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A Mirror Too Honest  Novel Cover

A Mirror Too Honest

‎ ‎ ‎Sophia Hayes has perfected the art of control. In the high-pressure world of The Metropolitan, she's the youngest senior journalist ever hired-an achievement built on ruthless discipline, flawless execution, and a reputation that makes even seasoned reporters double-check their facts before speaking to her. She is sharp. Unshakeable. Precise to the bone. Her life runs on deadlines, color-coded calendars, and emotional walls tall enough to withstand anything. ‎ ‎Dean Mercer is everything she isn't-and everything she doesn't have time for. A wildly successful illustrator whose comic series Love Is a Mess has a cult following online, Dean lives in a world where structure is optional and inspiration is everything. His apartment is chaos. His sleep schedule is chaos. His heart is chaos. He creates brilliance in messy strokes but hides his deepest truths behind humor, charm, and a smile that masks more wounds than he lets on. ‎ ‎So when the magazine pairs them for a high-stakes project-a revolutionary feature blending investigative journalism with illustrated storytelling-everyone expects disaster. Sophia expects worse. ‎ ‎Their assignment: explore modern love through real stories across the city. Raw, unfiltered, unpredictable love. ‎ ‎Exactly the kind of assignment that makes Sophia want to run. ‎ ‎Dean arrives late to their first meeting with coffee stains and excuses. Sophia arrives with a binder thick enough to double as a weapon. Dean studies her timeline like it's written in a foreign language. Sophia studies Dean like he's a problem she needs to solve before he derails everything she's built. ‎ ‎Their partnership begins in sparks-sharp, heated, dangerous sparks. ‎Arguments disguised as discussions. ‎Discussions disguised as power struggles. ‎Power struggles disguised as creative differences. ‎ ‎But tension has a habit of twisting into something else when the nights grow long. ‎ ‎As they dive into the city-interviewing strangers whose love stories survived decades, storms, heartbreaks, second chances-something shifts between them. Slowly. Quietly. Against both of their wills. ‎ ‎Sophia begins to see past Dean's easy humor to the man underneath-the one who fears failing the people he cares about, who draws comics because it's the only way he knows how to tell the truth. And Dean sees the cracks in Sophia's armor-the vulnerability she protects like a secret, the softness she doesn't show, the fire in her that the world misunderstands as coldness. ‎ ‎Their conversations deepen. Their arguments soften. Their laughter blends. ‎And the chemistry-the kind they both pretend not to notice-tightens around them like an invisible thread. ‎ ‎But the closer they get, the heavier the air becomes. Because both of them are hiding something. ‎ ‎Sophia hides her fear of losing control. ‎Dean hides his fear of being the reason someone gets hurt. ‎ ‎And the feature they're creating-meant to uncover the truth about modern love-begins exposing truths they never meant to reveal. About each other. About themselves. ‎ ‎Their late-night work sessions grow intimate, electric. Their stories blur with the stories they're collecting. Dean sketches Sophia without meaning to-capturing expressions she never lets the world see. Sophia writes notes about him she can't bring herself to delete. Something real starts forming in the space between them, fragile but undeniable. ‎ ‎Until the past they both buried finds them. ‎ ‎A mistake from Dean's life-one he thought he'd left behind-reaches the editorial floor at the worst possible time. A detail with enough weight to derail the feature, shatter their progress, and wound the one person who finally saw him clearly. ‎ ‎Sophia's instinct is survival. Run before she gets hurt. Seal her heart before it cracks open. Dean's instinct is retreat. Protect her from the version of himself he fears is still true. ‎ ‎Deadlines tighten. Trust fractures. ‎Their work stalls, their communication splinters, and the connection they've been dancing around threatens to snap under the strain. ‎ ‎But desire doesn't listen to logic. ‎And hearts don't obey deadlines. ‎ ‎Even as they pull away, they keep orbiting each other-drawn back together by an ache neither can extinguish. Their arguments deepen into something rawer, heavier. Their silence holds more meaning than their words. ‎ ‎They must choose: ‎fight for the story that could define their careers... ‎or fight for the connection that could rewrite their futures. ‎ ‎And when an unexpected message, a truth revealed too late, and one irreversible decision collide, they're forced to confront the question their feature was meant to answer: ‎ ‎What does love look like today- ‎and can two people living at opposite rhythms find it before it slips through their fingers? ‎ ‎On the edge of losing their partnership... ‎their second chance... ‎and each other... ‎ ‎
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Chapter 2

