
All of Me for You, Forever: A Love That Transcends Time
Seven years ago, Ella's heart was shattered when the man she loved disappeared without a trace.
Now he's back-older, dangerous, and holding secrets that could destroy them both.
Drawn into a world of betrayal, lies, and enemies lurking in every shadow, Ella must decide...
Can she trust Jerry again, when loving him might cost her everything?
Passion ignites, hearts collide, and danger closes in with every step. Their love is tested by revenge, deception, and a past that refuses to stay buried.
In a game of love and survival, every choice could be their last.
đź’” A gripping, heart-stopping romance full of suspense, twists, and a love that refuses to die.
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Chapter 9
The morning light filtered weakly through the blinds, painting the apartment in muted shades of gold and gray. Despite the calm outside, the tension inside was almost unbearable. Jerry had barely slept, his eyes dark with worry as he reviewed the evidence we had collected from the warehouse. I sat at the kitchen table, coffee cooling in my hands, my mind racing with thoughts I couldn't silence.
Last night's confrontation had left me shaken, yet strangely alive. Being beside Jerry during the fight, feeling his protective strength, had reminded me of everything I had lost and everything I had almost regained. But the danger wasn't over. Whoever had orchestrated the attacks was meticulous, patient, and deeply personal. And the threat had shifted from business to us.
I watched him, dark-haired and intense, every line of his face etched with determination. "Ella," he said suddenly, voice low and serious, "we can't underestimate them. This isn't just about the company. It's about us. About our connection. About the life we're trying to rebuild."
I nodded, my heart tightening. "I know. But we've faced worse before. Together."
He gave me a small, almost imperceptible smile, though the weight of responsibility in his eyes never lessened. "I've made mistakes," he said quietly, "but I won't make this one. I won't let you down again."
The sincerity in his voice sent a shiver down my spine. Seven years of longing, heartbreak, and unspoken love culminated in that moment. I wanted to reach for him, to hold him, to let him know that my heart had never stopped waiting for him.
But then my phone buzzed, and reality intruded. It was a message from an unknown number:
"You can't hide her forever. She belongs to me first."
My stomach dropped. The threat had escalated, becoming more sinister, more personal. I felt Jerry's hand tighten around mine, sensing my fear. "We'll deal with this," he said firmly. "I promise you. No one threatens us."
We spent the morning planning our next steps, alternating between strategy and surveillance. Damien joined us remotely, providing insights into the network behind the attacks. Whoever was orchestrating this was not only targeting Jerry's company but had intimate knowledge of our lives, our movements, and our vulnerabilities.
"This is bigger than we thought," Damien said over a video call. "It's a network. And they're willing to go to extreme lengths to achieve their goals."
I felt a chill. "And us?" I asked quietly.
Damien's eyes were grave. "You're not just collateral. You're a target."
Jerry's grip on my hand tightened, grounding me even as fear surged through me. "Then we face it," he said, determination etched into every line of his face. "We face it together."
Hours passed in tense silence, broken only by the occasional phone call or message alert. Every sound made me jump; every shadow seemed threatening. But amidst the fear, the unspoken tension between Jerry and me intensified. Every brush of hands, every glance, every shared breath carried the weight of seven years, of unspoken longing, of love tested by time and circumstance.
By afternoon, Jerry insisted we step out, to confront reality rather than hide from it. We drove to a secure location, a safe house Damien had prepared, designed to monitor potential threats. The drive was quiet, the hum of the engine punctuated by the occasional sigh. I reached for Jerry's hand, and he intertwined his fingers with mine, a silent promise that no matter what, we were united.
"You're still reckless," I teased lightly, trying to break the tension.
He smirked, dark eyes glinting. "Only for the things that matter."
"And those are?" I asked, raising an eyebrow.
He leaned closer, voice low, a seductive undertone threading through his words. "You, Ella. Always you."
My heart raced, my pulse quickening. I wanted to say something, to confess, to surrender completely. But the weight of the danger lurking outside reminded me that we were not free to indulge yet.
