Follow
Chapters
Share
Discarded By Him, Claimed By The Zillionaire

Discarded By Him, Claimed By The Zillionaire

I was Landon Mercer's secret girlfriend and loyal assistant for four years. I thought my absolute devotion would eventually win his heart. But he casually announced his engagement to a wealthy heiress, reminding me I was just a convenient nobody from an orphanage. When I got trapped in a horrific car crash and begged him to call an ambulance, he just hung up on me, annoyed that my bleeding was ruining his romantic getaway. He even blackmailed me with my orphanage's land lease, forcing me to attend his engagement party as a prop. At the party, his elite family and friends brutally humiliated me. They deliberately crushed my broken arm, poured red wine over my head, and kicked me into a freezing pond. When Landon finally pulled me out, he didn't care that I was suffocating and turning blue. "Are you out of your mind? You come out here and cause a scene during my engagement party?" He threw a stack of cash at my shivering body, furious that I had embarrassed him in front of his wealthy guests. Looking at the hundred-dollar bills floating in the muddy water, my four years of foolish love completely died. To him, I wasn't even human; I was just a cheap toy he could abuse and pass around. I didn't cry, and I didn't beg. I dragged my soaked, battered body into a car and headed straight to the penthouse of his biggest billionaire rival. It was time to burn Landon Mercer's world to the ground.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 5

The yellow cab pulled up to the curb on Boylston Street, the most expensive retail block in Boston. Vivian pushed the heavy door open and stepped onto the sidewalk. She walked straight toward the towering glass doors of the Hermes boutique. The security guard in a tailored black suit took one look at her cheap trench coat, her bruised face, and her bulky arm cast. He hesitated for a fraction of a second before pulling the heavy door open. The blast of freezing air conditioning hit Vivian's face. The air inside smelled heavily of rich, treated leather and exclusive perfumes. It made her head spin. A sales associate in a flawless uniform approached her. She pasted on a tight, corporate smile. "May I help you find something today?" Vivian didn't look at the silk scarves or the jewelry counters. She pointed her uninjured hand directly at a glass display case. "I want that black Birkin 30 with the gold hardware," Vivian said. The sales associate's smile strained. "I apologize, miss, but those pieces are reserved for clients with an established purchase history." Vivian reached into her coat pocket. She pulled out the Mercer Capital check for fifty thousand dollars and slapped it face-up on the glass counter. The associate's eyes darted to the signature at the bottom. Landon Mercer. Her posture instantly straightened, though a flicker of professional caution remained. "Mr. Mercer's credit is, of course, impeccable," the associate said smoothly, masking her judgment. "Please allow me just a brief moment to confirm the corporate payment procedure with my boutique director." She picked up the check with gloved hands and swiftly retreated into a back office. Five agonizing minutes passed. When the associate returned, her corporate smile was replaced by genuine, deferential warmth. "Thank you so much for your patience. Right this way to the VIP room, ma'am." Thirty minutes later, Vivian walked out of the boutique carrying a massive, iconic orange shopping bag. She stopped in the middle of the crowded sidewalk. She looked down at the bag hanging from her good arm. The absurdity of the situation hit her like a physical blow. This bag cost more than the St. Agnes Orphanage spent on food in an entire year. Yet, to Landon, it was just pocket change to make her go away. She looked at her reflection in the boutique window. A battered girl in a cheap coat, sporting a broken arm and a head wound, holding the ultimate symbol of wealth. She looked like a clown in a tragedy. She realized then that no amount of money could bridge the gap. She would always be an outsider to them. Vivian turned on her heel and walked two blocks down to a high-end luxury consignment store. The owner, an older man with sharp eyes, inspected the pristine bag and the original receipt. His eyes gleamed with greed, but he tapped his fingers on the glass counter. "It's a beautiful piece, but standard procedure requires a twenty-four-hour authentication process before any payout. I can't just hand over that kind of money blindly." Vivian didn't have the energy to argue or the time to wait. She reached into her coat pocket and pulled out the Mercer Capital check stub, sliding it across the counter next to her bruised arm. "I bought it an hour ago. You can see the corporate issue," she said, her voice hollow. The owner looked at the stub, then at her battered, desperate state. He did the math on how badly she needed this done now. "Fine," he offered, lowballing her aggressively. "If you sign an immediate transfer of liability waiver, I can bypass the wait and give you forty thousand right now." Vivian didn't hesitate. "Cut the check," she said. With a new cashier's check for forty thousand dollars in her pocket, Vivian took a cab to the outskirts of Boston. The familiar, weathered red brick building of St. Agnes Orphanage came into view. The sound of children laughing in the courtyard eased the tight knot in Vivian's chest. She walked into the main office. Sister Martha, her hair completely white, gasped when she saw Vivian's cast and bruised face. "Oh, my child!" Sister Martha rushed forward. Vivian forced a warm smile. "I'm okay. I just tripped down some stairs." She reached into her pocket and pulled out the check. She handed it to the nun. "My company gave me a bonus. I want you to have it." Sister Martha looked at the numbers on the paper. She covered her mouth with both hands. Tears instantly welled up in her eyes. "Vivian... the boiler system completely died yesterday. This will pay for the entire replacement," she whispered, her voice breaking. Looking at the nun's tears of relief, the shattered pieces of Vivian's heart felt like they stitched together just a little bit. She politely declined the invitation to stay for dinner. She walked alone down the peeling, painted hallway of the orphanage. She stopped in front of a bulletin board. Pinned to the cork was a photo of her at ten years old. A skinny girl with pigtails and terrified eyes. Vivian reached out and gently touched the face of the little girl in the photo. Goodbye, she thought. She walked out the front doors. The setting sun stretched her shadow long across the pavement. She was never going to be that frightened little girl again. Her phone buzzed in her pocket. It was a text from Landon. Tomorrow night, 8 PM. Mercer Estate. Be on time.

