
Flash Marriage To The Vengeful CEO
Debora went to prison to protect the man she loved, only to end up a paroled convict living under the roof of her abusive foster parents.
When they found her positive pregnancy test from a one-night stand, they threatened to kick her out and send her straight back to a cell.
Just as they were about to report her, the stranger from that dark hotel room suddenly appeared.
He paid her foster parents one million dollars to marry her and take her away.
Debora thought she was finally safe.
But the moment they were alone, he looked at her with pure, venomous hatred.
He didn't want a wife; he wanted a prisoner.
He believed Debora was the ruthless murderer who had destroyed his life in a car crash, and he planned to make her suffocate in her own despair.
He didn't know she was just a scapegoat.
To survive and protect her baby, Debora found a job at a bridal shop, only to run into the real culprit—the man who actually drove the car and framed her.
He was now happily engaged to a wealthy heiress.
They deliberately ruined a priceless wedding gown and blamed it on her.
"Kneel on this floor and apologize, or I'm calling the police to revoke your parole!"
Why did she have to rot in hell for his sins, while the man she married wanted to destroy her?
Just as her trembling knees were about to touch the cold marble floor, the heavy glass doors were violently shoved open.
Her billionaire husband strode in like a force of nature, his eyes locked onto the wealthy couple with a terrifying, destructive rage.
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Chapter 2
The heavy silence in the living room was broken only by the sound of Jameson stepping over the threshold. His leather dress shoes thudded against the creaky floorboards. He ignored Burt's gaping mouth and walked straight toward Debora.
He stopped right in front of her. He reached down, offering a large, long-fingered hand.
Debora stared at it. Her chest heaved. She remembered those hands from the dark hotel room a month ago, but the man attached to them now felt like a complete stranger. Slowly, she lifted her own trembling, sweat-slicked hand and placed it in his.
Jameson's fingers closed around hers. His grip was crushing, pulling her up from the floor with a force that made her shoulder joint ache. It wasn't a gentle rescue; it was a claim.
Marlene finally snapped out of her shock. Her greed quickly replaced her anger. She planted her hands on her wide hips and stepped into Jameson's path.
"Who do you think you are?" Marlene shrieked. "You think you can just walk in here and take the girl we raised? She owes us!"
Burt quickly caught on, stepping up beside his wife. "She's a paroled convict. A liability. If you want to take her off our hands, it's going to cost you."
A hot wave of humiliation burned the back of Debora's neck. She yanked her hand, trying to break Jameson's grip. "I am not a piece of property!" she yelled at Burt.
Jameson let out a low, dark chuckle. The sound held no humor. It made the hairs on Debora's arms stand up.
He didn't release her hand. Instead, he reached into the inner pocket of his suit jacket with his free hand and pulled out a leather-bound checkbook and a heavy fountain pen.
He didn't ask for a seat. He slapped the checkbook down onto the dusty television stand, uncapped the pen with his thumb, and wrote a string of numbers in quick, sharp strokes. He tore the check free and held it out to Burt, pinched between two fingers.
Burt snatched it. His eyes bulged as he read the numbers. "One... one million dollars?"
Marlene gasped, leaning over Burt's shoulder. The ugly scowl on her face instantly melted into a sickeningly sweet, greedy smile.
Debora stared at the piece of paper, her mind spinning. She looked up at Jameson's hard profile. "Where did you get that kind of money?" she asked, her voice barely a whisper. She thought he was just a regular guy from a bar.
"I recently sold off a niche software patent I developed in college," Jameson said, his voice flat, devoid of any attachment to the fortune he was giving away. "It's the entirety of the buyout. Consider it a dowry."
The lie was smooth, flawless. A heavy stone of guilt dropped into Debora's stomach. He was giving up everything he had for her. For a mistake they made in the dark.
Burt shoved the check deep into his pocket. "Go pack your things, Debora. Don't keep the man waiting."
Marlene grabbed Debora's bicep, her fingernails digging into the skin. She dragged Debora toward the narrow kitchen.
The moment they were out of Jameson's sight, Marlene's fake smile vanished. She leaned in close, her cheap perfume suffocating Debora.
Marlene jabbed a finger hard into Debora's collarbone. "You listen to me. That man just paid one million dollars for you, and you better make sure you serve him well and keep him happy. If he gets bored of you and brings you back here, I will call your parole officer and tell him you've been stealing from us. You'll be back in a cell by nightfall."
Debora's jaw clenched so hard her teeth ached. Her eyes burned with unshed tears. She knew Marlene wasn't bluffing. They had sold her.
She didn't say a word. She pulled her arm free and walked toward the tiny closet that served as her bedroom.
She dragged out a faded canvas duffel bag. She shoved her few threadbare t-shirts and jeans inside. From the nightstand, she picked up the only thing of value she owned: a blurry photograph of her biological mother. She carefully slid it between the pages of a paperback book and placed it at the bottom of the bag.
Debora zipped the bag and walked back into the living room. Jameson was standing by the window, his hands clasped behind his back, looking utterly repulsed by his surroundings.
Hearing her footsteps, he turned. His eyes dropped to her pathetic bag. A flicker of mockery danced in his blue eyes, gone as quickly as it appeared.
He didn't offer to carry it. "Follow me," he ordered, turning on his heel and walking out the front door.
Debora gripped the handles of her bag. She didn't look back at Burt and Marlene, who were already arguing over the check. She stepped out into the cold air, following the broad back of the man who had just bought her life.
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8.0
When gifted cellist Vivienne Aurel inherits her late father's catastrophic $4.2 million debt, she expects to lose everything. She doesn't expect the debt to be bought by Caspian Vane, the most feared private equity magnate in New York. Caspian doesn't want to ruin her; he wants her to work exclusively for him as the artistic director of his new cultural foundation for eighteen months. Forced into his world under a binding agreement, Vivienne prepares to fight against a cold, transactional cage. But as the intense, quiet proximity between them begins to blur the lines of their contract, she discovers a terrifying truth: the man who now owns her future has been watching her from the shadows long before she ever knew his name.

