
Absolute Dominance: The Billionaire's Vengeance
For three years, I hid my identity as the sole heiress of a multi-billion dollar tech empire to live in a cramped apartment and support my boyfriend, Ben.
But the day before our engagement, I stood outside a meeting room and overheard him talking to his wealthy boss, Haylie.
"She's just a stepping stone," Ben laughed, his voice full of contempt. "A poor, ambitionless distraction while I work my way up to where I really belong."
He mocked the cheap silver ring he gave me, calling it a necessary prop to keep a naive fool happy.
He bragged about the multi-million dollar merger proposal he was presenting, planning to use it to secure his promotion and build a future with her.
He had no idea that I had secretly negotiated that entire deal using my real connections just to give him his big break.
I had sacrificed my family's comfort, my true identity, and my own career just to watch him rise.
I poured my heart and soul into our humble beginnings, only to realize he saw my love as a pathetic joke and me as disposable trash.
I calmly picked up a pen and voided the merger agreement, tearing my hard work into tiny pieces.
I went home, slid the cheap ring off my finger, and dropped it into his mug of cold coffee.
"Soon, you'll find out exactly who is nothing."
Walking out the door, I pulled out my phone and texted my billionaire father.
"I'm in. Announce the merger."
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Chapter 6
Isolde Park POV:
I sat in the back of the taxi, watching the landscape of my old life blur and recede. The grimy, low-rise apartment buildings of Queens gave way to the manicured green of the suburbs, which in turn bled into the dense, private forests of upstate New York.
My reflection in the window was a pale, blank-faced stranger. The woman who had cried over burnt toast and worried about paying rent was gone. There were no tears now. There was nothing but a vast, cold emptiness where her feelings used to be.
My phone buzzed in my purse, a frantic, insistent vibration. I didn't need to look to know it was Ben. A barrage of desperate texts and missed calls. I pulled the phone out, held down the power button, and watched the screen go black without reading a single word.
The taxi slowed, turning onto a private road marked by an imposing set of wrought-iron gates. The driver, a man who had been chattering nonstop for the past hour, fell silent. He stared through the windshield at the sprawling stone manor visible at the end of the long, winding driveway. It looked less like a house and more like a castle.
“This is it?” he whispered, his voice full of awe.
I paid him in cash, adding a generous tip for his silence. I got out and pulled my single, unremarkable suitcase from the trunk. It looked comically out of place against the backdrop of such immense wealth.
As I approached the gates, a small, discreet camera swiveled to focus on my face. A soft chime sounded, and the heavy gates slid open without a sound.
Waiting for me just inside was Alfred, his back ramrod straight in his traditional butler’s uniform. His silver hair was perfectly combed, but as I drew closer, I saw that his eyes were red-rimmed.
“Miss Park,” he said, his voice thick with emotion. “You’re finally home.”
The icy fortress around my heart cracked, just for a moment. He was the closest thing to a parent I’d ever had. “I’m home, Alfred,” I said softly.
His hand trembled slightly as he took the handle of my suitcase. He handled it as if it were made of fine china, not cheap plastic.
I stepped into the grand foyer. The familiar scent of lemon polish, old books, and money filled my lungs. It felt both foreign and like the only real thing in the world. The soaring ceilings and cold marble floors seemed to echo with the ghosts of my lonely childhood. This was not a home; it was a battlefield. My battlefield.
A figure appeared at the top of the sweeping grand staircase. My father, William Park. He descended slowly, each step measured and controlled. He wore a perfectly tailored Savile Row suit, his expression a complicated mask of disapproval and relief.
He stopped in front of me, his gaze sweeping over my simple jeans and t-shirt. His brow furrowed.
His first words to his daughter after three years were not of love or concern. They were an indictment. “Is your three years of nonsense finally over?”
Any warmth I might have felt from Alfred’s welcome was instantly extinguished. I lifted my chin, my own expression becoming as cold and hard as the marble beneath my feet. “I need to rest.”
A flicker of something—pity, perhaps, or pain—crossed his face before it was replaced by his usual stern authority. “Your room is as you left it. Clean yourself up. Put on something decent.”
The space between us felt like a chasm. He wanted to say more, I could see it in the tightening of his jaw, but he just waved a dismissive hand. “Alfred, take her upstairs.”
Alfred, his face a portrait of discomfort, picked up my suitcase and led the way. As I passed my father on the stairs, we didn't make eye contact. We were two opposing generals, temporarily observing a truce.
I could feel his eyes on my back as I ascended. I knew that look. It wasn’t just anger; it was fear. He was terrified I would end up like my mother, broken and destroyed by a world he couldn’t control. His method of preventing it was to try and control me instead.
At the door to my suite, Alfred paused. “He missed you terribly, Miss Isolde,” he said in a low voice.
I didn’t answer. I just pushed the door open.
The room was exactly as I’d left it. A pristine, dustless museum of the girl I used to be. It was all shades of cream and gold, soft and feminine. It felt like a stranger’s room.
I walked to the massive floor-to-ceiling window that overlooked the sprawling estate. The familiar view brought a strange mix of comfort and exhaustion. I was home. The cage was gilded, but I was back in it.
A soft knock came at the door. It was my father. He was holding a glass of warm milk. A peace offering. My childhood comfort.
I took it from him, my fingers brushing his. I didn't drink.
He broke the heavy silence, his tone all business. “There is a family dinner tonight. It’s important.”
He met my eyes, and the final piece of the puzzle clicked into place. He delivered the critical information like a general issuing orders.
“Your uncle, Alger, will be attending.”
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9.2
She loved him until she lost herself.
Now, behind locked doors and shattered glass, she must learn to breathe again.
When she first met Lloyd, he was magnetic and intoxicating. The kind of man who turned every head when he entered a room, who spoke in promises sweet enough to taste. With him, she felt chosen, cherished, and safe.
But safety was an illusion, and love became a weapon.
And slowly, piece by piece, he dismantled her until nothing of the woman she once was remained.
Now institutionalized after a breakdown, she begins to piece together the brutal truth of what really happened in the shadows of their love story. Memories sting like open wounds: the manipulation disguised as tenderness, the apologies that blurred into threats, the desperate hope that tomorrow he'd be the man she fell for again.
Yet beneath the grief and the shame, a quiet rebellion stirs, a vow to reclaim her voice, her freedom, and her life. Because this is not just a story of how she fell apart. It is a story of how she rises.
Haunting, raw, and achingly intimate, Boys like him peels back the glittering mask of a toxic love affair to reveal the kind of darkness that hides in plain sight, and the unbreakable strength it takes to escape it.

