
Betrayed Bride: Claimed By The Best Man
Kloe Guthrie dragged her crystal-encrusted wedding gown down the penthouse corridor, exhausted but ready to finally be alone with her new husband, Justen.
But as she passed the presidential suite, a familiar, cloying perfume stopped her. Through the cracked door, she saw Justen brutally thrusting into her cousin, Candyce.
"Like fucking a corpse with Kloe," Justen grunted, his voice thick with lust. "Worth it for the trust fund control, though."
Candyce giggled, mocking Kloe's pathetic gratitude.
Shattered, Kloe stumbled backward in the dark, only to be caught by Julian Larsen—Justen's billionaire best man.
Instead of offering sympathy, Julian trapped her against the wall. He forced her to listen to her husband's cruel mockery, then dragged her into the opposite suite, tearing off her wedding dress and dismantling her dignity piece by piece.
Everything she had believed for four years was a meticulously calculated lie.
She was nothing but a boring prop to the man she loved, a naive fool meant to be drained of her family's immense wealth and laughed at behind closed doors. The humiliation and betrayal burned through her veins like acid.
"You could cry," Julian whispered against her neck, his eyes predatory and dark. "Or you could make him regret he was ever born."
Instead of running from the man cornering her in the dark, Kloe looked at the destroyed remains of her life, grabbed Julian's collar, and pulled him in.
This time, she would make them all pay.
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Chapter 1
The elevator doors slid open with a soft chime, and Kloe Guthrie stepped onto the plush carpet of the Starlight Hotel's penthouse corridor. Her fingers ached from gripping the heavy crystal-encrusted skirt of her wedding gown, thousands of Swarovski elements catching the dim light like scattered stars. She'd been shaking hands and air-kissing cheeks for six hours straight, and her palm still felt stiff from the repetitive motion.
Her ankles burned. The four-inch Louboutins she'd insisted on-because Justen loved how they made her legs look-had rubbed raw blisters into her heels with every step. She slowed her pace, wincing as the leather scraped against broken skin.
Kloe fumbled with her satin clutch, extracting the gold-embossed keycard. Her fingers, swollen from the evening's exertion, struggled to find purchase on the smooth plastic. She needed to get inside, peel off this forty-pound dress, and soak in a hot bath before Justen finished his cigars with the groomsmen.
The corridor stretched before her, lit by antique wall sconces that cast pools of amber light between stretches of shadow. As she passed the third doorway, something stopped her. A scent, foreign and wrong, threading through the recycled air of the climate-controlled hallway.
Cheap perfume. Sweet, cloying, aggressively floral.
Kloe's nose wrinkled. She knew that scent. Candyce had bathed in it since they were teenagers, declaring it "her signature" despite every department store in Manhattan carrying identical bottles in their discount bins. Her cousin had worn it tonight, dousing herself before the ceremony while complaining that Kloe's Vera Wang made her own cocktail dress look "intentionally understated."
What was Candyce doing on the penthouse floor?
Kloe took two more steps. The presidential suite loomed at the corridor's end, its mahogany door slightly ajar. A sliver of warm light cut across the carpet from the gap.
Then she heard it.
A sound, breathy and damp, pushed through the crack in the door. It hit Kloe's eardrum like a physical blow-a woman's moan, pitched high and theatrical, the kind of performance Candyce had perfected in high school theater.
Kloe's heart slammed against her ribs. She stopped breathing. Her body moved forward without her permission, drawn by some horrible magnetic pull, until her eye aligned with the door's edge.
Inside, the suite's sitting room was visible. The Tiffany lamp cast everything in sickly gold. On the cream-colored sofa, two bodies moved in a rhythm Kloe recognized but had never seen from this angle. Candyce's red nails dug into broad shoulders. Justen's hands gripped her cousin's waist, his watch-a gift from Kloe's father-glinting under the lamp with every brutal thrust.
"God, you're so much better than her," Justen grunted, his voice thick with liquor and lust. "Like fucking a corpse with Kloe. This face, this body-this is what I wanted."
Candyce giggled, the sound like breaking glass. "You should have seen her face when you put the ring on. So grateful. So pathetic."
"Four years of playing the devoted fiancé." Justen's laugh was ugly, wet. "Worth it for the trust fund control, though. Her grandmother's lawyer finally signed off yesterday. Once we're married, I can start moving assets."
Kloe's stomach heaved. The keycard slipped from her numb fingers, landing on the carpet with a barely audible thud. But in the ringing silence of Kloe's mind, the sound was a gunshot, deafening and final, shattering whatever fragile denial she had left.
She stumbled backward, her shoulder blades colliding with something hard and ceramic. A display pedestal. An antique vase-Ming dynasty, on loan from the hotel's private collection-wobbled violently, its curved belly tilting toward the marble floor.
