
Broken Ring, Billionaire Secrets: Watch Me Shine
I sat on the edge of the examination table, the crinkle of the sanitary paper sounding like thunder in the sterile room. The doctor didn't even look at me as he confirmed the news: the pregnancy was over. My husband, Keyon, didn't answer my call. He just sent an automated text: "In a meeting."
When I returned to our cold mansion, I found his iPad glowing with a message from his "muse," Katina. He was throwing her a secret gala tonight-on our third wedding anniversary. He told her he couldn't wait to escape the "boring" and "draining" atmosphere I created at home.
Keyon didn't stumble in until 3 AM, smelling of Katina's perfume with a smear of red on his collar. When I handed him the divorce papers, he laughed in my face. He called me a "glorified housekeeper" with no skills and no future, promising I'd be back in three days begging for a subway ticket. He even bet his friends ten thousand dollars that I wouldn't survive a week without his name.
He had his assistant cancel my credit cards and block my gate access before I even reached the end of the driveway. He wanted me to starve. He wanted me to crawl. He sat in his office, mocking the "desperate" woman who pawned her three-million-dollar wedding ring for scrap metal just to pay for a meal.
I stood on the rainy curb, watching the man I had protected for three years treat my life like trash. He didn't know about the ultrasound I just threw in the bin. He didn't know that while he was calling me "dull," I was the one secretly writing the code that kept his billion-dollar empire from collapsing.
As I slid into a cheap Uber, I opened a hidden, encrypted app on my phone. The screen refreshed to a dashboard for an account Keyon didn't know existed. The balance was ten figures long-the accumulated wealth of "Solaris," the world's most elusive tech genius. Keyon thinks he just evicted a parasite, but he's about to find out he just declared war on the only person who can hit "delete" on his entire life.
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Chapter 3
The bass of the music at Soho House was vibrating through the floorboards, but on the private rooftop terrace, the air was heavy with cigar smoke and arrogance.
Keyon sat in a leather armchair, a glass of whiskey in his hand. It was barely noon, but he hadn't slept.
Dylan Branch slid into the chair opposite him. He looked fresh, sharp, wearing a linen suit that cost more than most people's cars. He swirled his drink, eyeing Keyon's disheveled appearance.
"Word on the street is the bird has flown the coop," Dylan said. His tone was light, teasing. "Elodie actually walked out?"
Keyon scowled. "She's throwing a tantrum. She's trying to embarrass me in front of Katina."
"She packed a bag?"
"A gym bag," Keyon scoffed. "She took some t-shirts. She didn't even take her jewelry. That's how I know she's bluffing. She's probably at some motel in Queens right now, crying and waiting for me to call."
Keyon slammed his car keys onto the table.
"I bet you ten grand," Keyon said, his voice loud enough for the table next to them to hear. "Three days. She'll be back in three days, begging me to pay her credit card bill."
Dylan raised an eyebrow. He looked at Keyon, really looked at him. "And if she doesn't?"
"She will," Keyon said. "She can't survive without me. The woman doesn't know how to pump her own gas."
The group of young heirs at the next table laughed. "Elodie?" one of them said. "The flower arranger? Yeah, she's toast."
Dylan didn't laugh. He took a sip of his drink. "I don't know, Keyon. She looked... different lately."
Keyon waved a hand dismissively.
---
Five miles away, the elevator doors opened directly into the penthouse of The Sterling.
The apartment was a fortress of glass and concrete. It was minimalist, cold, and breathtakingly expensive. It had belonged to Elodie's uncle-or rather, the man who had posed as her uncle to hide her identity from the world during her years at MIT. He had left it to her in a trust that the Schneider lawyers couldn't touch.
Elodie walked in.
"Welcome home, Solaris," a synthesized female voice said from the walls. The lights adjusted automatically to a soft, warm amber.
Elodie dropped the canvas bag onto a white Italian leather sofa that cost forty thousand dollars. She didn't treat it like a museum piece. She collapsed onto it, burying her face in the cushions.
Her phone buzzed.
She pulled it out. An unknown number.
A video file.
She pressed play.
The screen showed Keyon at Soho House, captured from a discreet angle. The audio was clear.
"She's just a parasite. She'll be back when she gets hungry."
Elodie watched Keyon's face. The sneer. The absolute certainty that she was nothing.
She didn't know who sent it. It was Dylan, sitting across from Keyon, phone hidden under the table, stirring the pot.
Elodie didn't cry. She didn't throw the phone.
She pressed Delete.
She sat up and opened the old, thick laptop.
The screen flickered to life. Lines of green code cascaded down the black terminal. Her fingers flew across the keyboard. It wasn't the tentative typing of an administrative assistant. It was the blur of a virtuoso.
She typed a command: CONNECT REMOTE PORT: STOKES_GLOBAL_EXT.
A prompt appeared: ACCESS GRANTED.
She opened a secure messaging app.
To: CYost
Message: I'm out. Need lab access.
The reply came three seconds later.
From: CYost
Message: Finally. The lab is yours. Door code is still the first 6 digits of Pi.
Elodie closed the laptop. She stood up and walked into the master bathroom.
The mirror stretched from floor to ceiling. She looked at her hair. It was long, curled into the soft waves Keyon liked. He said it made her look "feminine."
She opened the drawer and found a pair of hairdressing scissors.
She grabbed a handful of hair.
Snip.
The thick lock fell into the sink.
She didn't stop. She cut with jagged, angry motions. Chunks of brown hair fell like dead leaves. When she was done, her hair stopped just above her shoulders. It was uneven, choppy, and sharp.
She looked fierce.
Back at Soho House, Keyon was laughing, his arm draped around Katina's waist. Katina was looking at him with wide, adoring eyes.
"Is she okay?" Katina asked, her voice dripping with fake concern. "Should I call her? I feel terrible."
"Don't you dare," Keyon said. "Let her suffer. It's the only way she learns."
In the corner, Dylan checked his phone. The message was marked Read. No reply.
Usually, Elodie would be blowing up Keyon's phone by now. Or calling Dylan to ask if Keyon was okay.
Silence.
Dylan frowned. He took a sip of his drink. "Interesting," he muttered.
In the penthouse, Elodie lay down on the bed. She didn't take a sleeping pill. For the first time in three years, the silence wasn't lonely. It was peaceful.
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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.