8.9
Seventeen-year-old Nina Storm has spent her life running from her tragic past, her dormant wolf, and the dreams of a mysterious man she can't escape.
Raised by her protective father after her mother's death, she has never stayed in one place long enough to call it home. But everything changed when they return to their home, the Moonlight Pack.
Nina discovers that her mate is Zane, the pack's Alpha... a bond that defies werewolf laws and the pack's expectations. Their undeniable attraction is dangerous, and their bond threatens to disrupt the fragile balance of power within the pack.
When an attack on the pack shatters her world, Nina loses everything, including her life. But death isn't the end.
Reborn, her dormant wolf awakens giving her a newfound strength and powers, Nina must navigate a world of betrayal, love, and vengeance as she unravels the truth about her family, her mate bond, and the danger threatening to destroy everything she holds dear.

9.3
My father ordered me to marry into the cursed Vaughn family.
Their heirs were rumored to die young from a mysterious genetic agony. My sister Kayden laughed, saying she wasn't going to waste her youth planning a funeral. So, I became the sacrificial lamb.
When I refused, my father slammed his hand on the table and threatened to throw my dead mother's ashes into the city dump.
"You are a struggling actress with no money and no power. You have no choice," he told me coldly.
To make matters worse, my own agent drugged my drink at a business dinner, trying to sell my body to a sleazy investor just to secure project funding.
I was completely cornered, suffocating under the weight of their cruelty. I couldn't understand how my own flesh and blood could be so vicious, treating me like a worthless pawn to be traded and discarded.
But none of them knew that while escaping the drug-laced dinner, I crashed directly into the terrifying Vaughn heir, Algot.
When his glowing crimson eyes locked onto me during a violent episode of his cursed pain, we discovered an impossible truth: my physical touch was the only cure for his agony.
Looking at the dark bruises he accidentally left on my neck, I chose not to run. Instead, I pulled out the private business card he gave me and dialed his number.
"You need me," I whispered to the dangerous billionaire. "And I am going to use you to destroy them all."

