
Blackmailed Into The Ruthless Tycoon's Bed
Adaline Poole thought she had escaped her family's toxic corporate grip by moving to London and adopting a stray cat named Monty.
But when she returns to her empty apartment, her father delivers a chilling ultimatum: he has kidnapped the cat and will euthanize it by morning unless she accepts an arranged marriage with Barron Cooke, a notoriously elusive billionaire.
Her entire family becomes complicit in her sale. Her mother demands she secure their elite status, and her brother secretly spies on her social media to feed Barron her every move. Horrified to discover Barron is a thirty-three-year-old "fossil" twelve years her senior, Adaline resorts to sabotage. She goes to a Soho club, takes a scandalous photo with a frat boy, and sends it to the old billionaire to disgust him into canceling their upcoming dinner.
But her rebellion backfires horribly when the frat boy spikes her drink with a powerful narcotic. As her body burns with a terrifying, feverish heat, she collapses in a dark corridor. Stripped of her phone and betrayed by her bloodline, she is left utterly defenseless as a predator approaches to drag her away.
Suddenly, the heavy fire door is kicked open by a towering, terrifyingly handsome stranger who effortlessly neutralizes her attacker.
"Please... help me," Adaline begs, deliriously throwing her burning body into his arms.
She has absolutely no idea that the handsome savior she is clinging to is Barron Cooke himself.
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Chapter 1
Adaline Poole pushes open the heavy oak door of her Marylebone apartment.
The cold London wind slips in behind her, but inside, the silence is what hits her first. It is a suffocating, empty silence. She drops her keys onto the marble console table. The metal clatters loudly, echoing in the vast, high-ceilinged hallway.
Usually, a flash of orange fur greets her before she even takes off her coat.
"Monty?" Adaline calls out.
Her voice sounds thin in the empty space. She kicks off her Prada loafers. The leather shoes hit the hardwood floor with a dull thud. She frowns. The apartment is too quiet.
She walks into the living room, carrying a paper bag filled with expensive organic cat food. She drops the bag onto the Persian rug. It tips over. Tins of wet food roll out, clinking against each other, but Adaline does not care.
She bends down and lifts the edge of the cashmere throw blanket draped over the velvet sofa. It is Monty's favorite hiding spot.
Nothing.
Her breathing speeds up. A cold knot forms in the pit of her stomach.
She turns and runs into the kitchen. Her bare feet slap against the cold tiles. She yanks open the bottom pantry door. The hinges squeak.
The shelf is completely bare. The fifty-pound bag of dry kibble is gone. The litter box in the corner is gone. The ceramic water bowls are gone.
Her pupils dilate. The knot in her stomach twists into a sharp, physical pain.
Her hands start to shake. She reaches into the pocket of her Burberry trench coat and pulls out her iPhone. Her fingers are trembling so badly she almost drops the device onto the tile floor.
She unlocks the screen. Her thumb hovers over her contacts. She presses the name of the housekeeper back at her family's estate in Long Island, New York.
The phone rings. Each long beep feels like a needle scraping against her eardrums.
Finally, the line connects.
"Miss Adaline?" Mrs. Gable's voice is hesitant, thick with guilt.
"Who touched my apartment passcode?" Adaline demands. Her chest heaves. She does not ask how the housekeeper is doing. In the world of the New York elite, pleasantries are discarded the moment property is violated. "Where is my cat?"
"I... I am so sorry, Miss. Your father ordered it."
Adaline's jaw clenches so hard her teeth ache. Her fingernails dig into the soft flesh of her palms, leaving deep crescent-moon indentations. Her eyes burn with sudden, hot tears.
Green Poole. Her father. The man who runs his family like he runs his corporate acquisitions-with ruthless, cold-blooded efficiency.
She hangs up on the housekeeper without another word.
She scrolls down her contact list and presses the number saved as 'Green Poole (Dictator)'.
He answers on the first ring.
"Bring him back," Adaline yells the second the line opens. Her voice bounces off the pristine white walls of her kitchen. "Bring my cat back right now!"
A low, humorless chuckle comes through the speaker.
"You are wasting your time in London, Adaline," Green says. His voice is smooth, arrogant, and entirely unbothered by her panic. "Playing house with a stray animal while ignoring your responsibilities."
"My responsibilities?" Adaline laughs. It is a harsh, broken sound. "You mean my responsibility to be sold off to the highest bidder? Your reach is too long, Green. You have no right to touch my things."
"I have every right. I pay for that apartment. And as for the stray," Green pauses, letting the silence stretch to maximize her anxiety. "He has been relocated to a shelter. One much more suited for a street cat."
All the blood drains from Adaline's face.
The kitchen spins. She stumbles backward and her spine hits the edge of the granite kitchen island. She slides down until she hits the floor.
"What do you want?" Her voice shakes. The fight drains out of her, replaced by raw, physiological terror.
"I sent you a contact card on WhatsApp," Green says slowly, dictating terms like a CEO closing a hostile takeover. "A man named Barron Cooke. You will send him a friend request. Immediately."
Adaline's nose wrinkles in disgust. Her stomach churns with actual nausea.
