
Bound By Pain: The Billionaire's Captive
I ran through the freezing rain, desperate to escape the Pennington estate. My adoptive family had raised me for one purpose: to be sold off as a bargaining chip in a wealthy arranged marriage.
But before I could reach the highway, I was cornered. Not just by my family's cruel guards, but by Hollis Wall—a terrifying, ruthless billionaire who snapped my tormentor's wrist and dragged me into his car. He didn't want a ransom. He threw a prenuptial agreement in my lap.
I thought he was insane until he took a scalpel to his own arm, and a burning agony ripped across my flawless skin. Because of a near-drowning accident three years ago, our nervous systems were linked. Every time I bled, he felt the agony. He locked me in his fortress to keep me safe, but when I finally escaped back to my adoptive parents, they didn't protect me. Instead, my adoptive father smiled and showed me a live video of my biological father on life support, a guard's hand hovering over the plug.
"You will marry Douglas Cherry tomorrow, or your father dies," he sneered.
My own family was willing to murder my only real flesh and blood just to secure their wealth. I collapsed onto the cold marble floor, my heart crushed in a vice of absolute, suffocating despair.
"I'll marry him," I sobbed, surrendering to the darkness.
But miles away, in his dark study, the ruthless Hollis Wall violently collapsed to the floor, gasping for air as my severe panic attack bled directly into his chest. Our twisted bond was killing him, and I knew he would tear the city apart to find me.
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Chapter 6
Carole opened the bottom drawer of the bathroom vanity. Under a stack of towels, she found a small, pink eyebrow razor. She slipped it into the sleeve of her sweater. It was small, but it was metal.
She walked out of the bathroom and sat by the window, staring blankly at the lawn. She needed the guards to think she had given up.
The door opened. Hollis walked in. He wore a dark grey sweater and held a medical file.
"Get up," Hollis said. "We are going to the clinic for your ankle."
Carole's heart jumped. Leaving the estate meant a chance to run. She stood up quietly and followed him out the door.
They sat in the back of the Maybach. K. Sterling drove them toward Manhattan.
Carole stared out the window, watching the traffic lights and the crowds of people. She calculated how fast she could run if she opened the door at a red light.
Hollis reached across the seat. He grabbed her hand and intertwined his fingers with hers. His grip was tight enough to bruise.
"Do not even think about it," Hollis said, staring straight ahead.
Carole felt the heat of his palm. She hated it, but she kept her hand still.
The car pulled up to a high-end private clinic. Hollis led her inside.
"I need to use the restroom," Carole said, pulling her hand away.
Hollis nodded to a guard. The guard followed her down the hall. Carole walked slowly, looking for a back exit. The hallway was packed with Wall security. There was no way out.
She turned around to walk back to the lobby.
As she passed the elevator bank, she stopped dead in her tracks.
A man sat in a wheelchair, facing the elevator doors. He wore a dark charcoal cashmere coat. His shoulders were thin, but the posture was exactly the same.
Carole stopped breathing. The scent of a very specific, rare cigar hit her nose.
Jose Lynn.
Her first love. The boy who died in the fire five years ago.
Carole lunged forward. "Jose Lynn! Is that you?"
The guard grabbed her arm and pulled her back. The elevator doors slid open. The man's assistant pushed the wheelchair inside.
For one second, the man turned his head. Carole saw the sharp line of his jaw and the cold, empty look in his eye.
The doors closed.
Carole stood frozen. Her chest heaved. Tears flooded her eyes. It couldn't be him. He was dead.
Hollis walked around the corner. He saw Carole shaking, her face pale, staring at the elevator.
Just then, a sharp, agonizing physical constriction seized his chest, making it impossible to draw a full breath. It felt as if ice water had been poured directly into his lungs-a severe, physiological stress response triggered by her sudden panic attack, bleeding perfectly into his nervous system.
Hollis grabbed her shoulders. "What are you looking at?"
Carole shook her head wildly. "Nothing. It was a ghost."
Hollis looked at the elevator numbers going up. His jaw clenched tight. He hated the look in her eyes. He hated that someone else made her feel this much pain.
He dragged her into the doctor's office.
The doctor checked her ankle, but Carole didn't feel a thing. Her mind was stuck on the man in the wheelchair.
Hollis paced the room. He felt her racing heartbeat. He slammed his hand on the desk.
He pulled out a new contract. "Sign it. Now. The terms are better. You get your own wing of the house."
Carole looked at the paper. She thought about the man in the wheelchair. If Jose was alive, she couldn't be trapped here.
"No," Carole said softly.
Hollis grabbed her wrist, pulling her out of the chair. He dragged her out of the clinic and shoved her into the car.
"If you do not sign it by tonight," Hollis yelled, his face inches from hers, "I will have your adoptive parents moved to the cell next to yours."
Carole shrank back into the leather seat. She bit her cheek until she tasted blood. The threat was real. She had to escape today.
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7.9
I woke up in a sterile hospital room, my head split open from a horrific car crash.
But the pain in my skull was nothing compared to the memory burned into my retinas just before the impact: my billionaire husband, Dawson, walking into a luxury hotel with a woman who looked exactly like his dead first love.
When Dawson finally arrived at the ward, there was no panic or relief in his eyes. He just coldly looked at my bloody bandages.
"Your reckless driving just forced me to postpone the quarterly board meeting."
Even our seven-year-old son, who I almost died giving birth to, didn't spare me a single glance. He kicked my hospital bed in annoyance.
"The Wi-Fi here is garbage. You're a bad mom! Dad said Aunt Angelita should be the one living with us!"
My blood turned to ice. For five years, I had bent over backward, wearing the hideous pale dresses he picked, starving myself to maintain a fragile figure, all to be a perfect, obedient substitute for a ghost.
And this was what I got. An unfaithful husband who would rather bury me in debt than grant me a divorce, and a son who wished I was dead.
The weak, subservient Charlene died on that wet asphalt.
When the doctor pointed to Dawson and asked for his name, I looked at my husband with a hollow, defensive stare.
"Who are you?" I whispered.
Using retrograde amnesia as my shield, I was going to tear their perfect world apart.