When we arrived at the safe house, Damien greeted us with grim news. "They've found a new lead," he said, eyes flicking between us. "It's someone from Jerry's past. Someone with a personal vendetta."
Jerry's jaw tightened, dark memories flickering across his face. "I thought I had left that behind," he muttered.
"Apparently, some things don't stay buried," Damien said.
I felt a shiver run down my spine. The past was not done with us. And suddenly, I realized that the threats we were facing were entwined with Jerry's history, secrets he hadn't shared, and decisions he had made long before we had met again.
We spent the evening strategizing, tracing digital footprints, cross-referencing contacts, and preparing for any potential ambush. Every so often, Jerry would glance at me, and I could see the unspoken fear in his eyes-not for himself, but for me.
"You shouldn't have to be involved in this," he whispered during a quiet moment, his hand brushing my cheek.
"I choose to be," I said firmly, pressing my forehead to his. "I'm not stepping aside. Not now, not ever."
He closed his eyes briefly, inhaling deeply, as if drawing strength from my presence. "You're incredible," he murmured. "And I... I can't imagine facing this without you."
The intimacy of that moment was almost overwhelming. I wanted to melt into him, to let go of every fear, every doubt. But the reality of the external threat kept us grounded, reminding us that love and danger were now inseparably linked.
As night fell, a storm began outside, rain pounding against the windows, wind rattling the walls. The storm outside mirrored the chaos within-the danger closing in, the memories resurfacing, and the emotions between us threatening to overflow.
Suddenly, the secure network pinged-an alert that someone had attempted unauthorized access. Jerry's eyes snapped to the screen, dark with intensity. "They're closer than we thought," he muttered.
We followed the digital trail, which led to a location just outside the city. The realization hit us simultaneously: the past we thought we had left behind was catching up. Someone with a vendetta, someone determined to hurt Jerry and me, was orchestrating every move with precision.
We prepared quickly, gathering essentials, planning our approach, and readying ourselves for confrontation. Every moment heightened the tension, every glance at each other heavy with unspoken emotion.
"You ready?" Jerry asked, his voice low, steady, but edged with danger.
I nodded, gripping his hand tightly. "Together."
He leaned closer, brushing his lips against my temple, a gentle reassurance amidst the storm. "Together," he echoed.
We stepped into the night, into the rain-soaked streets, hearts pounding, minds sharp, and emotions raw. The world around us was dangerous, uncertain, and unforgiving-but we faced it side by side. Love, desire, fear, and determination coalesced into a singular force.
And as we approached the location of our next confrontation, I knew that nothing-no past betrayal, no threat, no shadow-could break what we had rebuilt. Not as long as we faced it... together.
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7.8
My abusive ex was threatening a lawsuit that would destroy my father's career and wipe out my PhD. I was completely out of options.
That night, Graham, the boy from next door I hadn't seen in a decade, showed up at my apartment in the middle of a hurricane. Now a wealthy orthopedic surgeon, he offered a transactional marriage: he needed a local wife to keep his family away while he cared for his sick mother, and in return, he would make my ex disappear.
I thought it was a simple deal. But the morning after we signed the marriage license, Graham didn't just scare my ex off—he ruthlessly dismantled him. Then, Graham turned to me. His eyes were dead as he pulled out his phone, showing me a high-resolution photo of the night I illegally sold lab samples to pay off my ex's initial blackmail. He had hired a private investigator to stalk me. If that photo leaked to the FDA, I wouldn't just lose my degree; I'd go to prison.
"I needed a guarantee," he said flatly.
I was shaking with rage and terror. This wasn't a rescue. It was a hostage situation. Why did he hunt me down? Why use my darkest secret to trap me in this twisted marriage?
I couldn't live like this. I demanded an immediate divorce. But at the courthouse, the clerk dropped a bomb on us: state law required a mandatory thirty-day waiting period. Thirty days trapped with a ruthless, manipulative stranger. I had to find a way to break his leverage before the month was up.

