
Flash Marriage To My Mysterious Patient
I am the undisputed ice queen of the ER, a doctor whose life is built on absolute control. A month ago, I impulsively married a stranger to create a legal shield against my ex-mentor's betrayal.
Our prenup had one strict rule: a fake marriage with zero interference in each other's lives. But tonight, my "husband on paper" was wheeled into my ER, unconscious, reeking of cheap whiskey, and suffering from a bleeding ulcer.
To authorize his emergency surgery, I had to sign the consent form as his wife, detonating a gossip bomb among my colleagues. Worse, his overbearing family found out he was hospitalized. To stop his terrifying mother from flying in and exposing our sham marriage, I had to lean over his hospital bed and take a fake, loving couple's selfie.
I didn't understand why this disciplined math professor was suddenly drinking himself to death, nor why my chest tightened when he looked at me with exhausted eyes and begged for homemade soup. My perfectly ordered, untouchable life was crumbling into a chaotic mess, and I was losing my grip on the narrative.
"We should probably spend some time together beforehand. We could be roommates."
To prepare for an unavoidable family dinner and a wedding, my stranger husband just asked me to move into his apartment. The ultimate uncontrolled variable has just crossed the line, and our fake marriage is about to become dangerously real.
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Chapter 4
Jeffry's request hung in the air, simple yet impossibly heavy. His eyes were clear and sincere, holding that fragile, wounded look that made it impossible for Kellie to snap out a flat refusal.
Her mind was a battlefield. The doctor in her knew the correct answer: clear liquids, hospital broth, nothing heavy. The wife in her-the part she desperately tried to ignore-was frozen, unsure of what to do with this sudden, intimate demand.
She chose the safest ground. "I'll have the kitchen send up a clear liquid tray," she said, her voice clipped. "Broth and Jell-O."
A flicker of disappointment crossed Jeffry's face. It was subtle, just a slight downturn of his lips, but it hit Kellie like a physical blow. He didn't argue. He just gave a soft, defeated "Hmm" and closed his eyes, turning his head away.
He looked smaller suddenly, more fragile. The defeat in his posture made her stomach twist with an uncomfortable, unfamiliar guilt.
She stood there for a moment, listening to the rhythmic beeping of the monitor. The silence felt oppressive.
"I'll... see what I can do," she said quietly.
It was a vague, non-committal statement, but Jeffry's shoulders seemed to relax a fraction. He didn't open his eyes.
Kellie turned and walked out of the room. Her pace was faster than usual, her sneakers squeaking against the linoleum. She needed to get away from that room, from those eyes.
As she walked down the corridor, she felt the weight of stares. Nurses whispered behind their hands. Orderlies gave her odd looks. The gossip had spread. The walls of her private life were crumbling, and she hated it.
She bypassed the elevator and took the stairs to the roof. She pushed open the heavy metal door and stepped out into the crisp New York morning.
The wind hit her face, cold and sharp, whipping her hair out of its ponytail. She walked to the railing and gripped the cold metal, staring down at the yellow cabs crawling along the street below.
The wind seemed to blow the fog from her mind, but it also blew open a door she had tried hard to nail shut.
A month ago. She had been standing in wind just like this, staring at a city that felt suddenly hostile.
Her phone had rang. It was the assistant to Deron Blanchard, her former business partner. The voice on the other end was polite, robotic. "Mr. Blanchard wanted to inform you that his engagement party to Ms. Vance is next month. He hopes you can attend."
The phone had slipped from her ear. It wasn't just a business split. Deron had been her mentor, her confidant. She had believed there was something more, a silent understanding between them that transcended contracts and boardrooms.
