
Fake Marriage Ruined, She Married The Tycoon
Five years of a fake marriage to a billionaire.
Christi thought she was a wealthy wife-until City Hall told her the truth.
No marriage license. No legal rights. Nothing but a lie.
Her husband cheated on her for four years.
His entire family mocked her, used her, and planned to trap her with a baby.
She was ready to ruin them all.
Then a secret changed everything:
Her late parents were DARPA elites. She is the sole heir to $50 billion.
There's only one catch-marry Cornelius Gregory, Wall Street's ruthless paralyzed tycoon.
She signs the contract in an instant.
Freeze their accounts. Destroy the Rivera family.
The game is over for them.
And the queen has just arrived.
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Chapter 1
"I just need the joint filing status confirmed, please."
Christi pushed the heavy manila envelope across the polished marble counter. It slid under the gap of the bulletproof glass. She offered a polite, practiced smile to the clerk sitting on the other side.
Officer Doyle didn't smile back. He pulled the thick stack of W-2 forms and the Rivera family trust yield certificates from the envelope. His fingers moved mechanically over his keyboard, entering her Social Security Number into the federal tax database for the annual cross-check.
A harsh, flat error tone beeped from his computer speakers.
Doyle frowned. He hit the enter key again. The red glow from the monitor cast a harsh shadow across Christi's face.
"Ma'am, there's no legal marriage record on file for you and Jensen Rivera," Doyle said. His voice was completely monotone, a stark contrast to the sudden ringing in Christi's ears.
Her chest tightened. The air left her lungs in a rush. "That's impossible. We had a massive ceremony in the Hamptons five years ago. There was a priest. Hundreds of guests."
Doyle turned the heavy monitor around to face her. He tapped a thick finger against the screen. "Single," he read aloud. "Without a signed marriage license filed with the state, any religious ceremony is legally void. You are not married."
Christi's breathing stopped. Her brain forcefully replayed a memory from five years ago. Jensen, standing in his tailored suit, smiling warmly as he took the marriage certificate from her hands. *Let me handle the mailing, babe. It's safer for the family trust.*
A violent wave of nausea hit her stomach. She gripped the edge of the cold marble counter to keep her knees from buckling. Five years. She had spent five years in the Rivera family as nothing more than a high-end, legally unprotected companion.
Her phone vibrated violently in her trench coat pocket. The buzzing against her hip broke through the static in her brain. She pulled it out. The screen flashed with the name of her editor-in-chief, Arthur Finch.
She forced air into her lungs and answered. "Arthur-"
"Get to the Upper East Side. The Pierre Hotel. Now," Arthur barked. "There's a multi-car crash outside. I need photos before the police clear the scene."
"Arthur, I have a personal emergency. I can't-"
"You want to keep your health insurance, Christi? You go. Now." The line went dead.
Christi stood frozen for a second. Her fingers were numb. She turned and walked out of Boston City Hall. The early autumn rain of Boston slammed into her face, freezing and sharp. She raised her hand, flagged down a yellow cab, and headed straight for the train station.
Three hours later, the rain outside the Upper East Side was even worse.
Christi stood outside The Pierre Hotel, her waterproof windbreaker soaked through. She wore bulky safety goggles to keep the rain out of her eyes, clutching her telephoto camera. She shoved her way through the aggressive crowd of paparazzi pressing against the yellow police tape.
A black Maybach sat under the dim glow of a streetlamp. The front bumper was crushed.
Christi raised her camera. She adjusted the heavy lens, zooming in. The license plate came into sharp focus. Her stomach dropped. It was Jensen's private car.
Her fingers started to shake. The heavy camera trembled in her hands. She slowly tilted the lens up, focusing through the half-lowered rear window of the Maybach.
The flash of another photographer's camera lit up the inside of the car.
Christi saw Jensen. He was leaning over the backseat, draping his expensive suit jacket over the shoulders of a blonde woman.
The woman turned her head. It was Fallon Ratcliff. Her face, usually plastered on the covers of socialite magazines, was flushed.
Fallon didn't look scared of the crash. Instead, she reached up, hooked her arms around Jensen's neck, and pulled him down. Right there, in the back of the wrecked car, they engaged in a deep, possessive kiss.
Acid burned the back of Christi's throat. She gagged, the bile rising fast. The hard plastic viewfinder of the camera slammed hard against her brow bone. A sharp, stinging pain shot through her forehead.
She bit down on her lower lip. She bit so hard she tasted the hot, metallic tang of blood. *Don't look away.* She forced her finger to press the shutter button.
Click. Click. Click. She took over a dozen high-definition close-ups.
The rapid flashes caught the attention of a bodyguard inside the car. A man in a black suit stepped out, snapping open a massive black umbrella to block the window.
Christi immediately lowered her head. She shoved the heavy camera deep inside her oversized windbreaker. Using the chaotic pushing of the crowd, she backed away and slipped into a dark, narrow alleyway next to the hotel.
She leaned against the wet brick wall and slid down until she hit the cold pavement.
Her phone buzzed in her pocket. She pulled it out. A text message from Gilda Rivera, her "mother-in-law."
*Don't be late for the dinner party tonight. Make sure you wear something that doesn't make us look cheap.*
Christi stared at the words, the title "Mrs. Rivera" a cruel, mocking lie. A dry, ugly laugh scraped out of her throat.
She opened her phone's photo gallery. She zoomed in on the picture she just took. Jensen and Fallon kissing. Jensen's left hand rested on Fallon's waist. His wedding ring caught the street light, a circle of gold that now seemed utterly ironic.
A five-year highlight reel of psychological torture played in her head. Jensen telling her her journalism job was a joke. Jensen isolating her from her college friends. Jensen whispering that she was lucky the Rivera family accepted a girl from the Rust Belt.
The tears in her eyes dried up, replaced by a heat that burned her chest. She stood up. She went to Gilda's contact and hit 'Do Not Disturb'.
She opened the camera compartment, pulled out the small SD card, and carefully slipped it into the hidden lining of her bra. This was her first bullet.
She walked out of the alley, heading straight for the subway.
She didn't notice the black Lincoln Navigator parked silently at the mouth of the alley. The windows were tinted pitch black.
In the back seat, a man sat in the shadows, his eyes fixed on the screen of a tablet. He watched Christi's retreating figure until she disappeared into the rain.
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8.1
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.

