Follow
Chapters
Share
After Buying My Ex, I Learned His Dark Secret Novel Cover

After Buying My Ex, I Learned His Dark Secret

The Pierre Hotel smelled like gardenias and old money. I stood just inside the ballroom entrance and let the scene wash over me. Crystal chandeliers threw soft light across a hundred faces I didn't recognize and a dozen I did. Women in gowns that cost more than cars. Men in tuxedos that fit like they were born wearing them. Waiters gliding between clusters of conversation with trays of champagne so pale it looked like liquid gold. Six years ago, I would have been one of those waiters. I took a glass from a passing tray and didn't drink it. My steel-gray gown was custom Valentino, fitted so precisely it felt like armor. It cost more than my entire first-year scholarship at Columbia.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The Pierre Hotel smelled like gardenias and old money.

I stood just inside the ballroom entrance and let the scene wash over me. Crystal chandeliers threw soft light across a hundred faces I didn't recognize and a dozen I did. Women in gowns that cost more than cars. Men in tuxedos that fit like they were born wearing them. Waiters gliding between clusters of conversation with trays of champagne so pale it looked like liquid gold.

Six years ago, I would have been one of those waiters.

I took a glass from a passing tray and didn't drink it. My steel-gray gown was custom Valentino, fitted so precisely it felt like armor. It cost more than my entire first-year scholarship at Columbia. I knew that because I'd done the math in the fitting room, standing in front of the mirror, daring myself to feel something about it. I didn't. I just handed over my card and told them to send it to my penthouse on the Upper West Side.

That was the thing about money. Once you had enough of it, it stopped meaning anything. It was just a number. A tool. A wall between you and the version of yourself who used to cry in the bathroom of a campus café because she couldn't afford textbooks.

I didn't cry anymore.

"Ms. Ford." A man in a perfectly cut navy suit appeared at my elbow. Smooth smile. Practiced handshake. "Grant Whitfield. I'm the host this evening. We spoke on the phone."

"We did," I said.

"Welcome back to New York. Your reputation precedes you." He gestured toward the room like he was offering me a kingdom. "Tonight is about connections. Meaningful ones. We've curated an extraordinary group of candidates this year."

I nodded and let him talk. I wasn't here for connections. I was here because my PR team said showing up at a high-profile charity-adjacent event would signal my return to the city's social scene. I was here because it was strategic. That was all.

Whitfield handed me a leather-bound program with gold embossing. "The full catalog," he said. "Take your time. And please, enjoy the evening."

He disappeared into the crowd. I opened the program.

It was laid out like a luxury auction catalog. Each page featured a photograph, a biography, and a price — the "bride price," they called it, which was the amount a woman would commit to in exchange for a live-in arrangement with the man of her choosing. The men had agreed to the terms. The women held the cards. It was old-fashioned and absurd and wrapped in enough velvet language to make it feel civilized.

I flipped through the pages without interest. Tech founders. Hedge fund sons. A retired Olympic swimmer. Each one smiling like he'd been told to look approachable but not desperate.

Then I turned a page and my hand stopped.

Elias Hawkins.

The photograph was recent. He looked different. Older. Sharper. His jaw was harder, his hair a little longer than he used to keep it, and there was something in his eyes that hadn't been there before. Something quiet and settled, like a man who had made peace with something I couldn't see.

Bride price: $3,000,000. Live-in arrangement.

I read it twice. Three times. The words didn't change.

Elias Hawkins. The heir to the Hawkins empire. The man who had once held my hand across a café table and told me he didn't care what his family thought. The man who had let his family crush me like I was nothing.

Three million dollars. Like he was a piece of furniture.

My chest went tight. Not with sadness. Something hotter. Something that had been sitting in my ribcage for six years, quiet and patient, waiting for exactly this moment.

I closed the program. I set down my champagne. I looked up.

He was across the room.

I found him the way you find a fire in a dark house — not by looking, but by feeling the heat. He stood near the far windows, talking to Whitfield. He wore a dark suit, no tie, top button undone. Nothing flashy. Nothing that screamed money or status. He looked like a man who had deliberately dressed down for an event that demanded the opposite.

He was listening to Whitfield with that same unhurried calm I remembered. Head slightly tilted. Hands in his pockets. Like the whole room was moving at a speed he had chosen not to match.

Then he looked up.

Our eyes met.

The room didn't go silent. The music kept playing. People kept laughing. But something between us locked into place like a bolt sliding home, and for one second — one single, airless second — I was twenty years old again, standing in the rain outside the campus library, watching him walk toward me with an umbrella and a smile that made me forget I was tired and broke and alone.

I killed that memory before it could breathe.

He didn't look away. Neither did I.

