
Claimed By My Ex's Powerful Billionaire Uncle
Abigayle was the proud heir to the Pena Group, living a perfect life and engaged to Jeffery Sullivan.
But the morning after a charity gala, she woke up drugged in a hotel room, blinded by paparazzi cameras. Her fiancé and her best friend stood at the foot of the bed, throwing a forged pregnancy report at her face to publicly frame her for cheating.
The betrayal was only the beginning of the slaughter. Before she could even clear her name, the Sullivan family ruthlessly bankrupted her family's company overnight. Her father was rushed to the ICU with a heart attack, her brother was run off the road into a coma, and violent repo men raided her penthouse. Just as she was thrown out into the freezing rain, Jeffery's terrifying uncle, Donovan Sullivan—the very mastermind who engineered her family's ruin—stepped in. He offered to cover the life-saving medical bills, but only if she agreed to become his personal plaything.
Abigayle's blood turned to ice. She couldn't understand how the people she trusted most could plot such a vicious, coordinated destruction just to break an engagement. How dared the man who destroyed her entire family stand there playing the savior, trying to buy her body with her own stolen wealth?
Facing a $100,000 hospital deadline and abandoned by everyone she knew, she didn't shed another tear.
"I will never beg him."
Clutching her last diamond bracelet, she hailed a cab straight to the biggest pawnshop in the Diamond District. The Sullivans thought they had buried her, but her counterattack was just beginning.
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Chapter 10
Abigayle walked to the heavy wooden double doors and pulled them open.
Three uniformed court marshals stood in the hallway, their hands resting on their utility belts.
Behind them stood Jenna Cole, a mid-level asset liquidation officer from the bank.
Jenna wore a sharp gray pantsuit and held a thick clipboard against her chest.
Abigayle recognized her immediately. Jenna used to handle the Pena family's minor accounts, always smiling with sickening sweetness.
Now, Jenna's eyes gleamed with undisguised schadenfreude.
"Good morning, Abigayle," Jenna said, skipping the formal title. She tapped her pen against the clipboard. "This property is now officially under the possession of the bank. You have exactly five minutes to vacate the premises."
The marshals pushed past Abigayle, stepping into the apartment with rolls of red eviction tape.
They immediately went to the small suitcase Abigayle had packed, roughly unzipping it and digging through her underwear and toiletries.
"Careful," Abigayle said coldly, keeping her posture rigid. "Those are personal items. Exempt from the freeze."
Jenna smirked. She walked over to the leather sofa and spotted the expensive, custom-tailored men's suit jacket Donovan had left behind.
"Is this exempt too?" Jenna mocked, reaching out to grab the lapel. "Looks like a high-value asset. Or did some guy leave his overnight fee?"
Abigayle's eyes darkened.
She stepped forward, her hand shooting out to clamp down hard over Jenna's wrist before the mulish woman could touch the fabric.
"That does not belong to the Pena estate," Abigayle warned, her voice dropping to a lethal register. "It is the private property of a third party."
Jenna tried to yank her hand back, but Abigayle's grip was shockingly strong.
Abigayle stared directly at the name tag pinned to Jenna's lapel.
"Jenna Cole. Employee ID 8492," Abigayle read aloud, her eyes locking onto Jenna's. "This jacket doesn't belong to my family, it belongs to someone else. If you take it, that's theft. Do you really want to add a lawsuit from another powerful family to your problems today?"
Jenna's smug smile faltered. The inherent authority in Abigayle's voice made her hesitate.