You may also like

Acceptable Service: Tipping The Ruthless Billionaire
8.8
I woke up in a penthouse suite at the Pierre with a hangover from hell and a naked man who looked like he'd been carved from marble. Thinking he was a high-end escort I couldn't afford, I left my last hundred dollars and a petty note on the nightstand. "Service was acceptable. Keep the change." But when I rushed home to check on my dying father, I found the locks changed and my boyfriend, Chad, draped over my stepsister on the landing. My stepmother, Meredith, didn't even look up from her coffee as she handed me a legal folder. She told me to sign away my inheritance or she'd stop paying for my father's life support. The hospital called seconds later, demanding fifty thousand dollars by the end of the day, or they'd pull the plug. Meredith had already arranged my "payment": a dinner with Boris Gorsky, a predator who collected young women like trophies. I was being sold to a monster to keep my father alive, standing in a thrift-store dress while my family laughed at my ruin. I didn't understand how my life had collapsed in twelve hours, or how my own blood could put a price tag on a man's life. I sat at that restaurant trembling, waiting for the man who would buy my soul. Then the man from the hotel walked in. It wasn't Gorsky; it was August Sanders, the billionaire CEO of a media empire, and he was holding my hundred-dollar bill. He didn't want an apology; he wanted a contract wife for a year. He slid a confirmation for a five-hundred-thousand-dollar hospital deposit across the table and handed me a fountain pen. "Welcome to the firm, Mrs. Sanders." I signed the paper with a shaking hand, knowing I was trading my freedom for my father's life. But as August handed me his black card, I realized I finally had the weapon I needed to destroy the people who thought I was nothing.
Bought by the Billionaire: The Debt's Price
8.1
I was the "fallen princess" of New York, living in a charcoal silk cage while paying off my father’s millions in debt with my own body. My owner was Braxton Kensington, a man who looked at me with the same cold interest he gave a fluctuating stock graph. One morning, a New York Times alert shattered the silence: Braxton was getting engaged to a billionaire socialite in the merger of the decade. When I demanded my freedom and the five-million-dollar severance promised in our contract, he just smirked and pointed to the fine print. "In a court of law, an engagement is just an intention," he whispered, gripping my chin until it bruised. "Until I sign that marriage license, you belong to me." He flicked a black AmEx at my feet like I was a tragic charity case, ordering me to buy a dress for his engagement gala. To save my dying mother from eviction, I took a secret translation job, only to realize my client was his new fiancée, Caroline. She dragged me to Braxton’s office to humiliate me, and after he hid me in a secret room to avoid a scandal, he branded me a "security risk" and froze every cent I had. I stood in a CVS with my last sixty dollars, swallowing a Plan B pill dry while watching a news report about Braxton demolishing my family’s last legacy. He didn't just want my body; he wanted to erase my entire existence and leave me with nothing. The cruelty was breathtaking, but Braxton forgot that a woman with nothing left to lose is the most dangerous player in the game. I reached out to the only man he truly feared—his billionaire half-brother and the boy whose heart I broke years ago, Ansel Neal. "Coffee isn't enough," Ansel replied to my message in seconds. "Dinner. Our old spot. 8 PM." As I walked into the club to meet Braxton's greatest rival, I knew the game wasn't over. I was just changing the rules.
Contract Marriage With The Genius Heiress
9.1
Alysia lay on the freezing operating table, moments away from donating her kidney to her brother's fiancée. But as the anesthesia set in, a violent shock tore through her brain, awakening agonizing memories of a thousand brutal deaths across a thousand past lifetimes. She suddenly realized her family's true plan. Her brother and his fiancée weren't just taking her organ; they were secretly plotting to declare her mentally unfit post-surgery to steal her entire trust fund. When Alysia abruptly stopped the procedure and exposed the fiancée's kidney failure as the result of severe drug abuse, her family's reaction was chilling. Her father didn't care about the truth or the law. He ordered his bodyguards to lock Alysia up until she agreed to the surgery, while her brother threatened to freeze her assets and seize her late mother's penthouse. "You have no heart, Alysia. You don't deserve the Kent name," her aunt spat in disgust. For lifetimes, she had kept her head down, taking the blame and sacrificing everything for a family that viewed her as nothing more than a disposable blood bag and a financial pawn. The resignation that had clouded her eyes for so long vanished, replaced by the absolute, zero-degree cold of a glacier. Ripping the IV from her hand and leaving her family in stunned silence, Alysia walked straight out of the hospital. She had exactly forty-six hours to find a husband to secure her inheritance, and she knew exactly which ruthless billionaire CEO to target to help her burn the Kent family to the ground.