Six years. Six years of building myself from nothing. Six years of turning grief into capital and humiliation into empire. Six years of imagining what I would do if I ever saw him again.

I had imagined a lot of things. I had never imagined this.

I turned and walked to the registration desk.

The woman behind the desk looked up with a polished smile. "Good evening, Ms. Ford. How can I —"

"Elias Hawkins," I said. "Page fourteen. I'm claiming him."

She blinked. "That listing carries a three-million-dollar commitment. Would you like to review the terms before —"

"No." I pulled out my phone, opened my banking app, and initiated the wire. Three million dollars. I watched the confirmation screen load. The number didn't make me flinch. It was less than what I'd spent acquiring a logistics company in Singapore last quarter.

The transfer completed. I turned the phone toward her.

Her eyes went wide. She looked at the screen, then at me, then back at the screen. "I — yes. That's — confirmed. Ms. Ford, congratulations, you've —"

"Thank you."

I turned around.

The ripple was already moving through the room. I could feel it — the shift in attention, the whispered conversations, the heads turning. Whitfield had stopped mid-sentence and was staring at me from across the ballroom with his champagne glass frozen halfway to his mouth.

Elias hadn't moved.

I walked toward him. My heels clicked on the marble floor. The crowd parted slightly, the way people do when they sense something is about to happen and want a clear view.

I stopped in front of him. Close enough to see the faint scar on his left hand — a burn mark I remembered from a Thanksgiving disaster in a tiny off-campus kitchen, a lifetime ago. Close enough to smell cedar and something warm underneath it that my body recognized before my brain could stop it.

I smiled. It was the kind of smile I used in boardrooms when I was about to dismantle someone's quarterly projections. All edge. No warmth.

"Elias," I said. "It's been a while."

"Aspyn." His voice was low and steady. No surprise in it. No defensiveness. Just my name, spoken like he'd been saying it to himself for years.

"I just wired three million dollars for you," I said. "So here's how this works. You'll have your things at my penthouse by tomorrow morning. The address is on file with the registration desk." I paused. Let the silence do its work. "I trust that won't be a problem."

Something moved behind his eyes. Not shock. Not anger. Something I couldn't name and didn't want to.

"No problem," he said quietly. "I'll be there."

He said it the way someone accepts something they've been waiting for. Calmly. Completely. Like a man who had walked into this room knowing exactly how the night would end.

That unsettled me more than anything else.

I held his gaze for one more second. Then I turned and walked out of the ballroom without looking back. My heels echoed in the corridor. The night air hit my face as I stepped onto Fifth Avenue, and I stood there on the sidewalk in my Valentino gown, three million dollars lighter, my heart hammering so hard I could feel it in my teeth.

I told myself it was satisfaction.

I told myself it was power.

I got into my car and pressed my forehead against the cold window and closed my eyes, and for just a moment — just one — I let myself remember the way he used to say my name. Like it was the only word he knew.

