Follow
Chapters
Share
Betrayal in Dance Team Novel Cover

Betrayal in Dance Team

The fluorescent lights in the practice room buzzed overhead, casting harsh shadows across the polished floor where our team had gathered for what Grayson called an "important announcement." I sat cross-legged on the mat, my fingers unconsciously tracing the familiar dragon dance movements against my thigh—a nervous habit I'd developed over years of performing. Something in Grayson's tone had set my teeth on edge. "I've made a decision about our championship routine," Grayson said, his voice carrying that overly cheerful note he used when he knew he was about to say something controversial. He stood at the front of the room, hands clasped behind his back like he was addressing a board meeting instead of the team we'd built together from nothing. "Nina will be taking the tail position for the three-meter platform sequence." The words hit me like a physical blow. I felt my spine straighten, every muscle in my body tensing as the implications crashed over me. Nina Austin—who'd joined our team barely two months ago—taking the most crucial support position in our signature routine? "Are you serious?" The words escaped before I could stop them, sharp and incredulous. Around the room, I caught the shocked expressions of Marcus Chen and the other senior members. Even they understood how insane this was.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The fluorescent lights in the practice room buzzed overhead, casting harsh shadows across the polished floor where our team had gathered for what Grayson called an "important announcement." I sat cross-legged on the mat, my fingers unconsciously tracing the familiar dragon dance movements against my thigh—a nervous habit I'd developed over years of performing. Something in Grayson's tone had set my teeth on edge.

"I've made a decision about our championship routine," Grayson said, his voice carrying that overly cheerful note he used when he knew he was about to say something controversial. He stood at the front of the room, hands clasped behind his back like he was addressing a board meeting instead of the team we'd built together from nothing. "Nina will be taking the tail position for the three-meter platform sequence."

The words hit me like a physical blow. I felt my spine straighten, every muscle in my body tensing as the implications crashed over me. Nina Austin—who'd joined our team barely two months ago—taking the most crucial support position in our signature routine?

"Are you serious?" The words escaped before I could stop them, sharp and incredulous. Around the room, I caught the shocked expressions of Marcus Chen and the other senior members. Even they understood how insane this was.

Grayson's jaw tightened, but he maintained that diplomatic smile that had started appearing more frequently lately. "Soleil, I know this is unexpected, but Nina has been working incredibly hard, and I think she deserves the opportunity to—"

"Opportunity?" I pushed myself to my feet, my heart hammering against my ribs. "Grayson, the tail position isn't an opportunity—it's a responsibility. The entire routine depends on perfect timing and support. One mistake and someone gets seriously hurt."

Nina, who'd been sitting quietly in the corner, looked up with those wide, innocent eyes that had somehow convinced everyone she was some kind of dragon dance prodigy. "I understand the pressure, Soleil. My grandmother always said that the tail dancer carries the spirit of the dragon. It's in my blood."

There it was again—that fabricated story about her supposed cultural heritage that made my skin crawl. I'd watched Nina during practice sessions, seen how she fumbled basic transitions and missed crucial timing cues. She was adequate at ground-level choreography, but the platform work required split-second precision that took years to develop.

"Your blood won't help you catch me when I'm falling from three meters up," I said, my voice deadly calm despite the fury building in my chest. "This isn't about heritage or opportunity—it's about competence and safety."

Grayson stepped forward, and I saw something in his expression that made my stomach drop. He looked at me like I was being unreasonable, like I was the problem in this equation. "Sol, I need you to trust my judgment here. Nina has been putting in extra hours, and frankly, your attitude toward new team members has been...unwelcoming."

The accusation landed like a slap. Unwelcoming? I'd spent countless hours helping every new member who'd joined our team, sharing techniques I'd perfected through years of practice. But apparently, my professional assessment of Nina's abilities was now "unwelcoming."

"My attitude?" I repeated, my voice rising despite my efforts to stay controlled. "Grayson, I've been watching her in practice. She doesn't understand the fundamentals of support work. Yesterday, she nearly dropped Marcus during a basic lift sequence."

"That was an accident," Nina interjected, her voice trembling with what sounded like hurt feelings. "I'm still learning the team's specific techniques. Maybe if I had more guidance from the captain..."

The implication hung in the air like poison. She was suggesting that her inadequacies were somehow my fault, that I hadn't been doing my job as captain. I stared at her, seeing clearly for the first time how expertly she'd been playing this game—positioning herself as the victim while undermining my authority.

"I've offered guidance," I said through gritted teeth. "You've ignored every correction I've given you."

Grayson held up his hands like he was mediating a dispute between children. "Look, the decision is made. We have three weeks to perfect the routine, and I believe Nina can handle it. I need everyone to support this choice and work together as a team."

