
Billionaire's Fake Savior: Unmasking The Truth
I was a disgraced heiress hiding as a dishwasher in a high-end club, scrubbing lipstick off glasses until my fingers went numb. One night, I was forced to deliver a bottle of vintage whiskey to the penthouse, only to find the tech billionaire Kenan Cervantes collapsing from a lethal neural storm. I used my surgeon’s training to save his life, holding him in the dark until his fever finally broke.
The next morning, the world I knew shattered. My coworker Tiffany, who hadn't even stepped foot in the room, claimed my identity as the savior. She signed a non-disclosure agreement and walked away with a $200,000 check, while I was accused of stealing the whiskey and had my entire month's wages forfeited as punishment.
While Tiffany was flaunting Chanel suits and posting photos from his balcony, I was being shoved into the mud by my abusive foster father in a dark alley. I watched from the shadows as Kenan stepped into his luxury car, looking right through me with nothing but cold distaste. To him, I was just "street trash" cluttering the sidewalk, while the imposter was the "angel" who had stabilized his heart.
The injustice felt like a physical weight. I had quieted the noise in his brain and kept him from the brink of death, yet I was the one facing eviction and hunger. I didn't understand how he could be a genius and still be so blind to the truth, rewarding a thief while I rotted in the basement.
Everything reached a breaking point when Tiffany forced me to sneak into his penthouse to help her maintain the lie. But Kenan returned from Tokyo early, finding me on the terrace with his military-grade protection dog. The beast that had tried to bite Tiffany was now resting its head in my lap, protecting me from its own master.
Kenan dropped his briefcase, his eyes locking onto mine as the fragmented memories of the storm finally clicked into place.
"You," he whispered.
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Chapter 1
The steam rising from the industrial dishwasher was hot enough to scald, but Imogene Coffey couldn't feel her fingertips anymore. They were numb, wrinkled, and raw from six hours of scrubbing lipstick stains off crystal flutes. The noise in the back of the club was a constant, thumping bass that vibrated through the stainless steel counters and into the soles of her cheap sneakers. She wasn't Imogene here. She was just the girl who didn't speak much, the one with the oversized glasses and the hair always pulled back in a severe, messy bun.
Manager Chen kicked the swinging door open. It hit the wall with a violence that made Imogene flinch, a reflex she hadn't been able to train out of her system in the three months she'd been working here. Three months that felt like an eternity. Chen looked frantic. He was clutching a bottle of whiskey like it was a holy relic.
"Where is Sophie?" Chen barked, scanning the cramped kitchen.
Imogene didn't look up from the sink. Her mind, a surgeon's mind, clinically noted the burst capillaries in his eyes, the tremor in his hand. Classic signs of prolonged, high-level stress. He was a heart attack waiting to happen. "Bathroom. Retouching."
"Useless," Chen spat. He marched over to Imogene and slammed a silver tray onto the wet counter next to her. He placed the bottle on it. It was a Macallan, 1940. Imogene knew the year without looking at the label; she knew the shape of the bottle from a life she had buried. "You. Take this up. Now."
Imogene wiped her hands on her apron. "My shift ended ten minutes ago, Mr. Chen. I have to catch the last train."
"You want your tips for the week?" Chen leaned in, his breath smelling of stale coffee and stress. "Top floor. Penthouse suite. Five minutes. Or you walk out of here with empty pockets."
Imogene looked at the tray. She needed that money. Her rent was two weeks late, and her landlord had stopped accepting excuses. She untied her apron, revealing the ill-fitting black uniform underneath. "Fine."
She took the tray. The bottle was heavy. She moved through the kitchen, keeping her head down as she navigated the service corridor. The bass got louder as she approached the floor, but she bypassed the crowd, slipping into the service elevator alcove. The security guard, a man named Miller who spent most of his shift playing games on his phone, barely glanced at her.
"Penthouse run?" Miller asked, holding up a scanner.
"Unfortunately," Imogene said.
She leaned forward. Instead of a retinal scanner, Miller held up a simple keycard reader. He swiped a generic, black temporary access card. The machine beeped. Access Denied.
Miller frowned, swiping it again. Access Denied. He grunted in frustration. "Damn system's been glitching all night. Static interference or something. Hold on." He typed an override code into a keypad. The machine whirred and beeped again. Temporary Authorization Granted.
The doors slid open. Imogene stepped inside. The mirrored walls reflected a woman she barely recognized. The uniform hung loosely on her frame. Her glasses slid down her nose. She pushed them up with a wet knuckle. She looked like a ghost, or a burnout, exactly what she wanted the world to see.
The elevator ascended smoothly, leaving the noise of the club behind. The silence grew heavier with every floor. When the doors opened, the air changed. It was colder here. It smelled of expensive sandalwood and clinical disinfectant.
The hallway was empty. The lighting was recessed, creating sharp angles and long shadows. It felt less like a home and more like a vault. Imogene walked to the double doors at the end of the hall. She balanced the tray on one hand and pressed the doorbell.
Silence.
She waited. Chen had said five minutes. She didn't have time to wait for a rich man to finish a phone call. She pressed the button again. Still nothing. Then, a soft click echoed from the lock. The mechanism whirred, and the door unlatched.
Imogene took a breath and pushed the door open.
The suite was dark. The only light came from the floor-to-ceiling windows that offered a panoramic view of the Manhattan skyline. The city looked like a circuit board from up here, all electricity and cold logic. From the far side of the room, near the terrace, she heard a faint, rhythmic scratching sound. Like a dog wanting to be let in.
"Hello?" Imogene called out. Her voice was swallowed by the size of the room.
No answer.
She stepped into the foyer. There was a console table near the entrance. She would leave the whiskey there and go. She set the tray down, the silver making a soft clink against the marble.
"Delivery," she whispered to the empty room.
She turned to leave. As her heel pressed into the plush carpet near the door, a sensor triggered. A red light blinked on a panel she hadn't noticed before.
"Visitor confirmed," a synthetic voice announced. "Security protocol locked."
The heavy wooden door behind her swung shut. It slammed with a finality that made Imogene's heart stutter. She lunged for the handle, twisting it. Locked.
"Hey!" She pounded on the wood. "Let me out!"
The silence that followed was absolute. The soundproofing was military-grade. She pulled her phone from her pocket. No Service. Of course. High-security penthouses often had Faraday cages or jammers.
Panic, cold and familiar, began to rise in her chest. She wasn't just trapped; she was exposed. She turned back to the room.
Crash.
The sound came from the shadows of the living area. It was the sound of glass shattering. Imogene froze. She wasn't alone.
"Who's there?" she asked, her voice trembling.
Heavy breathing answered her. It was ragged, wet, and uneven. It sounded like an animal in a trap.
Imogene's hand drifted back to the tray she had just set down. Her fingers curled around the handle of the silver fruit knife meant for the garnish. She slid it into the sleeve of her uniform, the metal cold against her wrist.
A figure emerged from the darkness of the hallway leading to the bedrooms.
He was tall. Even in the low light, he was imposing. He stumbled, his shoulder clipping a tall, abstract metal sculpture. The sculpture wobbled and fell, hitting the floor with a deafening clang. The man didn't seem to notice.
He stepped into the strip of moonlight near the window.
Kenan Cervantes.
Imogene recognized him from the magazines Clair used to leave on the coffee table. The tech genius. The man trying to merge human consciousness with machines. But the man standing there didn't look like a visionary.
He looked like a wreck.
His shirt was torn open. His chest was heaving. But it was his face that terrified her. His eyes were bloodshot, the pupils blown wide. He was sweating profusely, his hair plastered to his forehead. He looked at her, but he didn't seem to see a waitress. He looked at her with a predatory focus, his jaw clenched so hard a muscle feathered in his cheek.
"Stop the noise," he rasped. His voice was a growl.
Imogene backed up until her spine hit the locked door. "I'm just the delivery girl. Let me out."
Kenan took a step forward. He swayed, then corrected his balance with terrifying speed. He wasn't drunk. This was something else.
"Code," he muttered. "It's in the code."
He lunged.
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7.1
Hana never planned to fall into the world of Kang Jae-Hyun.
She was just a struggling young woman trying to support her family when a single mistake brought her face-to-face with Seoul's coldest and most powerful CEO. What began as a contract - a fake engagement meant to satisfy a ruthless family and protect a fragile empire - quickly turns into something far more dangerous.
Behind Jae-Hyun's flawless image lies grief, pressure, and a heart he locked away long ago. Behind Hana's warm smile is quiet resilience and scars she never talks about.
As secrets surface, enemies close in, and the line between pretend and real begins to blur, Hana must decide:
Was this relationship ever just business - or was it always fate?
A slow-burn romance filled with tension, secrets, and a love that wasn't supposed to happen.