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.

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.

7.1
I waited a year for my mate, Alpha Justin, to return from the border war. While he was gone, I used my ten-million-dollar dowry to keep his crumbling pack afloat and buy life-saving elixirs for his mother.
But when he finally walked through the door, he reeked of another female's scent.
He brought back Gamma Brenna and a Royal Decree, coldly announcing she would be his "Co-Luna."
His family, who survived entirely on my wealth, immediately turned on me. They mocked me for being a wolfless orphan since my father and brothers were slaughtered defending the kingdom.
"You're just a fragile woman who belongs hidden away," Justin told me.
They demanded I accept this humiliation, step aside for his new warrior mate, and continue funding their luxurious lifestyle. Justin even arrogantly offered to sleep with me just once to give me a pup as a "consolation prize," declaring his heart and body belonged entirely to Brenna.
They thought my ruined pack meant I had no backing. They thought I was a pathetic victim who would cling to their scraps and accept a polluted mate-bond just to avoid being cast out into the woods as a Rogue.
They had no idea I had already visited the Alpha King.
I wasn't going to cry, and I certainly wasn't going to share my mate. I packed up every last cent of my ten million dollars, secured a Royal Severance Decree, and prepared to watch their arrogant pack starve to death.

9.0
Eileen woke up in a trashed hotel room, her head pounding with the pathetic memories of a despised Hollywood actress.
Outside the window, paparazzi were already screaming about her manufactured cheating scandal, but the real nightmare was waiting at her door.
Her paralyzed, billionaire husband, Carlisle Vinson, looked at her with pure disgust while his butler shoved a divorce settlement at her chest.
"Mr. Vinson is offering a severance package of fifty million dollars, provided you sign immediately and vacate the premises."
The original owner had left her an absolute mess.
Her trusted assistant had sold her room number to the press to frame her, and a playboy had scammed her out of her entire two million dollar life savings.
If she signed those papers and lost the Vinson family's protection, the breach of contract fees and her enemies in the industry would swallow her alive in days.
Eileen felt a cold fury override the original owner's lingering panic.
Why should she take the fall and be thrown out on the streets while the parasites who set her up lived out their wealthy fantasies?
She had died once, and she wasn't about to waste her second chance playing the victim.
Eileen slammed the heavy divorce folder shut right against the butler's chest.
"I'm not signing," she said with a terrifying, absolute calm.
She stepped behind her husband's wheelchair, ready to shield him from the cameras, secretly cure his dead legs, and make everyone who betrayed her bleed.

7.5
When Alessia Romano's ex-husband destroys her family's company to drag her back to him, she refuses to beg. But refusing comes at a cost she never expected.
Billionaire Adrian Virelli pays off every debt and saves Romano Industries from ruin. The price is simple. Three years of her life, living under his roof as his daughter's nanny.
Adrian is cold, controlled, and completely off limits. Alessia tells herself she feels nothing.
But when she discovers a hidden room filled with portraits of a woman wearing her face, the truth hits harder than any betrayal she has ever known
She was never the woman he wanted. She was only a replacement.
She walks away. Then his ex-wife returns, and the danger that follows is nothing like Alessia expected. Someone wants her dead, Adrian nearly dies saving her life, and when he finally opens his eyes again, he remembers nothing.
His ex-wife is standing at his bedside, ready to rewrite every memory he has left.
And Alessia is running out of time to make the man she loves remember that he loved her too.