
Flash Marriage To The Hidden Billionaire
My abusive step-family isolated me completely, holding my mother's medical funds hostage to control my every move.
Yesterday, they finalized my sale.
"You will marry Rudy Petrov next month. He is fifty, wealthy, and willing to overlook your lack of pedigree."
Pushed to the absolute edge, I did the insane. I posted an ad online offering my life savings of $50,000 for a contract husband. A stranger named Brennan agreed.
But my family wouldn't let me go. They forced me back for a dinner by threatening my mother's life-saving prescriptions.
At the table, they relentlessly mocked my new "poor IT guy" husband and intentionally burned my hand with boiling tea.
Worse, the housekeeper locked me in a guest room and forced drugs down my throat so Rudy could come in and assault me.
I lay there paralyzed on the floor, bleeding from Rudy's slap, utterly terrified. I couldn't understand why my own family would throw me to the wolves, and I felt a crushing guilt for dragging an innocent, ordinary guy into my nightmare.
Until a pitch-black Maybach smashed through the estate's wrought-iron gates at eighty miles an hour.
My "poor" husband kicked the solid oak doors off their hinges, beat Rudy half to death, and carried me out into the rain.
I didn't know it yet, but the ordinary man I hired to save me was a ruthless billionaire, and he was about to erase my family's entire empire by morning.
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Chapter 1
The heavy silver fork slammed against the porcelain plate.
The sharp, metallic screech sliced through the low murmurs of the Cook estate dining room.
Hazel's spine snapped straight against the high back of her mahogany chair.
Mildred sat at the head of the table, dabbing her wrinkled mouth with a linen napkin. Her cold eyes locked onto Hazel.
"The arrangements are finalized," Mildred announced, her voice dripping with the kind of charity reserved for stray dogs. "You will marry Rudy Petrov next month. He is fifty, wealthy, and willing to overlook your lack of pedigree."
A violent wave of nausea surged up Hazel's throat. Acid burned her esophagus.
She gripped the edge of her cloth napkin under the table. Her knuckles turned bone-white.
"No." Hazel pushed her chair back.
The wooden legs scraped violently against the polished hardwood floor.
Her chest heaved, struggling to pull oxygen into her tight lungs. "I am not a piece of property you can trade to a real estate developer."
Her stepfather, Benton, slammed his meaty palm flat on the table.
The crystal wine glasses rattled. Red liquid sloshed over the rims.
"Watch your tone, Hazel," Benton warned, his face flushing dark red.
Hazel's gaze turned to ice. She stared at the man who had made her life a living hell for a decade.
Beside her, Janice, her mother, reached out with a trembling hand.
Janice's eyes were rimmed with red. She tugged weakly at the hem of Hazel's dress.
"Please, Hazel," Janice whispered, her voice cracking. "Just listen to them."
The weak, suffocating touch of her mother's fingers made Hazel's stomach twist into a painful knot. It was the touch of a prisoner begging another prisoner to love their chains.
Mildred let out a dry, rattling laugh.
"Defy me," Mildred sneered, leaning forward, "and I will cut off the funding for your mother's medical account tomorrow morning."
The words hit Hazel like a physical punch to the gut. The air rushed out of her lungs.
Her mother's anti-anxiety medications and therapy were the only things keeping Janice tethered to reality. Mildred knew exactly where to slide the knife.
Pushed to the absolute edge of the cliff, Hazel's mouth opened before her brain could catch up.
"You can't marry me off to Rudy," Hazel blurted out, her voice shaking but loud. "I already have a fiancé."
Dead silence fell over the dining room.
The only sound was the ticking of the grandfather clock in the hallway.
Mildred narrowed her eyes. Her gaze swept over Hazel like a police searchlight, hunting for the lie.
"Is that so?" Mildred said, her tone lethal. "Then you will bring him here tomorrow. If you don't, you belong to Rudy."
Hazel forced her jaw to unclench. "Fine."
She didn't wait for Benton to yell again. She turned on her heel and practically ran out of the suffocating room.
The mocking laughter of her relatives echoed against the high ceilings, chasing her out.
Hazel sprinted up the grand spiral staircase.
Her leather flats slapped frantically against the wooden steps. Her heart hammered against her ribs like a trapped bird.
She reached the second floor, bolted down the hallway, and threw herself into her bedroom.
She slammed the solid oak door shut and twisted the lock.
The heavy metallic click of the deadbolt sliding into place was the only thing that allowed her to take a full breath.
Hazel slid down the cold wood of the door until she hit the floor.
The chill of the floorboards seeped through her thin dress. She pressed the heels of her hands into her eyes, a silent, tearing sob ripping through her chest.
Her phone buzzed in her pocket.
She pulled it out. The screen lit up the dark corner of the room.
It was a text from Rudy.
Can't wait to see what you look like under those cheap dresses, little bird.
Her stomach cramped violently. She gagged, tossing the phone away as if it burned her skin.
The device bounced harmlessly against the thick Persian rug.
Hot, blinding anger finally burned through the paralyzing fear.
Hazel pushed herself off the floor and walked to the large bay window.
Outside, the heavy rain lashed against the glass. The ten-foot stone walls of the estate were lined with security cameras. Physical escape was impossible. They would drag her back before she reached the gates.
She walked back and snatched her phone off the rug.
She opened her contacts. Her thumb hovered over the screen.
Nothing. She had no one. The Cook family had isolated her perfectly. No friend could fight Mildred's lawyers.
A completely insane idea sparked in the back of her mind.
Her hands shook so badly she almost dropped the phone again as she opened Instagram.
She swiped to the Story camera.
Hazel took a deep breath, trying to steady her racing pulse. She held the phone up, framing her pale, desperate face. Her eyes looked wild, cornered, and utterly resolute.
She snapped the photo.
Her thumbs flew across the keyboard, typing a frantic block of text over her face.
Need a husband. Tomorrow morning. Contract marriage only. Must be willing to sign papers immediately.
She paused at the bottom of the screen. Her teeth bit down hard on her lower lip, tasting copper.
Payment: $50,000.
It was every single cent she had secretly saved from her online tutoring jobs. It was the price of her freedom.
Her thumb hovered over the 'Share' button.
Logic screamed at her to stop. This was insane. She was inviting a predator into her life.
Heavy footsteps stopped outside her bedroom.
A fist pounded aggressively against the oak wood.
"Miss Hazel," Niamh, the head housekeeper, barked through the door. "Madam requires your passport. Open the door."
The demand was a death sentence.
Hazel squeezed her eyes shut and jammed her thumb onto the screen.
The blue progress bar shot across the top of the app.
A soft ding echoed in the quiet room. Published.
Her heart rate skyrocketed, pounding so hard it made her ears ring.
She stared at the view count at the bottom left corner.
Zero. Then three. Then ten.
A direct message popped down from the top of the screen.
Are you out of your mind?
Another one followed. Is this a joke?
Humiliation flushed her cheeks hot. She moved her finger to delete the story.
Suddenly, a new message notification appeared.
It was from a user with no profile picture and a string of random numbers for a handle.
City Hall. 8:00 AM tomorrow. Does that work?
Hazel froze. The cold, business-like tone of the text made her breath hitch.
She tapped on the profile. It was completely blank. Zero followers. Zero posts. A ghost.
The pounding on the door grew louder, the wood rattling in its frame.
"Miss Hazel! I will get the master keys!" Niamh yelled.
Hazel's jaw locked. Her fingers flew over the glass screen.
Yes.
She hit send.
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9.6
Brenda Vincent thought her biggest nightmare was catching her boyfriend cheating with her roommate on her own sofa.
But her life truly derailed after a drunken night led her into the bed of Bryon Reeves, the ruthless billionaire CEO and older brother of the student she tutored.
Trying to pay off the most dangerous man in New York with a crumpled twenty-dollar bill was her first mistake.
Fleeing the hotel, she accidentally rear-ended his custom Maybach. Bryon used the massive repair bill to blackmail her into being his fake date, parading her at a gala just to make his sister-in-law jealous.
When Brenda finally snapped and fled the humiliation, only to be rescued by his biggest corporate rival, Bryon's twisted possessiveness turned completely destructive.
"If you feel kidnapped, call the police. But your teaching license will be permanently revoked."
He didn't just threaten her. He systematically dismantled her life, using his influence to force the university to freeze her tenure and suspend her without pay.
Brenda couldn't understand why this terrifying man was going to such extreme lengths to ruin a simple tutor who just wanted to be left alone.
Now, stripped of her career, her income, and her independence, she was forced into the sprawling Reeves Manor.
Hearing the heavy mahogany door lock from the outside in her signal-jammed bedroom, Brenda's panic slowly morphed into a cold, clinical rage.
She was trapped, but she refused to be his helpless pawn.