Abigayle released her wrist, picked up the heavy suit jacket, and draped it over her own arm.
She grabbed the handle of her small suitcase and walked over to Thaddeus, gently taking the old man's arm.
"Let's go," Abigayle said.
As they walked toward the door, Jenna deliberately stuck her pointed high heel out, aiming to trip the limping butler.
Abigayle saw the movement in her peripheral vision.
She didn't stop. She simply adjusted the angle of her suitcase.
The heavy, hard-plastic wheels of the luggage rolled directly over the toe of Jenna's expensive leather pump, crushing her toes with the full weight of the bag.
Jenna let out a sharp yelp of pain, hopping backward on one foot.
"Watch where you're standing, Jenna," Abigayle said, not even looking back. "You can take the apartment, but you will always be someone who has to look up from the bottom."
Abigayle guided Thaddeus into the elevator and hit the lobby button.
The doors closed, cutting off Jenna's furious glare.
When the elevator reached the ground floor, Abigayle could already hear the shouting outside the glass doors.
The paparazzi had multiplied overnight.
Abigayle stopped in the lobby. She unfolded Donovan's massive suit jacket and draped it over Thaddeus's head and shoulders, completely hiding his bandaged face from the cameras.
She stood in her torn trench coat, put her sunglasses back on, and pushed the doors open.
The flashbulbs exploded like a warzone.
Microphones were shoved toward her face, reporters screaming questions about her father's sudden collapse following the company's bankruptcy and her broken engagement.
Abigayle kept her face completely blank.
She used her body as a shield, pushing through the aggressive crowd, taking the physical shoves and elbows without making a single sound.
She flagged down a yellow cab at the corner, practically shoving Thaddeus into the backseat before diving in after him.
"Drive," she ordered, slamming the door shut.
The cab sped away from the curb, leaving the flashing lights behind.
Abigayle leaned her head against the cold window, watching the building she had lived in her entire life disappear from view.
"Where to, Miss?" the driver asked, glancing in the rearview mirror.
Abigayle reached into her pocket, her fingers wrapping tightly around the cold diamonds of the Van Cleef bracelet.
"Diamond District," Abigayle said, her voice hard and resolute. "The biggest pawnshop on 47th Street."
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8.7
Brought back from a humble life in Montana, Nora found out she was the true biological heiress of the ultra-wealthy Beaumont family.
But her biological parents didn't love her; they loved the fake daughter, Olivia, much more.
The moment she arrived, her father pushed an engagement termination agreement across his massive desk, forcing her to give up her wealthy fiancé so Olivia could have him.
Her mother looked at her with pure disdain.
"You should know your place. Don't reach for things that were never meant for you."
To break her spirit, they moved her into a cramped, dusty servant's room. They even ordered the butler to feed her cold kitchen scraps and gristle.
They wanted to humiliate her, to make her feel like a piece of trash rather than a daughter.
They expected her to cry, to beg, and to be absolutely crushed by the realization that her own flesh and blood saw her only as a liability to their reputation.
They thought the country girl would easily fold under their united front of cruelty.
But Nora felt no sting of betrayal, only the calculating clarity of a chess player.
She calmly signed the paper, pulled out the Beaumont family trust rules, and looked them dead in the eye.
"Since I am the legal heir, I demand what belongs to me. I'm taking the master bedroom."

