
Flash Marriage To The Secret Chairman
To escape my toxic ex-fiancé and the father who froze my assets, I entered a contract marriage with Barrett, a cold but protective corporate consultant.
I thought he was my safe harbor. I even confided my secret, ruthless strategy to take back control of my company from my ex.
But at the most critical board meeting, a mysterious new chairman dialed in.
The synthesized voice coming through the speakerphone systematically dismantled the board and took over the company, using the exact, word-for-word strategy I had only ever whispered to my husband in the dead of night.
My ex-fiancé turned pale with panic. The board members were stunned into silence.
And I sat there, my blood running completely cold.
The man who had held my hand in the hospital, who had slept in my bed, and who had promised to protect me, had just committed the ultimate corporate espionage.
Every tender touch, every late-night confession—was it all just a calculated move to steal my life's work? How could the only person who made me feel safe use my deepest vulnerabilities to orchestrate my ruin?
I packed up my files, walked straight out of that boardroom, and prepared to disappear from his life forever.
But when I fled to my best friend's apartment to hide, I looked out the window.
The ruthless mastermind who had just stolen my empire was standing completely still in the freezing downpour, waiting for me to come down.
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Chapter 1
Evangelina Vazquez stared at the vintage Rolex on her wrist, the second hand ticking past the twelve for the eighth time.
Forty minutes.
The familiar churning started in her stomach, that acid burn of anxiety she'd spent five years trying to ignore. She pressed her palm flat against her abdomen, feeling the structured wool of her trench coat against her skin, and forced her spine straighter against the marble column.
The electronic screen above the counter blared its mechanical voice.
"Number four-seven-three, please proceed to window six."
Her number.
Evangelina's breath hitched. Around her, couples laughed and leaned into each other, their joy carving sharp edges into her solitude. She walked toward the counter anyway, her heels clicking against the municipal building's floor with the precision of a metronome.
"Could I have five more minutes?" The smile she offered the clerk felt like it might crack her face. "My fiancé is stuck in traffic."
The clerk's eyes softened with pity. "Of course, ma'am. I'll hold your spot."
Evangelina's phone vibrated in her Birkin bag, a low, insistent hum against her hip. She dug for it, her fingers clumsy, and saw the name flash across the screen.
Darrien.
She answered before the second ring finished.
"Where are you?" Her voice came out steadier than she felt.
Static. Then the background noise bled through-beeping monitors, rushed footsteps, the particular chaos of a Manhattan emergency room.
Evangelina's heart plummeted to the base of her throat.
"Evangelina." Darrien's tone carried that practiced patience, the one that always made her feel like a child throwing tantrums. "I can't make it. Jenelle's having a severe panic attack. I'm at Mount Sinai with her."
"Today." The word scraped out of her. "Darrien, today is-"
"I know what day it is." His voice sharpened, that blade of condescension she'd learned to duck. "But my sister is in crisis. I thought you'd understand. I thought you had empathy."
Evangelina's fingers went cold around the phone. She opened her mouth to remind him that Jenelle wasn't his sister, that she'd been his stepsister for exactly eleven months, that they'd been engaged for five years and this was their appointment to become legal-
"You're making this about you," Darrien interrupted. "Again. Maybe you should take this time to reflect on why everything has to be a production with you."
The nurse's voice cut through the background, calling for family members of a patient in bay four.
"I have to go," Darrien said. "We'll talk when you're calmer."
The line went dead.
The dial tone drilled into Evangelina's ear, a mechanical scream that matched the ringing in her skull. She stood frozen at the counter, the clerk's concerned face blurring at the edges.
Someone bumped her shoulder. Hard.
"Sorry-so sorry-" A young man, holding his new wife's hand, his face flushed with apology and champagne and happiness.
Evangelina nodded. She couldn't speak.
She turned. Her heels struck marble. Each step echoed like something breaking.
Her phone buzzed again. A notification from Jenelle Hobbs. A video file.
Evangelina walked to the corner of the hall, behind one of the fluted Roman columns, and pressed play.
The screen filled with white hospital light. Jenelle lay against propped pillows, her cheeks pink, her eyes bright. No sweat. No trembling. Behind her, Darrien's back was turned as he poured water from a plastic pitcher.
Jenelle looked directly into the camera.
Her lips moved without sound, forming three distinct words.
You. Lost.
The video cut off as Darrien turned around, his face soft with concern.
Evangelina's spine went rigid. Ice flooded her vertebrae, climbing toward her skull.
Five years. Five years of midnight revisions for Avery Lifestyle's brand campaigns. Five years of covering Darrien's public gaffes, of smoothing his father's ruffled feathers, of watching Jenelle arrive at company events in dresses Evangelina had sketched in her private notebooks.
The burn behind her eyes threatened to spill.
Evangelina closed them. She breathed through her nose, counting backward from ten, and when she opened her eyes again, the heat had crystallized into something sharp and cold.
She opened her contacts. Found Darrien's name. Her thumb hovered over the block button, that final red icon that would erase five years in one press.
Her thumb came down.
Delete contact. Block number.
Gone.
She opened her work email. Drafted a message to the legal department, subject line: Immediate Revocation of Personal IP Licensing. Her fingers flew across the screen, listing every patent, every trademark, every design she'd allowed Avery Lifestyle to use under the assumption that she would someday be family.
The security guard approached, his boots squeaking on the floor. "Ma'am? You okay?"
Evangelina straightened. She met his eyes with absolute stillness.
"I'm fine. Thank you."
She dropped her phone into her bag. The motion was clean, decisive, like shrugging off a coat that had never fit properly.
The crumpled queue ticket was still in her fist. Evangelina walked to the trash can beside the exit. She didn't hesitate. She tore the paper in half, then quarters, then eighths, and let the pieces fall like confetti into the bin.
She adjusted her trench coat. Her hand found the brass handle of the revolving door.
And stopped.
Someone was watching.
In her peripheral vision, in the seating area across the hall, a man sat with his legs crossed at the ankle. Dark gray suit. Savile Row cut. His eyes were the color of storm clouds, and they were fixed on her with the focused intensity of a predator measuring distance.
Their gazes locked.
Evangelina's heart stuttered. Something primal in her hindbrain screamed danger, screamed run, even as her feet remained planted on the marble.
The man didn't look away.
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7.8
Alexis signed the divorce papers, leaving her with no assets, no alimony, and just the clothes on her back.
To forget her abusive husband Carlos, she got drunk and bought a high-end gigolo for the night with her last 800 dollars.
But the man she slept with wasn't an escort. He was Jarrett Hughes, a ruthless billionaire CEO.
And while she was gone, her ex-husband was busy destroying her entire life.
Carlos framed her with fake photos of her cheating to justify the penniless divorce.
Then came the real nightmare.
Carlos and her own aunt secretly drained her family's corporate accounts, driving her father to jump off a building.
At the hospital, her grieving mother blamed her for the tragedy, violently attacking her in the ER.
To top it off, her cousin Josie—who was secretly sleeping with Carlos—held her father's ashes hostage.
"Crawl on your knees and pick it up, or the ashes go in the river," Josie sneered, throwing cash into the freezing slush.
Stripped of her marriage, her father, and her dignity, Alexis sat bleeding in the snow.
She couldn't understand why the people she loved most had coordinated such a brutal slaughter against her.
But Carlos and Josie made one fatal mistake.
They didn't know the "gigolo" Alexis had accidentally bought was the most powerful man in New York.
Alexis looked at the towering billionaire standing behind her, a vengeful fire burning in her eyes.
"I need you to get my father's ashes back," she said, pulling him into a kiss right in front of her ex-husband. "I don't care what it takes."

