
Eight Years Of His Cold Betrayal
After eight years in a cold marriage, I watched my husband, Damian, run past me during a raging fire. He ignored my screams, his only focus on saving another woman.
That night, he coldly admitted he never loved me. Our entire marriage was just a business deal he was forced into.
But his betrayal didn't end there. His mistress, Aida, framed my innocent younger brother for a crime he didn't commit. Damian believed her lies without question.
He stood by as she had my brother murdered in his hospital bed. He even forced me to crawl over broken glass to apologize for "upsetting" her.
The final blow came when he threatened me with my mother' s heirloom box, not knowing it held my brother' s ashes. He had taken everything from me-my love, my family, my dignity.
He thought he had broken me. But he only forged me into a weapon.
Now, I'm back. And as the new majority shareholder of his company, I'm here to make him pay for every last sin.
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Chapter 7
Jillian POV
Damian cried out, his hands flying to his head, clutching the gushing wound. His eyes, still glazed with a drug-induced haze, flickered with a brief, agonizing moment of clarity. He stared at me, his gaze a mixture of pain, confusion, and a dawning, terrible realization. The shock of my violent rejection, the sight of his own blood, seemed to pierce through the fog.
"Jillian," he rasped, his voice rough, thick with pain and bewilderment. He struggled to find words, his mind reeling. He was confused, not just by the blow, but by my utter repulsion, my cold, unwavering stare. He had expected anger, perhaps, but not this chilling indifference, this visceral recoil. A new, unfamiliar irritation sparked within him, a feeling of chaotic discomfort that had nothing to do with the physical ache in his head.
"Don't speak," I said, my voice flat, cutting him off before he could utter another word. "Get dressed. We're going to the hospital." I didn't touch him. I didn't help him. I simply stood there, watching him with detached composure, my heart a block of ice in my chest.
He stumbled, dazed, towards his closet, pulling on clothes with clumsy, pain-racked movements. I called an ambulance, gave them the address, and then waited, my gaze fixed on the wall, refusing to meet his eyes. When the paramedics arrived, I explained the situation with clinical precision, omitting any personal details. I ensured he was taken to the emergency room, signed whatever forms were necessary, and then, without a single backward glance, I walked away.
I didn't visit him. Not once during his entire hospital stay. The hospital called, his assistant called, even Hildegarde called, all trying to get me to check in on him. I politely deflected every single call, claiming illness, exhaustion, anything to maintain my distance. I was done. Completely, irrevocably, done.
My days were a methodical process of dismantling my old life. I packed my meager belongings, the few things that truly mattered to me, into a single suitcase. Then, with a chilling sense of finality, I began to systematically sell off every single piece of expensive jewelry, every luxury gift Damian had ever given me. Each sale was a symbolic cutting of a cord, a severing of ties. The diamonds, the emeralds, the designer bags-all transformed into cold, hard cash, deposited into a new, anonymous bank account. I wanted no trace of him, no reminder of the gilded cage I had lived in.
The day of Hildegarde's birthday gala arrived, a week after Damian's hospitalization. It was a grand affair, as always, a glittering display of wealth and power. Damian was there, impeccably dressed, a bandage discreetly hidden beneath his perfectly styled hair. He was the center of attention, the prodigal son back in his rightful place.
And then there was Aida. She reveled in the spotlight, flitting from guest to guest, her every movement a calculated performance of fragility and charm. She even had her own personal maid trailing behind her, carrying her dainty purse, a blatant flaunting of her newly elevated status. Whispers rippled through the old-money crowd, eyes subtly rolling at her brazen display, but Damian, ever oblivious, hovered protectively around her, seemingly blind to the subtle disdain of his peers.
I entered the ballroom on Hildegarde's arm, dressed simply but elegantly, a quiet specter amidst the opulence. I blended in, a stark contrast to Aida's flamboyant exhibition.
Later, as the giant cake was wheeled out, Hildegarde, with a tight smile, motioned for Damian and me to stand beside her, a final, desperate attempt to present a united front, to mend the irreparable cracks in her family's facade. I stood there, rigid, my gaze fixed straight ahead, refusing to meet Damian's eyes, refusing to acknowledge his presence. He tried to catch my gaze, to say something, anything, but I was a stone wall.
Hildegarde sighed, a sound of weary resignation. She knew. She had seen the finality in my eyes.
