
Acceptable Service: Tipping The Ruthless Billionaire
I woke up in a penthouse suite at the Pierre with a hangover from hell and a naked man who looked like he'd been carved from marble. Thinking he was a high-end escort I couldn't afford, I left my last hundred dollars and a petty note on the nightstand.
"Service was acceptable. Keep the change."
But when I rushed home to check on my dying father, I found the locks changed and my boyfriend, Chad, draped over my stepsister on the landing. My stepmother, Meredith, didn't even look up from her coffee as she handed me a legal folder.
She told me to sign away my inheritance or she'd stop paying for my father's life support. The hospital called seconds later, demanding fifty thousand dollars by the end of the day, or they'd pull the plug.
Meredith had already arranged my "payment": a dinner with Boris Gorsky, a predator who collected young women like trophies. I was being sold to a monster to keep my father alive, standing in a thrift-store dress while my family laughed at my ruin.
I didn't understand how my life had collapsed in twelve hours, or how my own blood could put a price tag on a man's life. I sat at that restaurant trembling, waiting for the man who would buy my soul.
Then the man from the hotel walked in. It wasn't Gorsky; it was August Sanders, the billionaire CEO of a media empire, and he was holding my hundred-dollar bill.
He didn't want an apology; he wanted a contract wife for a year. He slid a confirmation for a five-hundred-thousand-dollar hospital deposit across the table and handed me a fountain pen.
"Welcome to the firm, Mrs. Sanders."
I signed the paper with a shaking hand, knowing I was trading my freedom for my father's life. But as August handed me his black card, I realized I finally had the weapon I needed to destroy the people who thought I was nothing.
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Chapter 9
"You married him?" Zoe shrieked, nearly dropping her latte. "August Sanders? The man who makes Christian Grey look like a teddy bear?"
They were walking down Fifth Avenue. August was at a board meeting, so Colette had escaped for an hour.
"It's complicated," Colette said, adjusting her sunglasses. "I can't talk about the details. NDA."
"Okay, but is he... you know?" Zoe waggled her eyebrows.
"Zoe, stop."
They walked into Bergdorf Goodman. Colette felt the familiar knot of anxiety. She usually only came here to look, never to touch.
"I need shoes," Zoe said. "For my sister's wedding."
They headed to the shoe salon. And there, sitting on a velvet ottoman, was Tiffany.
Meredith was hovering over her, holding three different boxes. Chad was standing awkwardly to the side, holding Tiffany's purse.
Colette tried to turn around, but Tiffany spotted her.
"Well, well," Tiffany called out, her voice shrill. "If it isn't the runaway bride. Come to spend your allowance?"
Colette stiffened. "Leave me alone, Tiffany."
"We're just shopping," Meredith said, her voice dripping with fake sweetness. "Tiffany needs shoes for the gala. You know, the one you weren't invited to."
Tiffany pointed to a pair of crystal-encrusted Jimmy Choos. "I want those. Size seven."
The sales associate, a woman with a pinched face, looked at Colette and Zoe. She saw Zoe's worn sneakers and Colette's simple jeans. Then she looked at Tiffany's designer bag. Tiffany discreetly slid a hundred-dollar bill into the associate's hand as she pointed at Colette.
"I'm afraid that's the last pair in size seven," the associate said to Colette, her tone dismissive. "And this young lady asked first."
"We were looking at them!" Zoe protested.
"Can you afford them?" Tiffany sneered. "They're two thousand dollars. Chad, pay for them."
Chad fumbled for his wallet. He pulled out a credit card. It was a standard card.
"Actually," Tiffany laughed, "give me the card. It's my dad's anyway."
That stung. It was Colette's father's money. Money that should have gone to his surgery.
"Cole, don't embarrass yourself," Meredith said. "Go back to your little apartment."
Tiffany stood up, deliberately bumping into Zoe. Zoe stumbled, gasping as her ankle twisted.
"Oops," Tiffany said.
Something inside Colette snapped.
She looked at Zoe, who was rubbing her ankle. She looked at Chad, the coward. She looked at Meredith and Tiffany, the leeches.
She remembered the black card in her pocket. I don't want my wife looking like a refugee.
She reached into her bag. Her fingers closed around the cold metal.
"I'll take them," Colette said clearly.
"Honey, you can't afford the tax," Tiffany laughed.
Colette pulled out the card. It was black. It was titanium. It was the American Express Centurion.
The air left the room.
The sales associate's eyes bulged. She knew what that card meant. It meant no limit. It meant royalty.
Colette held the card out between two fingers.
"I'd like to schedule a private appointment," Colette said, her voice steady and cool, addressing the manager who was suddenly at her side. "And update my client profile. Please note that this sales associate is not to handle my account in the future. Also, place a temporary hold on the entire new season collection in size seven for my consideration. Effective immediately."
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7.3
Eloise was the untouchable Brandt family heiress, just one audition away from landing a lead movie role and escaping her golden cage.
But overnight, her family's empire completely collapsed.
With her father dying of heart failure, her mother forced her to beg the only man who could save them: Christian Clarke.
Christian was the ruthless billionaire who had publicly humiliated Eloise in college, ripping up her love letter in front of a laughing crowd.
Now, he tossed a fifty-million-dollar acquisition contract on the table.
"What exactly is the Brandt heiress putting up for sale today?"
To secure her father's medical care, Eloise was forced to sign a suffocating marriage contract, selling herself as a corporate tax shield.
He moved her into his freezing penthouse and treated her like a purchased asset. He mocked her attempts to cook him dinner, yet pinned her against the wall with punishing, possessive kisses whenever she tried to pull away.
Eloise's pride was entirely shattered.
She didn't understand why he was doing this. If he hated her so much and only wanted revenge, why did his touch carry such an agonizing, desperate heat?
Determined to survive, she went to her final audition and miraculously won the lead role, crying tears of joy because she had finally earned something on her own.
She had no idea that the cold-blooded monster sleeping beside her had just secretly threatened to destroy all of Hollywood to give it to her.

