
Faking Love To Save The General
7.5 / 10.0
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For five years, I was locked away in the freezing royal dungeon, starved and used as a bloody plaything by the kingdom's sadistic Cabinet Minister, Brandt Fischer.
He tortured me daily for one twisted reason: I simply looked like someone else.
When he visited my cell to casually announce my father's execution and drag a silver dagger across my neck, he expected me to beg.
Instead, I laughed, sank my teeth directly into his carotid artery, and was violently thrown against a jagged stone wall to my death.
As my skull cracked and my blood stained the moss, I thought about my so-called family. The moment Brandt had demanded me, my father, the Duke, handed me over without a single hesitation to save his own political career.
I was nothing but a disposable pawn, left to rot in the dark while the monsters who ruined my life thrived.
I died suffocating on my own blood and absolute, destructive vengeance.
Then, I opened my eyes.
I was lying in my silk-sheeted bed, reborn as my fifteen-year-old self.
Today was the exact day Lord Daryl Langley, the God of War, would be ambushed and crippled—the event that allowed Brandt to seize ultimate power.
I immediately stole a horse, rode to the palace gates, and threw myself directly in front of Daryl's moving carriage.
"I just didn't want to see a hero die like a slaughtered pig."
I didn't care if I had to shatter my own ankle to hijack his convoy. This time, I was going to save the general, and he would become the blade I use to slaughter them all.
Faking Love To Save The General Chapter 1
Cold, murky water dripped from the moss-covered stone archway.
The drop fell with a hollow splash into a foul-smelling puddle on the floor.
The Royal Dungeon was built deep beneath the capital city, a place designed to make prisoners forget the sun existed. The air down here was thick, tasting of rust and rotting flesh. It coated the back of the throat like a physical weight.
A heavy, wrought-iron cell door shrieked. The harsh friction of metal on metal echoed down the corridor.
Mace, the prison guard, pushed the door open with all his weight. He kept his eyes trained on the floor, his body stiff with extreme, deferential caution.
Brandt Fischer stepped into the cell.
He wore a pair of immaculate, custom-made black leather boots. The expensive leather splashed directly into the filthy puddle, but Brandt didn't flinch. As the Cabinet Minister, a man who controlled the kingdom's laws and shadows, he was not supposed to be here. The dungeons were for the condemned, not for the highest-ranking officials. But Brandt used the official excuse of "interrogating the families of traitors" to mask his private, twisted obsession.
The flickering light from the hallway torches spilled into the cell.
It illuminated Eulah Merrill.
She was suspended from the wall, her wrists bound tightly by heavy steel chains. The metal had rubbed her skin raw, leaving bloody, infected rings around her delicate bones.
Her body trembled. It was an involuntary, violent shivering caused by five years of starvation, severe blood loss, and the freezing dampness of the underground cell.
Brandt walked toward her. He raised a hand clad in a pristine white glove.
His long fingers clamped down on Eulah's jaw. His grip was a vice, forcing her chin up.
The sudden, harsh torchlight stabbed at Eulah's dry, sunken eyes. She squinted instinctively, her eyelashes fluttering against the painful glare.
Brandt stared down at her. The corners of his mouth curved up into a smile. It was a gentle, polite smile, the kind he wore at royal banquets. It made the hairs on the back of Eulah's neck stand up.
"Your father, Duke Harrison, is dead," Brandt said.
His voice was like velvet. Soft. Soothing. Completely at odds with the words leaving his mouth.
Eulah's heart seized. It felt as if a giant, invisible fist had punched straight through her ribs and squeezed her heart muscle until it stopped beating for a full second.
Her stomach dropped, a cold, hollow sensation spreading through her abdomen.
But she didn't make a sound.
Her cracked, bleeding lips pressed tightly together. Not a single whimper. Not a single plea for mercy escaped her throat.
Brandt's polite smile faltered. A flicker of irritation crossed his gray eyes. He hated this dead-water reaction. He wanted her to scream. He wanted her to beg.
He slowly reached into the cuff of his dark, patterned sleeve.
He pulled out a silver dagger. The hilt was heavily engraved with the Royal Crest-a lion intertwined with thorns.
Brandt pressed the flat, freezing edge of the blade against Eulah's cheek. The metal dragged against the layer of grime and dried blood on her skin.
Eulah didn't look away. Through the tangled, dirty strands of her hair, her eyes locked onto his. Her gaze was cold. Piercing. Filled with a mocking defiance that refused to be broken.
That look. That unyielding, rebellious stare.
It was a spark thrown into a pool of gasoline. It instantly ignited the sadistic, violent urges buried deep inside Brandt's chest.
He twisted his wrist.
The razor-sharp edge of the dagger sliced into the pale, fragile skin of Eulah's neck.
Warm blood immediately welled up. It spilled over the metal blade and trailed down her collarbone, disappearing into the filthy, torn fabric of her prison uniform.
A sharp, electric pain shot through Eulah's entire body. Her lungs seized.
She bit down hard on the tip of her tongue. The metallic taste of her own blood flooded her mouth, the sharp sting forcing her brain to stay conscious.
Brandt leaned in close. So close that his hot breath fanned over the fresh, bleeding cut on her neck.
"The executioner was clumsy," Brandt whispered directly into her ear.
He began to describe the execution. He detailed exactly how the heavy axe had missed the first time, biting into her father's shoulder blade before finally severing his head on the second swing.
Eulah's chest began to heave. Her breathing turned ragged.
Extreme, suffocating hatred clawed at her throat.
Her mind violently replayed the last five years. Five years of being locked away. Five years of being used as a substitute, a punching bag, a plaything for this monster, all because she looked like someone else.
Brandt's gloved finger moved. He pressed the pad of his thumb directly into the fresh, bleeding wound he had just made on her neck. He pushed hard.
A muffled, agonizing groan was ripped from Eulah's throat.
Her body convulsed against the stone wall, the steel chains rattling violently as her muscles spasmed in pure agony.
Brandt's gray eyes lit up. A sick, twisted satisfaction washed over his features. The thrill of absolute control made his pupils dilate.
He released his grip on her jaw and took a half-step back.
He tilted his head, admiring the way she hung there. Like a broken, discarded ragdoll.
Eulah's eyelashes were heavy with cold sweat. She forced her eyes open, staring dead at the demon who had systematically destroyed her entire life.
Her dry, ruined throat worked.
She let out a sound. It started as a rasp, then grew into a low, chilling sneer.
It was a laugh.
A spark of absolute, destructive vengeance ignited in the ashes of her despair.
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Faking Love To Save The General of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6Chapter 7 Ch. 7
Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