After the cake cutting, Hildegarde led me away from the glittering crowd, into a quiet study. Her eyes were red-rimmed, her lips trembling slightly as she handed me a thick envelope. Her voice was thick with emotion. "It's done, my dear. The divorce is final. These are your papers, and your shares in the company. A significant stake, Jillian. Enough for you to start anew, to build whatever life you choose."
She squeezed my hand, her voice cracking. "My only request... if, God forbid, the Ramsey family ever faces ruin, if the company is ever truly in peril... will you consider helping us? For my sake? For the sake of the legacy your grandfather helped build?"
Her eyes, filled with a mixture of hope and sorrow, pleaded with me. "You are far more capable than Damian gives you credit for. You are intelligent, resilient, kind. Go, my dear. Build the life you deserve. You have my blessing. You have my love."
Tears streamed down my face, silent and hot. I knelt before her, holding the envelope tightly, bowing my head in a gesture of profound gratitude and respect. This woman, more than anyone else in that family, had seen me, truly seen me. She had been my only ally, my only protector.
"Thank you, Hildegarde," I whispered, my voice thick with emotion. "Take care of yourself. Please." I rose, clutching the envelope, and walked towards the door, my heart heavy with a bittersweet farewell.
As I stepped out into the manicured gardens, preparing to leave, a smug voice stopped me. "Jilly, darling. Leaving so soon?"
Aida. She stood there, perfectly poised, her left wrist raised, a flash of emerald green glinting in the faint moonlight. A small, exquisite jade bracelet, intricately carved. My mother's bracelet. The one Damian had threatened me with hours ago, the one that had been in her heirloom box with Cristopher's ashes.
My blood ran cold. My jaw clenched so tightly it ached.
"This little trinket?" Aida purred, twirling the bracelet on her wrist, her eyes gleaming with malice. "Damian gave it to me. Said he didn't want any reminders of you cluttering up his life. He said it was your mother's. Oh, Jilly, my love, you should have seen his face when he gave it to me. He was so... eager to be rid of it. You know, he said he wished you had never existed." She laughed, a high, tinkling sound that grated on my nerves. "Why don't you just disappear, Jilly? Go away. You're a stain on his perfect new life."
My hands clenched into fists, my knuckles white. My entire body trembled with a cold, murderous rage. I wanted to tear her apart, to rip that bracelet from her wrist, to silence her sickening laughter forever. But not here. Not now. Not at Hildegarde's birthday.
I took a deep breath, forcing down the rage, forcing myself to speak in a calm, controlled voice. "Give it back, Aida," I said, my voice dangerously low. "That belongs to me. It belonged to my mother."
She smirked. "Oh, but Damian gave it to me. Finders keepers, darling."
"Give it back," I repeated, my gaze unwavering, my voice taking on an icy edge. "Or I will release the recording of you confessing to framing Cristopher and threatening his life. I have it all, Aida. Every single word."
Her face went pale, her eyes widening in a flicker of genuine fear. Her confident smirk vanished. "You're lying," she whispered, her voice losing its sugary sweetness.
"Am I?" I raised my phone, flashing the screen, the voice recorder icon clearly visible.
Aida shrieked, lunging at me, her hands outstretched, desperate to snatch my phone. "Give me that!"
I sidestepped her, my movements surprisingly swift. As she stumbled past, I grabbed her wrist, twisting hard. She cried out in pain as the jade bracelet, the symbol of her cruel triumph, snapped. I snatched the broken pieces, the sharp edges digging into my palm, but I didn't care. I shoved them into my pocket.
"You bitch!" she shrieked, clutching her now bleeding wrist.
Just then, Damian appeared, his eyes fixing on Aida's bleeding wrist, then on me. "Jillian! What have you done to her?" he snarled, his voice thick with anger.
I met his gaze, my eyes cold and dead. "What have you done, Damian?" I retorted, my voice devoid of emotion. "Giving my mother's heirloom to your mistress? To the woman who murdered my brother?" The word "mistress" seemed to pierce him, a flash of something unreadable in his eyes.
"This is not over, Aida," I warned, my voice a low, dangerous growl. "Next time we meet, the reckoning begins. For everything."
With that, I turned on my heel and walked away, my steps firm, my head held high. I didn't look back. I was finally free.
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9.5
Arranged to marry the most ruthless mafia don in the city, Serafina learns early that obedience is the price of survival.
Luca De Santis doesn't love, he owns.
And she is his most valuable possession.
Inside an empire built on blood, fear, and unbreakable loyalty, there is only one man who never looks at her like property.
Matteo De Santis.
Luca's cousin. His enforcer. His shadow.
Falling in love with him is forbidden.
Being discovered means death.
As loyalty fractures and betrayal ignites, Serafina is forced to choose: remain a silent bride to a monster or rise beside the man willing to burn the empire for her.
In a world where love is treason, survival demands rebellion.