9.7
Sienna woke up in a hospital room, her body screaming from a severe car accident. Through the glass, a man paced with violent rage, a dark shadow she felt absolutely nothing for.
Her friend Julia burst in, eyes bloodshot, dropping a bomb: "He didn't even try to help you." Dante, Sienna's fiancé, had protected another woman, Valeria, in the crash, leaving Sienna to burn alive.
Her past life unspooled – seven years sacrificed, an architecture degree abandoned, all to serve Dante. Her phone was a shrine to him: his photos, his "taboos," and even "Valeria's preferences," with no trace of Sienna herself.
But amnesia brought no heartbreak, only a cold, calculating fury. She felt disgust for the "idiot" she'd been, stripped of dignity. The memory loss was a release, a blank slate.
With chilling resolve, Sienna deleted every trace of Dante. Ripping out her IV, she declared, "The wedding proceeds." Not for love, but as a weapon: "I need to take back everything that belongs to me before I disappear."

7.3
Clara came home from a fourteen-hour board meeting to the sound of a piercing scream in the playroom.
When she rushed in, she found her husband, Chadwick, kneeling on the floor in a panic.
But he wasn't looking at their five-year-old son, Leo, who had a massive bleeding welt on his forehead.
Instead, Chadwick was trembling as he held the nanny's daughter, Autumn, who barely had a microscopic scratch.
"She needs ice. And antibacterial ointment," Chadwick snapped, carrying the nanny's daughter away and leaving his bleeding son behind.
From that moment, the nightmare only escalated.
Chadwick ordered Clara to cook a three-hour meal for the nanny's kid, threw away Leo's favorite toys because Autumn sneezed, and even secretly took the nanny and her daughter on Leo's promised Disney trip.
The final humiliation came at the Met Gala.
Right before their sponsor speech, Chadwick received a frantic call from the nanny claiming Autumn was having a panic attack.
He abandoned Clara in front of hundreds of flashing cameras, sprinting out of the ballroom.
Clara stood completely alone, the humiliation eating through her veins like acid.
She couldn't understand how a father could call the nanny's kid his "little princess" while watching his own son cry.
Why was he treating his own flesh and blood like garbage just to play savior to another woman's child?
Suddenly, the blinding camera flashes were blocked by a massive shadow.
Erasmo Chase, the heir to New York's largest financial dynasty, stepped out of the darkness and shielded her.
"A man like that is unworthy of your grief, Ms. Best," he whispered, pressing a silk handkerchief into her trembling hand.
Looking at the sharp profile of the powerful man beside her, Clara's shock hardened into a lethal, cold fury.
She was going to dump her family's shares, crash the board, and make Chadwick lose absolutely everything.

8.4
Arlene was the illegitimate daughter of the wealthy Boone family, treated worse than a stray dog. To keep her meager scholarship, she had to swallow her pride and apologize to the frat boy who tormented her.
But he didn't just want an apology. He forced her to drink twenty shots of liquor laced with pure capsaicin extract.
"Drink us under the table, or take off your clothes and crawl out."
Arlene drank until her stomach tore, vomiting blood and collapsing on the filthy club floor.
When she dragged her half-dead body back to the Boone estate, her biological father and half-sister didn't care. Instead, her sister ground Arlene's SAT admission ticket into the dirt with her stiletto.
"Throw her out. Dad doesn't want to look at her before Hardie's engagement."
The guards threw her onto the gravel, leaving her bleeding and barefoot in the freezing night.
Arlene sat shivering at a dark bus stop, her dignity completely stripped away. She never wanted a dime from the Boones, so why did they insist on crushing her only way out? And why did Dr. Hardie Boone, the untouchable head of the family, look at her with such a twisted, terrifying obsession?
When Hardie's black Aston Martin pulled out of the shadows, he scooped her up, took her away, and locked her inside his penthouse.
"You carry the Boone name. Whether you live or die is my decision."
Trapped by the dangerous man who demanded total control over her life, Arlene finally realized that simply running away was no longer an option.