
DEAD AT HEART
Terminally ill.
Betrayed by her husband.
Abandoned by the only family she had.
Ariel died with nothing... and no one.
But fate gives her a second chance.
Reborn three years before her death, she walks away from the man who ruined her life-and takes back everything they stole.
Her love.
Her identity.
Her power.
Now, the cold billionaire who once ignored her can't take his eyes off her.
The brother who abandoned her starts to regret.
Too late.
Because this time, Ariel isn't the woman who begs.
She's the one who makes them kneel.
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Chapter 3
The kiss doesn't sting. It's the ease that hurts. He does it so simply, like it means nothing. The lips-on-lips part, the collective hush from the audience, the soft applause as if this is just a show-none of that lands the way she once believed it would. The pain isn't in the act itself, it's in how effortless he makes it look.
Jayson leans in like it's second nature, as if the kiss belongs to him-and to them-as if the messy history isn't standing nearby, rain-soaked and unraveling fast. There's not a hint of hesitation. Not even a flicker of conflict or guilt. He kisses her like a man without secrets.
That, more than anything else, quietly tears something open inside Ariel-a splitting she knows won't heal.
The room erupts again in laughter and applause, all indulgence and approval. Ariel stands right in the middle, invisible and cracked, trying to make sense of a reality slipping away from everything familiar. Her fingers twitch, then slowly clench into fists, nails digging hard enough to anchor her, to remind her she's still here-even as numbness threatens to swallow her.
No. This isn't the end.
She moves before the thought fully forms. It takes just seconds to close the distance, the crowd parting for her like it's instinct. She steps forward, reckless and sure, grabbing Jayson's arm as he pulls away from the kiss.
"Excuse us," she says. It's not really a question.
Her grip speaks for her, unyielding. For the first time all night, something changes in his posture-not enough to ruin his composure, but enough to show he notices. He glances at her hand, back at her face, his calmness unreadable.
"Ariel-"
"Now," she says, low and tight, her voice vibrating with barely held emotion.
He almost refuses. She can see it-maybe he wants to dismiss her in front of everyone, reduce her to an afterthought. But then, whatever the reason-maybe because everyone's watching, maybe because even he knows this can't stay a performance-he exhales and nods.
"Give us a moment," he says to the woman beside him.
The woman in red doesn't object. She just smiles, calm and knowing, the same smile she's worn since Ariel first saw her. Like she's unbothered, certain of the outcome.
"Take your time," she murmurs, her gaze flicking to Ariel, almost curious.
Ariel's gut twists.
Jayson slips from Ariel's grip and moves ahead, leading her to the quietest corner near tall windows streaked with rain. The crowd's noise fades but never disappears, a constant reminder: they're not alone, every word is under scrutiny.
Ariel follows, her steps heavy, every one carrying the weight of what she's about to lose.
He stops. He turns to face her.
Silence, thick and suffocating. It stretches between them, loaded with everything unsaid, everything that can't be taken back.
Ariel's chest is shaky, rising and falling unevenly as she scans his face, desperate for any sign of something familiar. She finds nothing.
"Three years," she says, so much softer now, stripped of all sharpness-fragile. "Three years, Jayson."
Her words tremble under their weight.
"What was I to you?"
It's not really an accusation, not entirely. It's a raw, honest question-she needs the truth, even if it's the last thing she wants.
Jayson holds her gaze. No hesitation.
"A contract."
His answer lands fast, too clean. As if he's been saving it for this moment.
Ariel stares, trying to process the brutal efficiency with which he just reduced three years to one sterile word.
"A contract?" It feels strange to say.
"Yes."
No elaboration. No softening. Just confirmation.
Her memories start to shift-rearranging themselves under this new truth.
She sees the start.
A quiet office. Dim light. Documents stacked between them. No flowers. No ceremony. Just a lawyer, neutral, explaining terms like it's routine. Jayson was composed, calm, laying out expectations, timeline, boundaries.
"It's mutually beneficial," he said.
She remembers nodding, somehow believing practicality didn't rule out possibility. That something real could come from something structured.
There was no ring. No vows. Just signatures. Ink binding them in a way that felt official-even if it was nothing like she imagined marriage would be.