9.6
To escape my sister-in-law selling me off to a local thug, I married a complete stranger I met at City Hall.
My new husband, Drake, claimed to be a broke Uber driver who could barely make rent.
He even made me sign a brutal ten-page prenup just to ensure I wouldn't take his rusted, beat-up Ford sedan if we ever divorced.
I thought I was just sharing a decaying Brooklyn apartment with a struggling man at the bottom of the ladder.
But things quickly stopped making sense.
When that local thug cornered me at a restaurant, my "weak" husband didn't cower.
Instead, he dismantled three massive mobsters in ten seconds with the terrifying, fluid speed of an apex predator.
"I used to be a human punching bag in an underground boxing gym to pay off debts."
I believed his excuse, until his supposedly homeless grandfather showed up at our door in a moth-eaten sweater, begging to sleep on our lumpy sofa.
Before going to sleep, the old man casually pressed a heavy, intricately engraved pocket watch into my hand as a wedding gift.
He claimed it was a cheap flea market find that didn't even keep time.
But the sheer weight of the solid rose gold and the flawless mechanical gears inside screamed otherwise.
Why did a destitute driver have the aura of a man who controlled empires?
And what kind of homeless old man casually hands over a priceless, museum-grade antique?
I had no idea the "broke driver" sleeping on my floor was actually a ruthless billionaire CEO, and I had just walked straight into his trap.

