
Captive Of The Ruthless Underground Boss
June was an ordinary architect struggling to pay rent, completely estranged from her high-society mother.
But one night, she was kidnapped and beaten in an abandoned warehouse by Gage Becker, the city's most ruthless billionaire, who demanded payback for her mother's sins.
Gage pointed a high-definition camera at June's battered face and video-called her mother, threatening to release the footage and ruin her upcoming billion-dollar wedding.
"I will never throw away a billion-dollar marriage for a useless daughter."
Her mother's cold voice echoed through the warehouse before the line went dead.
From that moment, Gage systematically destroyed June's life. She was publicly humiliated and forced to hack off her own hair with a cigar cutter. She was blacklisted from every firm in the city, evicted by her landlord, and violently mugged in a freezing New York blizzard.
Curled up in an icy tunnel waiting to die, June felt a suffocating despair. She hadn't spoken to her mother in months. Why did she have to endure this hell for a woman who didn't even care if she lived or died? Why was a monster like Gage so obsessed with driving her to the grave?
When Gage's armored Maybach pulled up, he stepped into the snow to mock her, waiting for her to finally surrender and beg for his mercy.
But the absolute humiliation snapped the last thread of June's sanity.
Instead of crying, she lunged forward with feral energy and sank her teeth directly into the devil's flesh.
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Chapter 5
June sat on the hard plastic seat of the subway car. The train rattled through the dark tunnels. She stared at her reflection in the dirty window. Her hair was hacked into uneven pieces. Her arm was bruised and aching. She wrapped her arms around her ribs and shivered.
The next morning, June pulled a cheap gray beanie over her head to hide her hair. She pushed open the glass doors of the architecture firm.
The office was dead silent. Every person in the room looked at her with wide, terrified eyes. They shrank back in their chairs as she walked down the aisle.
She reached her desk. A cardboard box sat in the center of her chair. All her pens, notebooks, and a small framed photo were dumped inside.
Martin Pryce walked out of his office. He threw a single piece of paper on top of her box. He told her she was fired and ordered her to get out.
June grabbed the edge of the desk. She asked for her severance pay. Her rent was due in three days. Without that money, she would starve.
Martin laughed in her face. He told her she had pissed off the Becker empire and cost him his biggest client. He said she was lucky he wasn't suing her for damages.
The building security guard stepped up behind her. He grabbed June by the bicep, shoved the box into her chest, and physically pushed her out the front doors onto the sidewalk.
June stood on the concrete. The freezing wind whipped down the Manhattan street. She felt the crushing weight of Gage's power. He owned the city.
She set the box down. She pulled out her phone and dialed the numbers of three other firms that had offered her jobs last month.
The first two hung up the second she said her name. The third manager sighed heavily. "Listen, kid. The word is out from Becker Industries. No one in the city will touch you. You're blacklisted across all top firms." Then the line went dead.
June picked up her box. She took the train back to Brooklyn. She just wanted to crawl into her bed and pull the covers over her head.
She walked up the street to her apartment building. Her battered suitcase sat on the sidewalk next to the overflowing trash cans.
Her landlord, a heavy woman in a thick coat, stood on the front steps. She pointed a fat finger at June and started screaming. She called June a liability who brought gang members to her property.
