
Framed By Betrayal: Billionaire's Possessive Contract
Haylie waited nervously at the Wall Street charity gala for her boyfriend Bryan, but a spiked drink hit her hard, leaving her stumbling into a VIP lounge.
There, Chester Steele, the ruthless CEO of Steele Industrial, found her—drugged and vulnerable. What started as a frantic claiming in the shadows ended with him whispering she was his.
But moments later, a security alert shattered everything: data breach traced to Haylie's terminal. Chester's fury exploded. He saw her brush past a Logan Group rival on footage and dumped her in the rain, firing her as a corporate spy.
Bryan answered her desperate call with ice: "It's over." Reporters swarmed her door, branding her a traitor. Arrested at the office by FBI agents, she watched smug coworker Erin wave goodbye.
Thrown in a cell, chained and grilled with fake evidence—offshore accounts in her name—Haylie learned the worst: charges now included her sick father, Ernest, framed for laundering the leak money. Plead guilty or he dies in prison.
Innocent and raging, she couldn't fathom who planted it all—the gala bump, the logs, the forgeries. Why her? Who hated her enough to destroy her life?
Chester burst in, posting unlimited bail but forcing her signature on a slave contract: live in his penthouse, serve him 24/7. As she collapsed in his arms, trapped in his gilded cage, Haylie vowed silently—she'd uncover the real traitor and make them pay.
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Chapter 3
The revolving door spat Haylie out onto the sidewalk like a piece of trash. The security guard gave her one last push. She stumbled, her heels skidding on the wet concrete.
The rain hit her like a wall of ice. It soaked through the thin cashmere blanket and her dress in seconds, the cold seeping into her bones. A gust of wind nearly knocked her over.
Her ankle twisted. She went down hard, her knees slamming into a deep puddle. Pain shot up her leg, and she felt the wet warmth of blood trickling down her shin.
She scrambled onto her hands and knees, gasping. Her fingers scraped against the pavement. She patted her pockets frantically. Empty. Her phone was gone.
A lump of plastic skidded across the sidewalk toward her. One of the guards had tossed her clutch. It landed in a puddle, the contents spilling out. Her lipstick rolled into the gutter. Her old backup phone, tucked into the hidden lining of the clutch, had spilled out.
She grabbed the phone with trembling fingers. It was her old backup,now obsolete smartphones, the battery low but holding a signal. She flipped it open.
She dialed the only number that mattered. The only person who could make this nightmare stop.
It rang. And rang. And rang.
Just when she thought it would go to voicemail, the line clicked.
"What." Bryan's voice was flat, irritated. The sound of clinking glasses and laughter echoed in the background.
"Bryan," she sobbed, the words tumbling out. "Bryan, it's me. Chester threw me out. He fired me. I'm outside in the rain, I don't know what's happening, please, you have to come get me-"
"Stop." The single word was a bucket of cold water.
Haylie froze, the rain streaming down her face.
"I just saw the Wall Street Journal alert," Bryan said. His tone was devoid of any emotion. It was the voice he used when firing a subordinate. "Did you leak the Meridian data to my father's company?"
The world tilted. "What? No! Bryan, I would never-"
"Don't." His voice hardened. "My father saw the news. Logan Group can't be associated with a corporate espionage scandal. We're in damage control mode."
Her teeth chattered violently. The cold was a physical weight crushing her chest. "Bryan, we've been together for three years. You know me."
"Apparently, I didn't," he replied, the words crisp and final. "It's over, Haylie. Don't call this number again."
The line went dead.
The beep beep beep of the disconnect tone was louder than the thunder. She stared at the screen until it went black. The phone slipped from her numb fingers, but she scrambled to snatch it back from the wet pavement, clutching it to her chest like a lifeline.
She stayed there, kneeling in the dirty water, the rain pelting her back. She didn't move. She couldn't.
A yellow cab sped past, hitting a pothole. A wave of muddy water drenched her from head to toe. The driver leaned on his horn, shouting something obscene out the window before disappearing into the night.
She tried to stand. Her right ankle screamed in protest, the pain bringing tears to her eyes. She collapsed back onto the wet asphalt.
"Hey, baby," a voice slurred from the shadows. "Need a ride?"