7.6
I moaned out his name. "Damien, you are not trying hard to get me, yet .."
He smirked and whispered to my ears. "I like being hard, Not "trying" hard."
When Lila Sinclair's mother is sentenced to life in prison, her world collapses overnight. With nowhere else to go, she is taken in by Sebastian Blackwood, her mother's former lover. A powerful, reserved man who agrees to shelter her under strict conditions.
Lila is placed in his household... and into a life she never asked for, sharing a roof with two stepbrothers who change everything.
Damien is danger wrapped in charm...intense, controlling, and impossible to ignore. Ethan, on the other hand, is steady, kind, and grounding...the only place she feels safe when everything else feels like it's slipping away.
But Lila's situation comes with a hidden clause: her stay in the country is temporary. Within 365 days, her legal protection expires. To remain, she must marry one of the Blackwood heirs.
One house. Two brothers. Twelve months of blurred lines, buried secrets, and emotions she was never meant to feel.
As desire clashes with safety and passion wars with peace, Lila is forced into a choice that could secure her future...or destroy it completely.

7.5
To save my family's dying company, I was forced to marry a billionaire I hadn't seen in fourteen years.
But right outside the City Clerk's office, he tossed our marriage certificate at me like a cheap receipt and shoved a four-year-old boy into my arms.
"Your new life has begun. You're on babysitting duty now."
He sneered and left me stranded on the sidewalk. I realized with absolute horror that my new husband was Ellsworth Marshall, the sickly boy I had relentlessly bullied in middle school.
He didn't spend five billion dollars to save the Bradford family. He bought me to execute a slow, suffocating revenge.
He used his orphaned nephew as a pawn, explicitly threatening my father that if I failed to play the perfect, compliant nanny, he would instantly destroy our family's legacy.
He even had his guards lock me out of his Long Island estate on my first night, forcing me to stand in the cold dark just to prove he owned me.
I was trapped in a gilded cage, suffocated by the guilt of my past and the terror of my present.
Why did he involve an innocent child in his twisted vendetta? How much humiliation was enough to pay for my childhood cruelty?
Looking at the terrified little boy clinging to my skirt, I tightened my grip on my suitcase.
If he wanted to destroy my will piece by piece, I had to find a way to survive the monster I created.