CHAPTER 2 - LATE, LOUD, AND INFURIATING

The newsroom was never quiet, but today it felt like someone had slapped an amplifier on every single sound-phones ringing, keyboards slamming, printers whirring like they were on the verge of combustion. Sophia sat at her desk drowning in all of it, jaw tight, fingers curled around her mug as she attempted to rehearse patience.

She had been early. She had reorganized her notes three times. She had mentally outlined the feature, the angles, the interview structure, the tone. She was ready.

Dean, however, was thirty-four minutes late.

And counting.

It wasn't even that she disliked him yet. She didn't know him well enough for that. She just knew the idea of him-a comic artist, a "creative free spirit," the kind of man who doodled during meetings, probably smelled like pencils and chaos, and didn't take deadlines seriously.

Which was everything she hated.

Her editor, God bless his chaos-loving soul, had paired them intentionally. "You need someone who can loosen your writing. Something with a heartbeat," he'd said. "And Dean needs someone who can turn his stories into actual structure."

Sophia didn't want to be anyone's structure.

And she definitely didn't want to be waiting on someone who treated punctuality like an optional sport.

She sat there, checking her phone for the time again, muttering under her breath, "Unbelievable."

When the glass entrance doors finally burst open, the newsroom seemed to inhale collectively.

A man stumbled in-hair an unbrushed ocean of dark waves, backpack slung over one shoulder, sketchbooks falling from his arms, a coffee cup tilting dangerously in the other. He apologized to someone who hadn't even glared at him yet. Papers fluttered behind him like confetti.

And he was loud.

Too loud.

"Sorry! Sorry, so sorry-oh God, that wasn't mine-sorry! I'm here, I'm here-wait, no, I'm spilling-okay, alright-hi!"

Everyone turned to stare.

Sophia closed her eyes. The universe was mocking her.

This... this had to be him.

He spotted her instantly-somehow-and his entire face brightened like she was oxygen and he had been suffocating for years.

"You're Sophia?" he asked, breathless, dropping a notebook that bounced off his shoe. "Hi. I'm Dean. Sorry I'm late. I had-okay, long story. I'll explain. No, actually I won't, it's embarrassing. But I'm here now!"

He said it proudly, as if his arrival-thirty-seven minutes late-deserved applause.

Sophia stared at him. "You're late."

Dean blinked. "Yeah, I know. I said that."

"You said sorry," she replied. "You didn't acknowledge the fact that you wasted my time."

His eyebrows shot up. "Wow. Okay. Good morning to you too."

"It was a good morning," she muttered.

He laughed-an easy, warm sound that made her irritation flare hotter. "You're intense."

"You're unprofessional."

"Oh, so this is how it's going to be," he murmured under his breath, amused.

Sophia inhaled sharply. "This is how it's going to be if you can't respect schedules."

He opened his mouth, then closed it, then squinted at her as if trying to decode a puzzle only visible to him.

"Well," he finally said, "you're clearly the brains of this operation."

"And you're clearly the chaos."

"Chaos makes good stories," he countered.

"Deadlines make published ones."

"Oh, we're going to be fun," he said, half-teasing, half-challenging.

He took a seat beside her desk-well, technically he crashed into it, knocking a pen holder over and catching it with surprising reflexes.

Sophia pinched the bridge of her nose.

"This is a nightmare," she whispered.

Dean heard it. Of course he did.

