
Framed By Love, Unleashed By Vengeance
I was a top patent lawyer until my husband and his lover framed me, destroyed my career, and sent me to prison. For seven years after, I was presumed dead, living as a ghost in a warehouse.
Then, they found me. My ex-husband, Edgar, and our son, Kody, showed up, shocked to see me alive.
They lured me to Kody' s 18th birthday party, but it was a lie. The party was a surprise engagement celebration for Edgar and Celena, the very woman who ruined my life.
In front of everyone, Edgar told me to "let go."
My own son even begged me.
"Mom, please," he cried. "Just say you're sorry."
Sorry? For what? For surviving the car crash they orchestrated to kill me?
I looked at the boy I once loved more than life itself. In the sudden silence of the ballroom, I smiled and asked, "Kody, do you remember the night Celena asked you to slash my tires?"
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Chapter 3
Abigail Cardenas POV:
Sleep didn't come. Their faces, their voices, Celena' s smug smile, Edgar' s pathetic guilt, Kody' s tear-stained face-they were all vivid, unwelcome invaders in my mind. Each memory was a spark, igniting the inferno of hatred that still smoldered within me. It was a dull ache most days, but tonight, it was a raging fire.
I needed to move, to do something, anything, to quiet the storm inside. My small room offered little to organize, but I started anyway, straightening the few books, folding my limited clothes. I pushed aside a stack of old magazines, and my hand brushed against something hard, hidden in the back of the small, dusty closet.
A forgotten box. Heavy, worn, taped shut. I pulled it out, grunting with the effort. As I lifted it onto the bed, the bottom gave way. The contents spilled onto the threadbare blanket, scattering across the mattress. Among them, a photo frame, old and wooden, clattered to the floor. The glass shattered with a sharp, sickening crack.
My breath hitched. My eyes fell on the image within the broken frame. A family photo. Edgar, Kody, and me. We were smiling, standing in front of a Christmas tree, garlands of light twinkling around us. A perfect, fabricated memory.
Kody. My Kody. My adopted son. The one I had loved with a ferocity that bordered on madness. He wasn't mine by blood, but he was mine by every other measure that mattered.
Edgar, in his early days, had been scarred by Celena' s first betrayal. He swore off children, claiming he couldn't bear the thought of more pain. But I had seen something else in him, a longing he couldn't admit. I had wanted a child, desperately, but life had dealt me a different hand.
One rainy afternoon, I found him. A tiny, abandoned baby, left on the steps of the local church. He was frail, malnourished, with a congenital heart defect that would require countless surgeries, a lifetime of care. Edgar had hesitated, worried about the cost, the whispers, the burden.
But I hadn't. Not for a second. I scooped up the tiny bundle, my heart overflowing with a fierce, protective love. I named him Kody, a name that meant 'helpful' and 'kind' in an old dialect I' d once studied. He was my purpose, my reason for being.
I fought for him, paid for his treatments, held his tiny hand through every painful procedure. I learned everything I could about his condition, became an expert in pediatric cardiology by necessity. Edgar, eventually, came around, but it was always my battle. My sacrifice. And Kody, in turn, clung to me, his small arms wrapped tightly around my neck, calling me "Mama" with a reverence that melted my heart. That was my greatest joy.
Then Celena came back. A ghost from Edgar's past, a siren who pulled him back into her orbit with practiced ease. She was everything I wasn't-flashy, ambitious, and utterly ruthless. She saw me as an obstacle, Kody as a nuisance.
Edgar started working late, his excuses growing thinner, his eyes colder. Kody, too, changed. Celena, with her expensive gifts and whispered promises, slowly poisoned his mind. He started calling me "controlling," "overprotective." He grew resentful of the endless doctor's appointments, the watchful eye I kept on his fragile health. He wanted freedom, the kind of freedom Celena dangled like a shiny new toy.
I remembered one fight, me screaming, "Edgar, what is happening to us?!" Him, turning away, his shoulders hunched, "Nothing, Abigail. You're imagining things." His office door was always locked now, his phone glued to his hand. Kody stopped telling me about his day, instead spending hours with Celena, who showered him with attention and expensive gadgets. He even started calling her "Aunt Celena," a word that felt like a knife twisting in my gut.
My eyes burned, a fresh wave of tears threatening to spill. The jagged edge of the broken glass dug into my finger, a thin line of red blooming against my skin, staining the smiling faces in the photo. It was a physical echo of the pain in my chest. The broken glass, the shattered family, the blood seeping into the memory.
I remembered Kody's tenth birthday. He'd blown out the candles on his cake, his eyes bright with hope. "I wish," he' d said, "that we could be a family forever, Mama. Just us."
I laughed now, a bitter, broken sound that caught in my throat. Forever. What a naive wish.
With a choked sob, I snatched the photo up, the blood from my finger smearing across the image. I crumpled it in my hand, then tossed it into the small wastebasket in the corner. The crumpled faces stared up at me, accusing and mocking.
Just then, my phone buzzed. A text message. An unknown number.
You're invited to Kody's 18th Birthday Celebration. This Saturday. Astoria Ballroom.
My blood ran cold. Kody. His birthday. After all these years. And after Edgar and Celena's visit. It felt like a trap, another cruel twist of the knife. But a part of me, a small, foolish part, wondered if this was a chance. A chance to see him again, to understand. Or perhaps, a chance to finally, truly say goodbye.
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7.7
A deep bone-melting groan vibrates from his chest. "I want to see you malyshka.Every inch of you."
I shiver in anticipation as his fingers trail down my back, lowering the zipper of my dress, the fabric pooling at my waist. My tits come into view as cool air kisses my bare skin.
His sharp intake of breath makes my stomach flip.
"Damn," the word is rough, almost reverent as his large hand cups my left tit, squeezing softly. "They look even better than I had imagined." His grip tightens slightly. "A perfect fit for my hands."
☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎☦︎
Serafina had only one dream: to take center stage at the New York Opera. But if wishes were horses, even beggars would have a ride.Thrown into an arranged marriage, She is determined to hate him but soon discovers that there's a thin line between love and hate.
Adriko has no use for love. His focus is power, his goal is revenge. But what do you do when your greatest threat is your most sinful desire?
A pawn in the game...
A Bride for a truce...