8.5
For two years, I was the perfect shadow of another woman. I wore the silk robes Brittain Austin bought, styled my hair exactly how he liked, and spoke in a voice pitched half an octave higher than my own. I was a placeholder, a living statue in a minimalist Manhattan penthouse, waiting for a man who looked at me but never actually saw me.
Everything shattered when a news alert flashed on my phone: "Caryn Newman Spotted at JFK." The original was back. The woman I was hired to mimic had returned to claim her throne, and my secret two-year contract as her stand-in was set to expire in three days.
Brittain didn't even give me the courtesy of a phone call. While he was supposed to be on a business trip, photos surfaced of him shielding Caryn from the paparazzi, his hand on her waist with a tenderness he never showed me. When I walked into his office to return his keys, he didn't look guilty; he just looked annoyed. He pulled out a checkbook and asked, "How much for the hurt feelings?" When I refused his money, he coldly ordered his assistant to freeze every one of my accounts before I even reached the elevator.
I stood on the sidewalk with zero dollars, realizing that to him, I wasn't a partner—I was just an expired lease. I had spent two years erasing my soul to fit into his world, only to be tossed out like trash the moment the real thing came home.
But Brittain forgot one thing: before I was his doll, I was an actress. I pulled my secret weapon from under the bed—a notebook and a raw film cut he never knew existed. I called my agent and launched a high-profile "showmance" with my co-star that set the internet on fire.
As I blocked Brittain's number and moved into a dusty apartment in Queens, I realized the show wasn't over. For the first time, I was the leading lady.

