
Flash Marriage To The Secret Zillionaire
Blaire's mother gave her a ruthless ultimatum: find a husband today, or never call her mother again.
Desperate to escape the suffocating control and disastrous blind dates, Blaire agreed to a fake marriage with a stranger she met through an old woman.
She thought she was marrying a dirt-poor salesman drowning in mortgage debt.
They lived in a rundown Queens apartment and split the living expenses fifty-fifty.
He drove a sputtering Toyota Camry, established extreme territorial rules, and treated her like a gold-digging biohazard.
When she accidentally tripped and spilled hot soup on him, he didn't help her up, instead accusing her of using pathetic tricks to seduce him.
Her own mother even crashed their apartment, ruthlessly mocking his pathetic financial state and calling him a total loser.
Blaire endured his coldness and extreme germaphobia, genuinely pitying him for his stressful, low-paying job.
She refunded his money and defended his dignity, refusing to take advantage of a struggling man.
But she couldn't understand why this supposedly broke guy possessed such a lethal, commanding aura, or why an incredibly expensive cashmere blanket mysteriously appeared on her when she was freezing on the couch.
Until her brother called with a shocking warning.
"Blaire, the name on your marriage certificate belongs to the notoriously secretive billionaire CEO of New York's top financial syndicate!"
Blaire laughed out loud, completely unaware that behind the bedroom door, her "broke" husband was frantically ordering his PR team to bury his true identity.
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Chapter 5
The Toyota pulled up to a slightly rundown, red-brick apartment building in Queens. Blaire tilted her head back, looking at the peeling paint on the exterior walls. She mentally calculated how cheap the rent must be.
Jude grabbed her broken suitcase from the trunk and walked ahead of her. He pushed open the heavy, glass-paneled lobby door. The stale, greasy smell of old pizza and damp carpet assaulted his senses. Jude's jaw clenched tight. He stopped breathing entirely, refusing to let the contaminated air into his lungs.
They rode a creaky, vibrating elevator up to the third floor. Jude pulled a brand-new, shiny key from his pocket. He shoved it into the lock, twisting it twice before the door finally gave way.
Blaire stepped inside and let out a small gasp of surprise. The interior was completely opposite to the hallway. It was spotless. The furniture was basic IKEA, but it was arranged warmly, complete with throw pillows and a rug. Emanuel had executed the illusion perfectly.
"This is way better than I expected," Blaire said, spinning around the living room. "The rent must be pretty high, right?"
Jude loosened his tie, his face completely blank. "It's manageable. I paid the down payment a while ago. I'm just paying off the mortgage every month now."
Blaire's mouth formed an 'O'. It all made sense now. That was why he said he could afford things earlier. He was drowning in mortgage debt. Her chest squeezed with a fresh wave of sympathy.
Jude pointed a long finger toward the hallway. "I take the master bedroom at the end. The guest room is yours. We share the bathroom, but keep your things strictly on your side of the sink."
Blaire didn't care about his extreme territorial rules. She grabbed her suitcase and happily dragged it into the guest room to unpack.
Jude stood alone in the center of the living room. He listened to the sound of her zippers opening. He pulled out his phone. As a husband, even a fake one, he felt a compulsory need to provide living expenses to maintain his character.
He opened his banking app. His thumb hovered over the screen, instinctively preparing to transfer one hundred thousand dollars. He caught himself just in time. He deleted the extra zeros, his brow furrowing at the pathetic amount left on the screen.
Using Zelle, he transferred $1,000 to Blaire's phone number. He typed a single word in the memo: Household.
Inside the guest room, Blaire's phone chimed. She picked it up, her eyes bulging at the notification.
