
Bound To The Disabled Apocalyptic Tycoon
Jessie's biological parents brought her back from a Rust Belt wasteland just to force her into marrying a paralyzed heir to save their bankrupt empire.
Three years later, when the global doomsday apocalypse hit, her own family shoved her into a swarm of infected corpses.
As she was being torn apart by mutated hounds, she was stunned by what she saw.
Her fake sister, Harley, was clutching the antique silver necklace she had stolen from Jessie—an heirloom that secretly contained a magical spatial dimension.
When the infected swarmed them, her biological mother didn't even look back.
"Jessie is just white trash, she is perfectly suited to buy us time to run!"
Harley used Jessie's stolen necklace to live in absolute safety and luxury, while Jessie's windpipe was ripped out in the rotting wasteland.
Until she died, Jessie didn't understand. She was their true flesh and blood.
Why did her parents hate her so much? Why was she sacrificed so easily while the fake daughter got everything?
Opening her eyes again, the blinding glare of a crystal chandelier stabbed into her retinas.
She was back in the Manhattan penthouse on the exact day they sold her off.
This time, Jessie calmly signed the marriage contract, demanded a one hundred million dollar buyout, and walked out to prepare for the apocalypse.
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Chapter 6
The yellow cab pulled into the long, curving driveway of the Aguilar estate. The air was thick with the smell of wet cement and dust from the ongoing renovations near the massive front fountain.
Jessie stepped out of the cab. She needed to get to the backyard storage shed to retrieve her adoptive mother's old farming journals before heading to the mountains.
A deafening engine roar shattered the quiet. A bright red Ferrari sped up the driveway, slamming on its brakes and skidding to a halt just a few feet from Jessie.
The driver's side door swung open. Dax Vance stepped out. He wore a custom-tailored suit and designer sunglasses, reeking of arrogance and expensive cologne.
Harley sat in the passenger seat, watching the scene through the tinted glass with calculating eyes.
Dax walked around the front of the car, opened Harley's door like a chivalrous knight, and then turned his head to glare at Jessie.
He marched right up to her, blocking her path to the backyard. He looked her up and down, his lip curling in disgust.
"Look at you," Dax sneered loudly, making sure the nearby construction workers could hear. "You can put a Rust Belt rat in Manhattan, but you still smell like cow shit and cheap denim."
The workers paused their mixing, leaning on their shovels to watch the drama unfold.
Seeing the audience gathered, Harley hurried over, her face suddenly etched with worry. She gently grabbed Dax's forearm. "Dax, please don't," she whispered, casting a fearful glance at Jessie. "My sister is just... different."
Dax puffed out his chest, emboldened by Harley's touch. He pointed a finger inches from Jessie's nose. "You stay the hell away from Harley. If you ever try to bully her again, I'll ruin you."
Jessie stood perfectly still. Her face was a blank canvas. She looked at Dax the way one might look at a buzzing mosquito.
Her total lack of reaction infuriated Dax. He felt his ego bruising in front of his goddess.
"Are you deaf, bitch?" Dax snarled, stepping into her personal space. He raised his hand, aiming to shove her hard in the shoulder.
The moment his hand moved, Jessie shifted her weight. Her eyes, previously dull, suddenly sharpened into twin blades of ice.
It wasn't a magical aura, but the cold, predatory stillness of a survivor who had looked death in the eye a thousand times. It was a look that promised violence without a single word, and Dax's primal instincts screamed at him to retreat.
Dax felt it physically. His heart seized in his chest. His lungs forgot how to pull in air. It was as if a massive, apex predator had just locked its jaws around his throat.
His raised hand froze in mid-air. A violent tremor started in his knees, shaking his tailored pants.
"Take your dirty hand away," Jessie said. Her voice wasn't loud, but it vibrated with a dark, lethal promise.
Dax stumbled backward, his face draining of all color. He couldn't breathe.
Harley didn't feel the killing intent. She only saw Dax backing down from a country girl. She pinched the back of Dax's arm, a silent, angry demand for him to act like a man.
The pinch snapped Dax out of his terror. Realizing he had just cowered in front of Harley and the construction crew, a hot, humiliating rage boiled over.
"I'll kill you!" Dax roared. He pulled his arm back and swung a heavy, uncoordinated punch right at Jessie's face.
The workers gasped. Harley's lips curved into a wicked, satisfied smile.
Jessie didn't flinch. She stepped into his guard. Her left hand shot up, her fingers wrapping around Dax's wrist with bone-crushing force.
She pivoted on her heel, using his own momentum against him. As she twisted his arm down, she drove her right boot hard into the back of his knee.
Dax screamed as his leg buckled. His balance vanished entirely.
Jessie let go of his wrist and watched with cold, detached eyes as his body launched forward, completely out of control.
He was falling directly toward the massive, shallow mixing tub filled to the brim with wet, thick cement.
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7.1
For seven years, I hid my identity as a wealthy heiress to be with my boyfriend, Ewing. I followed him across the country and made myself small so he could feel big.
On Thanksgiving, he ditched our celebration for his first love, Bree, who supposedly had a "burst pipe."
Later, she posted an intimate selfie with him, calling him her "hero."
Then she sent me a video of him at a bar, laughing with his friends.
"She's just being dramatic," he slurred, smirking at the camera. "A new necklace and she'll forget all about it. She's easy."
Easy. Seven years of my life, my love, my sacrifice-all reduced to that one word. I realized I was never his partner. I was just a placeholder.
I didn't cry. I packed my bags, booked a one-way flight to New York, and sent him one final text before blocking his number.
"Don't bother coming home. I'm getting married."