9.7
When Dante Moretti discovers his arranged husband is the son of the man who massacred his family, he sees the perfect opportunity for revenge. Alessandro Santoro accepts the marriage as penance for sins he couldn't prevent, expecting nothing but the punishment he believes he deserves.
But living together reveals cracks in the story both families told. Alessandro wasn't the enemy Dante thought. Dante isn't the monster Alessandro feared. As they uncover the real conspiracy behind the massacre, they're forced to choose between the vengeance that's defined them and the fragile connection growing between them.

9.0
My boyfriend and stepsister murdered me for my inheritance, their celebratory kiss a final insult above my broken body on the rain-slicked concrete of the port.
As my soul floated inches from my own face, a tyrant the world knew only as a disfigured cripple, Charles Moses, arrived with a team of soldiers.
He ignored my killers, who were now begging for their lives. Instead, he fell to his knees in the mud and blood.
He cradled my lifeless head in his hands, and a gut-wrenching sob of pure agony tore from his throat before he carried my body into the black ocean.
As the water closed over us, I didn't understand. Why did this monster, a man I had never met, weep for me as if I was his entire world?
My eyes snapped open. I was five years in the past, coughing up water in a hospital bed. It was the night my family screamed at me for ruining my stepsister's dress after she'd tried to drown me.
When they offered to marry me off to the "crippled monster" Charles Moses to save my perfect stepsister from that fate, I didn't fight them.
I smiled and said yes.
This time, I would walk straight into the lion's den myself.

9.7
Amy has lived in the shadows of her twin all her life-unwanted by her parents, erased by lies, and forgotten by the only boy she ever loved.
Now, years later, she returns not as the broken girl they abandoned, but as a woman ready to fight. When she demands marriage from Lucas Tyson-her sister's powerful fiancé, but her first love-the world gasps.
To them, she looks greedy. To her, it is the first step in reclaiming everything stolen from her: her name, her dignity, and the one heart that belongs to her.
But Lucas remembers only betrayal, Ava will do anything to keep her lies hidden, and Amy is walking into a war she may not survive.
Who will win the love fight?

9.0
My fiancé, the Underboss of the DeLuca Crime Family, promised he would burn the world down for me.
But when my mother was dying in the hospital, he chose a ski trip with another woman.
It was that woman's dog that attacked my mother, but when I called him, shaking, he was annoyed. He was in Aspen with Isabella, and I could hear her laughing in the background. He dismissed my mother's injuries as a "minor scrape" and told me not to "make a big deal out of this."
While my mother's fever spiked, he ignored my desperate pleas. Instead, my phone lit up with an Instagram post of him and Isabella smiling by a fireplace, sipping hot chocolate.
My mother slipped into septic shock. That picture was a public declaration, a judgment on my mother's worth, and my own. A cold fury burned away every last bit of love I had for him.
She died at 3:17 a.m. I held her hand until it was cold, then walked out of the hospital and called the one number I was never supposed to use—the number for my father.
"She's dead," I said. "I'm coming to Chicago. I'm leaving this life, and I'm going to burn his world to the ground."

7.5
I didn't fall for him.
I crashed.
Liam Cage wasn't supposed to matter. He was just the arrogant stranger with a dangerous smile and eyes that undressed me in a single glance. Just a man passing through my life.
Until our parents got married.
Now he's everywhere, in the kitchen at midnight, leaning against doorframes like he owns the air I breathe. In the hallway, too close. Always too close. Every look between us feels like a secret. Every argument feels like foreplay. Every silence feels loaded.
We don't talk about it.
We don't have to.
Because the truth is there in the way my pulse stutters when he says my name. In the way he watches me like he's trying to decide whether to ruin me - or save me.
He's wrong.
For me.
For my family.
For my sanity.
But when he touches me, the world narrows down to skin and heat and the terrifying realization that some mistakes don't feel like mistakes at all.
They feel inevitable.
This story is about craving what you shouldn't, crossing lines you swore you wouldn't, and discovering that sometimes the most dangerous love is the one that feels the most real.