Her hands flew out instinctively, a desperate, futile gesture to catch the priceless ceramic before it hit the floor. She braced for the inevitable crash, the shouting, the humiliation of being discovered here, listening to her fiancé fuck her cousin on their wedding night.
The impact never came.
A hand shot from the shadows, large and certain, catching the vase's base before it shattered. The Patek Philippe on the wrist caught the light-platinum, complicated, worth more than Kloe's car.
She opened her eyes.
Black wool. Impeccable tailoring. The scent of Cuban tobacco and wintergreen cutting through Candyce's cheap perfume.
Julian Larsen stepped fully into the corridor's dim light, his tie loosened, his dark hair mussed in a way that suggested he'd been running his hands through it. His eyes-gray-green, predatory, amused-fixed on her with the intensity of a man watching prey walk into his trap.
Kloe knew him. Everyone knew Julian Larsen. Justen's best man, his college roommate, his "brother from another mother" who'd flown in from Singapore for the wedding. The man who'd toasted them three hours ago with a speech about loyalty and lifelong friendship.
Had he been standing there the whole time? Had he watched her entire world crumble while she stood there like a naive fool? The thought sent a fresh wave of humiliation through her, hot and corrosive.
Shame flooded Kloe's veins, hot and corrosive. She tried to sidestep, to flee, but Julian moved with her, his broad shoulders blocking the path to the elevator. He advanced one step. Then another. Until her back pressed against the wall and his body created a cage of heat and expensive fabric between her and the rest of the world.
From behind the mahogany door, Justen's voice rose in a mockery of intimacy. "Kloe's probably asleep already. Poor thing was exhausted from all that smiling. Like a doll, you know? Pretty to look at, but nothing happening upstairs or downstairs."
Julian's breath ghosted across her earlobe, warm and deliberate. "So," his voice was a low murmur against her ear, the vibration traveling down her spine. "You could scream and cry. Or you could make him regret he was ever born. The choice is yours. But you only have ten seconds to decide."
Kloe's head snapped up. She met his gaze directly, her voice a ragged whisper. "Are you enjoying this? Watching me fall apart?"
Julian's thumb rose, tracing the sweat-dampened hair at her temple with a gentleness that contradicted everything in his stance. The touch sent a shiver through her that had nothing to do with the air conditioning.
"I don't enjoy watching," he said. His eyes dropped to her mouth, held there. "But I'm very interested in participating."
The door behind them rattled-Justen shifting position, Candyce's giggle cutting through the wood. Kloe's nails dug into her palms, breaking skin. She felt the wetness of blood, the distant pulse of pain.
Julian's hand dropped, capturing her bleeding fist. His thumb pressed hard into the crescent-shaped wound, sending a bright spike of sensation up her arm.
"Room next door," he said, his voice dropping to a register that vibrated in her chest. "Different room. Different man. Different ending to your wedding night."
Kloe stared at him. At the predator's patience in his eyes. At the certainty that he would wait forever for her answer, that he had nowhere else to be, that this moment-her humiliation, her rage, her desperate need to be someone other than the pathetic bride in the corridor-was exactly what he'd been waiting for.
Her fingers found his lapel. Clenched. Pulled.
Julian's mouth curved, satisfaction and something darker flashing across his features. His arm locked around her waist, lifting her slightly off her feet. With one backward kick, the door to the opposite suite swung open, and the darkness swallowed them both.
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7.6
Johana walked half a mile through a brutal blizzard just to secure a tutoring job with the elite Black family.
But the very night she was hired, she received a terrifying call from the ER—her quiet roommate, Hazelle, had been drugged and severely traumatized at a Hamptons party.
When Johana rushed to the hospital, she didn't find the police. Instead, she found a team of ruthless billionaires erasing the crime.
Leading them was Dalton Black, the cold, arrogant older brother of her new student.
Within minutes, Dalton's fixers wiped the hospital's security footage, deleted all digital evidence, and forcefully transferred Hazelle to a locked private psychiatric facility.
"We are ensuring her privacy."
Dalton's voice was devoid of emotion, treating the horrific assault like a minor PR glitch.
His friends mocked Johana's powerlessness, while Dalton authorized a blank check to pay for the private ward, effectively burying the scandal and buying their silence.
Johana stood in the sterile hallway, trembling with a mix of despair and absolute rage.
How could they destroy an innocent girl's life and simply pay to make it disappear? Why was the truth so easily erased by money?
She had no wealth, no connections, and no proof, but she refused to be a victim of their cover-up.
Staring directly into Dalton's intimidating, icy blue eyes, Johana made a vow.
"I don't want your money. I will find out what you monsters did to her."
She thought the billionaire heir would crush her on the spot, but instead, he watched her walk away and quietly ordered his assistant: "Find out everything about Johana Neal."