8.6
On the night of her third wedding anniversary, Isabella Hart discovered her husband in another woman's bed.
By morning, she was divorced.
Humiliated. Replaced. Erased.
After three years of loving a man who treated her like a shadow in her own marriage, Isabella walks away with nothing but her pride - and a secret she refuses to tell him.
But fate has a cruel sense of humor.
Hours after signing the divorce papers, she accidentally marries the most powerful and dangerously untouchable man in the city - billionaire CEO Alexander Laurent - in a legally binding contract mistake that cannot be undone.
Alexander needs a wife to secure his inheritance.
Isabella needs revenge.
What begins as a cold-blooded deal soon turns into something neither of them expected.
Because her ex-husband suddenly wants her back.
And this time... she's no longer the woman he threw away.
But when secrets unravel and the truth about that anniversary night comes to light, Isabella must decide-
Is this marriage her salvation... or her greatest mistake?

8.2
For five years, I was the invisible glue holding Damien Crawford together. I was the one who pulled him from a burning car until the skin melted off my back, and I was the one who donated bone marrow when he was on death's door. I even gave up a full-ride scholarship to MIT just to be his nurse.
Yet, he believed his mistress, Hadley, was his savior. To him, I was just the maid's daughter who changed his bedpans—a piece of furniture he could abuse while he planned his wedding to another woman.
But his cruelty didn't stop at verbal abuse. When my father suffered a massive heart attack, Damien refused to let me use the car, choosing to comfort Hadley over a fake panic attack instead.
His mother even slashed the tires to ensure I couldn't leave.
While my father died cold and alone, Damien stabbed a needle into my hand just to teach me a lesson about "respect," oblivious to the fact that the scars on my skin were the receipt for his life.
He didn't know he was torturing the only person who had ever truly loved him. But the girl who begged for crumbs of affection died along with her father that day.
I picked up my phone and dialed the number saved simply as a dot.
"He's dead," I whispered to the man on the other end—Anderson Morrison, the city's most feared Don and my sworn protector.
"I'm coming," he replied, his voice lethal. "And I'm bringing the army."
It was time to show Damien that he hadn't just mistreated a maid; he had declared war on a Queen.

7.7
Silas Vane, a billionaire on the edge of ruin, needs his ex-wife's signature to save his tech empire-and June Ashby, his scorned orchard-owning ex, wants only one thing: to make him suffer.
The deal is brutal, simple, and non-negotiable: Silas must move back to their small hometown, trade his silk suits for calloused hands, and work the orchard harvest for six months. Worse? He has to play her doting husband for the press-fake marriage, real contract, no room for error.
What starts as a revenge-fueled game quickly spirals. As the sun dips below the orchard trees, old sparks reignite, and the line between fake and real blurs into something dangerous.
Silas came to town for a patent to save his empire. But he might just walk away with a broken contract-and a heart completely owned by the woman who set out to destroy him.

9.7
Giana woke up drugged and burning with fever in a luxurious hotel suite. Standing before her was Cornel Stark, the most ruthless billionaire in New York.
Memories of her past life stabbed into her brain. In that life, her adoptive family and her fiancé Gary had stolen her inheritance and left her to die a brutal, agonizing death.
She also remembered how fighting Cornel only made him more violent. So this time, she didn't scream.
She endured his brutal punishment, escaped the moment he let his guard down, and swallowed a Plan B pill on the freezing streets.
Returning to her adoptive family's mansion, she faced the people who had destroyed her. Her fiancé and her stepsister put on masks of fake concern, secretly mocking her.
Instead of throwing a useless tantrum like before, Giana deliberately threw herself down the steep wooden stairs.
She smashed her head against the marble floor, using her own blood to shatter their plans and win back her mother's trust.
She thought she had finally taken control. She was ready to crush the people who had betrayed her and live for herself.
But she didn't understand why the billionaire she had just escaped was suddenly turning her life upside down.
When she woke up in the hospital, her room wasn't filled with her family's fake tears, but an ocean of blood-red roses.
The heavy door swung open, and Cornel Stark walked in, his gray eyes locking onto her with a dark, predatory hunger.
"Remember this feeling, Giana. Every breath you take belongs to me now."