
Falling For My Dead Husband's Ghost
To save my brother's life, I married a dead billionaire.
My new home was a freezing, high-tech mausoleum where I was ordered to hold a year-long vigil beside Byron Hyde's cryogenic pod.
But I wasn't alone in the dark.
Every night, a terrifying shadow smelling of whiskey and sandalwood pinned me to my narrow bed.
It tore my clothes and brutally claimed my body, leaving me bruised and trembling until dawn.
When I begged the housekeeper for help, showing her my torn skin, she just smiled cruelly.
"It seems the master's spirit has accepted you."
I thought I was being haunted by a vengeful ghost, until Byron's arrogant nephew broke into the tomb to assault me.
His tampering triggered the life-support system, and the heavy lid of the pod hissed open.
Byron Hyde sat up, his eyes lethal and his skin shockingly warm.
He was alive.
Looking at his broad shoulders, I caught the faint scent of whiskey and sandalwood.
The horrific truth hit me like a physical blow.
My nightly tormentor wasn't a ghost. It was my living, breathing husband.
When I confronted him, his eyes were cold and clinical.
"That was a necessary test. I had to know if my wife would break."
A white-hot rage choked me, but I didn't scream or run.
He slipped the priceless, heavy sapphire of the family matriarch onto my finger, offering me absolute power over the treacherous relatives who wanted us both dead.
To fight a monster, you can't be a victim.
I looked into his deep, dangerous eyes and accepted the ring.
If this was a cage, allying with the keeper was the only way to find the key.
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Chapter 1
The rain was a relentless drumming against the windows of the Maybach, a sound that vibrated deep in Amelie Glass's bones. Each drop that slid down the black-tinted glass felt like a countdown.
The car slowed to a stop. Through the blur of water, she saw it. The Hyde family mausoleum. It wasn't a tomb; it was a cathedral of the dead, a monument of marble and granite that clawed at the midnight sky, grand and grotesque. This was to be her home.
The driver's door opened and closed. A moment later, her own door was pulled open. A black umbrella shielded her from the downpour.
"Welcome to your new home, Mrs. Hyde."
The voice belonged to Mrs. Gable, the housekeeper. It was a voice without temperature, flat and cold as the marble facade before them. Her face was a mask of stern lines, her eyes like chips of ice.
Amelie's stomach twisted into a knot so tight it stole her breath. She took the offered umbrella, her fingers brushing against Mrs. Gable's gloved hand. There was no warmth there. Of course there wasn't.
She stepped out of the car, her thin black silk dress instantly feeling inadequate against the damp chill. She followed the housekeeper up the sweeping stone steps to a pair of massive, ornate doors.
Mrs. Gable produced a heavy, old-fashioned key. The lock turned with a groan that echoed in the stormy silence.
The interior was cavernous and cold. In the center of the room, bathed in a soft, ethereal blue light, was a futuristic-looking cryogenic preservation pod.
"According to the agreement, you will remain here to hold vigil for Mr. Byron Hyde for 365 days," Mrs. Gable stated, her voice echoing slightly in the vast space. "This is the sole condition for your brother, Leo, to receive the best medical and legal protection."
Amelie's gaze was fixed on the small metal plate on the side of the pod.
BYRON HYDE.
Followed by the dates of his birth and his death.
A shiver that had nothing to do with the cold snaked its way up her spine. She had married a dead man.
Mrs. Gable gestured towards a small, recessed area to the side. It was furnished sparsely: a narrow bed, a small table, and a door that presumably led to a bathroom. It was a cell, decorated in shades of grief.
"Your duties are companionship and absolute obedience. Food will be delivered once a day. Do not attempt to leave. The security system was designed by former Mossad agents."
The warning was delivered with the same lack of emotion as the welcome.
Amelie just nodded. For Leo, she would endure anything. She had to.
"I will leave you now."
Mrs. Gable turned and walked away, her heels clicking on the polished stone floor. The heavy doors swung shut behind her, the sound of the lock turning again, a final, deafening boom that severed Amelie from the world.
She was alone.
The only light came from the cryogenic pod, casting long, dancing shadows on the walls. The air was thick with the scent of lilies and something else, something sterile and chemical.
She curled up on the narrow bed, pulling a thin blanket around her shoulders. The wind howled outside, a mournful cry that seemed to seep through the stone. She felt like a sacrifice, left on an altar for a god who was no longer there.