June dropped her box. She ran to the steps, begging the woman to let her in. She reminded the landlord she had paid a security deposit.
The landlord pulled a check from her pocket. She ripped it into tiny pieces and threw them directly into June's face.
The woman told June if she stepped foot on the stairs, she would call the cops for trespassing. She turned around and slammed the heavy iron door shut. The lock clicked loudly.
The sky turned dark gray. The first snow of the New York winter began to fall. The temperature plummeted. June only wore a thin autumn jacket.
She crouched down next to her suitcase. Her fingers were stiff and bright red from the cold. She pulled out her phone and dialed the one number she swore she never would again.
The phone rang for a long time. Finally, Jessica Cole answered. The sound of crashing ocean waves played in the background.
June's teeth chattered. She told her mother that Gage had blacklisted her. She had no job, no apartment, and nowhere to go.
Jessica Cole sighed loudly. She called June an idiot for provoking a madman like Gage Becker.
Jessica Cole offered a cold solution. She told June to take a bus to a small town in upstate New York and hide for a few years. She demanded June stay out of the press so her new husband wouldn't find out.
June's chest tightened. She asked her mother how she could be so heartless. She reminded her that Gage had a video that would ruin her life.
Jessica Cole cut her off. She said she would wire five hundred dollars a month. Then, she hung up.
June listened to the dead silence on the line. The last ember of hope in her heart turned to ash.
She stood up. A raw, burning anger mixed with her despair. She pulled her arm back and hurled her phone directly at the brick wall of the apartment building. The screen shattered into a spiderweb of glass and plastic.
She grabbed the handle of her suitcase. She turned her back on her building and walked into the blowing snow.
The snow fell harder, sticking to her clothes. People rushed past her on the sidewalk, their heads down. No one looked at her.
Her stomach cramped violently with hunger. She dug her freezing fingers into her coat pockets. She pulled out three quarters and a dime. Not even enough for a cup of hot coffee.
The streetlights flickered on. The Brooklyn streets grew dark and empty. June dragged her suitcase behind her, walking blindly into the freezing night.
June pulled her suitcase through the heavy snow, her head bowed against the wind.
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7.7
My fiancé always told me he loved me. But not long after our engagement, I woke up suffocating in the dark.
He was pressing a pillow over my face, his eyes cold and dead, while my half-sister stood by watching with fake pity.
They had orchestrated everything just to steal my trust fund.
It all started with a massive hotel scandal. They had drugged me, thrown a cheap escort into my bed, and brought a mob of paparazzi to ruin my reputation.
When my fiancé broke through the crowd, playing the heartbroken victim, he knelt down with a massive diamond ring.
"I know things have been hard, but I love you. If you come home with me, I will forgive all of this."
In my past life, I cried tears of gratitude and let him slide that ring onto my finger.
That ring sealed my death warrant. I lost my company, my dignity, and eventually, my life.
Until my lungs burned and my heart stopped, I didn't understand.
How could the people I trusted most plot my murder so ruthlessly?
Why did they have to tear my entire life apart?
Opening my eyes again, I was back on the morning of the hotel scandal, exactly one year ago.
But the man lying bare-backed in my bed wasn't a random escort.
It was Johnathan Chase, my family's biggest corporate rival and the most ruthless predator on Wall Street.
Listening to the paparazzi pounding on the door, I smiled coldly.