8.2
I spent three years playing the role of a submissive, small-town wife for Evertt Baker, trading my true identity for a quiet life in a Manhattan penthouse. I thought my devotion would be enough to build a real home, but I was just a placeholder in his grand design.
The illusion shattered at 2 AM when Evertt walked in smelling of Chanel No. 5-the signature scent of his mistress, Adda. Without a word of apology, he dropped divorce papers on the table, demanding I sign them immediately so he could finally be with the woman he truly loved.
He looked at me with pure disgust, flicking a five-million-dollar check toward me as if he were paying off an incompetent employee. He told me it was more money than anyone from my "trailer park" background would ever see and ordered me to hurry because Adda was waiting in the car downstairs. He didn't care that I had spent years nursing him through illness and tolerating his family's insults; he only cared about his own convenience.
The sheer arrogance of his payout and the blatant disrespect of bringing his mistress to our home was the final blow. I realized that the man I loved never actually saw me, only the submissive shadow I had forced myself to become.
I signed the papers with a fluid scrawl he didn't bother to check, then I fed his millions into the office shredder. I pulled a hidden, encrypted device from a kitchen drawer and dialed a number I hadn't called in three years.
"Brother," I said, my voice finally steady. "Come get me. The game is over."
Evertt thought he was discarding a penniless nobody, but he was about to find out that he had just declared war on the Stafford empire.