"Hey," he said softly, tone shifting. "I know I'm... a lot. But I'm good at what I do. And I promise I'll take this seriously."

She looked at him then-really looked.

He wasn't smug.

He wasn't defensive.

He looked genuinely hopeful.

And something inside her chest tugged in a way she didn't give permission for.

It annoyed her instantly.

"Let's just get to work," she said.

Dean nodded, pulling out a pencil and sketchpad. "Alright, boss."

She froze. "I'm not your boss."

"Oh, I know," he grinned. "But you really give off that vibe. Like... if vibes could hold clipboards."

She stared at him.

He smirked.

She hated that she almost smiled.

Almost.

The meeting was supposed to last an hour. It took two, because Dean kept interrupting her structure with "What if the opening scene is a doodle?" and "Can we add a panel where modern love is represented by two pigeons sharing a leftover sandwich?" and "Do you think heartbreak is funnier or sadder when animated?"

Sophia resisted the urge to throttle him with her own notebook.

At one point he grabbed her pen from her hand in the middle of her sentence.

"Don't," she said.

"Why not?"

"I was using that."

"You were gripping it hard enough to snap it in half."

"That's because you kept-"

"Existing? Living? Contributing?"

"Interrupting!"

"Oh."

He shrugged, unconcerned.

She wanted to scream.

She wanted to walk away.

She wanted to... understand how someone could be so infuriating and strangely likable in the same breath.

And then, as if the universe wanted to make things worse, her editor passed by, leaned down between them and whispered, "Great chemistry, you two. Keep it going."

Dean grinned.

Sophia glared.

Chemistry?

There was no chemistry.

There was... combustion.

Which wasn't the same thing.

Not at all.

When the meeting finally ended, Sophia stood up, gathering her things with movements so sharp they could slice air.

Dean stood too, towering slightly over her. "So... lunch? To keep brainstorming?"

"No."

"Coffee?"

"No."

"A walk?"

"No."

"A truce?"

She paused.

"What kind of truce?"

"The kind where you don't kill me, and I don't annoy you intentionally."

"You annoy me unintentionally?"

"Yes," he said proudly.

Sophia exhaled. "We don't need a truce. We need boundaries."

Dean brightened. "Boundaries are my favourite! I cross them a lot."

"Exactly my point."

He laughed.

She did not.

"Well," he said, adjusting his backpack, "see you tomorrow?"

"Be on time."

He saluted with exaggerated seriousness. "Yes ma'am."

She watched him walk away, shaking her head, telling herself she didn't notice the way people naturally moved aside for him, the way he smiled at the receptionist, the way his steps bounced like he lived on a different frequency.

A lighter one.

A freer one.

She shouldn't envy that.

But she did.

And that scared her.

Sophia stepped into the hallway alone, hugging her folders tightly. She needed air. She needed silence. She needed-

Her phone vibrated.

Unknown Number: He's going to ruin everything. Don't trust him.

Sophia froze.

Her heart slammed against her ribs.

Another message popped up.

Unknown Number: You don't know who you're working with.

Her stomach dropped.

She glanced back toward the newsroom-Dean was gone.

Her pulse climbed.

A final message arrived, chilling her spine:

Unknown Number:

If he becomes part of your story... so will you.

Sophia's breath caught.

Her fingers trembled.

And the hallway suddenly felt much, much darker.

The newsroom was never quiet, but today it felt like someone had slapped an amplifier on every single sound-phones ringing, keyboards slamming, printers whirring like they were on the verge of combustion. Sophia sat at her desk drowning in all of it, jaw tight, fingers curled around her mug as she attempted to rehearse patience.

She had been early. She had reorganised her notes three times. She had mentally outlined the feature, the angles, the interview structure, the tone. She was ready.

Dean, however, was thirty-four minutes late.

And counting.