8.0
When gifted cellist Vivienne Aurel inherits her late father's catastrophic $4.2 million debt, she expects to lose everything. She doesn't expect the debt to be bought by Caspian Vane, the most feared private equity magnate in New York. Caspian doesn't want to ruin her; he wants her to work exclusively for him as the artistic director of his new cultural foundation for eighteen months. Forced into his world under a binding agreement, Vivienne prepares to fight against a cold, transactional cage. But as the intense, quiet proximity between them begins to blur the lines of their contract, she discovers a terrifying truth: the man who now owns her future has been watching her from the shadows long before she ever knew his name.

9.1
With only fifteen days of cash flow left to save her tech startup, Aida had no choice but to seek a five-million-dollar bridge loan from Brendan Walls, a ruthless billionaire predator.
He agreed to sign the check, but on one sickening condition. He demanded Aida act as bait to get close to his corporate rival, Grayson Lott, treating her like a high-end call girl for a business transaction.
Forced to comply to save her employees, Aida let Grayson take her to a windowless underground club, where he secretly spiked her whiskey.
As the drugs paralyzed her body, triggering horrific flashbacks of a brutal assault from six years ago, Aida locked herself in the bathroom. She had to shatter a mirror and slice her own thigh open with a jagged shard of glass just to stay conscious enough to call Brendan for help.
Brendan's armored SUV immediately smashed through the club's wall to save her, and Grayson was arrested. But lying in the hospital, the horrifying truth finally clicked in Aida's mind.
The rescue was too fast. Brendan’s men hadn't rushed from Midtown; they had been parked outside the entire time. He had watched Grayson drug her and waited for the felony to happen just so he could legally seize Grayson's company. He had gambled her life and trauma for a hostile takeover.
When Brendan casually tossed a signed contract and luxury car keys onto her hospital bed as hush money, the last thread of Aida's sanity snapped.
"The deal is dead. NovaTech is mine. If you ever come near me again, I will kill you."
Bleeding and shaking with icy rage, Aida threw the keys at his chest, formally declaring war on the monster who thought he could buy her soul.

7.5
Kaitlyn Barton POV:
After three years building my family's hotel empire abroad, I came home to New York, expecting a warm embrace from my childhood fiancé, Edwin.
Instead, he greeted me with a warning. He told me to be gentle with his new girlfriend, Kacy, painting me as a villain before I even knew her name.
At my own welcome-home party, he let her stage a dramatic fall and then publicly blamed me for it, his eyes burning with a hatred I'd never seen.
He cradled her in his arms as if she were a fragile doll I had broken.
"Happy now, Kaitlyn?" he snarled, shattering twenty years of our shared history in front of everyone we knew.
In his eyes, I was no longer his love, but a monster he needed to protect his new flame from.
As he stormed out, my phone buzzed. It was a text from Everett Rowe, the man who had quietly loved me for five years.
"If you are truly ready, I will marry you. Right now. Just say the word."
My fingers moved on their own.
"Yes," I typed. "I'll marry you."
The moment I stepped back onto New York soil, a city I had once shared completely with Edwin, he greeted me not with a hug, but with a warning about his new girlfriend, painting me as the villain before I even knew her name. Three years abroad, cultivating my family's hotel empire, had prepared me for many business battles, but nothing for the cold, calculated betrayal that awaited me at home. He had replaced me, and then twisted our shared history, turning me into the aggressor he now needed protection from. This was not the reunion I had envisioned, nor the Edwin I remembered. My heart, which had swelled with anticipation, now froze into a solid block of ice.

9.0
My ex-husband returned after a three-year bet, ready to reclaim me and the son he thought was his. He had no idea that I'd secretly aborted his child, divorced him, and remarried the day he left. His world was about to come crashing down.
His delusion turned deadly when he and his manipulative best friend, Haylee, kidnapped my son, Leo.
I found them at his family's mansion, with Leo suffocating from a severe allergic reaction to a dog they were forcing him to play with. Elliot physically restrained me, scolding me for overreacting while Haylee giggled as my son turned blue.
At the hospital, as Leo fought for his life, Elliot grabbed my arm, demanding to know who the man standing beside me was. He was convinced this was all a game to make him jealous.
That's when my real husband, billionaire Gregory Morton, stepped forward.
"Since when is this child yours, Elliot?"

7.3
Seven years ago, my fiancé, Don Dante Moretti, sent me to prison to take the fall for my adopted sister, Chiara. He called it a gift-a way to protect me from a worse fate.
Today, he picked me up from prison only to abandon me at my family's estate. His reason? Chiara was having another one of her "episodes."
My parents then informed me I'd be staying in the third-floor storage room, so as not to disturb the fragile girl who stole my life.
They celebrated her "recovery" with a lavish dinner party, while I was treated like a ghost. When I refused to join, my mother hissed that I was ungrateful, and my father called me jealous.
They assumed I couldn't understand their venomous whispers. But prison was my university. I learned Spanish. I understood every word.
It was then I realized I wasn't just a sacrifice; I was disposable. The love I once felt for all of them had turned to ash.
That night, in the dusty storage room, I logged onto an encrypted channel I'd set up years ago. A single message was waiting: "The offer stands. Do you accept?" My hands, scarred and steady, typed back, "I accept."