The invitation was a slap. It wasn't just an engagement; it was a declaration. A declaration that she, Kellie Walter, with all her ambition and brilliance, was merely a stepping stone on his path to success, easily discarded for a more suitable match. Everything she had built, everything she prided herself on-her intellect, her control, her success-felt like a joke in the face of absolute power and old money. A destructive impulse, cold and sharp, seized her. She would show them. She would show them all that the things they valued-marriage, partnership-were meaningless to her, just tools to be acquired and used.
That night, she hadn't gone home. She had walked into a dimly lit bar downtown, the kind where nobody asked questions. She ordered a soda water, staring at the ice melting in the glass.
And then, in a moment of sheer, uncharacteristic recklessness, she had pulled out her phone. She had a number saved, given to her by a discreet matchmaking service she had consulted in a moment of loneliness months prior. She had never used it.
Until then.
"I need to get married," she texted. "As soon as possible. I don't care who."
A few hours later, a profile appeared. Jeffry Alston. Columbia University Math Department. Young, clean record, no family drama. Perfect.
The next day, they met at a coffee shop near campus. He was wearing a white t-shirt and jeans, looking like a grad student who had just rolled out of bed. He was handsome, in a clean, unassuming way.
"I need a husband on paper," she told him, getting straight to the point. "A legal arrangement. We split expenses, we sign a prenup. We don't interfere with each other's lives."
He listened quietly, stirring his coffee. "I agree," he said. "But I have conditions."
She raised an eyebrow.
"The marriage lasts at least a year," he said. "And we don't tell anyone it's a deal. To the outside world, we're just a couple who fell fast."
It was a strange request, but she was too numb to care. "Fine."
The next day, they stood in line at City Hall. They didn't hold hands. They didn't speak. They were two strangers sharing an Uber, splitting the fare.
When the clerk asked the question, they both said "I do." When the paper was pushed across the counter, Kellie signed it without looking at him.
"My lawyer will contact you about the prenup," she said, tucking the copy into her bag. She walked out the door and hailed a cab, leaving Jeffry standing alone on the steps of City Hall.
She hadn't looked back.
Kellie shivered on the rooftop, the memory releasing its grip on her. She stared at the skyline, the reality of what she had done-and who was currently lying in a hospital bed downstairs-settling over her like a heavy fog.
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8.9
For three years, Alana acted as the sole tactical brain for the Dawnbreaker squad, keeping them alive despite being labeled a useless "Dud" Conduit.
But right before the crucial Ascension Trials, squad leader Cash handed her a corporate sponsorship contract. The condition? She had to become the "private companion" to a greasy corporate heir just so the squad could get high-tier gear.
When she refused, the teammates she had bled for unanimously voted to kick her out.
"You're just window dressing, a liability."
They revoked her safehouse access, burned her belongings, and the academy advisor even tried to force her into a state-sanctioned breeding program. They left her to freeze in the slums, betting she would desperately crawl into the rich man's bed.
What they didn't know was that her inability to summon an Eidolon wasn't a lack of talent. Her teammate Dallin had been secretly sabotaging her rituals for years, crippling her potential just to keep her chained as their free tactician.
Stripped of everything and pushed to the absolute brink, Alana's despair morphed into a deadly resolve.
Using a million-credit black market loan and a forbidden blood matrix, she forcibly anchored an Apex-Tier cosmic wolf disguised as a harmless silver pup.
When her ex-squad tried to publicly humiliate her and burn her new "pet" alive in the cafeteria, a flash of silver light severed Dallin's hand instantly.
Looking at her screaming former teammates, Alana finally smiled.