It wasn't even that she disliked him yet. She didn't know him well enough for that. She just knew the idea of him-a comic artist, a "creative free spirit," the kind of man who doodled during meetings, probably smelled like pencils and chaos, and didn't take deadlines seriously.

Which was everything she hated.

Her editor, God bless his chaos-loving soul, had paired them intentionally. "You need someone who can loosen your writing. Something with a heartbeat," he'd said. "And Dean needs someone who can turn his stories into actual structure."

Sophia didn't want to be anyone's structure.

And she definitely didn't want to be waiting on someone who treated punctuality like an optional sport.

She sat there, checking her phone for the time again, muttering under her breath, "Unbelievable."

When the glass entrance doors finally burst open, the newsroom seemed to inhale collectively.

A man stumbled in-hair an unbrushed ocean of dark waves, backpack slung over one shoulder, sketchbooks falling from his arms, a coffee cup tilting dangerously in the other. He apologized to someone who hadn't even glared at him yet. Papers fluttered behind him like confetti.

And he was loud.

Too loud.

"Sorry! Sorry, so sorry-oh God, that wasn't mine-sorry! I'm here, I'm here-wait, no, I'm spilling-okay, alright-hi!"

Everyone turned to stare.

Sophia closed her eyes. The universe was mocking her.

This... this had to be him.

He spotted her instantly-somehow-and his entire face brightened like she was oxygen and he had been suffocating for years.

"You're Sophia?" he asked, breathless, dropping a notebook that bounced off his shoe. "Hi. I'm Dean. Sorry I'm late. I had-okay, long story. I'll explain. No, actually I won't, it's embarrassing. But I'm here now!"

He said it proudly, as if his arrival-thirty-seven minutes late-deserved applause.

Sophia stared at him. "You're late."

Dean blinked. "Yeah, I know. I said that."

"You said sorry," she replied. "You didn't acknowledge the fact that you wasted my time."

His eyebrows shot up. "Wow. Okay. Good morning to you too."

"It was a good morning," she muttered.

He laughed-an easy, warm sound that made her irritation flare hotter. "You're intense."

"You're unprofessional."

"Oh, so this is how it's going to be," he murmured under his breath, amused.

Sophia inhaled sharply. "This is how it's going to be if you can't respect schedules."

He opened his mouth, then closed it, then squinted at her as if trying to decode a puzzle only visible to him.

"Well," he finally said, "you're clearly the brains of this operation."

"And you're clearly the chaos."

"Chaos makes good stories," he countered.

"Deadlines make published ones."

"Oh, we're going to be fun," he said, half-teasing, half-challenging.

He took a seat beside her desk-well, technically he crashed into it, knocking a pen holder over and catching it with surprising reflexes.

Sophia pinched the bridge of her nose.

"This is a nightmare," she whispered.

Dean heard it. Of course he did.

"Hey," he said softly, tone shifting. "I know I'm... a lot. But I'm good at what I do. And I promise I'll take this seriously."

She looked at him then-really looked.

He wasn't smug.

He wasn't defensive.

He looked genuinely hopeful.

And something inside her chest tugged in a way she didn't give permission for.

It annoyed her instantly.

"Let's just get to work," she said.

Dean nodded, pulling out a pencil and sketchpad. "Alright, boss."

She froze. "I'm not your boss."

"Oh, I know," he grinned. "But you really give off that vibe. Like... if vibes could hold clipboards."

She stared at him.

He smirked.

She hated that she almost smiled.

Almost.

The meeting was supposed to last an hour. It took two, because Dean kept interrupting her structure with "What if the opening scene is a doodle?" and "Can we add a panel where modern love is represented by two pigeons sharing a leftover sandwich?" and "Do you think heartbreak is funnier or sadder when animated?"

Sophia resisted the urge to throttle him with her own notebook.

At one point he grabbed her pen from her hand in the middle of her sentence.

"Don't," she said.

"Why not?"

"I was using that."

"You were gripping it hard enough to snap it in half."

"That's because you kept-"

"Existing? Living? Contributing?"