She told herself it didn't matter. That love could come later. That time would fill in the gaps the contract left.
She blinks, returning to now, to this man she thought she understood-she stops the thought.
"Is that all it was to you?" she whispers, the question cutting deeper than anything before. "An agreement? An arrangement?"
"It was exactly what we agreed to," he replies, almost patiently, explaining something simple to someone refusing to accept it.
"No," Ariel shakes her head, small but determined. "No, that's not true. Maybe it started that way, but-" Her words falter, twisted by emotion. "Things changed."
He says nothing.
"They did," she insists, stepping closer, searching his face. "You stayed. You-" She swallows. "You came home. You-"
"I fulfilled the terms of the contract," he interrupts.
Those words come harder now, slicing away what's left of hope.
Ariel's breath catches.
"That's not how it felt," she admits, raw and unguarded. "Not to me."
His gaze softens-but not with warmth or regret. Nothing like affection. It's the softness of distance. Detachment. A man observing, not participating.
"That was your mistake," he says.
Something inside her goes completely still.
"You let yourself believe it was more."
The room seems to tilt, everything blurring as his words settle-permanent and unyielding.
"So what am I now?" she asks, but she already knows. It's in the way he stands, that new space between them.
Jayson's answer is steady:
"You were never my wife."
No cruelty, no emphasis. Nothing to suggest he knows how much it hurts.
That's the worst part-it's said because, for him, it's simply true.
Ariel feels herself splinter. The last piece falls away, crushed by those words.
Never. Not once. Not even for a second.
She wants to fight, to deny-but nothing comes out. The foundation is gone.
Movement behind Jayson catches her eye-soft, subtle, but enough.
The woman in red steps back into view, perfectly composed, like she's been waiting for her cue.
Ariel looks at her, a sharp defensiveness rising-too late.
The woman's expression isn't amused anymore. It's thoughtful, measured, almost gentle.
"He told me about you..." she says, voice pitched low, just for Ariel.
Ariel's heart skips.
"...months ago."
Those words land slow, inevitable.
Months. Not days, not weeks. Months.
Ariel's mind reels-the whole timeline cracks, everything she thought she understood collapsing in on itself.
The crowd moves on, talking and celebrating, clueless or uncaring about the quiet wreckage unfolding right here.
Ariel stands frozen, stuck between a past and a present-what was, what never really existed.
And, for the first time since she walked into the ballroom, she knows: she has no idea what comes next.
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9.3
Marissa was the perfect wife. She traded her high powered corporate ladder for home cooked meals and a designer sanctuary, all to support her husband, Ethan.
But when Ethan confesses to a four month affair not out of guilt, but because his mistress is extorting him for $300 million...Marissa's world turns to ash.Ethan's solution is as twisted as his heart.
"Cheat back. Get even. Stay married."Driven by a cocktail of rage and Revenge, Marissa decides to take him up on his offer. She heads into the night looking for a single moment of rebellion to wash away the scent of Ethan's lies.
She finds it in the arms of a cold, devastatingly masked handsome stranger who makes her forget everything.Broken and fueled by the betrayal, Marissa decides to take the ultimate risk. She slips into an exclusive, members only masquerade club...a place where names don't exist and only desires matter.
Behind a lace mask, she meets him....a man who smells of expensive bourbon and cold command.He is the first person in years to see the fire in her, not just the wife she became.They share a night of scorched....earth passion that leaves Marissa breathless and "even." She leaves before the sun rises, intending for the stranger to remain a ghost of her revenge.
But some ghosts have a name.When the masks come off and the corporate world demands her return, Marissa comes face to face with the man from the club. He isn't just anyone. He is Xavier Sterling....the ruthless billionaire CEO she once worked for, and the man Ethan calls his "best friend."Xavier knows her scent. He knows her touch. And most dangerously, he knows exactly what Ethan did to her.
Now, Marissa has to navigate a world where her husband wants her to stay, the mistress wants her dead, and the CEO wants to own the one woman he was never supposed to touch.
Now, Marissa is caught in a lethal triangle. Xavier wants to own her, Ethan wants to keep her to save his reputation, and the $300 million debt is threatening to drown them all. In a world of billionaire power plays, Marissa is about to learn that revenge is a dish best served... in the CEO's bed.