9.0
Once a pampered princess, Alaina now clutched a deactivated American Express card, staring out at Central Park. Her family’s fortune was gone, her life, over.
Her family's Hamptons estate, a four-generation legacy, was seized by Dyer Capital. The name hit her: Hardin Dyer, the poor boy she’d once scorned, had returned.
Hardin marched in, serving a divorce agreement. He'd orchestrated her family's downfall for revenge, giving her 24 hours to vacate his property. Penniless, her father faced prison, needing $50 million. Her mother forced her to beg Hardin, who sneered, offering the money for her body. Alaina ripped up the contract.
Hours later, her father had a heart attack. Desperate, she became "Lexi," a club girl enduring humiliation. In the Viper Room, Hardin's lackeys demanded she lick whiskey off his shoe for $10,000. Hardin watched. Outside, her brother Ashton's hand was threatened for a $3 million debt. Spirit shattered, Alaina returned, knelt on broken glass, offering to sign. But Hardin declared her family "dead," offering $10 million for her body, commanding her to use her mouth.
In a furious act of defiance, Alaina threw whiskey in his face, snatched the check, and fled. Yet, when he finally took her, a searing, foreign pain and blood on the sheets revealed a shocking truth: he had never touched her three years ago. Why had he let her believe such a monstrous lie?

8.0
My wedding was tomorrow. I was a crisis counselor who had finally found peace with my loving fiancé, Dexter, and my best friend, Barbara.
A late-night call about a forced marriage led me to a hotel penthouse, where I found them naked in bed together.
It was all a cruel, three-year "savior game." They were bored heirs, and I was their project. They destroyed my career, caused me to lose our baby, and put my mother in the hospital.
They forced me to be a bridesmaid at their wedding-the one that should have been mine.
In front of hundreds of guests, they exposed my traumatic past and then tried to marry me off to a drunken stranger as a joke.
As I stood there, broken, a text from Barbara arrived.
"Your mother saw the livestream. She had a heart attack. She's not going to make it."
With nothing left, I ran to the 20th-floor window and jumped. They thought they had erased me. But my death was just the beginning.