She dropped her clothes and sprinted into the living room, waving her phone at Jude. "Why did you just Zelle me a thousand dollars? You have a mortgage to pay!"
Jude sat down on the cheap sofa, crossing his long legs at the knee. He looked at her with cold indifference. "Since we live together, you will handle buying the groceries and daily necessities. That is for the expenses."
Blaire frowned deeply. She felt like he was puffing up his chest to look like a big man when his wallet was empty. "Groceries do not cost a thousand dollars a month. We agreed to split everything fifty-fifty."
Right in front of his face, she tapped her screen. A second later, Jude's phone buzzed. She had Zelled $900 back to his account.
"I'm keeping one hundred for tonight's groceries," Blaire declared, crossing her arms. "You keep the rest for your mortgage. If I need more, I'll pay for it myself."
Jude stared at the $900 refund notification on his screen. The temperature in the room plummeted. His eyes turned into shards of black ice.
In his world, in his extensive experience with women, returning money only meant one thing: she thought it wasn't enough. She was playing the long game, trying to hook him for a much larger payout down the line.
Jude stood up abruptly. He closed the distance between them, his massive frame casting a dark shadow over her. The sheer physical intimidation made Blaire stumble backward until her spine hit the wall.
"What exactly is your game?" Jude demanded, his voice a low, dangerous growl.
Blaire shrank back, her eyes wide with total confusion. "I don't have a game! I just don't want to take advantage of you!"
Jude let out a harsh, mocking laugh. He opened his mouth to tear apart her little act, but his private, encrypted phone suddenly began to ring in his pocket.
The custom ringtone belonged exclusively to the Brewer Matriarch. Jude glared at Blaire, his chest heaving, before he spun on his heel and marched out onto the small balcony, sliding the glass door shut behind him.
He answered the call. "What?" he snapped.
"Watch your tone, boy," the Matriarch's booming voice echoed through the speaker. "Did you get the license? You didn't mistreat the poor girl, did you?"
Jude lowered his voice, grinding his teeth. "She is a master manipulator. She just turned her nose up at a thousand dollars. She's playing hard to get."
The old woman burst into loud, booming laughter. "She's sensible! Stop using your cutthroat boardroom paranoia on my granddaughter-in-law!"
The old woman intentionally raised her voice to a near-shout. "And don't you forget about your oceanfront estate in the Hamptons! Don't actually start believing you're a beggar!"
Jude's blood ran cold. He immediately took three long strides to the far end of the balcony, pressing his back against the brick wall to muffle the sound, and whipped his head around, staring through the glass door into the living room.
Blaire was standing in the open kitchen, her back to him, loudly rummaging through the empty refrigerator, while the blaring sound of a blender she had just turned on to make a smoothie completely drowned out the outside world. She was also wearing a pair of white wireless earbuds, nodding her head to an unheard beat. She hadn't heard the fatal slip.
Jude dragged a hand down his face, exhaling a harsh breath. He gave his grandmother a clipped, angry response and hung up. He stared at Blaire's back through the glass, the seed of deep, toxic misunderstanding firmly planted in his chest.
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7.2
Four years ago, Madelynn accepted money from Caiden's family and vanished. She thought it was for the best-he would remain the untouchable heir while she faced her tough life alone.
When they met again, Caiden humiliated her in public, yet appeared when she was cornered by a difficult client, pulling her back into his life.
He forced her to stay as his lover, using her mother's medical bills as leverage, whispering, "What you owe me... you'll repay the same way."
Madelynn believed he despised her. Only after the accident, when he ran toward her before the explosion, did she understand-he never let go.