7.8
For five years, I was the secret weapon behind A-list actor Johan Lee. As his top agent and devoted girlfriend, I cleaned up his scandals, secured his contracts, and deliberately dressed down so I would never outshine him. Tonight was his birthday, and I was waiting in his penthouse in black lace, ready to surprise him.
The only surprise was the one I got when he walked in with a 22-year-old actress. From inside his walk-in closet, my romantic evening turned into a nightmare as I listened to them fall into his bed.
But the cheating wasn't the worst part. It was hearing his cruel, dismissive laugh as he explained why he kept me around.
"She's safe," he told the other woman. "She dresses like a depressed librarian. I don't need a queen trying to steal my spotlight. I need an assistant."
An assistant. Five years of my life, my love, and my career-building genius, all reduced to a convenience. The grief in my chest instantly hardened into ice. The mousy girlfriend he took for granted was gone forever.
I walked out of that closet, ended his career with a single video, and thought I was finally free. But then my aunt called, screaming. My family's company was mysteriously facing bankruptcy, and their only way out was to enforce an old family contract. I was to be sold in marriage to the ruthless billionaire who engineered their downfall: the infamous Colvin Sykes.

8.1
I was the top trauma surgeon at the city’s busiest hospital until my family decided I was nothing more than a disposal fee. I stood in my father’s mahogany-lined study, staring at a two-hundred-thousand-dollar check that was meant to buy my silence and my dignity.
"Sign the confession, Aurelia," my father demanded, the silver cigar cutter snapping with a violent finality. They wanted me to take the fall for a medical error I never committed, all to protect my sister Dominique’s image before her high-profile merger with the Blackburn family.
When I refused to sign my life away, the betrayal turned lethal. My sister planted a priceless sapphire heirloom in my bag and called the security team to search me in front of my ex-fiancé. My mother watched with cold indifference as I was branded a thief, and my father threatened to pull the plug on my grandmother’s nursing home payments by noon if I didn't vanish.
I was thrown out into a freezing rainstorm with a revoked medical license, a battered suitcase, and exactly forty-two dollars to my name. Even the man I once loved looked at me with pity, believing I had stooped to grand larceny because I was jealous of my sister’s success.
I stood at a bus stop, shivering and broken, wondering how my own blood could trade my truth for a corporate PR stunt. They had taken my career, my home, and my reputation, leaving me with nothing but the clothes on my back and a burning need for justice.
Desperate to protect my grandmother, I sought out the one man they all feared: Avery Blackburn, the "monster" CEO rumored to be a brain-damaged vegetable. But the man I found in the shadows of the VIP wing wasn't a victim; he was a wolf waiting for the right moment to strike.
"I need a shield, and you need a wife," he rasped, sliding a titanium card across the desk. I didn't hesitate to sign the marriage certificate. The Blanchards think they’ve discarded a liability, but they’re about to find out what happens when you give a desperate surgeon a billionaire’s scalpel.

