
Escaping The Grasp Of My Billionaire
Five years ago, I was the invisible scholarship charity case at an elite Manhattan prep school, trying to survive in a sea of trust-fund babies.
Arlo Hammond, the untouchable billionaire heir, made sure to completely dismantle my soul.
When his wealthy friends asked if he noticed me, his mocking laughter echoed down the hallway.
"Are you out of your mind? You seriously think I'd be interested in a boring little nerd like her?"
But the moment we were alone, he would corner me in dark alleys, pinning my wrists against brick walls with terrifying, possessive jealousy if my phone even buzzed. He played his twisted games until I was left standing in the rain with my shattered dignity.
Now, I am an Assistant District Attorney. I spent years burying those memories under mountains of legal files.
But tonight, he returned.
When we crossed paths at an exclusive club, he looked at me with the cool detachment he'd give a piece of furniture. In front of a crowd of elites, he coldly declared:
"We have absolutely nothing to do with each other anymore."
Then he walked away to pick up a supermodel, leaving me trembling from the sheer humiliation.
I didn't understand. If I was so worthless to him, why did he still have my birthday tattooed in dark ink on his wrist? Why did he look at me with such raw, painful vulnerability in the shadows?
I stared at my pale reflection in the mirror and made a silent vow.
I am not that pathetic seventeen-year-old anymore, and I will prove to him that I am completely, entirely over him.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 5
The VIP lounge was a stark contrast to the chaotic energy of the main club. It was dimly lit, soundproofed, and smelled faintly of expensive leather cleaner.
Dawn lay curled on her side on a massive, plush leather sofa. She looked like a broken doll, her knees pulled tightly to her chest in a fetal position. Her eyes were squeezed shut, her teeth grinding together as she rode out the violent waves of pain radiating from her stomach. Every muscle in her body was locked in a state of rigid tension.
The heavy oak door of the lounge clicked open. Allyson hurried in, her heels sinking into the thick carpet. She was carefully balancing a delicate porcelain teacup on a saucer. Steam rose from the cup in curling wisps.
Allyson knelt beside the sofa. She gently placed a hand on Dawn's trembling shoulder. "Hey. Sit up just a little bit. I got the bartender to brew this. Real peppermint leaves."
Dawn forced her eyes open. Her vision was slightly blurry from the unshed tears of physical pain. She uncurled her body with agonizing slowness, propping herself up on one elbow.
Allyson guided the rim of the teacup to Dawn's pale lips. Dawn took a small, hesitant sip.
The liquid was scalding hot, but the sharp, clean taste of peppermint immediately flooded her mouth. The heat traveled down her throat, settling into her violently cramping stomach. The medicinal properties of the mint began to work almost instantly, slightly loosening the tight, agonizing knot in her muscles.
Dawn let her head fall back against the soft leather cushion. She exhaled a long, shaky breath. The intense physical pain began to recede, leaving behind a profound, hollow exhaustion.
As she lay there, the sharp scent of the peppermint vapor drifted into her nose. It was a distinct, piercing smell.
Proustian memory. The scientific term for when a specific scent bypasses the logical brain and directly triggers a visceral, buried memory.
The smell of peppermint didn't remind Dawn of a high-end club. It reminded her of cheap chewing gum. It reminded her of a boy who constantly chewed it to mask the smell of cigarettes he wasn't supposed to be smoking.
The low, muffled bass of the club music outside the door began to distort. The sound warped, stretching and fading until it was replaced by the shrill, chaotic noise of teenagers. The dim lighting of the lounge dissolved, replaced by the blinding, harsh sunlight of an early autumn morning.
The memory hit her with the force of a physical blow, dragging her five years into the past.
She was seventeen again.
She was sitting in a classroom at St. Jude's Preparatory Academy, an elite private school in Manhattan where the tuition cost more than her father made in a decade. She was there on a full academic scholarship, a charity case dropped into a sea of unimaginable wealth.
The sunlight poured through the massive, floor-to-ceiling windows, illuminating the rich mahogany desks. Dawn sat in her usual seat, a desk in the middle of the classroom, pushed right up against the massive windows. She wore a pristine, perfectly ironed uniform. Her skirt was the regulation length. Her tie was knotted perfectly. She was a ghost, trying desperately not to be noticed by the kids wearing limited-edition sneakers and carrying backpacks that cost thousands of dollars.
Suddenly, a massive commotion erupted in the hallway outside. It was a mix of loud, obnoxious laughter and the high-pitched giggles of girls.
Bang.
The heavy wooden door of the classroom was kicked open with such force that it slammed against the wall, the sound echoing like a gunshot.
Arlo Hammond strode into the room.
He was eighteen, tall, and already built like a man who spent hours in a private gym. He had a designer backpack slung carelessly over one shoulder. His school uniform was a disaster. The top two buttons of his crisp white shirt were undone, exposing a sliver of his tanned chest. His tie hung loosely around his neck, completely useless.
He reeked of the absolute, arrogant entitlement of a trust-fund baby who knew the rules didn't apply to him because his father funded the school's new science wing.
The moment he entered, the dynamic of the room shifted. The girls stopped talking, their eyes tracking his every movement with undisguised hunger. The boys puffed out their chests, desperate for his attention.
He strode toward the back of the room, his path taking him right past Dawn's desk. His gaze fixed straight ahead, jaw tight, deliberately ignoring the figure in his peripheral vision. He dropped his heavy bag onto his self-appointed throne in the center of the back row.
Dawn stared down at the complex calculus equation in her textbook. Her fingers tightened around her mechanical pencil. The plastic dug into her skin, leaving a deep red indentation.
She forced her eyes to focus on the numbers. She pressed the graphite tip onto her scratch paper, writing out formulas at a frantic pace. The scratching sound of the pencil was her attempt to drown out the sudden, erratic thumping of her own heart.
From just a few seats away, she could hear Arlo's voice. He was talking to his friends about a weekend yacht party his family was hosting in the Hamptons. His voice was a lazy, gravelly drawl. Every syllable he spoke felt like a physical tug on Dawn's nerve endings.
She hunched her shoulders, trying to make herself physically smaller. She buried her face closer to the textbook.
We are different species, she repeated the mantra in her head like a desperate prayer. He is a Hammond. I live in a neighborhood where the streetlights are broken. We cannot intersect. Do not look at him.
The shrill, piercing scream of the school bell suddenly rang out, signaling the end of the period. It was a harsh sound that shattered the delicate, oppressive ecosystem of the classroom.
Dawn didn't hesitate. Before the teacher had even finished speaking, she slammed her heavy calculus textbook shut. She shoved it into her worn canvas tote bag, her movements jerky and panicked. She needed to get out of this room. She needed to escape the suffocating gravity of his presence before she did something stupid, like turn around and look at him.
You may also like