9.5
"My father sold me to a sixty-year-old monster to clear his gambling debts. So, I made a desperate gamble of my own."
Seventeen-year-old Isabella Rossi has two choices: become the broken plaything of a sadistic mafia Capo, or do the unthinkable. She chooses the latter. Sneaking into a high-end speakeasy, she slips an aphrodisiac into the whiskey of the deadliest man in New York—Damien Falcone, the ruthless Underboss of the Falcone family.
Her plan was simple: steal his seed, secure his protection, and run.
But you don’t drug a predator and expect to walk away.
When Damien wakes up, he doesn’t kill her. Instead, he claims her.
"You intercepted a delivery meant for my enemy. Turns out, it was you. Now, you are my Collateral."

9.8
I reached for my fiancé's phone to silence an alarm and found a hidden folder named "The Protocol."
Inside was a spreadsheet that systematically dismantled my entire existence.
Task 399: Buy blue hydrangeas. Note: Her favorite. For Denzel.
Task 400: Schedule anniversary dinner. Note: Make sure she feels special. For Denzel.
In that heartbeat, I realized the man I had loved for three years hadn't looked at me once without seeing a chore list left by his dead brother. I wasn't Elfrieda Stewart, the woman Jaxon Tate loved. I was a legacy project.
The truth turned lethal at our engagement gala. When a massive chandelier detached from the ceiling, Jaxon didn't lunge for me.
He tackled his "ex" Janice—who I later discovered was his secret wife—to safety.
He left me standing in the center of the target to be crushed by shattering glass.
But the cruelty didn't end there. On a "reconciliation" yacht trip, Janice pushed me overboard. Jaxon looked at me struggling in the freezing black water, then threw the life preserver to her.
He saved the shark and left me to drown.
I lost everything in that water, including the unborn child I hadn't even told him about.
He thought I was dead. He thought he was free to play house with Janice.
But my brother pulled me from the darkness.
And when I resurfaced in Norway, wearing the ring of a man far more dangerous than Jaxon could ever dream of being, Jaxon realized too late that he had destroyed the only thing that could have saved him.

8.4
I saved a man bleeding out in the snow. He had no memory, so I called him Ben.
We lived in a cabin, fell in love, and married by firelight with no witnesses but the ghosts of my parents.
Then one day, he disappeared.
Two years later, he returned. Not as my husband, but as Bernard Logan, the ruthless Underboss of the city's most dangerous crime family.
And he didn't remember me.
He brought his cruel new fiancée to my clinic and treated me like a stranger.
When she threw my father’s antique music box into a cactus display, he watched as I tore my hands apart trying to save it.
He called our past a "drug-induced hallucination" and threatened to destroy me if I spoke up.
Worst of all, I found out I was pregnant.
He cornered me in the hospital room, his eyes cold and devoid of the warmth I used to know.
"Is it mine?"
I knew if I said yes, he would turn my child into a killer like him. Or his fiancée would ensure we never survived.
So I looked the love of my life in the eye and lied.
"No," I said. "It's not yours."
I signed his NDA, took his hush money, and vanished to Europe to raise my twins alone.
I thought I was free. I found a good man who actually loved me.
But three years later, at an art gallery in Zurich, the crowd parted.
Bernard was standing there, staring at me with a terrifying hunger.
He had found out the truth.
And he was ready to burn the world down to get us back.

7.1
We have been neighbors our whole lives and were best friends when we were kids. Now he is my bully who claims that I am his to torment. There is only one little problem, I have been in love with him since I was sixteen. For two years, Jace Palmer has tortured me with his cruelty in the halls of our high school, but how do I make him stop when it's those same actions that excite me more than they should. Especially when he slams me against a locker and whispers, "You've been a bad girl, Ella."
Now that he's claimed me as his own, he opens my eyes to the darkness within me, turning everything that I have ever known into a thing of the past while helping me to embrace my new role in his life. Only by doing so, it unlocks a piece of me that will change everything. Once my true self comes forward, will he be able to handle the aftermath of his choices?

8.3
Adaline Whitmore becomes the price for her father's betrayal when she is forced to live under the roof of the ruthless billionaire Ronan Frost, the man who lost everything because of her family.
But neither of them knows one truth. She is the same girl who once saved him years ago.
As everything begins to change and secrets come to light, the line between punishment and desire fades. Now Ronan must choose between his need for revenge and the woman quietly stealing his heart.