The finality in his voice hit me harder than his words. This wasn't a discussion—it was a decree. He'd already made up his mind, probably after one of Nina's private conversations where she played the struggling newcomer who just needed someone to believe in her.

I looked around the room at my teammates—people I'd trained with, performed with, bled with. Most of them avoided my eyes, uncomfortable with the tension but unwilling to challenge Grayson's authority. Only Marcus met my gaze, and I saw my own concerns reflected in his expression.

"Fine," I said finally, the word tasting bitter on my tongue. "But when this goes wrong—and it will go wrong—remember that I warned you."

The silence that followed felt like a funeral shroud settling over everything we'd built together.

You may also like

Boys Like Him Novel Cover
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.
From Asylum to Empire: Her Sweet Revenge Novel Cover
9.3
The scent of lilies still clung to my clothes, a cloying reminder of my daughter Shannon' s tiny casket, yet it was the stench of betrayal that truly choked me. At her graveside, I saw Harlow Faulkner, my closest friend, standing too close to my husband Antonio, her hand possessively on his arm. Then, Antonio hissed, "Francesca, darling, not now," his smile pasted on for onlookers, but his eyes were ice. He' d brought me breakfast in bed, protected me from critics, built an empire with me. Now, he was a stranger. My accusation ripped from me: "You left her alone, Harlow! You left my baby alone, and she died!" Harlow whimpered, "It was SIDS, a tragic accident." Antonio roared, "You're making a scene!" He then revealed the nanny cam was "broken," confirming my darkest fear: he knew. He was part of it. When Antonio' s hand instinctively went to Harlow' s stomach, whispering, "Is the baby alright?" my world shattered. He had a new family. He was erasing Shannon, erasing me. They sent me to an institution, electroshocked and drugged me, then forced me to sign divorce papers. But as I lay broken, a cold, diamond-sharp resolve hardened within me. He thought he could erase me. I would remember everything.
He Chose His Mistress Over Our Unborn Child Novel Cover
9.1
I had been waiting for five years. My boyfriend had finally completed his assignment and retired from the special forces, ready to come back and marry me. But then I discovered thirty-six letters among his possessions. These letters were written before he embarked on his overseas missions, filled with longing for the person he truly loved—and that person wasn't me. Clutching the pregnancy test report, my heart shattered as I arrived at the peak of the snowy mountain, only to see Vincent, always so proud, kneeling before Arabella Ortiz. "Arabella, please give me a chance to make things right. If you're willing, I'll marry you immediately," he pleaded passionately, his voice full of desperation. I tore the pregnancy report to pieces and let them flutter across the snowy peaks, deciding to leave. But on the day of the wedding, everything spiraled out of control. On the summit of the mountain, at an altitude of 15,354 feet, I stood among the crowd, witnessing the proposal of my boyfriend of seven years.
He Chose Them, I Lost Everything Novel Cover
9.1
My husband Dorian and I clawed our way out of the foster system together, building a software empire from scratch. He was my hero, the man who swore he' d always protect me. But he became obsessed with "saving" a manipulative single mother, draining our accounts and our marriage. I thought the baby I was secretly carrying could be the bridge to bring him back to me. Then, at my first prenatal appointment, her son attacked me. He rammed his head into my stomach, and a universe of pain exploded inside me as I collapsed, bleeding on the cold hospital floor. I begged Dorian for help. He looked from my pale face to the wailing child, and made his choice. "You need to get a grip," he said coldly, scooping the boy into his arms and walking away, leaving me to lose our child alone. He let our first baby die, and now our second. His love was a lie. So I sent him a final gift to remember me by-the divorce papers, and a small jar containing the body of the son he abandoned.
Old Team's Costly Mistake Novel Cover
8.6
The notification pinged on my screen at 11:47 PM, just as I was reviewing tomorrow's strategy notes. A routine team communication update—except nothing about what I saw was routine. My fingers trembled as I scrolled through the internal message thread. There it was, buried in the administrative notifications: a bet. A goddamn bet between Marshall and Kyla about my performance metrics. The words blurred as I read them again, my chest tightening with each detail. They'd wagered on whether I'd maintain my current win rate, discussing my strategic calls like I was some experimental variable in their twisted game. But that wasn't the worst part. My resignation letter—formatted, submitted, and officially processed—sat in the management queue with my digital signature forged at the bottom. The timestamp showed it had been filed three days ago, right after our championship celebration.
Revenge Of The Wife They Sold Novel Cover
8.4
My husband, Brock, wanted to sell me out. Literally. His plan was to drug me and deliver me to his boss, all for the sake of a promotion. But what he didn't know was that my boss, Gill Webb, was gay. He was interested in my husband, not me. He looked me in the eye and asked, “Adeline, you don't want to lose your job, do you?” I sighed, weary to my bones. I really needed this job. After my husband fell into a drugged stupor, my boss appeared at the bedroom door.