9.0
Grace's engagement to Dillan Hayes was nothing but a cold business transaction to secure funding for her family's company.
But when Dillan violently shoved her into a marble bar over his ex-girlfriend, leaving her bleeding, Grace didn't hesitate.
She called 911, had her fiancé arrested on the spot, and broke off the engagement.
Returning to the Albert estate, she expected chaos, but not absolute betrayal.
Her family didn't care that she had just been physically assaulted.
They were in a sheer panic because her cousin Ashly had just fled the country, abandoning a terrifying arranged marriage.
The groom was Hudson Turner, a man known across Manhattan as a disgraced, violent psychopath, paralyzed from the waist down in a severe crash.
To save themselves from the Turner family's wrath and financial ruin, Grace's aunt and father ordered her to take Ashly's place.
"You eat from this family, you live in this house! It is time you paid us back!"
Her father even threatened to freeze her bank accounts and faked a heart attack to force her compliance.
For three years, Grace had single-handedly kept the family business afloat while they squandered the profits.
Now, they were throwing her to a monster without a second thought, expecting her to rot as a crippled man's miserable nursemaid.
But they picked the wrong sacrifice.
Grace ruthlessly extorted a legal severance from her family, taking her shares and cutting all ties forever.
She walked straight into Hudson Turner's private gallery to propose a mutually beneficial, cutthroat business marriage.
However, when the prenuptial was signed, the "paralyzed" billionaire placed his hands on his wheelchair.
Slowly, deliberately, Hudson stood up to his full, imposing height of six-foot-three.
"The wheelchair is a necessary illusion for my enemies," Hudson stated calmly. "But it will never be an illusion between you and me."

8.4
Elena Reyes is drowning-buried in debt, fighting to keep a roof over her head, and running out of time. When an eviction notice gives her only seven days to save her future, desperation drives her to the one man everyone fears: Damian Blackwell, a cold billionaire with a reputation for ruthless deals and no mercy.
Damian doesn't offer help-he offers control. His world is a cage of power, secrets, and desire, and Elena is about to learn that accepting his deal means risking everything. She thought survival was the goal, but soon she realizes the true cost of his desire may be her freedom... and her heart.
In a dangerous game where trust can be a weapon and love feels like surrender, Elena must decide if she's willing to pay the ultimate price for a chance at a new life-and if Damian is worth losing herself for.

7.3
Six years ago, my father tore up my mother's trust fund and threw me out into a freezing New York storm.
Crawling in the mud with a high fever, I was nearly run over by a massive Rolls-Royce.
The man in the backseat, ruthless billionaire Hiram Houston, looked at my bleeding face with absolute disgust.
"Throw her in the trunk."
He coldly ordered his driver to lock me in suffocating darkness and dump me behind a sketchy private clinic in Queens like garbage.
I survived that night, completely abandoned by my family.
But the ultimate cruel joke came when I realized the anonymous sperm donor I later used from that exact same clinic gave my son a pair of piercing, ice-blue eyes.
For six years, I clawed my way up to become an untouchable lawyer and designer.
I raised my son Julian alone, publicly humiliated my abusive father, and thought I had buried the monster of my past forever.
But today, during a tense corporate negotiation, my uncle accidentally showed Hiram a picture of my little boy.
The ruthless corporate butcher stared at a child who looked exactly like a mirror reflection of his own youth.
"Boss... he looks exactly like you."
I locked my apartment door, my body shaking with silent sobs as I slid down to the floor.
He ordered a full background check on me, and now he knows the truth.
The man who once left me for dead is coming for my son.