Hours passed. Exhaustion warred with fear, a heavy, suffocating weight on her chest. Her eyelids grew heavy. She was drifting, sinking into a shallow, restless sleep when she felt it.
A sudden drop in temperature. A cold so profound it felt like it was coming from inside her.
Her eyes snapped open.
The room was darker now. The blue light from the pod seemed dimmer.
She felt a presence. A prickling on the back of her neck. The undeniable sensation of being watched.
Slowly, she turned her head.
A tall, dark figure stood silently by her bed.
A scream built in her throat, hot and sharp, but it died before it could make a sound. It was as if an invisible hand had clamped down on her windpipe.
The silhouette was stark against the faint glow. Broad shoulders, a lean frame. It was shockingly similar to the man in the photographs she had been shown. The man in the pod. Byron Hyde.
It's his ghost, her mind screamed. He's come back. A vengeful spirit, angry that a substitute bride, a girl from a bankrupt family, has sullied his name.
The shadow leaned down.
An icy breath, smelling of expensive whiskey and sandalwood, washed over her cheek.
Her body was frozen, pinned to the mattress by a force she couldn't comprehend. It was pure, undiluted terror.
Then, his hand was on her.
The thin silk of her dress was torn apart with an ease that was terrifying. His fingers, calloused and shockingly warm, traced a path over her trembling skin.
This wasn't a ghost.
Ghosts weren't warm. Ghosts didn't breathe. Ghosts didn't have hands that felt so horribly, terrifyingly real.
The realization didn't lessen the fear; it twisted it into something new, something worse. She was trapped in a tomb with a living, breathing monster.
She was powerless, a doll in the hands of an unseen force. The assault was brutal, silent, and humiliating. She squeezed her eyes shut, digging her nails into her own palms until they bled, focusing on the small, sharp pain to distract from the overwhelming violation.
And then, as suddenly as he appeared, he was gone.
The cold air hit her exposed skin. The only evidence of his presence was her torn dress, the ache in her body, and the lingering scent of whiskey and sandalwood.
Amelie curled into a tight ball, shaking uncontrollably. She didn't know if she had been awake or asleep, if it was a nightmare or a reality too horrific to process.
The sun had not yet risen when the heavy door creaked open again.
Mrs. Gable entered, carrying a tray with breakfast. Her eyes swept over the scene-the tangled sheets, Amelie's torn dress, the raw marks on her skin-and her expression didn't flicker. There was no surprise. Not a hint of it.
"It seems the master's spirit has accepted you," the housekeeper said, her voice as cold as the morning.
"That wasn't a ghost," Amelie rasped, her voice raw and broken.
A small, cruel smile touched the corner of Mrs. Gable's lips. "In Hyde Manor, there are things you are not meant to understand. It is better not to try."
She placed the tray on the table.
"Be compliant. And remember your brother's life is in your hands."
The door closed, and Amelie was alone again, plunged into a fear far deeper than the supernatural. She wasn't being haunted by a ghost. She was being tormented by a secret, and everyone here was in on it.
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9.4
My brother and his wife slapped the contract on the table, forcing me to marry Alpha Stone. He was a cruel monster known for breaking his mates' bones, and I was just the price for a new trade route.
Right before I surrendered, the legendary Blackwood Pack arrived. But they didn't offer a glorious rescue. They claimed I was the fated mate of Kaelan, a disgraced, wolfless Omega.
My family laughed in my face, eagerly taking the dowry and throwing me out like garbage. They mocked my miserable future, sending me off to a crumbling shack in the woods. When they later summoned us back to publicly demand a humiliating "tribute" to bleed us dry, they waited for me to break.
"Couldn't handle life in a shack with an Omega? Come crawling back already?" my sister-in-law sneered.
But I refused to let them shame him. I didn't understand why the Moon Goddess gave me an Omega, but Kaelan was kind, giving me the only bed while he slept on the cold floor. Why did my family value a cruel Alpha over a gentle soul? I declared to their faces that his loyal spirit was worth more than any title.
Then, a vicious rogue wolf threatened us at the local market.
My "wolfless" husband stepped in front of me and grabbed the rogue's wrist.
Suddenly, a suffocating, terrifying Alpha King's aura exploded from Kaelan, bringing the rogue to his knees in pure terror.
I stared at my quiet, supposedly weak mate in absolute shock. Who exactly did I marry?