Barron Cooke. She knows the name. Everyone in their social circle knows the Cooke family, but the heir, Barron Cooke, is notoriously elusive. He never appears in society magazines, and no one knows what he actually looks like, only that his corporate ruthlessness is legendary. They are old money, aggressive investors. And her father wants her to marry into their wealth to secure his own company's future.
"No," Adaline spits out. She pushes herself off the floor and begins to pace the length of the kitchen. "I am not doing this. I am not participating in your twisted, archaic matchmaking."
"That is your choice," Green says coldly. "But you should know, the shelter I chose is quite overcrowded. They euthanize unclaimed animals after twenty-four hours. Tomorrow morning, to be exact."
Adaline gasps. The air is sucked from her lungs. She stops pacing. Her feet feel glued to the floor.
"You are a monster," she whispers. A single tear escapes and tracks down her cheek, hot and humiliating. "You are a cold-blooded sociopath."
"You have five minutes to send the request," Green says, completely ignoring her tears. In his world, emotions are just leverage. "Or the cat dies."
The line goes dead.
The dial tone buzzes in her ear. Adaline screams. She pulls her arm back and hurls the iPhone across the room. It hits the leather sofa, bounces off the cushions, and lands face-up on the rug.
She drops to her knees. She grabs her hair with both hands, pulling hard enough to hurt. Her mind flashes with images of Monty-the scrawny, terrified orange tabby she rescued from the freezing London rain three months ago-locked in a metal cage, waiting for a lethal injection.
Her chest tightens. She cannot breathe. The panic attack is a physical weight crushing her ribs.
She snaps her head up. Her tear-filled eyes lock onto the glowing screen of her phone on the rug.
The despair morphs into a cold, hard resolution. She crawls across the Persian rug. Her knees burn against the fabric. Her fingers are stiff and clumsy as she grabs the phone.
She opens WhatsApp. The screen is blank. It feels like staring at a death warrant.
The phone vibrates in her hand. A new text message from Green pops up.
It is a photo.
Adaline clicks on it. Her heart stops beating for a full second.
It is Monty. He is crammed into a tiny, rusted wire cage. His ears are flattened against his head. His eyes are wide, reflecting pure, unadulterated terror.
The sight of the photo feels like a physical punch to her gut. Fresh tears spill over her eyelashes and splash onto the glass screen, distorting the image of the terrified cat.
She bites down on her lower lip. She bites so hard she tastes the metallic tang of copper blood. She forces herself to wipe the screen with the sleeve of her trench coat.
She opens the contact card her father sent.
She stares at the screen, her fingernails digging so hard into her palm that the skin nearly breaks. Every breath she takes burns with the hot sting of humiliation. This is not a surrender; it is a temporary ceasefire. She swears to herself, in the silent emptiness of her kitchen, that Green Poole will one day pay dearly for this extortion.
She taps the 'Add Contact' button.
The profile loads. The name reads 'Barron Cooke'. There is no status. There is no bio. The profile picture is just a solid, pitch-black square. It looks like a void.
She stares at the name. Pure, concentrated hatred burns in her chest, heating her blood.
She takes a deep, shuddering breath. She closes her eyes.
Her thumb presses down hard on the 'Send Request' button. It feels like pressing the detonator on her own life.
The screen flashes: Request Sent.
Adaline slumps against the base of the sofa. Her energy is completely depleted. She stares at the black square on her screen, her breathing ragged.
"I hate you," she whispers to the empty room, her voice dripping with venom.
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9.3
On her wedding night at The Plaza Hotel, Clara went looking for her husband.
Instead, she found him in the dimly lit parking garage, passionately pinning down her bridesmaid.
She couldn't even scream or expose them. Just hours before the ceremony, Julian had tricked her into signing away her twenty percent shares of their co-founded company, leaving her completely penniless and unable to pay her grandmother's life-saving medical bills.
Fleeing in absolute despair, a sudden hotel blackout plunged her into a second nightmare. She was dragged into a pitch-black room and brutally violated by a heavily drugged stranger.
When a shattered Clara returned to the office to audit the books and reclaim her power, Julian demoted her to a dusty desk by the trash cans.
He flaunted his mistress in the executive suite and deliberately sent Clara into a horrifying trap. He arranged for vicious clients to drug and assault her, demanding high-definition blackmail photos so he could divorce her with absolutely nothing.
"Since you want to play rough, you can service Mr. Petrocelli tonight," the thug sneered, locking the VIP room door.
Clara was pushed to the brink of hell. Why was the man she devoted three years of her life to trying to destroy her so completely? And why did the freezing cedarwood scent of the stranger who ruined her in the dark perfectly match Conrad Vance, the ruthless CEO and Julian's untouchable uncle?
Rather than let Julian win, Clara smashed a glass bottle, held the jagged edge to her own throat to force the men back, and threw herself off the second-floor balcony into the freezing night.
But the bone-crushing impact never came. A massive figure shot out from the shadows and caught her, and her brutal counterattack finally began.