A man stumbled out of an alleyway. His eyes were glassy, his grin predatory. He reached out a hand toward her shoulder.
Fear, sharp and immediate, cut through her grief. She scrambled backward, her injured foot dragging behind her. She turned and ran,endure the pain ,or rather, hobbled, as fast as she could toward the glowing sign at the end of the block.
The subway station was a concrete tomb. The tile walls were covered in grime and old posters. The few fluorescent lights buzzed and flickered. It was empty, save for a sleeping homeless man on a bench.
She limped to the MetroCard machine. Her hands shook so badly she dropped her wet bills three times before the machine accepted them. The card popped out. She pushed through the turnstile, the metal bar heavy against her hip.
The platform was deserted. The warm, metallic smell of the tracks filled her nose. She slumped onto a wooden bench, pulling the wet blanket tighter around her shoulders. Her body heaved with silent sobs.
The downtown express roared into the station, the wind whipping her hair into her face. She dragged herself onto the car.
The train was mostly empty. She chose a corner seat, tucking her legs up under her. She buried her face in her knees, trying to make herself as small as possible.
The window acted as a mirror in the dark tunnel. She caught a glimpse of herself. Hair plastered to her skull. Mascara running down her cheeks in black rivers. And there, on her neck, a dark, bruising mark in the shape of a mouth.
She yanked the collar of her dress up, hiding the evidence of Chester's possession. But she couldn't hide the shame burning in her gut.
She rode the train to the end of the line. When she got off, she realized she was in an unfamiliar neighborhood. The street signs meant nothing to her.
She walked for blocks, limping past dark storefronts and boarded-up buildings. Finally, a beacon of light appeared. A 24-hour bodega. The neon sign buzzed, the letter 'B' flickering erratically.
She pushed the door open. A bell chimed. The man behind the counter looked up, his eyes lingering on her ruined dress and bare feet.
"Band-aids," she croaked, pointing to the rack. "And antiseptic."
She paid with her last few damp dollars. The clerk handed her the change, his gaze never leaving the bruise on her neck. She grabbed the items and fled back into the rain.
She huddled under the narrow awning outside the store, the rain still driving down just inches from her shoes. She pulled out the backup phone and typed out a text message with shaking thumbs.
"Brenda. It's Haylie. Please. Can I come home?"
The minutes stretched into an eternity. The cold was a living thing, gnawing at her fingers and toes. She closed her eyes, leaning her head against the cold glass of the window.
The phone vibrated.
"Yes. Come right now."
The dam broke. She pressed a hand over her mouth, a broken wail escaping her lips. She stepped out into the rain, holding her arm up. A car slowed down. An Uber. She climbed into the backseat, giving her address in a voice that didn't sound like her own.
She curled up in the corner of the seat, staring at nothing. The city lights blurred past, a million windows full of a million lives, none of which cared about hers.
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8.4
For twenty years, I lived as the adopted daughter of the wealthy Hill family.
But today, they forced me to sign a severance agreement and kicked me out so their precious biological daughter, Malia, could marry my fiancé.
To ruin me completely, they framed me for stealing Malia's engagement bracelet, threatening me with prison.
I calmly exposed the "sapphire" as cheap glass, then rolled up my sleeves to show the reporters my scarred, punctured arms.
For two decades, I wasn't a daughter. I was Malia's living blood and bone marrow bank.
They drained my health to keep her alive, even ordering doctors to ignore my failing organs just so she could attend a gala.
"Take this million dollars and shut your mouth," my adoptive father sneered, throwing a check at my feet.
My ex-fiancé looked at me with disgust, and Malia screamed that I was a crazy, vindictive liar.
They had stolen my life and my health, yet they still looked down on me like I was garbage.
I ripped the check into pieces and threw it in their faces.
Just as they ordered the butler to drag me out, a group of men in black suits shattered the chaos.
The heir of the untouchable Montgomery dynasty stepped through the door, ignoring the Hills' fawning, and handed me a DNA report.
I wasn't a disposable blood bag. I was the long-lost true heiress of old New York money.
And now, I was going to take back everything they stole from me.