7.7
Rory stood on the witness stand, forced by her father into an impossible choice: secure her dying mother's medical funding, or save her innocent boyfriend.
She looked Corbin right in his trusting eyes and lied to the court, testifying that he was the one driving the car during the fatal hit-and-run, sending him to a maximum-security prison for ten years.
The betrayal destroyed him. Corbin's father died of a heart attack upon hearing the guilty verdict. Six years later, Corbin returned as a ruthless billionaire and systematically blacklisted Rory from every job in the city. He cornered her into singing at his private club, humiliating her by forcing her to drink scotch—knowing she was severely allergic—and making her throw away his promise ring just to earn a stack of cash.
"Remember this moment. This is only the beginning."
She endured his cruel revenge because she was hiding a desperate secret: she was raising his five-year-old daughter, Willa. But when Willa's congenital heart defect suddenly worsened, requiring an impossible one-million-dollar surgery, Rory realized Corbin's calculated blockade had left her completely trapped with no way to save their child.
Staring at the sterile hospital walls, the last shred of her guilt burned away, replaced by a cold, hard resolve. He had destroyed her career and backed her into a corner, but he was the only one with the money. Wiping her tears, Rory turned and headed straight for Vance Tower.

8.1
I'd lived as a mafia queen, ruling with quiet strength, only to discover my entire life was a lie. My husband, Dante, secretly divorced me three years ago, then married our timid nanny. I wasn't just betrayed; I was a dead ex-wife walking, a ghost in my own home.
A mafia daughter, I expected routine at Rossi's law firm. But Rossi, pale and sweating, handed me an envelope: Dante's divorce judgment, signed three years ago, and his marriage certificate to Gia, our nanny.
Truth slammed me: Gia poisoned me for years, causing infertility, making her bastard son the sole heir. Hidden, I watched her force Dante, the Underboss, to kneel, drink hallucinogenic tea, and profess devotion. She smirked.
This was calculated murder: my existence, my legacy. Rage burned, but clarity struck: disappear, or vanish into the Long Island Sound.
From a hidden phone, I called Luca, the underworld's elite cleaner. "I need a top-tier scrub. Target is myself," I commanded. "Get me out of this hell. I'd rather die than be his taxidermy specimen."

8.1
Pretty Devil
8.1
Maddy worked at an exclusive underground club, always hidden behind a sleek black mask. One night, a wealthy client approached her with a filthy fantasy , he didn't want to just fuck her. He wanted to be her complete slave.
He took her to his luxury penthouse, while she shoved her soaked pussy onto his face and rode his tongue until she came, then mounted his cock and used him mercilessly, slapping and choking him while denying his orgasm until he begged like a broken whore. Even after she quit the club and started a new corporate job, she kept hooking up with him. One day, she walked into the CEO's office... and froze. Her new boss was the same man.
By day, in his luxurious office, he is the dominant, commanding CEO , barking orders, running the company with iron authority, and no one suspects a thing. By night, he becomes her secret pathetic slave: crawling, getting pegged over his own desk, licking her cum off his floor, and having his cock locked in chastity while she laughs at how easily she owns him.
Pretty Devil is a raw, extremely explicit erotic novel packed with intense femdom, heavy BDSM, humiliation, orgasm denial, pegging, face-sitting, and twisted power exchanges that blur the dangerous line between boss and secret slave.
This book is unapologetically nasty and graphic. Reader discretion is strongly advised.

7.6
I died as an MMA champion in an octagon halfway across the world.
But instead of finding peace, I woke up face-down in the cracked Ohio dirt, trapped in the severely malnourished body of an eighteen-year-old girl named Alissa.
Along with this frail, useless body came a flood of agonizing memories.
Her glamorous sister, Ainsley, treated her like a slave, starving her and working her to the bone while playing the perfect saint to the outside world.
Worse, her brother-in-law Kristopher, a highly respected high school teacher, was a disgusting predator.
He constantly cornered her in dark hallways, whispering sickening threats disguised as affection, waiting for the perfect moment to completely ruin her.
"You are meant to be mine, little bird. This is our secret."
The original Alissa had lived her entire life in suffocating terror.
She was completely powerless, eventually dying of sheer exhaustion and silent despair in a suffocating cornfield while her abusers lived comfortably.
They thought she was just a pathetic, broken toy they could crush without consequence.
But the dull, defeated glaze in Alissa's eyes is gone now.
In its place is the sharp, calculating focus of a killer.
My new body might be weak and starved, but my mind is a lethal weapon. The predators are about to become the prey.

7.1
After three years of marriage, Kasie's husband forced her to sign a divorce agreement leaving her with nothing.
He destroyed her academic career just to protect his adopted sister, Calista, from a lab accident she had caused.
Forced to return to her hometown, Kasie found her biological family had also been completely brainwashed by Calista.
Her brothers dragged her to a clinic to donate bone marrow for Calista's fake illness.
When Kasie struggled, they pushed her down the stairs, breaking her arm, while her ex-husband watched and called her pathetic.
They tore up her only job offer. When she was attacked by a drunk in an alley, her own brother drove right past her desperate screams just to answer Calista's phone call.
The final blow came when Calista stole Kasie's life's work, published the research as her own, and cried on national television.
"My own sister... she was jealous. She tried to claim my research as her own."
Penniless, publicly ruined, and evicted by her own brothers, Kasie was thrown out into a mob of angry reporters.
She didn't understand why her own flesh and blood treated her like a monster, or why Calista's fake tears were worth more than Kasie's actual life.
But as she unlocked the door to a secret apartment she had rented years ago—the one safe haven they didn't know about—the tears finally stopped.
She had nothing left to lose, which meant it was time to make them pay.