7.4
Alaya woke up in the sterile hospital room to a devastating reality: her six-month-old baby was gone, lost in a horrific car crash.
But as the memories crashed into her, she realized she had been reborn. She was back three years before her ultimate death, back to the moment she remembered lying bleeding on the asphalt while her husband, Hardy, shielded his mistress from the freezing rain.
When Hardy finally showed up at the ward, he coldly dismissed the crash as a mere accident and immediately left to comfort his young lover. To make matters worse, Alaya secretly checked her medical files and found a terrifying detail: someone had intentionally slipped beta-blockers into her system, a lethal drug for her transplanted heart. And Hardy didn't care about her dead baby or her irreversible infertility. He only coldly confirmed with the doctor that her heart was still viable.
A horrifying suspicion made Alaya's blood run cold. Why was her husband so obsessed with protecting her transplanted heart while treating her like garbage? And why was his perfectly healthy mistress secretly racking up massive bills at an advanced cardiac hospital?
Realizing she was nothing but a vessel in a twisted, deadly game, Alaya didn't shed another tear.
She packed her belongings, left her flawless diamond wedding ring on the cold marble table, and vanished from their penthouse.
When Hardy finally tracked her down, she threw a thick stack of documents onto the table.
"Sign the divorce papers," she said, her eyes completely dead.

7.0
Elliana and her six-year-old daughter Clara were trapped in a horrific, bloody car crash.
A private medical helicopter bearing her husband's family crest touched down on the wet asphalt, but the paramedics ran straight past her crushed SUV.
They rushed to the sleek sports car that had rear-ended them.
Sitting inside were her husband Devontae's mistress and her daughter, suffering from nothing more than a minor scratch and a panic attack.
Trapped under twisted metal, Elliana dialed her husband's number with bloody fingers, begging him to save their dying child.
"Stop being so dramatic, Elliana," Devontae snapped impatiently over the phone. "I am sick of you using Clara to play the victim. Kyle needs to get to the hospital immediately."
He hung up, and the helicopter lifted off into the night sky, leaving Elliana and Clara in the absolute dark.
Elliana watched her daughter's tiny hand drop lifelessly.
In absolute despair and suffocating hatred, she dropped a lighter into the pooled gasoline, letting a wall of fire consume them both.
As the flames blistered her skin, she felt a profound, agonizing injustice.
She had hidden her brilliant talents and played the submissive, perfect wife just to protect his fragile ego, but her endless sacrifices had only bought them a fiery grave.
Why did her devotion end with her child bleeding to death in the cold rain while the mistress flew away to safety?
Opening her eyes, Elliana violently gasped for air in her massive velvet bed.
She stared at the glowing date on her phone screen.
It was exactly six months before the crash.
The phantom pain in her crushed legs reminded her of the hell she had just crawled back from.
She got out of bed, her eyes as cold and sharp as broken glass.
This time, she would send them all to hell first.

8.1
For three years, I swallowed every humiliation to warm my billionaire husband's frozen heart.
But at his birthday banquet, the obsidian cufflinks I spent three sleepless nights carving were crushed into worthless powder.
Carly, the woman he truly loved, had intentionally tripped and slammed into my arm.
When the velvet box fell, I dropped to my knees on pure instinct. My bare hands were deeply sliced by the jagged shards, warm blood dripping onto the pristine marble floor.
But Dominic didn't even spare a single glance at his bleeding wife.
He protectively cradled Carly, his voice thick with concern as he asked if she was hurt.
He let the entire ballroom laugh at me, calling me a piece of trash that wasn't even fit to touch the hotel carpet.
When I later confronted him about the secret estate where he hid her, he nearly broke my jaw.
"A toxic bitch like you deserves to rot in a loveless marriage."
I finally understood. My marriage was just a cruel prison designed to torture me for a debt I supposedly owed.
I didn't shed a single tear. I went back to the penthouse, signed the divorce papers waiving all my assets, and walked barefoot into the freezing New York storm.
To survive, I took a job as the personal executive assistant to his biggest enemy on Wall Street.
But when I showed up at an industry dinner wearing a stunning designer suit next to another man, the cold tyrant who had thrown me away completely lost his mind.