Divorced And Penniless: The Billionaire's Secret Heir
9.0
On their seventh wedding anniversary, Kiley's billionaire husband, Aden, slid a thick stack of papers across the restaurant table. It was a petition for divorce. He was leaving her for his college sweetheart. Thanks to a ruthless prenup, Kiley was being thrown out with absolutely nothing. That very night, their young son Jules was rushed to the ER, bleeding profusely. The doctor's diagnosis was a death sentence: acute leukemia. When Kiley frantically called Aden for help, he dismissed the emergency as a simple nosebleed. "I'm not paying for this. Deal with it," Aden sneered, the sound of his mistress giggling in the background. To force Kiley to sign the divorce papers, Aden froze all her credit cards and canceled their son's health insurance. He refused to pay a single cent for the chemotherapy. Even Kiley's adoptive parents sided with the wealthy Aden, calling her a burden and telling her to stop fighting him. Driven to the brink of despair, with a dying child and no money, Kiley didn't understand how a father could be so monstrous to his own flesh and blood. Until a news article on a friend's phone caught her eye. It featured a fallen 9/11 firefighter hero from the ultra-wealthy Whitfield family. The man in the photo looked exactly like Jules, down to the very bone structure. Kiley's mind raced back to the fertility clinic and the anonymous sperm donor. Could this dead billionaire hero be her son's biological father? Looking at her sleeping, fragile boy, Kiley wiped her tears and crushed the divorce papers in her hand. She was going to find the Whitfield family, save her son, and make Aden lose everything he held dear.
Divorced By My Billionaire Husband: I Returned Unstoppable
8.4
For three years, Sophia Carter was the perfect wife to billionaire CEO Alexander Kingsley. She loved him quietly while he treated her like a stranger. When his first love suddenly returns, Sophia is falsely accused and thrown out of the Kingsley mansion with nothing but humiliation. The divorce shatters her heart-but it also frees her. What Alexander never knew was that Sophia was never ordinary. She was the hidden heiress of a powerful empire. Three years later, she returns-richer, stronger, and untouchable. Now the man who once discarded her is desperate to win her back. But this time, the woman he abandoned is no longer the same girl. And revenge has never looked so beautiful.
His Broken Bride Is A Hidden Genius
9.8
Adeline's stepmother had secretly drugged her for years, turning a child genius into a drooling, mentally disabled laughingstock just so her stepsister could steal her life. But when her greedy father sold her off to Griffin Herring—a violent, untouchable billionaire psychopath—to save his company, things took a deadly turn. Before the wedding, Griffin attacked her in a dark alley, nearly snapping her neck before stealing her grandfather's silver necklace. That necklace held a micro-drive with her family's deepest secrets, and without it, she had nothing. Back at the estate, her situation only worsened. Her stepsister Damaris paraded around in the Herring family's diamond engagement gifts, trying to force-feed Adeline wet dog food on an Instagram live stream. When Adeline's calculated "clumsiness" ruined the video, her furious father locked her in a damp, rusted basement. "Give her to the psycho," her stepmother hissed through the door. "Let him lock her away forever." Listening from the shadows, Adeline's fists clenched until her palms bled. Her supposed mental fog wasn't a tragedy—it was a calculated assassination of her mind. They had destroyed her childhood and were now throwing her to a monster just to keep the billions. The dull, empty look in Adeline's eyes vanished instantly, replaced by a razor-sharp, chilling clarity. She pulled a thin surgical needle from her messy bun and picked the heavy iron padlock in ten seconds. It was time to break into the billionaire's penthouse, take back her necklace, and tear them all apart.