8.3
He laid me on the sheets, climbed over me, caged me with his arms. "Last chance to run," he said, voice low."I need the money," I whispered, feeling so tiny in his arms."You're soaking," he muttered. "Virgin or not, your pussy wants this."I moaned, looking away, couldn't help it,"Eyes on me, sweetheart," he pushed his tip in slowly."Fuck," he groaned. "So tight."He fucked me like he was claiming something. "Come for me," he whispered in my ears, moving faster."Damien," I cried out his name as I came."That's it," he growled. After a long minute he pulled out slowly. "One night," he said again, almost like a reminder....weeks later, I walked through the quiet hall of my school. A massive portrait stared back at me.Damien BlackwoodPrincipal Benefactor and OwnerColumbia University.Same man who'd just taken my virginity for money. My stomach dropped. "Oh fuck... what have I done?"

8.1
Desperate for a way out of rejection and poverty, Pearl Augustine accepts a nanny job with an outrageous salary-working for billionaire Ace Warren. What she doesn't expect is his daughter.
Mia Warren is spoiled, sharp-tongued, and feared by everyone in the mansion. Behind her cruelty is a lonely child longing for a mother. As Pearl becomes the only one who can reach her, walls begin to fall-especially those around Ace, a grieving man hiding behind wealth and control.
What started as "just a job" quickly turns into something dangerous: attachment.
Sometimes, healing begins where you least expect it.

9.7
For three years, I was the dutiful wife of billionaire Ervin Valdez.
On our third wedding anniversary, he came home smelling of his mistress's perfume, pinned me down, and brutally mocked me.
His mistress, Sylvia, had even sent me a fake ultrasound report to force me out of the picture.
In Ervin's eyes, I was just a vicious, calculating liar who used a pregnancy to trap him into marriage.
He didn't care that I had actually lost that baby, nor did he know the trauma of my gambling father selling me to a dark club where I was assaulted by a stranger.
When I finally handed him the signed divorce papers, giving up all assets, and left the penthouse with nothing but an old suitcase, he just sneered.
"She is playing a game of hard to get. She won't last three days before she comes crying back."
He froze all my bank accounts, let his mistress humiliate me in public, and waited coldly for me to starve and beg.
He thought my entire existence relied on his wealth, completely confident that I would inevitably surrender to his control.
But he was wrong.
I calmly opened my old laptop, bypassed the complex encryptions, and looked at the dozens of unread emails from top-tier global brands begging for my return.
I resurrected my hidden identity as the legendary jewelry designer "R," and walked straight into the top design firm in Manhattan.
"It is time to find myself again."

9.3
He was supposed to be my brother. The cold CEO everyone feared. The man who controlled the entire country's business world.
But one night, he looked at me and calmly destroyed everything I thought I knew.
"We're getting married."
I laughed, but he didn't.
Now every door in my life is closing, every choice is disappearing, and the one man I'm not supposed to love refuses to let me go.
Because to Lucien Hale, this was never forbidden. It was inevitable.
And the most terrifying part? The closer I get to him, the harder it becomes to run.

8.5
I was supposed to marry Aaron, the future Alpha of the Blackwood Pack, and finally have my fairy tale.
But right before our Unity Celebration, I caught him buried between my stepsister's legs in our bridal suite.
When I refused to bind my soul to his at the altar and exposed his betrayal, my world completely shattered.
My own mother called me a crazy, wolfless bitch and disowned me on the spot for ruining a political alliance.
Aaron publicly humiliated me, screaming that as a wolfless Omega, I should have been on my knees thanking him for the chance to be his breeding mare.
Driven to absolute despair by the betrayal of everyone I trusted, I tried to jump off a freezing roof.
But a pair of strong arms pulled me back from the edge.
In the dark, a stranger consumed my grief, wrapping me in a terrifyingly dominant scent of cedar and leather, making me feel an intoxicating mate bond I thought I was incapable of having.
I thought it was just a desperate, one-night mistake to make me forget.
But the next morning, when I went to the Blackwood estate to return Aaron's gifts and leave as a Rogue, a suffocating aura filled the room.
The man who stepped between me and my furious ex-fiancé, the man whose marks were currently hidden beneath my clothes, stared at me with glowing golden eyes.
"Get your hands off her."
He was Kaelon Blackwood. The supreme Alpha King.
Aaron's father.
And he had just locked the door, declaring that I belonged to him.