7.9
Elena Crane wakes up in a hospital bed after barely surviving a resort fire, only to discover the devastating truth. The kidney she donated to her husband Leo three days ago wasn't for him. It was for his mistress, Lydia. Worse, she overhears Leo instructing a doctor to kill her within five days and make it look like surgical complications so he can collect two hundred million dollars in life insurance. Their entire five year marriage was an elaborate scheme to steal her organs and murder her for money.
What Leo and Lydia don't know is that Elena is actually Roberta Alfred, the legendary jewelry designer and billionaire heiress who abandoned her empire for love. After enduring multiple murder attempts, including being locked in a morgue and losing her uterus to forced hysterectomy, Elena escapes. She divorces Leo, claims the insurance money herself, and returns home to reclaim her identity and her family's billion dollar empire.

9.3
For five years, I was Ashton Miller's invisible partner, his loyal fiancée, pouring my life into building his empire from the shadows. Tonight, the Bronze Deer exhibition, my masterpiece, was finally opening at the Met, a testament to our shared future.
Then, Bianca, a third-tier actress, stepped into the spotlight in *my* custom Vera Wang wedding dress. My blood ran cold as Ashton's arm circled her waist, his whispered words promising to make her the "new queen of the city."
Five years of trust and sacrifice crumbled. I was a blood bag, drained and discarded. When I publicly exposed their lies, Ashton cornered me backstage, his face twisted in fury, threatening to ruin me, to blacklist me forever. I ripped off his engagement ring, tossing it at his chest. "We're done," I said, walking out as his enraged screams echoed.
The man whose empire I secretly built called me a parasite, his mistress feigning tears, painting me as delusional. My guilt vanished, replaced by freezing, absolute hatred for the man who twisted reality to erase my existence.
Standing in the New York rain, I finally pulled out the military-grade encrypted phone hidden for five years. The line clicked open instantly, a low, gravelly voice asking, "Is it you?" Before I could answer, Archer's voice hardened: "Give me the location. I'll be there in ten minutes. Who touched you? I want his life."

8.6
For years, Elvera lived as the despised charity case in the cramped Wright household.
When she caught her foster sister Donita straddling her fiancé, they didn't even panic. Instead, they loudly framed Elvera for stealing a diamond necklace to justify kicking her out.
Her foster parents immediately sided with the cheaters, screaming at her to pack her trash and starve in the gutters. Only her dying foster brother tried to sneak her his medical savings, but the family violently shoved him away, mocking him as a walking corpse.
Standing in the freezing Brooklyn wind, Donita and Crockett followed her outside just to laugh. They waved a crisp twenty-dollar bill in her face, mocking her biological family as a bunch of unemployed street thugs.
They really thought she was going to freeze to death on the pavement with nothing but a faded backpack.
But then a roaring, matte-black supercar pulled up.
The man who stepped out wasn't a street thug; he was her real brother, an FBI task force commander.
He effortlessly snapped Crockett's shoulder out of its socket, put Elvera in the passenger seat, and drove her straight to a sprawling billionaire estate in the Hamptons.
Sitting by the fire in her biological parents' palace, watching them casually display an eight-million-dollar sculpture she had secretly designed, the head butler suddenly walked in.
"Sir, the fake heiress has returned from Europe."
Elvera took a slow sip of her coffee. The real game was finally about to begin.

9.3
To escape my abusive adoptive mother selling me to a loan shark for $50,000, I rushed to City Hall to marry a blind date.
In a blind panic, I grabbed the wrong man.
He was Julian Cardenas IV, a billionaire CEO who desperately needed a fake wife to dodge a corporate arranged marriage. We signed the papers on the spot.
He became my legal shield. He moved me into his pristine penthouse and secretly protected me from my family's violent threats. When I broke down crying in the freezing cold, he quietly left me hot cocoa. For the first time in my life, I felt safe.
But then, Julian overheard me complaining to my sister about my constantly breaking-down car, groaning that I had to "get rid of this baby four times."
He thought I meant abortions.
The man who was slowly melting my frozen heart instantly turned to ice. He threw away the dinner he had specially bought for me, his eyes filled with absolute disgust and blinding rage.
I was left entirely confused and terrified. Why did my savior suddenly look at me like I was the most repulsive thing in the world? What had I done to deserve this sudden cruelty?
I thought this fake marriage was my ticket out of hell. I didn't realize I had just locked myself in a cage with a furious, ruthless CEO who now wanted to destroy me.

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."