our marriage was supposed to go to hell.
This time, looking at Damien's flawless, unscarred face, I didn't push him away.
I wrapped my arms around his neck and made a silent vow: I would make every single person who ever hurt him bleed.

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.

7.4
Alaya woke up in the sterile hospital room to a devastating reality: her six-month-old baby was gone, lost in a horrific car crash.
But as the memories crashed into her, she realized she had been reborn. She was back three years before her ultimate death, back to the moment she remembered lying bleeding on the asphalt while her husband, Hardy, shielded his mistress from the freezing rain.
When Hardy finally showed up at the ward, he coldly dismissed the crash as a mere accident and immediately left to comfort his young lover. To make matters worse, Alaya secretly checked her medical files and found a terrifying detail: someone had intentionally slipped beta-blockers into her system, a lethal drug for her transplanted heart. And Hardy didn't care about her dead baby or her irreversible infertility. He only coldly confirmed with the doctor that her heart was still viable.
A horrifying suspicion made Alaya's blood run cold. Why was her husband so obsessed with protecting her transplanted heart while treating her like garbage? And why was his perfectly healthy mistress secretly racking up massive bills at an advanced cardiac hospital?
Realizing she was nothing but a vessel in a twisted, deadly game, Alaya didn't shed another tear.
She packed her belongings, left her flawless diamond wedding ring on the cold marble table, and vanished from their penthouse.
When Hardy finally tracked her down, she threw a thick stack of documents onto the table.
"Sign the divorce papers," she said, her eyes completely dead.

8.5
I was rushed to the emergency room with a bleeding head after a horrific car crash.
But while the doctor was stitching my forehead, I heard the nurses whispering.
"The CEO of the Finley Group is upstairs right now, playing nurse to that pregnant actress."
My heart stopped. I ripped out my IV and dragged my battered body to the VIP suite, only to watch my billionaire husband tenderly wipe away his mistress's tears.
I filed for divorce that night and left his penthouse with nothing but a basic suitcase.
Carter was furious. He tracked me down, completely ignoring my injuries, and mocked me relentlessly.
"You're nothing but a breeding tool. You won't survive a week without my money."
When I later collapsed from severe stomach cramps, he abandoned me on the floor because his mistress faked a panic attack over the phone. He even nearly ran me over in the freezing rain as he sped back to her side.
I had loved him in secret for ten agonizing years, pouring my bleeding heart into a novel about my unrequited love. I couldn't understand how a man could be so incredibly cold-blooded to his own wife.
But Carter didn't know I was the anonymous author of that global bestselling book.
So when he tried to use his massive wealth to buy the film rights and give his mistress the lead role, I walked straight into his boardroom, slammed my contractual veto on the table, and finally fought back.

7.6
For three years, I played the perfect, docile wife to Brendon Jimenez, desperate for the real family I never had as an orphan.
But during a high-society gala, I peeked through a cracked door and caught him sleeping with my best friend.
When I packed my cheap canvas bag to leave the penthouse, my mother-in-law blocked the door.
She dumped my clothes on the marble floor, called me a stray dog, and slapped me so hard my mouth bled.
Brendon just stood there, watching his mother humiliate me.
To keep me trapped as his perfect public prop, he even faked his mother's heart attack in a VIP hospital suite.
"Get on your knees. Kneel down right now and beg my mother for forgiveness until she decides to accept it."
I gave them my youth and unconditional loyalty, only to realize this prestigious old-money family was nothing but a rotting corpse built on dirty secrets.
I didn't cry, and I certainly didn't drop to my knees.
Instead, I pulled out my phone right in front of him and called my lawyer.
"File for an at-fault divorce. I have proof of his infidelity with Kaelynn Hudson. I want him ruined."
Then, I touched the matte black card hidden deep in my clutch.
It belonged to Kile Barrett, the ruthless billionaire shark my husband feared most, and I was going to use him to tear the Jimenez family apart.