9.2
Averie spent hours preparing a perfect third-anniversary dinner for her billionaire husband, Jarett Sharp.
Instead of celebrating, she received an anonymous photo of him intimately holding another woman.
When Jarett finally arrived, he didn't even look guilty.
"Candida. It's okay. Don't be scared. I'm on my way."
He simply took a call from his mistress, shoved Averie aside, and walked right back out the door.
That same night, Averie's father suffered a massive heart attack.
The hospital demanded a half-million-dollar deposit before they would operate.
But when Averie frantically tried to use the emergency medical trust card Jarett had given her, it was declined.
Jarett had deliberately frozen her access to the funds just hours earlier.
While she begged his assistant on the phone, Jarett refused to be disturbed, busy wrapping his expensive coat around his mistress in the hospital garden.
Averie collapsed in the hallway, realizing the man she loved was deliberately letting her father die.
In the end, a childhood friend stepped in to pay the bill and save her father's life, while her billionaire husband later pinned her to their bed, throwing a check at her and reminding her he had bought her for three million dollars.
Averie didn't shed a single tear.
She slowly ripped his check into pieces, left her massive diamond ring on the dresser, and walked out into the cold New York night with nothing but her old suitcase.
She pulled out her phone and dialed her old ballet professor.
She wasn't just going to leave Jarett Sharp. She was going to destroy him.

9.2
After his father passes away, Darnell becomes the new heir to King Hotels. But his grandfather-who owns shares of the hotels-wants Darnell to marry to earn his (Grandfather's) shares before his death.
After her father's death, Sasha and her family are left to deal with the burden he leaves behind-a huge debt owed to loan sharks.
Darnell approaches Sasha with a two-month marriage contract for five million dollars-enough to pay off her father's debt and be free from her traditional mother. She accepts.
Things are complicated when grandfather doesn't die after two months, and Sasha is being extorted by loan sharks. She and Darnell must stay married for their benefit, despite their lack of affection for each other. Eventually, they fall in love.
But drama unfolds when family secrets are exposed, old lovers resurface, and unknown families appear. Darnell and Sasha must decide if their love is worth it all.

7.0
"Sign the divorce papers, Olivia... or I'll make sure you never wake up again."
I thought marriage meant love, loyalty, and forever. But the night I overheard my husband plotting my downfall with my sister-in-law, my world shattered. The man I had sacrificed everything for was only after my family's wealth and worse, he wanted me dead.
Drugged. Betrayed. Left bleeding while he ran to the arms of his ex. That was Marcus Thompson, the man everyone believed was the perfect billionaire husband.
But I won't go down quietly. With enemies in my own family and assassins at my doorstep, I must fight back. And when David, the man who risked his life to save mine, steps in, I begin to see what true love really feels like.
Now, I'm trapped between a husband who would rather bury me than let me go, and a man willing to risk everything to protect me.
In a world built on lies, betrayal, and deadly secrets... who can I trust when even love could be a weapon?

8.6
Desperation is one of the world's worst vices. It can control the lives of people, including the poor, the middle class, and surprisingly, the wealthy.
Elena Parker is the only child of Mr and Mrs Desmond Parker,the well known billionaires in the city ranked among the top three richest men in the world.
Her relentless search for a partner to produce an heir to the riches seemed to no avail until one faithful day which forever changed her life.