7.1
For six years, I was the perfect, obedient wife to billionaire Hartwell Ware, enduring his coldness because I thought my love could eventually thaw his heart.
Then, my friend sent me a photo. Hartwell was at the airport, tenderly holding the waist of his first love, Eveline Craig.
He came home smelling of her synthetic rose perfume, accused me of stalking him, and coldly demanded a divorce.
His lawyer handed me a thick settlement agreement. It offered astronomical alimony and luxury properties, but it came with a humiliating ten-page non-disclosure agreement.
He wanted to buy my silence. He wanted to strip me of my rights to our son and gag me permanently, just so he could parade his new life with Eveline without any PR backlash.
Even now, he still thought I was a gold digger who had orchestrated a media scandal to trap him into marriage.
I stared at the man I had worshipped for two thousand days. My six years of desperate devotion had been nothing but a humiliating, one-sided delusion.
Hope was finally dead, and with it, my tears had completely dried up.
He expected me to cry, to beg, to negotiate for more millions.
Instead, I snatched the pen, crossed out the massive alimony, and signed my name on the dotted line.
"I am taking the basic child support, and not a single red cent more."
Leaving my five-carat diamond ring on the marble table, I walked out the door with nothing but my old suitcase.

9.6
I was only three and a half years old, living in a damp basement and beaten daily by Enoch Pruitt with a heavy leather whip.
"Get up, you useless waste of space!"
He always told me I was a stray he had picked out of the garbage.
But during one brutal beating that nearly stopped my heart, time froze, and a glowing figure called The Chronicler appeared.
"You are not an abandoned orphan, Clare. You carry the blood of the highest gods."
He revealed that I was the stolen daughter of the ultra-wealthy Barrett family.
Then, he showed me the horrific ending of my previous life.
I had died right here on this bloody dirt floor.
My real parents and three brothers went completely insane with grief, turning into ruthless monsters who destroyed themselves and the entire world to avenge me.
Meanwhile, the Pruitt family kept torturing me, locking me in a woodshed and feeding me moldy bread.
The memory of my bones breaking and my real mother's agonizing screams crushed my chest.
Why did I have to suffer like an animal while my true family tore the world apart looking for me?
This time, I refused to die in the mud.
I accepted my divine blood, my eyes glowing gold as I summoned a bolt of purple lightning to strike my abuser.
I just needed to survive the night.
Because my real father's heavily armed convoy was already tearing up the mountain, ready to burn this hell to the ground.