9.1
For two years, Elena played the role of the perfect, submissive wife to her wealthy husband, Andrew Macdonald, quietly swallowing the daily insults of his elite circle to appease his family.
But using her hidden divination skills, she tracked his GPS to a dirty nightclub terrace and caught him tightly holding a fragile, crying woman, calling Elena a disposable "Appalachian hillbilly."
"The lawyers are drafting the divorce papers. Next week, she'll be out of New York for good."
Hearing Andrew promise this gently to his cheating partner, Elena stepped into the dim light, only to be met with nasty mockery from his arrogant friends, while the mistress shrank back and pretended to be an innocent victim.
Andrew glared at Elena with deep annoyance, aggressively demanding she stop embarrassing him in public and go back to the countryside, fully expecting her to break down, cry, and beg him to save their marriage.
Two years of cooking his meals, ironing his shirts, and enduring his family's cruel abuse were nothing but a sick joke to him, completely blind to the terrifying, ancient power she actually wielded.
Instead of shedding a single tear, Elena mercilessly exposed their darkest medical and financial secrets, signed the divorce papers without taking a single dime, and stepped into her new life as the untouchable master she truly was.

7.6
Eloise was the adopted stray of the wealthy Foreman family, mocked daily for her tarot cards and dismissed as a mentally unstable burden.
When her adoptive father suddenly collapsed with thick, black veins pulsing up his neck, they didn't blame his corrupt real estate deals. They blamed her.
"She's a witch! She cursed me!" Mitch roared, ordering his doctor and armed guards to forcefully drain her blood to cure his supernatural toxin.
Her adoptive mother revoked her trust fund and threatened to drag her to a psych ward. Her spoiled sister threw a crumpled twenty-dollar bill at her feet, laughing as the security team cornered Eloise against the wall.
Eloise stared coldly at the family that had abused her for years. They had dug up a sacred burial ground to build condos, bringing this deadly curse upon themselves, yet they wanted to bleed her dry to survive.
Just as the guards lunged, the heavy oak doors were violently shoved open.
An aristocratic butler stepped through the freezing rain, flanked by elite operatives who snapped the guards' legs in seconds. He dropped a three-billion-dollar trust document onto the table as mere "compensation" for her shelter.
"Please, Miss Palmer," the butler bowed deeply, offering her pristine white gloves. "Do not dirty your hands in this place."
Leaving her adoptive father to his midnight death sentence, Eloise stepped into a waiting Rolls-Royce, ready to reclaim her place in a hidden global dynasty.

7.5
I was the architect of my husband's billion-dollar tech empire, but he repaid me by bringing his mistress to our son's funeral-the very woman whose negligence killed him.
To protect her, he had me committed, tortured, and then burned every last memory of our son, systematically erasing our past.
Then I discovered he'd secretly divorced me years ago, so I faked my own death and gave the source code to his rival, ready to watch his world burn to the ground.

7.5
My biological mother finally came to the rundown trailer park to take me to her wealthy new family in New York.
But instead of the good life she promised, I was treated worse than a stray dog.
My stepbrother broke my legs with a golf club just for fun, while my perfect stepsister smiled and watched.
My mother didn't even try to stop them. She let them lock me in a car and set it on fire.
I was burned alive, the smell of gasoline and toxic smoke filling my lungs as they walked away with my life.
Until my last agonizing breath, I couldn't understand why my own flesh and blood hated me so much.
Why did I have to die just so her new family could thrive?
Opening my eyes again, the smell of smoke vanished, replaced by the cheap coffee of the diner I worked at.
I was seventeen again, on the exact day the black Bentley pulled up to take me away.
This time, I wasn't going to be their victim.
I deliberately stalled our departure, saving us from the massive highway pileup that was supposed to be my grave.
And when my stepbrother threw a metal dart at my face on my first day back, I didn't just dodge.
I let New York's most ruthless billionaire step in, ruining his ten-million-dollar watch in the process.
"Since that hand likes to throw things, I will take the hand as payment."
Watching my arrogant stepfamily fall to their knees and beg for mercy, I knew my revenge had just begun.

9.2
For three years, I played the perfect, invisible wife to billionaire Dempsey Everett.
But late one night, he walked in smelling of another woman's perfume and threw a thick divorce agreement onto the coffee table.
"Darcy is back. Sign it."
The terms were brutal, a complete wipeout that left me with nothing but the clothes on my back.
To make matters worse, his true love Darcy sought me out to humiliate me, smirking that I was just a convenient placeholder keeping his bed warm.
Even his mother immediately paraded Darcy around the estate in family heirlooms, treating me like worthless trash they couldn't wait to discard.
I stared at the cold, heavy divorce papers, my chest tightening with pain, until my eyes caught the signature line at the bottom.
Elinor Parish.
A missing 'r'.
After three years of sharing a home, a bed, and a life, my husband didn't even know how to spell my last name.
All my patience, my quiet acceptance, and the love I had poured into this man had been a cosmic, cruel joke.
The realization hit me like a physical blow, but the heartbreak quickly vanished, replaced by a white-hot fury.
I swung my arm and slapped him across his arrogant face with every ounce of my suppressed pain, then signed the document without a second thought.
Dempsey thought I was just a poor dropout who would beg for his scraps.
He had no idea I was hiding my true identity.
It was time the Everetts learned what it truly meant to cross the real Parrish royalty.