9.7
I was a top cardiac surgeon, trapped in a dead marriage with a ruthless billionaire.
One afternoon, he brought his mistress to my hospital, ordering me to perform her high-risk heart surgery.
When I refused and handed him our divorce papers, he violently tore them up and threatened to erase my name from the medical community.
Worse, I discovered they had a five-year-old surrogate son—bought and born the exact same year I bled out on an operating table, losing our baby.
The mistress mocked my trauma, calling me a barren piece of trash who couldn't give him an heir.
I slapped her across the face.
The next morning, the NYPD publicly handcuffed me in my own hospital.
She had framed me for attempted murder, claiming I injected her IV with a lethal dose of potassium.
My husband cornered me in the interrogation room.
"Just confess to me. I will throw enough money at the DA to make this entirely disappear."
I looked into his dark eyes and saw nothing but raw, unfiltered suspicion.
He actually believed I was a jealous murderer.
I swore I would rather rot in a concrete cell for the rest of my life than bow down to them.
Just as my childhood savior miraculously appeared to bail me out, my phone rang.
The mistress had gone into full cardiac arrest.
Only I had the surgical skill to save her.
I turned around, deciding whether to let the woman who ruined my life die, or pick up my scalpel.

9.5
I woke up gasping from a nightmare of flames devouring Chandler Finch's estate, my body wrapped in burning curtains as I died alone.
But my eyes opened to silk sheets in his penthouse master bedroom. He was alive beside me, his cedarwood scent real. This was my second chance—I'd been reborn.
His phone buzzed: Eugenia Stewart's "emergency." Her security detail reported her refusing meals, unstable. Chandler bolted without a glance, rushing to her side.
I signed the brutal cohabitation contract binding me to him, but Temperance had planted birth control pills in the trash—a trap to frame me. Chandler found them, exploded in jealous rage, crushing the pills to dust. "No child unless it's mine," he growled, possessive fire in his eyes.
Brett, Eugenia's lapdog, stormed in later, accusing me of manipulation. I fired back: Chandler demanded my womb for his heir. Brett paled, fled to tattle.
Then the storm hit—power outage, locked on the terrace in pouring rain, freezing as Eugenia faked an asthma attack on Chandler's line, stealing his focus again. I hung up, huddled with a stray puppy, nearly dying from hypothermia.
He'd never believed me before—Eugenia's lies always won, dooming me to isolation and fire. Why did her every whimper trump my screams? How could he be so blind?
This time, reborn weeks before the inferno, I wouldn't beg. I'd play his game, shatter Eugenia's web, and make Chandler mine—before the flames returned.

8.9
For fifteen years, I thought my mother had died in a tragic fire.
Then the wealthy Ross family's butler knocked on my door, revealing she was alive—locked away in the psychiatric annex of their massive estate.
I rushed into the lion's den to save her, only to run straight into Graydon Ross, the ruthless billionaire CEO.
He looked at my cheap clothes with pure disgust, convinced I was a bottom-feeding scammer trying to extort his family.
"Throw this bitch out into the snow."
He ordered his armed guards to drag me away, completely cutting off my only chance to see my mentally broken mother.
But as he violently grabbed my collar to throw me out, I saw a custom eagle-head cufflink hanging from his coat pocket.
My blood turned to ice, and a wave of paralyzing terror crashed over me.
Eight months ago, I accidentally slept with a masked stranger in a pitch-black hotel room and fled before dawn.
That cufflink belonged to him.
The man who took my virginity—the Wall Street tyrant I had been hiding from—was Graydon Ross.
If he ever found out I was that woman, he would literally destroy my life.
But to save my mother, I couldn't be thrown out.
When his grandmother suddenly appeared, I dropped to the floor, exposed the dark bruises Graydon had just left on my wrists, and sobbed.
I framed the billionaire for assault to secure my place in the mansion, forcing myself to live right next door to the monster whose bed I had fled.

7.6
🔞🔞🔞🔞🔞🔞
Aria Bennett is the perfect daughter, a decoration in her father's massive business empire. But for one night, she decides to break every rule. At a secret underground club, she meets Adrian, a man who knows exactly how to please her and awaken desires she never knew she had. They promise each other nothing but one night of pleasure and desire.
But when Aria wakes up to find him gone, leaving only a cold note behind, she thinks the fantasy is over. That is, until she walks downstairs the next morning to see the same man standing in her driveway.
Now, the man who knows her darkest secrets is her father's new driver. Forced to face him every day while pretending they are strangers, Aria is caught in a suffocating game of cat and mouse.
Adrian on the other hand is dangerous, cold, and hiding a secret that could destroy her father's empire.
And the closer she gets to him, the more she risks losing everything, including herself.

9.0
For a whole year, April believed her billionaire husband, Bartholomew, abandoned her in Europe the day after their arranged wedding. She hated him so much she drunkenly prayed for his death at a club.
But he suddenly returned that very night, catching her red-handed. Instead of a divorce, he trapped her, threatening to bankrupt her bloodsucking family unless she moved into his penthouse to play the devoted wife.
Forced to comply, she attended a dinner with her toxic family. Her stepmother deliberately served her lobster—knowing April had a fatal allergy.
"Eat up, darling. I know hospital food is dreadful."
When April refused and exposed their massive gambling debts, her furious father raised his hand to strike her across the face.
But it was Bartholomew, the ruthless tyrant she despised, who caught her father's arm and snapped his wrist.
"If you ever try to touch my wife again, I will erase your family by sunrise."
April was completely stunned. Why was he defending her with such murderous rage? And why did he keep a cheap paper airplane she had made at age six preserved under a glass dome in his study?
The answer came that night. When Bartholomew stepped out of the shower, April saw the massive, jagged surgical scar sliced directly over his heart. He hadn't run away; he had been fighting for his life on an operating table. Staring at the man who had silently survived just to come back to her, April made her choice. She was going to uncover the truth behind his surgery and their past.