8.4
After being kidnapped for years and finally rescued, five-year-old Izzy thought she was going home to her wealthy biological family.
But when the social worker brought her to the freezing bus station, her biological father, Conrad, didn't even get out of his Mercedes. He took one look at her tangled hair and worn-out shoes, his lip curling in disgust.
"I have a real family now. I'm not disrupting my life for this."
He drove away, leaving her choking on his exhaust fumes. When her rough, grease-stained uncle Bryan forcefully brought her to the family mansion, things only got worse. Her biological mother refused to touch her, complaining that she smelled like a dumpster. Her half-sister Katelynn pushed her to the ground, making her bleed, and framed her for stealing. Instead of helping, Conrad roared at Izzy, calling her a wild animal and threatening to throw her back onto the streets.
Izzy stood there shivering in her oversized rags, watching them stand together in a perfect, unbroken circle. She didn't understand why her own blood looked at her like she was a monster, or why they were so eager to throw a traumatized child back into the dark.
But what her wealthy family didn't know was that Izzy had a secret: she could hear plants talking. And the greenhouse orchids were screaming at their cruelty. So, she climbed onto their expensive coffee table, pointed at her mechanic uncle, and made her choice.
"I don't want Conrad to be my daddy. I want Uncle Bryan."
She walked out of that loveless mansion forever, ready to follow the whispers of an old apple tree in her new backyard—a tree that was about to guide her to a buried fortune of gold.

8.8
I've always been the unwanted child-the invisible one. The rebel no one ever tried to understand.
And yet, I never resented my perfect, beloved sister. All I ever wanted was for her to be happy.
But one cruel twist of fate-and a devastating betrayal by someone I trusted-changed everything.
I woke up in a stranger's bed, losing the one thing I had guarded so carefully. Back then, I thought that was my greatest loss.
I was wrong.
Because not long after, my sister introduced me to her fiancé.
And the man standing in front of me... was the same stranger from that night.
Now he haunts me-day and night, in my dreams and in my waking hours. And just when I start to believe the nightmare might finally fade with the dawn, Alan walks back into my life.
This time, he has no intention of letting me forget.
Not the insult I dealt him.
...or that one unforgettable night.

9.3
I was the rightful heir to the Valenzuela estate, but my aunt and cousin treated me worse than a stray dog.
On a freezing rainy night, they forged documents to strip me of my trust fund and violently ordered their bodyguards to throw me out.
My cousin snatched the rosewood urn containing my mother's ashes. She smashed it onto the marble floor and maliciously ground the white powder under her stiletto heel.
When Aidan, the elderly butler who had protected me since I was a baby, tried to shield me from their assassins in the storm, he was stabbed in the back.
His hot blood poured over my hands as he died in the muddy puddle, while my aunt's men laughed and raised their blades to finish me off.
They thought I was just a nameless orphan they could easily erase.
The next day, they went to the press, branding me a degenerate thief who ran away, happily preparing to parade around at my grandfather's charity gala using my stolen wealth.
But they didn't know I was rescued from the rain by the most ruthless billionaire in New York, a man willing to burn the city down to protect me.
Staring at my pale reflection in the penthouse mirror, I took a pair of heavy silver scissors and chopped off my long hair.
"From today on, the weak girl is dead. I am Evelena Valenzuela, and I am going to make them bleed for every single thing they took."

8.9
I was married to billionaire Alessandro Dorsey for four years. The only person in his cold, elite family who truly cared for me was his grandfather.
But when his grandfather suddenly passed away, my husband dragged me to the freshly dug grave and threw a newspaper in my face. The headline blamed me for his death.
Before I could process the grief, Alessandro forced me to my knees in front of dozens of flashing cameras.
"Admit your negligence, or you will never see the sun rise in this city again."
He threatened to destroy my own family if I didn't publicly apologize for a crime I didn't commit. Back at the estate, his mother falsely accused me of stealing a priceless family heirloom. I begged my husband to believe me, but he just looked at me with disgust, froze all my personal bank accounts, and handed me a divorce agreement. Sign it, forfeit everything, and erase my identity, or go to prison.
I was stripped of my dignity, my money, and the man I loved. I fled New York with nothing, only to discover I was pregnant with his triplets. For years, the injustice burned in my chest. How could the man who once meant safety throw me to the wolves without a second thought?
Five years later, I stepped back into the city with my three children. This time, I wasn't the broken woman he discarded, but a powerful gemologist ready to tear down his empire.