9.3
Chandler was the secret wife of Avery Osborn, a powerful media heir who kept their marriage hidden to avoid the scandal of her illegitimate birth.
After catching him openly flirting with a rival at a gala, Avery mocked her low status and told her she was nothing without his money.
Instead of crying, Chandler immediately signed a zero-payout divorce agreement, left her wedding ring on his glass table, and walked out.
To numb the pain of her shattered life, she went to a notorious underground club.
Drugged by a bartender, she lost her mind and ended up having a wild night with a handsome stranger she mistook for a high-end male escort.
Panicking the next morning, Chandler transferred her entire life savings of $50,000 to the man to buy his silence, then fled to her corporate job.
But at the afternoon executive meeting, her blood ran cold.
The man she had paid off was standing at the head of the boardroom table. He wasn't a gigolo. He was Brennan George, the ruthless new COO of her company.
Cornering her in the women's restroom, Brennan held up a printed copy of her $50,000 wire transfer.
"Wiring a massive sum of cash to your direct superior after a night together is classified as commercial bribery and solicitation," he whispered dangerously.
Chandler was terrified, realizing she had handed him the exact evidence needed to destroy her career and sue her into bankruptcy.
"Marry me," Brennan demanded coldly. "It's the only way to make this HR problem disappear."

9.3
He was supposed to be my brother. The cold CEO everyone feared. The man who controlled the entire country's business world.
But one night, he looked at me and calmly destroyed everything I thought I knew.
"We're getting married."
I laughed, but he didn't.
Now every door in my life is closing, every choice is disappearing, and the one man I'm not supposed to love refuses to let me go.
Because to Lucien Hale, this was never forbidden. It was inevitable.
And the most terrifying part? The closer I get to him, the harder it becomes to run.

9.2
Arla was supposed to marry Clinton Freeman, the perfect fiancé who had promised to love her and protect her five-year-old son.
But instead, the cold steel of a dagger pierced her chest.
As she collapsed onto the freezing basement floor, she watched her adoptive sister Blair laugh.
"Look at her," Blair sneered, kicking her son's small, blue, lifeless body.
Clinton stood there, calmly wiping the bloody blade on a pristine handkerchief.
In her dying moments, the horrifying truth became clear. Her fiancé and her adoptive family had been plotting all along to steal her massive trust fund.
To break her, they had secretly tortured her child. Clinton had watched Blair pierce the little boy's arms with sewing needles, rewarding him with candy to keep him silent.
Arla's lungs burned with the taste of copper and ash.
She couldn't understand why the family she trusted could be so monstrous, or why they had to brutally murder an innocent child just for money.
The darkness swallowed her whole, drowning her in suffocating hatred and absolute despair.
Then, she gasped for air.
The concrete floor was gone, replaced by the silk sheets of a hotel penthouse suite.
Arla had been reborn to the exact night six years ago—the very day Blair first dragged her son into the dark attic.
This time, she picked up a solid silver letter opener, ready to burn them all to the ground.

9.2
Lainey spent her last life destroying herself for Larry, only to become the woman he discarded most cruelly. He never loved her, never wanted her, and made no secret that his first love still owned his heart.
On their wedding day, he abandoned Lainey at the altar for that woman, then later used Lainey as nothing more than a stepping stone for his company's rise. In the end, he even had her kidney ripped from her.
Reborn at the very moment everything began, Lainey called off the wedding without hesitation. But after losing her, Larry begged desperately.
Lainey shot him a cold look, then turned and walked straight into the arms of a powerful, aloof man, who stared down at Larry with pure contempt. "She's my wife now."

8.9
My family's company went bankrupt, and my biological father was lying in the ICU, kept alive by machines that cost tens of thousands a day.
I thought it was just a tragic business failure, until I caught my mother in bed with my stepfather.
They had secretly transferred all our assets months ago, deliberately bankrupting the company and leaving my father to die.
To pay the hospital bills, my stepfather forced me to a private club, trying to sell me to a sleazy investor.
When I refused, he slapped me across the face, and my mother just looked at me with cold, dead eyes.
"Be realistic, Jaelynn. A woman's body is a tool. Use it to get what you need."
Later, right before my father's emergency surgery, my stepfather signed a Do Not Resuscitate order and froze the medical accounts.
"If you don't get on your knees and spread your legs for him, I will tell the hospital to pull your father's plug."
Standing in the freezing rain, covered in mud and blood, I stared at the astronomical hospital bill in my hand.
My own family had plotted to murder my father and sell me to the highest bidder. The betrayal shattered every ounce of sanity I had left.
I didn't cry or beg them anymore.
Instead, I pulled out a water-stained, gold-embossed business card.
It belonged to Dolph Valentine, the most ruthless billionaire in New York and my ex-fiancé's uncle.
If they wanted to destroy my life, I was going to sell my soul to the biggest monster of them all and drag them straight to hell.