You may also like

Bound To Love You Domineering CEO Novel Cover
8.0
She was forced to accept a marriage proposal from a strange billionaire to pay her huge debt and to take back her inheritance left to him when her mother died. Nathan’s lawyer handed her the documents, including the marriage certificate. Things were moving much faster than she had imagined they would, and everything happening seemed too easy. Too good to be true - a voice in her mind cried out - Be careful! It’s a trap! If it was a trap, though, it was very cleverly hidden. Crystal contemplated the proposal for a moment before addressing Mike, his lawyer. “I only have two questions,” she said. “The first question is this: if I sign it, does it mean that I don’t need to pay my debt?” Mike: “Yes. And your second question...?” Crystal: “Okay, I haven’t reached the legal age for marriage yet, so even if I sign it, it won’t take effect. Is that right?” Nathan quickly raised his hand and said, “If I say that it is effective, no one will dare to say that it isn’t. Do you believe that?” “I suppose so,” Crystal admitted. She hesitated for a moment, and then she signed the marriage certificate. Months later, she asked for a divorce from him. He stared at her in silence, then he uttered, “Have I ever told you how much I love you?” “What does that have to do with our divorce?” Crystal asked. “I’m only asking because I care about you,” Nathan murmured. Suddenly, tears began to stream down Nathan’s face. “I’ll be happy if you say that you care about me,” Nathan continued. “Why must you torture me this way? Haven’t I done enough to prove my love for you?” She was stunned hearing his confession and words stuck on her throat. Nathan carried on with his little speech. He said, “I have died once, and the fear of death has no hold on me. But if you admit that you care for me, then I will live for you! So, please, love me once, and I will be at your disposal!”
Bound To The Monster Who Ruined Me Novel Cover
8.4
Ayleen Avery was just a struggling hotel worker trying to survive her shift. But during a sudden blackout, she accidentally stumbled into the pitch-black VIP suite of a ruthless billionaire driven mad by chronic insomnia. Calmed only by her unique natural scent of roses and rain, the terrifying man attacked her from the shadows and forced himself on her. Terrified and broken, Ayleen fled at dawn, unknowingly leaving behind her late mother's antique rose necklace in his bed. Her greedy coworker found the necklace, claimed to be the woman from that night, and was instantly swept into a life of luxury. Meanwhile, Ayleen was blackmailed into a forced marriage with her attacker—Cassius Doyle—to save her adoptive father from prison. Deceived by the stolen necklace, Cassius believed Ayleen was a manipulative spy. He brought the coworker into their home and paraded her around the master bedroom. "In this house, you are lower than the dirt on my shoes." He choked Ayleen, forced her to sleep in a damp storage room, and treated her with violent disgust while pampering the thief. Ayleen was suffocating in absolute despair. She had lost her innocence, her freedom, and her mother's only relic to a vicious liar. She couldn't understand how this all-powerful man could be so completely blind. Why couldn't he recognize the very scent that had cured his agonizing madness? Staring at the dark bruises he had just left on her neck, Ayleen wiped the blood from her lip. She would endure this three-month marriage to secure her family's safety, but once the contract ended, she would expose the truth and tear down the fake savior he cherished so much.
Candice And The Cocky King Novel Cover
9.3
She bit her lower lip, nervous. "You're a dangerous man. I have seen you kill without a thought. What's to make me believe it won't be my head falling to the ground one day?" He stared at her for long, quiet seconds before he said slowly, "There are far more dangerous things I want to do to you and with your body. Death by my hand should be the least of your worries." ***** Candice is a metropolitan real estate agent, whose world revolves around closing deals and raking in commissions. But everything changed when a mysterious billionaire set her up on a blind date, thrusting her into a world beyond her wildest imagination. Suddenly, she finds herself at the center of a supernatural storm, with creatures from the shadows seeking to exploit her connection to Wayne Wyatt, the powerful and enigmatic werewolf monarch. Forced into a role she didn't fully understand, she agrees to play her role as Luna to her newly found Alpha – but only for a price. However, taming the proud and infuriating King would require her to navigate a delicate balance of power and seduction, testing her wits and will against his unyielding dominance. She finds herself in a bind, trying to resist this gorgeous, prideful king or succumb to the primal attraction that threatens to consume them both.
Forbidden Affairs With My fiance's Billionaire Uncle  Novel Cover
8.7
In order to save her grandmother, Elena agrees to marry into the Rodríguez family. On the night before her engagement, she is invited by her friends to celebrate her last night of singleness. She is advised not to keep her virginity for her so-called fiancé, a man with a playboy reputation. That night, she meets a handsome stranger. She seduces him and gives him her first time-only for him to show up the next day at the engagement party as her fiancé's powerful uncle and the heir to the Rodríguez empire. What would happen when the two cross paths again, and what secret is the Rodríguez family hiding?
Husband's Affair and Divorce Novel Cover
9.5
When my husband won the gold trophy at the painting competition, I rushed into the studio with the pregnancy report I'd hidden for days. But what I saw was my husband entangled on the floor with his young female apprentice. She was unclothed, her pale skin speckled with various colors of paint. And there was my husband, Bridger Reed, pinning her down, using his paint-covered hands to meticulously "create art." Bridger insisted they were in the midst of artistic expression. I laughed inwardly. A mediocrity I'd propped up, daring to speak of artistic creation. Bridger pulled on his pants, irritation etched across his face. "Next time, remember to knock before you come in," he snapped. The apprentice, Amiri Dixon, seemed flustered—so flustered, in fact, that even after all the time I'd been standing there, she hadn't managed to put on a single piece of clothing. Instead, she picked up a crumpled tissue from the floor and tossed it into the wastebasket.
Husband's Fall, Wife's Rise Novel Cover
8.5
The late afternoon sun streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows of Ryan's office, casting long shadows across the polished marble floors. I stood in the doorway of the executive lounge, watching my husband of five years as he guided Isabella across the room with his hand resting possessively on the small of her back. The intimacy of the gesture made my stomach twist, but I forced myself to remain still, invisible in the shadows as I had become accustomed to being in recent months. Ryan reached into the inner pocket of his tailored suit jacket and produced a small velvet box. When he opened it, a golden key gleamed in the sunlight. Isabella's perfectly manicured hand flew to her mouth, her eyes widening with theatrical surprise. "Welcome to your new home, Mrs. Mitchell," Ryan announced, his voice carrying that smooth, practiced charm he reserved for board meetings and important clients—never for me anymore. Isabella took the key with trembling fingers, her red lips curving into a triumphant smile. "The penthouse on Fifth Avenue?