7.4
In a city where data is power and truth is a weapon, some secrets are worth killing for.
Mara Quinn is a ghost in the system, an underground journalist known only as Cipher, feared by corporations and hunted by those with everything to lose. When she breaches a classified network inside Axiom Industries, she uncovers something no one was meant to see: ORACLE, a predictive AI capable of shaping human behavior on a global scale.
She expects retaliation. She doesn't expect Kael Draven.
Cold, brilliant, and untouchable, Kael is the architect behind Axiom's empire, and a man who doesn't make threats he can't execute. Instead of silencing Mara, he offers her a choice: work under his watch, or disappear from existence entirely. Trapped inside his glass fortress known as The Spire, Mara is pulled deeper into a world of surveillance, manipulation, and power plays that stretch far beyond anything she imagined.
But ORACLE isn't just a tool, it's already been used. Governments have fallen. Empires have shifted. And someone else is pulling the strings.
As a rival syndicate closes in and a hidden war erupts across the city, Mara and Kael are forced into an uneasy alliance, one built on intellect, suspicion, and a dangerous, undeniable pull neither of them can ignore.
Because in a world where every move is predicted...
the only thing more dangerous than control is feeling.
And the system is already watching.

7.2
Allie Patterson poured fifteen years into her husband Grayson’s tech startup, living in a cramped San Jose apartment. Every penny, every late night coding session, was for their shared future, built on his constant claims the company struggled, always on the verge of its big break.
Then, a grant deed arrived: a stunning $4.2 million Atherton villa, paid in full, listing Grayson and an unknown Kacey Schmidt as joint tenants.
Her coffee mug shattered as Allie’s world imploded. Driving to the mansion, she found Kacey in silk pajamas, flaunting a massive pink diamond and, beneath it, Grayson’s grandmother’s heirloom ring – the one he’d tearfully claimed to have lost years ago.
Kacey purred, "He's in the shower. We were so tired last night."
The words were a serrated knife, twisting, confirming years of lies.
Humiliation and rage burned out, leaving a terrifying, absolute silence. All her sacrifice and trust were a cruel, elaborate joke, orchestrated by the man she loved.
Allie calmly took photos, then gave herself one minute in her beat-up car to mourn. When it passed, her tears stopped, replaced by cold, calculated murder in her eyes. She typed a text to Grayson:
"Come home early tonight. I have a surprise for you."

9.2
When Alma's father stood in front of the bulldozers to protest, the energy company's thugs beat him half to death in the mud.
Instead of arresting the attackers, the police handcuffed her bleeding father and threw him into a cruiser.
"Stay back, kid," the officer barked, shoving Alma away.
Her father was denied bail and framed for assaulting an officer. The corrupt mayor just smiled and told her not to cause a scene. Meanwhile, the company mailed her weeping mother a severance check that barely covered a month of groceries.
Alma was forced to watch her family be completely destroyed by men with money and power.
Kneeling in the cold dirt where her father's blood had spilled, she didn't shed a single tear. The panic in her chest died, replaced by a cold, absolute hatred.
She realized that crying wouldn't do anything. In this world, justice didn't exist for the weak.
Years later, Alma stepped onto a prestigious Ivy League campus, her cheap backpack slung over her shoulder.
She was surrounded by the arrogant children of the very executives who ruined her life.
She lowered her head, hiding her dead eyes, and put on the perfect mask of a timid, helpless charity case.
Undergrad was just a training ground, and these elite kids were just her practice dummies. The hunt was officially on.

7.9
I was in the kitchen of the Vance mansion, slicing black truffles worth more than my car while my mother-in-law, Victoria, mocked my "backwoods" origins. My back throbbed from standing for six hours, and my head spun from the chronic anemia I’d developed since marrying into this family.
Suddenly, my phone vibrated with a call from my husband, Julian. He didn't ask if I was okay or if I’d eaten; he simply ordered me to get to the hospital because his "fragile" friend Caroline needed another emergency blood transfusion.
"Her hemoglobin is low, Seraphina. Get to St. Luke's now."
I looked down at my left arm, which was a roadmap of bruises and needle marks hidden beneath my sweater. When I tried to tell him that the medical guidelines forbade donating again so soon, Julian’s voice turned dangerous.
"I don't care about guidelines. She’s in crisis, and your anemia is manageable. Are you really going to be this selfish after the life we gave you?"
Seconds later, a photo arrived from an unknown number. It showed Julian sitting on Caroline’s hospital bed, tenderly feeding her apples. The text underneath was a visceral slap in the face: "He wouldn't even eat dinner with you, but he's feeding me. Thanks for the refill, blood bag."
At that moment, something inside me finally snapped. I realized that to the Vances, I wasn't a wife or even a human being—I was a biological spare part, a servant they kept around only to be drained dry for a woman who was faking her illness.
I untied my apron, dropped it into the trash, and walked past a screaming Victoria toward the front door. I picked up the phone and dialed the one number I had been forbidden to contact since my wedding day.
"Mr. Henderson, it's Seraphina Sterling. Prepare the divorce papers. And if they contest it... burn their entire empire to the ground."

9.2
For three years, I was the one scrubbing the scent of blood from his hands and holding him while he screamed in pain. I was the one who taught Coleton Barron how to walk again after the car bomb nearly took his legs.
But the moment he reclaimed his seat as Don, I became invisible.
At his recovery gala, he draped his arm around Charly—the woman who fled when he was crippled—and laughed as he told his inner circle I was "just the hired help."
It didn't stop at insults. When Charly faked a fall, he shoved me aside with enough force to crack my skull against the pool edge.
When a bomb went off in a gallery, he looked me in the eye, saw me trapped under debris, and turned his back to carry her to safety instead.
He even held a gun to my head because she lied about me poisoning his soup.
His mother threw a check at me, telling me that tools go back in the box when the job is done. They thought I would beg to stay. They thought I was weak.
I took the five million and vanished without a word.
Three years later, I returned to New York. Not as his nurse, but as the fiancée of the only man Coleton fears.
And when he saw the diamond on my finger, the King of New York finally realized he had thrown away his only lifeline.