"Interrupting!"

"Oh."

He shrugged, unconcerned.

She wanted to scream.

She wanted to walk away.

She wanted to... understand how someone could be so infuriating and strangely likable in the same breath.

And then, as if the universe wanted to make things worse, her editor passed by, leaned down between them and whispered, "Great chemistry, you two. Keep it going."

Dean grinned.

Sophia glared.

Chemistry?

There was no chemistry.

There was... combustion.

Which wasn't the same thing.

Not at all.

When the meeting finally ended, Sophia stood up, gathering her things with movements so sharp they could slice air.

Dean stood too, towering slightly over her. "So... lunch? To keep brainstorming?"

"No."

"Coffee?"

"No."

"A walk?"

"No."

"A truce?"

She paused.

"What kind of truce?"

"The kind where you don't kill me, and I don't annoy you intentionally."

"You annoy me unintentionally?"

"Yes," he said proudly.

Sophia exhaled. "We don't need a truce. We need boundaries."

Dean brightened. "Boundaries are my favourite! I cross them a lot."

"Exactly my point."

He laughed.

She did not.

"Well," he said, adjusting his backpack, "see you tomorrow?"

"Be on time."

He saluted with exaggerated seriousness. "Yes ma'am."

She watched him walk away, shaking her head, telling herself she didn't notice the way people naturally moved aside for him, the way he smiled at the receptionist, the way his steps bounced like he lived on a different frequency.

A lighter one.

A freer one.

She shouldn't envy that.

But she did.

And that scared her.

Sophia stepped into the hallway alone, hugging her folders tightly. She needed air. She needed silence. She needed-

Her phone vibrated.

Unknown Number: He's going to ruin everything. Don't trust him.

Sophia froze.

Her heart slammed against her ribs.

Another message popped up.

Unknown Number: You don't know who you're working with.

Her stomach dropped.

She glanced back toward the newsroom-Dean was gone.

Her pulse climbed.

A final message arrived, chilling her spine:

Unknown Number:

If he becomes part of your story... so will you.

Sophia's breath caught.

Her fingers trembled.

And the hallway suddenly felt much, much darker.

Someone is watching. Someone is warning. But is the danger about Dean... or something else?

Sophia didn't breathe for a full five seconds.

Not because she forgot how-because her body refused to. The hallway felt narrower. Dimmer. Like the overhead lights had stepped back just enough to make shadows longer.

Anonymous text messages were not new to her; journalism came with its fair share of unhappy readers and defensive sources. But this?

This was different.

This was specific.

Targeted.

Personal.

Her fingers hovered over the screen before she typed, Who is this?

Delivered.

Read.

No reply.

Sophia swallowed hard. She checked the empty hallway again, half-expecting someone to be standing there watching her. Nothing. Just the faint buzz of printers and murmurs from distant desks.

She forced herself forward, heels clicking too loudly, echoing down the corridor.

She told herself not to overreact.

She'd had worse. She'd been threatened before-usually by people who had everything to lose if the truth ever surfaced. But those messages had always followed stories, investigations, leads. Things that mattered. Things dangerous people would care about.

But this message was about...

Dean.

The artist who spilled things. Who talked too much and ran late and sketched strange little characters on napkins. The man who could barely control his coffee cup, let alone cause enough damage to warrant anonymous warnings.

Unless she was missing something.

Unless she didn't know him nearly as well as she thought.

The idea unsettled her.

She shoved the phone into her bag and marched toward the exit. She didn't have time to think about threats. She had a draft to begin. A project to survive. A co-worker who needed to learn punctuality and basic human decibel limits.

That was enough stress.

Right?

Outside, the cold air slapped her in the face, grounding her a little. The city buzzed around her in a way that usually centered her-cars honking, people shouting across streets, distant music from a fruit seller's stall-but today it all felt too loud.

She only got a few steps from the building when someone stepped into her path.

She jumped back, hand flying to her chest.