8.8
My husband thought I was just a docile wife, easily controlled. He didn't know I'd spent five years meticulously dismantling his life. Tonight, his world would finally crumble into dust.
For five years, I endured Jackson's entitled demands and his family's greed, silently funding their lavish life in our Beverly Hills mansion.
My illusion shattered finding his mistress Amber's lingerie in his suitcase. My attorney just severed all financial ties, making Jackson's arrogant demands hollow.
I tossed my diamond ring into the trash, summoning an industrial compactor. Jackson, his mother, and mistress watched in horror as their designer luggage, bought with my money, was crushed, turning their lavish trip into garbage.
A cold, dead smile marked my cathartic release from five years of betrayal. How could they be so blind to the woman they dismissed?
Stepping into an armored Maybach, I left them in chaos. My iPad confirmed Jackson's credit cards freezing. This wasn't just divorce; it was a calculated demolition, making their pampered lives very real.

9.5
Bridget left the office early on her anniversary, her pocket heavy with a custom velvet ring box meant for her fiancé.
But when she pushed open the bedroom door, she found him tangled in their bed with her best friend, Chloe.
"Bridget! Wait, it's not what it looks like!" Jacob stammered, his eyes wide with panic.
"Evidence," Bridget stated coldly, snapping a photo of their naked bodies before fleeing into the freezing New York night.
Desperate to numb the betrayal, she got blackout drunk at an underground lounge and threw herself at a dark, terrifyingly handsome stranger.
She woke up in a penthouse suite alone, finding only a limitless black credit card left on the nightstand.
Humiliated and feeling like a cheap escort, she ran away, swearing to forget the nightmare.
But the nightmare had just begun. When she rushed into the office, she discovered the stranger was Jevon Rocha—the ruthless billionaire CEO of her company.
He didn't fire her. Instead, he trapped her in a twisted, obsessive power game, forcing her into his private life and demanding she report to his penthouse.
Bridget couldn't understand why a ruthless billionaire was so dangerously fixated on a low-level employee.
Until she stumbled upon his secret social media account and saw a crayon drawing of a little kid, captioned with a single word: "Finally."
A wave of absolute horror washed over her. He wasn't just playing games; he was hiding a secret child and a messy, high-stakes family drama.
She refused to be the naive collateral damage in a billionaire's twisted life.
Trembling, Bridget hit "Block" on his profile, determined to escape his dangerous web.

9.3
"She's mine tonight, asshole, you had her last week." Zack, taller and broader, with those piercing blue eyes, shoved him back hard. "Fuck off, Zade. Her tight little pussy belongs wrapped around my dick." And then there was Mark, my stepdad, looming in the doorway like a goddamn predator, his arms crossed over his broad chest. "Both of you back the fuck off. I'm the man of the house and that sweet ass is mine to pound whenever I want."
❤️❤️❤️
Dive into this sizzling erotica collection of taboo tropes where forbidden flames erupt in shadows of power and secrecy. Stepfamily sparks fly between a seductive step sis and stepbrothers under one tense roof. Mythical beasts knot with innocent human girls in primal forest trysts. A mafia kingpin claims a pure-hearted nun in a ruthless game of dominance. Captor hunts prey in a thrilling chase of possession. "Dad's Best Friend" awakens cravings in his ally's daughter, shattering loyalty. "Boss x Stripper" ignites when an executive ensnares his hypnotic dancer in high-stakes control. "Professor X Student," where forbidden mentorship spirals into obsessive bonds in lecture halls after dark. "Coach x Cheerleader," rigorous drills turn into steamy locker room rituals after hours. "Priest x Parishioner," sacred confessions unravel into sinful midnight vows.
Read if you're ready for some heat.

7.6
Cora thought she was the luckiest woman alive, married to a devoted tech billionaire who showered her with custom haute couture and obsessive care.
But his "protection" involved locking her inside their San Francisco estate, forcing her to swallow foul neon-green supplements, and drawing her blood with highly classified veterinary needles.
She thought it was just his extreme paranoia, until a cynical doctor cornered her at a charity gala.
"Kendrick isn't raising a wife. He's curating a very rare, very fragile medical specimen. You're his personal pharmacy."
Terrified, Cora broke into Kendrick's hidden safe and found a medical report approving her total bone marrow and stem cell depletion.
Kendrick wasn't a doting husband. He was raising her as a human bloodbag to save his terminally ill cousin.
When she nearly uncovered the truth, Kendrick cried fake tears, claiming he only needed her antibodies.
"Tomorrow, we are going to my private island in the Caribbean. Just the two of us. No internet. No guards. Just peace."
Cora almost believed his vulnerable act, deeply confused by how a man who kissed her so tenderly could plan to slaughter her in cold blood.
Then, while packing for the trip, she dropped a wooden box, revealing a hidden flight manifesto.
Kendrick's return date was listed. Hers was completely blank.
Stapled to the back was a clinical schedule: Intensive Marrow Harvesting - Final Stage. Patient will not require return transport.
Hearing his heavy footsteps echoing in the hallway, Cora gripped the sharp edges of the broken box.
She was not going to be a slaughtered lamb on that island.

8.7
I handed my terminal brain cancer diagnosis to my billionaire husband, hoping for a shred of comfort.
Instead, he sneered, accused me of faking it for a better divorce settlement, and told me to die quickly.
Heartbroken, I turned to my sister, a top surgeon, who promised to save my life.
But on the operating table, my soul was ripped from my body as I watched her inject me with a lethal drug.
She didn't just murder me. She harvested my organs, forged my medical records to claim I was a hysterical liar who ran away, and went straight to my penthouse to take my place.
She looked at my blank organ donation consent form and smiled.
"Don't worry, he'll sign."
And he did. My husband welcomed her into our bed and announced their grand wedding, while my own mother celebrated my disappearance as a chance to secure his wealth.
I hovered in the air, screaming silently.
Why did my own flesh and blood slaughter me to steal my life? Why did the man I loved hate me so much that he'd happily marry my killer?
As my husband stood by the window, daring my runaway self to show up at their wedding, my spectral heart turned to stone.
I decided not to fade away. I would stay right here as a ghost, and watch their monstrous charade burn to the ground.