7.4
Avery thought she'd found her happily ever after with Ethan, the charming billionaire who swept her off her feet in Willow Creek. But after one night of passion, he vanished, leaving her heartbroken and alone. She returned home to find her grandmother, her only family, had passed away.
Devastated, Avery discovered a shocking truth: she was the daughter of a millionaire who'd left her a vast fortune. Relocated to New York, she met Ethan again, but this time, he was determined to win her back. Unbeknownst to him, Avery had been hiding a life-changing secret: she's the mother of his twin babies.
As Avery navigates her complicated past and the wicked family members who despise her, Ethan's pursuit becomes relentless. He'll stop at nothing to reclaim the love they shared, but Avery's secrets threaten to tear them apart. Can she trust him with her heart and the truth about their children, or will it drive them further apart?
Ethan's words echoed in her mind: "I've been searching for you for six years, Avery. I won't let you go again." But Avery's secrets were only the beginning. Little did Ethan know, their love story was only just beginning...

8.3
For three years, I was the perfect, invisible wife to Bart Brown. On our third anniversary, I stood in the kitchen for four hours, preparing his favorite meal with imported truffles, only to receive a cold text command.
"Crysta fainted again. Get to the hospital. Now."
My rare Rh-negative blood was the only thing the Brown family valued. Bart didn't want a wife; he wanted a walking blood bank for his "sick" best friend, Crysta. While I was fainting from chronic anemia, Crysta was smirking in her hospital bed, clutching Bart's hand and mocking my "peasant" lifestyle.
Even his mother treated me like a servant, demanding I vacuum the floors after I'd already offered my veins for the hundredth time. When I finally reached my breaking point and signed the divorce papers, they didn't let me go quietly. They filed a false police report, accusing me of stealing a multi-million dollar diamond necklace just to watch me crawl.
I didn't understand how a family could be so heartless. I had cooked their meals, cleaned their house, and literally bled for them, yet they were determined to ruin my life the moment I stopped being useful. Did they really think I was a nobody with nowhere to go?
Standing outside the hospital with a bruised wrist and nothing to my name, I didn't cry. I simply took off my cheap wedding ring and dialed a secure line I hadn't touched since the day I married him.
"It's me, Dad," I whispered as a fleet of black Maybachs rounded the corner. "The extraction is a go. I'm coming home."

8.9
For three years, Alana acted as the sole tactical brain for the Dawnbreaker squad, keeping them alive despite being labeled a useless "Dud" Conduit.
But right before the crucial Ascension Trials, squad leader Cash handed her a corporate sponsorship contract. The condition? She had to become the "private companion" to a greasy corporate heir just so the squad could get high-tier gear.
When she refused, the teammates she had bled for unanimously voted to kick her out.
"You're just window dressing, a liability."
They revoked her safehouse access, burned her belongings, and the academy advisor even tried to force her into a state-sanctioned breeding program. They left her to freeze in the slums, betting she would desperately crawl into the rich man's bed.
What they didn't know was that her inability to summon an Eidolon wasn't a lack of talent. Her teammate Dallin had been secretly sabotaging her rituals for years, crippling her potential just to keep her chained as their free tactician.
Stripped of everything and pushed to the absolute brink, Alana's despair morphed into a deadly resolve.
Using a million-credit black market loan and a forbidden blood matrix, she forcibly anchored an Apex-Tier cosmic wolf disguised as a harmless silver pup.
When her ex-squad tried to publicly humiliate her and burn her new "pet" alive in the cafeteria, a flash of silver light severed Dallin's hand instantly.
Looking at her screaming former teammates, Alana finally smiled.

7.2
Leila never believed in fairy tales - especially not the kind sealed with signatures instead of kisses.
When a carefully structured contract binds her to billionaire Damian Black, it's supposed to be simple: public appearances, flawless smiles, and zero emotional attachment. A calculated arrangement designed to protect reputations and secure power.
But high society is watching.
Whispers follow her into every ballroom. Rumors trail behind every step she takes beside him. They call her an outsider. A contract wife. Temporary.
What they don't see is the silent tension unfolding beneath polished smiles.
Damian Black is controlled, strategic, unreadable - a man who doesn't allow weakness. Yet Leila begins to notice the subtle shifts. The possessive glances. The quiet approval in his voice. The rare moments when his composure falters... just for her.
And Leila is far from fragile.
As jealousy simmers, rivals test boundaries, and past secrets threaten to surface, the line between pretense and reality begins to blur.
What happens when a marriage built on conditions starts to demand something real?
In a world where power is currency and vulnerability is dangerous, can a contract survive the slow burn of genuine emotion?
A billionaire romance filled with tension, rumors, emotional push-and-pull, and undeniable chemistry.

7.8
Growing up as the maid's daughter in the glittering, suffocating Collins mansion, Nora Macie has perfected the art of being invisible. Enter Asher Collins. Rich, ruthless, and infuriatingly untouchable, unfortunately for Nora, her stepbrother has always had the power to ruin her with a single word.
The moment a private video she never intended anyone to see is accidentally sent straight to Asher Collins. Except Asher doesn't expose her. He becomes curious... and dangerously invested.
He will remake her. Not just into someone noticed, but into someone unforgettable, someone who commands attention the moment she walks into a room.
Suddenly, the boys who never knew her name are watching her. Through it all, Asher remains in control... or at least he should be.
Because the closer Nora gets to becoming everything he designed, the harder it becomes for him to remember that she was never meant to be his.
*
His fingers lifted, brushing lightly along the side of her throat. "I think you've been lying to yourself," he said. "Because your body already knows what it wants."
Her breath faltered. "I swear, I'll kill you if you don't back the hell up."
And then, without giving her the chance to retreat, he closed the final inch between them. "I would much rather you kiss me."