8.7
I was trapped in a greasy diner by my own mother.
She was forcing me to marry my abusive cousin because he had paid her twenty thousand dollars.
To escape, I used a contract marriage app and begged a complete stranger to marry me at City Hall that very day.
Ethan drove a cheap Ford and wore a plain suit. I thought he was just an ordinary guy needing a fake wife.
When my mother found out, she brought thugs to destroy my flower shop—my only home and livelihood.
To protect Ethan from her endless extortion, I shielded him and screamed that he was bankrupt and drowning in credit card debt.
My mother fled in disgust, and Ethan took me into his apartment for the night.
But out of trauma and habit, I locked my bedroom door, muttering that he must be old and desperate.
He stormed out into the freezing night, leaving me terrified that I had ruined my only lifeline.
I didn't understand why he was so furiously offended, completely unaware that my "broke" husband was actually the most ruthless billionaire in New York, and I had just trampled his massive ego.
The next morning, his face was a mask of ice as he dragged me back to City Hall to annul the marriage and get rid of me.
"Annulment. Now," he demanded.
But the clerk just popped her gum and slid a pink paper across the counter.
"State law changed. Mandatory thirty-day cooling-off period."

8.7
I was pregnant with the future heir of the Blackwood Pack, but my fated mate, Alpha Gavin, was nowhere to be found when sharp, tearing agony ripped through my swollen belly.
Instead of rushing to my side, he was in a luxury penthouse with his mistress, Piper.
When I desperately called his human number for help, it was Piper who answered the phone.
"I'm Piper. His future Luna."
Minutes later, I received a leaked audio file of Gavin promising to formally reject me the moment our pup was born.
Before the heartbreak could even set in, my armored SUV was violently rammed off the road by a massive truck.
It wasn't an accident. It was a targeted hit paid for by Piper's pack.
I woke up in the clinic with an empty womb. My pup was dead.
Gavin didn't even show up. He just mind-linked the butler to say he was "too busy" to deal with my loss.
He let his mistress murder our child and treated me like disposable trash, assuming my grief would make me a weak, compliant victim.
He thought he could just bury my trauma and move on with his perfect new life.
He was wrong.
I faked my own death in a fiery crash, leaving him with nothing but my signed rejection papers and the bloody receipt proving his mistress hired the killers.
Now, armed with a new identity and untraceable wealth, I am stepping out of the shadows.
I am going to bankrupt their packs from the inside out and make my former Alpha watch his empire burn.

8.4
After raising Dakota for years, the wealthy Walton family mercilessly kicked her out of their mansion.
Her adopted father threw a crisp check for five hundred dollars onto a stripped mattress.
"That is more than enough for a bus ticket back to whatever slum your real parents live in. Do not ever contact us again."
Her adopted sister Cindy tried to violently snatch her faded canvas backpack, smugly bragging that she was already engaged to Dakota's former fiancé. The entire family stood on their grand balcony, sneering in disgust as Dakota left in a broken-down, smoking rental car.
"You are going to die in the gutter!"
They treated her like a contagious disease, truly believing she was nothing more than an ungrateful, bottom-feeding street rat destined to rot in poverty and beg for their charity.
But what the arrogant Waltons didn't know was that on her way "home," Dakota would casually save the dying matriarch of the country's most powerful family using a mythical medical technique. She traded her smoking junk car for a million-dollar reward and a flawless Rolls-Royce Cullinan. And the filthy "slum" she was returning to? It was the palatial estate of the ultra-billionaire Su empire. As her true parents wept with joy and ordered their staff to buy out every luxury brand in the world just to welcome her back, Dakota prepared to show the people who threw her away what real power looked like.

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.