9.0
Allegra woke up in a sterile alien hospital with no memory, no ID chip, and a terrifying snow leopard General claiming responsibility for her crash.
But a routine ID scan at a local boutique shattered her fragile cover.
The machine shrieked, flashing a fatal red warning: NO NEURAL LINK DETECTED.
She was a "Ghost"—an illegal, unregistered biological entity in a ruthless Hybrid Empire.
The boutique locked down instantly. Heavily armed police swarmed the plaza, laser sights painting her chest red.
She was dragged into a subterranean military black site, where a manic geneticist tested her blood and discovered the impossible truth.
She wasn't a Hybrid. She was a pure Homo Sapiens—an extinct race whose mere presence could cure the Hybrids' fatal Psyche collapse.
To keep her all to himself, the scientist lied to the General, branding her a toxic, mutating bio-weapon.
Forced by Imperial law, the General abandoned her to the scientist's cruel custody.
Allegra was locked inside a reinforced glass cage in the deepest isolation ward, waiting to be dissected.
She huddled on the floor, trembling in absolute despair.
She didn't belong in this nightmare world. Why was she being treated like a monster? Why did this madman look at her like a prize to be torn apart?
Watching the scientist's fox ears twitch in manic stress outside the glass, her human empathy momentarily overrode her terror.
She stood up and pressed her palm against the glass, perfectly aligning it with his.
"Don't be so nervous, Mr. Fox."
Instantly, an invisible wave of human resonance flooded his core, shattering his genetic madness.
The terrifying predator was reduced to a whimpering, devoted puppy, pressing himself against the window in absolute submission.
Allegra slowly pulled her hand back, her heart skipping a beat.
Well, she thought, that changes things.

7.6
I was the fiancée of the Chicago Outfit’s heir, a bond sealed by blood and eighteen years of history.
But when his mistress pushed me into the freezing pool at our engagement gala, Jax didn’t swim toward me.
He swam past me.
He scooped up the girl who pushed me, cradling her like fragile glass, while I struggled against the weight of my gown in the murky water.
When I finally dragged myself out, shivering and humiliated before the entire underworld, Jax didn’t offer a hand. He offered a scowl.
"You’re making a scene, Eliana. Go home."
Later, when that same mistress shoved me down the stairs, shattering my knee and my dance career, Jax stepped over my broken body to comfort her.
I overheard him telling his friends, "I’m just breaking her spirit. She needs to learn she’s property, not a partner. Once she’s desperate enough, she’ll be the perfect obedient wife."
He thought I was a dog that would always return to its master. He thought he could starve me of affection until I begged for scraps.
He was wrong.
While he was busy playing protector to his mistress, I wasn't crying in my room.
I was packing his ring into a cardboard box.
I cancelled my transfer to UCLA and enrolled at NYU instead.
By the time Jax realized his "property" was missing, I was already in New York, standing next to a man who looked at me like a queen, not a possession.

8.3
On the night of my career-defining art exhibition, I stood completely alone. My husband, Dante Sovrano, the most feared man in Chicago, had promised he wouldn’t miss it for the world. Instead, he was on the evening news.
He was shielding another woman—his ruthless business partner—from a downpour, letting his own thousand-dollar suit get soaked just to protect her. The headline flashed below them, calling their new alliance a "power move" that would reshape the city.
The guests at my gallery immediately began to whisper. Their pitying looks turned my greatest triumph into a public spectacle of humiliation. Then his text arrived, a cold, final confirmation of my place in his life: “Something came up. Isabella needed me. You understand. Business.”
For four years, I had been his possession. A quiet, artistic wife kept in a gilded cage on the top floor of his skyscraper. I poured all my loneliness and heartbreak onto my canvases, but he never truly saw my art. He never truly saw me. He just saw another one of his assets.
My heart didn't break that night. It turned to ice. He hadn't just neglected me; he had erased me.
So the next morning, I walked into his office and handed him a stack of gallery contracts.
He barely glanced up, annoyed at the interruption to his empire-building. He snatched the pen and signed on the line I’d marked.
He didn’t know the page tucked directly underneath was our divorce decree.
He had just signed away his wife like she was nothing more than an invoice for art supplies.

8.9
Ava Kidd just wanted to escape her abusive stepmother when she got drunk at a high-end club and stumbled into the wrong hotel room.
She woke up the next morning in a luxury penthouse, lying naked next to a terrifyingly handsome man covered in her scratch marks.
Recalling rumors of the hotel's secret underground concierge, she immediately assumed she had accidentally slept with an elite male escort.
Desperate to settle the bill, she offered him her only debit card with a pathetic $1,800.
But the man, who was actually Garrison Terry, the ruthless billionaire CEO, was deeply insulted by the cheap plastic.
He trapped her against the bed, coldly demanding a half-million-dollar service fee.
When Ava frantically offered her dead mother's tarnished locket as collateral, he cruelly dismissed it as worthless junk.
Ava was humiliated, her heart pounding with absolute terror.
She didn't understand why this arrogant gigolo was acting like a deranged extortionist, demanding a fortune from a broke girl who had clearly made a mistake.
Furious and refusing to cower, she sneaked out, put on his oversized designer shirt, and aggressively ate his $800 truffle breakfast.
Having no money left, she grabbed her cheap red lipstick, wrote a defiant IOU on his expensive linen napkin, and fled the hotel.
She thought she had escaped a criminal, but upstairs, the billionaire traced her lipstick-stained name with a predatory smile.
"Ava Kidd, I will absolutely find you."