8.4
Carissa's son was dying in the ICU, and the bone marrow match had just failed.
The billionaire father, Guilford Gates, cornered her with a cruel ultimatum: naturally conceive a "savior sibling" to save their son. But what shocked Carissa more was his family's sudden accusation that she had heartlessly sold her baby to them three years ago.
"You sold your own flesh and blood to us for five million dollars, so your body belongs to the Gates family."
She was dragged into their gilded estate, treated like a filthy, rented womb. Guilford's new fiancée mocked her, the matriarch humiliated her, and Guilford looked at her with pure disgust. When she desperately tried to feed her sick son and accidentally made him vomit, Guilford violently shoved her away and banned her from the room.
Carissa was devastated and entirely confused. She had never seen a single cent of that five million. Driven by a desperate need for the truth, she investigated and uncovered a horrifying reality: her own father and stepmother had secretly trafficked her baby to the billionaire behind her back, leaving her to bear the ultimate blame.
Looking at the bank transfer record bought with her son's life, the last shred of Carissa's vulnerability died.
She signed the conception contract without asking for a single penny. She was going to use the Gates family's immense power to destroy the blood relatives who sold her, and she would survive this hell to take back her son.

8.7
Lina Carter was just a waitress trying to make ends meet. On the other hand, Alexander Knight was a billionaire who would do anything to safeguard his empire. When he proposes a deal for her to be his fake girlfriend, it seems straightforward, he act like she loves him, stick to the rules, and walk away with a nice payday. No feelings involved. No strings attached. No room for error.
But as they share fake kisses, those moments turn into lingering glances. What starts as cold, business-like orders shifts into a quiet sense of protection. Suddenly, the line between pretense and reality begins to blur.
Then, out of nowhere, his ex-fiancée reappears-gorgeous, ruthless, and hell-bent on ruining Lina's life. When the truth about their arrangement comes to light, Lina finds herself publicly humiliated, tossed aside as if she never mattered at all. She walks away with her pride shattered, but her heart still whole.
Now, the man who once paid her to pretend is realizing he wants her for real. But some betrayals cut too deep... and some love stories start with a lie that's just too painful to forgive. She was brought in to act. He ended up falling for her for real.