8.3
For three years, I hid my identity as a billionaire heiress to build a life with the man I loved. I gave up everything to support Ben's career, believing we were creating a future together from the ground up.
The day before our engagement, I overheard him with his boss, Haylie. He called me a "stepping stone," a poor, simple girl he was using to climb the corporate ladder and get closer to her.
He laughed about our "humble" life and mocked the silver ring on my finger, calling it a necessary prop. He was sleeping with her, taking credit for the multi-million dollar deal I secretly engineered, and saw my love as a naive distraction.
The man I sacrificed my entire world for saw me as less than nothing. My love didn't just die; it turned into ice-cold rage.
So I walked out of his life and straight into the arms of my family's biggest rival.
He offered me a deal I couldn't refuse.
"Marry me," Jaxson Banks said with a smirk. "And together, we'll burn their world to the ground."

8.7
Emerson worked grueling twelve-hour shifts just to keep her five-year-old son, Leo, alive. Her only lifeline was her partner Alden, who was willing to give up his wealthy family to protect them.
But when Leo's bone marrow completely failed, the doctor delivered a death sentence. The only way to save him was a two-million-dollar treatment, or having another child with his biological father.
That father was Finnegan Mcconnell, the ruthless billionaire who had accused Emerson of faking her pregnancy and abandoned her five years ago.
Desperate for the medical fees, Emerson submitted her designs to Finnegan's company.
Instead of advancing the money, Finnegan tore her portfolio to shreds and trapped her as a prisoner in his estate.
To force her complete submission, he systematically destroyed her reality. He framed Alden with federal charges, leaving him facing twenty years in prison.
Alden's mother stormed into the pediatric ICU, violently strangling Emerson against the wall.
"Beg Finnegan to let my son go! You are a curse!"
Even Emerson's own adoptive mother showed up at the hospital, just to publicly mock her dying child.
Emerson was suffocating in despair. Finnegan already had a beautiful new wife and a five-year-old daughter—absolute proof he had been cheating while she was pregnant and alone.
He had his perfect family. Why did he have to hunt her down and sever every lifeline she had left, just to watch her drown?
With her son's heart monitor fading and Alden locked in a cell, her pride finally shattered.
Emerson walked into the top-floor executive office and dropped to her knees at the devil's feet, but the desperate mother looking up at him was preparing for a devastating revenge.

9.6
To escape my sister-in-law selling me off to a local thug, I married a complete stranger I met at City Hall.
My new husband, Drake, claimed to be a broke Uber driver who could barely make rent.
He even made me sign a brutal ten-page prenup just to ensure I wouldn't take his rusted, beat-up Ford sedan if we ever divorced.
I thought I was just sharing a decaying Brooklyn apartment with a struggling man at the bottom of the ladder.
But things quickly stopped making sense.
When that local thug cornered me at a restaurant, my "weak" husband didn't cower.
Instead, he dismantled three massive mobsters in ten seconds with the terrifying, fluid speed of an apex predator.
"I used to be a human punching bag in an underground boxing gym to pay off debts."
I believed his excuse, until his supposedly homeless grandfather showed up at our door in a moth-eaten sweater, begging to sleep on our lumpy sofa.
Before going to sleep, the old man casually pressed a heavy, intricately engraved pocket watch into my hand as a wedding gift.
He claimed it was a cheap flea market find that didn't even keep time.
But the sheer weight of the solid rose gold and the flawless mechanical gears inside screamed otherwise.
Why did a destitute driver have the aura of a man who controlled empires?
And what kind of homeless old man casually hands over a priceless, museum-grade antique?
I had no idea the "broke driver" sleeping on my floor was actually a ruthless billionaire CEO, and I had just walked straight into his trap.

8.9
For fifteen years, I thought my mother had died in a tragic fire.
Then the wealthy Ross family's butler knocked on my door, revealing she was alive—locked away in the psychiatric annex of their massive estate.
I rushed into the lion's den to save her, only to run straight into Graydon Ross, the ruthless billionaire CEO.
He looked at my cheap clothes with pure disgust, convinced I was a bottom-feeding scammer trying to extort his family.
"Throw this bitch out into the snow."
He ordered his armed guards to drag me away, completely cutting off my only chance to see my mentally broken mother.
But as he violently grabbed my collar to throw me out, I saw a custom eagle-head cufflink hanging from his coat pocket.
My blood turned to ice, and a wave of paralyzing terror crashed over me.
Eight months ago, I accidentally slept with a masked stranger in a pitch-black hotel room and fled before dawn.
That cufflink belonged to him.
The man who took my virginity—the Wall Street tyrant I had been hiding from—was Graydon Ross.
If he ever found out I was that woman, he would literally destroy my life.
But to save my mother, I couldn't be thrown out.
When his grandmother suddenly appeared, I dropped to the floor, exposed the dark bruises Graydon had just left on my wrists, and sobbed.
I framed the billionaire for assault to secure my place in the mansion, forcing myself to live right next door to the monster whose bed I had fled.

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.