Dean.

He stood there, breathless again, like he'd run down the stairs instead of taking the elevator. "Whoa-sorry, I swear I wasn't stalking you."

"That is exactly what a stalker would say."

He grinned, and somehow it softened the tension in her chest by a fraction. "No seriously, I forgot to ask-do you have a preferred style for outlining the article? Bullet points? Paragraph summaries? Or do you want to throw my entire structure out the window and create your own?"

Sophia blinked. He remembered the project? And was... eager?

"We can discuss it tomorrow," she said, adjusting her bag on her shoulder. "Right now I need to get home."

His eyes flicked to her expression-just a flick, but he noticed the tightness. The stiffness. "You okay?"

She hesitated. Just long enough for him to read something in her silence.

His face sobered. His voice dropped. "Sophia... what happened?"

She considered telling him. The messages were about him, after all. But sharing them felt too real. Too immediate. Too vulnerable.

And she didn't want him thinking she was frightened by some random unknown texter.

"I'm fine," she said firmly.

He didn't look convinced, but he let it go. "Alright. But... for what it's worth, today was fun."

She raised a brow. "Fun?"

"Yeah," he said, cheeks dimpling. "You're tough. It's cool."

"Annoying is not cool."

"It is when you're the good kind of annoying."

Sophia sputtered. "There's no 'good kind' of-"

"There is. You're organised, determined, and you have this very intense eyebrow thing that tells me when I'm pushing it too far."

"I do not have an eyebrow thing."

"You totally do." He pointed at her. "And there it is. Eyebrow Thing™."

She exhaled in disbelief. "Go home, Dean."

He stepped aside, raising his hands in exaggerated surrender. "Yes ma'am."

She walked past him, trying not to let the corners of her mouth curl.

She failed.

Just a little.

When Sophia got home, the apartment was quiet-exactly how she liked it. But even the silence didn't settle her. She kept replaying the messages, the unknown number, the implications.

She finally sank onto her couch, exhaling slowly as she pulled out her laptop to take refuge in the thing that had always grounded her: work.

But her phone buzzed again.

Her heart stuttered.

Same unknown number.

Unknown: He's not who you think he is.

Sophia locked her jaw.

Before she could type anything, another message came.

Unknown: Check his name.

Her pulse pounded.

Her fingers shook-more with anger than fear now.

She typed back: Stop messaging me or I'll report this number.

A beat.

Then:

Report all you want.

The truth doesn't care who believes it.

Sophia blocked the number immediately.

She tossed her phone to the other side of the couch and rubbed her temples.

This was ridiculous.

Probably a prank.

Probably nothing.

But another intrusive thought formed-the kind that slipped in through the cracks of logic:

What truth?

Across the city, Dean collapsed onto his couch with a groan, throwing his backpack onto the floor. His apartment was messy-coffee cups, sketches everywhere, a half-eaten packet of crisps from two days ago.

He stared at the ceiling, replaying the day.

Sophia had been... intense. Sharp-edged. All structure and precision and barely concealed annoyance.

But she'd also been smart. And brave. And frustratingly beautiful in that way disciplined people often were.

He liked her already.

Too much, maybe.

He grabbed his sketchpad, flipping to a page where he'd doodled earlier during their meeting-a tiny cartoon version of her, frowning at him with the caption: You're late again, Dean.

He snorted.

Then his phone buzzed.

He glanced at the unknown number. "Spam," he muttered.

But the message made him sit up straighter:

Unknown:

You shouldn't be working with her.

Dean frowned.

Then frowned deeper.

Another message:

She's going to dig into things you should leave buried.

His stomach twisted.

Before he could reply, the number sent one final message:

Some stories ruin the people who write them.

Dean's phone slipped from his fingers.

His breathing hitched.

He tried to call the number.

Blocked.

His hands went to his hair as he stood abruptly, pacing.

He wanted to dismiss it as spam.

He wanted to assume it was a prank.