7.6
After an exhausting fourteen-hour flight, Katia returned to her Upper East Side penthouse, expecting the quiet comfort of the life she had built.
Instead, she found a pair of familiar red stilettos in the foyer and her fiancé, Caleb, tangled in their bedsheets with his twenty-two-year-old assistant.
She didn't scream or cry. She simply took off her three-carat engagement ring, threw it at his bare chest, and demanded he buy out her half of the penthouse by Friday.
Seeking to numb the sickening disgust, she got blackout drunk and crashed at a luxury hotel, accidentally stumbling into the wrong suite.
Thinking the imposing man inside was a high-end escort hired by her friend, she threw him over her shoulder and spent a wild night with him.
The next morning, she left five thousand dollars on his nightstand with a lipstick-stained note.
"Good Job."
For six years, she had funded Caleb's dreams and built his startup from the ground up, only to be treated like a lifeless ATM.
With ruthless precision, she spent the next two months systematically bankrupting his company, cutting off his venture capital, and erasing his life's work.
She felt no heartbreak, only a cold, calculating need to cleanse herself of his betrayal.
But when Katia finally returned to corporate headquarters to co-lead a massive merger, she literally crashed into the new Vice President.
Strong arms caught her waist, and the sharp scent of cedarwood and whiskey hit her like a freight train.
"You came back," Jackson whispered, his eyes burning as he stared at the woman who had treated him like a cheap gigolo.

8.6
For two years, I was trapped behind my own eyes, a prisoner in my own skull.
A crazed fan had hijacked my body after a brutal car crash, wearing my skin like a cheap suit.
When my soul finally locked back into my flesh in a cramped hospital room, I realized she had destroyed everything I built.
This parasitic stalker had drained my massive fortune to zero, buying luxury gifts for a mediocre actor and turning me into the internet's most hated woman.
My phone was flooded with death threats, and the hashtag demanding I go to hell was trending at number one.
Even the hospital nurses despised me. One marched into my room, raising her hand to violently slap my pale cheek.
"You psychotic bitch, you make me sick!"
Worse, my sprawling Beverly Hills estate had been foreclosed and sold to a mysterious billionaire named Kasey Dominguez.
I had absolutely nothing left. No money. No reputation. No home.
The sheer violation of watching a psychotic stranger ruin my life while I was locked in the passenger seat of my own mind made my blood boil.
I refused to let her destroy my legacy.
As the nurse's hand descended, my atrophied muscles snapped into action.
I twisted her wrist until the joint popped, grabbed the keys to my freedom, and slipped out into the cold Los Angeles night.
I was going to take my life back, starting with the billionaire who thought he owned my house.

9.5
After her step sister ran away from her marriage to the billion dollar heir, they took Emerald Jane Campbell as a stand-in to fill in the position of her step sister. Forced by her evil mother, Emerald can't do anything but to follow. She was tied to the disabled billion dollar heir for three years and all she got was cold treatment from him. Years later, a kidnapper appears in their lives. The kidnapper threatens the life of Emerald until Jude Rafael Sanders- the billion-dollar decides to do what it takes to protect his wife, Emerald.
Secrets began to unravel one by one. But what if Jude finds out his beloved wife has something up beneath her sleeves? Find out how tension intensifies in their roller coaster marriage.

7.4
Frieda married Dewitt believing he was just a struggling middle-manager, living in a cramped apartment with only seventy-two dollars left to her name.
She had no idea her cold husband was actually a ruthless billionaire running a cruel psychological test on her. Convinced she might be a gold digger, Dewitt gave her a meager allowance, keeping the divorce papers ready the moment she showed any greed.
While Dewitt secretly judged her every move, Frieda suffered endlessly. At her toxic workplace, she was relentlessly bullied by her arrogant in-laws and mocked for her scuffed shoes. Even after she risked her life to protect his grandmother from an armed mugger and exposed her own hidden tech genius, her coworkers still treated her like trailer-park trash. They cornered her on the street, pointing fingers in her face.
"You are a shameless, gold-digging whore! A billionaire would never want you!"
She endured the humiliation, having just rejected a priceless no-limit black card from his family out of pure principle. She truly believed she and her husband were fighting through poverty together. She had no idea her "poor" husband was watching her every struggle from the tinted windows of a hidden Maybach across the street.
But when her bullies finally pushed too far and raised a hand to strike her, the icy wall around the billionaire's heart completely shattered. Dewitt tore up the divorce papers, his eyes turning pitch black with murderous rage.
"If anyone ever raises a hand to her again, break it."

7.8
For three years, Elena endured a husband who barely acknowledged her, a mother-in-law who treated her like hired help, and a sister-in-law who sneered that she was nothing but a golddigger. All the while, her husband, Damien, pined after his "perfect" ex, like his own wife didn't exist.
Until the day Elena had enough.
She signed the divorce papers, packed a single bag, and vanished.
Damien was certain she'd come crawling back within a week. But the woman they all dismissed? Turns out Elena is a billionaire heiress, the CEO of the very empire Damien has been desperate to partner with and the one now signing his paychecks.
Oops.
Now Damien is spiraling, realizing too late what he lost. But Elena has choices she never had before. Like her childhood best friend, an NFL star who's been in love with her all along.
So who will it be?
The ex-husband who finally woke up?
The best friend who never left?
Or has Elena finally decided she's done with men who don't deserve her?