8.2
My father was the King of Wall Street until he was branded a fraud, turning the Maxwell name into a lead weight dragging me to the bottom of the Hudson. I walked into the Brennan Media Tower with blood-red lipstick and a desperate proposal, offering myself as a "paper wife" to Garland Brennan, the coldest billionaire in Manhattan.
Garland didn’t even look at me as a human being; he tore my term sheet in half and called me "radioactive" before having security toss me out like trash. I returned to my rotting apartment in Bushwick only to find my roommate’s cousin, a debt collector named Jax, waiting to break my bones.
He pinned me against the wall, his hand heavy on my throat as he sneered about selling me to a club to pay off my father's debts. With my ribs aching and my back against the radiator, I had to leak corporate secrets on Twitter just to summon Garland’s private mercenaries to stop a predator.
The humiliation didn't stop there. At the Met Gala, the elite mocked my dress made of construction tarp, and my father’s creditors began harassing my senile grandmother in her nursing home. I was a cornered animal, and Garland Brennan was the only hunter offering a cage instead of a grave.
I realized then that in this zip code, you are either the predator or the prey, and I was tired of being hunted.
Garland offered me a marriage contract that demanded total submission—no equity, no voting rights, just an employee with a wedding ring. I signed the four-hundred-page document with a steady hand, but not before hiding a legal poison pill in the fine print. He thinks he bought a silent asset, but I just secured a front-row seat to his downfall.

7.2
Fitzgerald Woodard was the "stray" I used to torment in prep school, a boy I once paid to kneel in the mud for my amusement. Now, the tables have turned, and he’s the billionaire who bought my father’s debt, dragging me into his mansion as a "personal asset" listed in a contract I never read.
He didn't just want the money back; he wanted to see me break. He stood over me in the rain and told me he owned the very machines keeping my father alive, and with one flick of his thumb, he could stop his breathing forever.
The nightmare escalated until I didn't recognize myself. He forced me to eat cold soup off the floor like an animal and gripped my hand over a heavy hammer, forcing me to crush a young guard's bones just to prove I was as much of a monster as he was. His childhood sweetheart, a nurse I once humiliated, stood in the shadows, whispering that I was nothing more than a used-up toy he was already bored of.
I lay on the cold marble, shivering from a fever he refused to treat, realizing that the curse he placed on me years ago had finally come true. Every act of cruelty I had ever committed was being repaid with interest, and the man I once looked down on was now the only god I had left to pray to.
Suddenly, he threw me out into the freezing night with nothing but rags on my back and a shattered phone. The hospital called with an ultimatum: fifty thousand dollars by noon, or they pull the plug on my father’s life support.
Standing barefoot on the biting asphalt, I watched his black SUV disappear into the dark. I have nine hours to save the only person I love, and only one way to get the money. I have to go back and kneel before the devil I created.

9.7
Amara Blackwell only wanted to survive.
She had lived her whole life in shadows an unwanted servant, bullied, beaten, and ignored.
She had learned one truth: the world didn't care for the weak.
She never meant to cross into the Sunfang Clan's border... but hunger doesn't care about territory lines.
Captured as a trespasser, thrown into the dungeon, treated as nothing more than a filthy outsider.
Amara becomes the clan's newest servant, sentenced to repay her "crime" through labor.
Invisible. Powerless. Unwanted.
Until jealousy paints a target on her back.
Framed for an offense punishable by death, Amara is dragged before the court - bruised, terrified, and surrounded by wolves who want her gone.
The crowd demands blood.
The elders demand punishment.
And she waits for the blade.
Then the Alpha King arrives.
Kael Duskbane
Cold. Feared. Unbreakable.
He steps forward to judge her... and the moment his eyes land on her, something ancient and forbidden stirs inside him.
A scent.
A pull.
A truth he should never have felt.
His wolf whispers one word that changes everything:
Mate.
The girl kneeling in the dirt
the servant, the trespasser, the nobody is the one woman his kingdom will never accept.
The one woman whose hidden bloodline could set the entire empire on fire.
And the one woman every enemy wants dead...
And the one Kael Duskbane will defy fate, tradition, and every rival clan to protect.