He wanted to believe this had nothing to do with-

He shut his eyes tightly.

No.

Not now.

Not again.

He grabbed his coat, heart pounding as he left his apartment in a hurry, like the walls were closing in.

He needed air.

Distance.

Silence.

He needed-

He didn't know.

Sophia spent the evening trying to write, but her mind kept returning to Dean's face as he asked if she was okay. The sincerity. The softness.

She didn't want to think about him.

She didn't want to care.

But something in today's chaos had unsettled her in a way she hadn't felt in a long time.

She was still lost in those thoughts when her phone-her regular messages-dinged again.

This time, it wasn't the unknown number.

It was her editor.

Editor:

Dean's been trying to reach you.

Everything alright?

Sophia frowned.

Her phone had no missed calls. No messages. No notifications.

Then another message appeared from her editor:

He said someone contacted him.

About you.

Be careful.

Sophia's blood ran cold.

Someone had texted Dean too.

Her chest tightened.

Someone was watching both of them.

But why?

She grabbed her coat and keys with shaking hands. Someone needed to answer questions tonight. And Dean seemed like the only person who could.

She stepped into the hallway, locking her apartment behind her.

Then she froze.

A piece of paper was wedged under her door.

She slowly pulled it out, heart thundering.

It was a printed note.

No sender.

No message.

Just one sentence:

"He's not the one you should fear."

Sophia felt her back press against the door, legs weakening beneath her.

The hallway was silent.

Too silent.

Somewhere inside her apartment, something creaked.

Was it the radiator?

Or was she not alone?

Her breath caught.

She reached slowly for her phone-

Then nearly dropped it when the hallway lights flickered once... twice... then went out completely.

Pitch black.

And in the darkness, she heard it:

A soft, deliberate footstep behind her.

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8.2
For five years, I was the invisible glue holding Damien Crawford together. I was the one who pulled him from a burning car until the skin melted off my back, and I was the one who donated bone marrow when he was on death's door. I even gave up a full-ride scholarship to MIT just to be his nurse. Yet, he believed his mistress, Hadley, was his savior. To him, I was just the maid's daughter who changed his bedpans—a piece of furniture he could abuse while he planned his wedding to another woman. But his cruelty didn't stop at verbal abuse. When my father suffered a massive heart attack, Damien refused to let me use the car, choosing to comfort Hadley over a fake panic attack instead. His mother even slashed the tires to ensure I couldn't leave. While my father died cold and alone, Damien stabbed a needle into my hand just to teach me a lesson about "respect," oblivious to the fact that the scars on my skin were the receipt for his life. He didn't know he was torturing the only person who had ever truly loved him. But the girl who begged for crumbs of affection died along with her father that day. I picked up my phone and dialed the number saved simply as a dot. "He's dead," I whispered to the man on the other end—Anderson Morrison, the city's most feared Don and my sworn protector. "I'm coming," he replied, his voice lethal. "And I'm bringing the army." It was time to show Damien that he hadn't just mistreated a maid; he had declared war on a Queen.
I was an Angel, You made me a Villain Novel Cover
9.5
Betrayed by the very world he once protected, a former celestial guardian is cast down from grace. Stripped of his wings and purity, he finds himself fueled by a cold, relentless desire for vengeance against those who orchestrated his fall. As he navigates a realm of shadows, he must embrace his new identity as a formidable villain. Amidst the chaos of his path to retribution, an unexpected romance emerges, challenging his resolve and dark transformation.
I Was Saved By the Lycan King Who Claimed Me Novel Cover
9.5
Betrayed and left for dead by her own pack, Elara is certain her journey ends in the cold shadows of the forest. However, her fate takes a drastic turn when she is rescued by the legendary Lycan King. To her shock, the powerful monarch claims her as his fated mate. Now, Elara must navigate the dangerous politics of a new court and her growing feelings for her savior, all while the ghosts of her past threaten to destroy her newfound sanctuary.