
From His Captive Doll To The World's Unstoppable Queen
Everyone in Manhattan envied me for being married to Julian Sterling, the "Saint of Wall Street." After a tragic accident ended my ballet career, he was the ultimate devoted husband, carrying me when I couldn't walk and managing my "mental episodes" with saintly patience.
But inside our fifty-million-dollar penthouse, my savior was actually my jailer. I started losing time and forgetting entire days, while Julian insisted my "trauma" was making me lose my mind, forcing me to take heavy sedatives he personally prepared.
The horror peaked when I discovered my disability was a lie; Julian had been paying my surgeon to inject neurotoxins into my ankle just to keep me dependent. He used deepfakes to convince the world I was psychotic, all while secretly harvesting my eggs to create an heir I never knew existed.
I spent years mourning the life he stole, wondering how the man who once took a bullet for me could be the same monster who watched my bones shatter with a smile.
Finding my stolen son being used as a pawn in his sick legacy was the final straw.
Julian thought he broke my wings, but he only taught me how to hunt.
He stole my life, my body, and my child.
Now, I'm coming to take them all back.
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Chapter 1
The camera flashes were not stars. They were aggressive, stroboscopic bursts of lightning that left purple spots dancing in Sienna Vance's vision. She stood on the red carpet outside the Metropolitan Museum of Art, her left hand gripping the crook of Julian Sterling's arm so tightly her knuckles had turned the color of old bone.
"Smile, darling," Julian whispered. His voice was low, a velvet texture that usually calmed her, but tonight it felt like a wire tightening around her throat. "They just want to see the woman who tamed the beast."
Sienna forced the corners of her mouth upward. It was a muscle memory from a life she no longer lived-the life of a principal ballerina who knew how to project radiance even when her toes were bleeding inside satin shoes. Now, the bleeding was internal, and the shoes were sensible, flat-soled designer loafers hidden beneath the hem of her emerald gown.
"Julian! Over here! Mr. Sterling, is it true the Foundation is donating another ten million to the PTSD recovery wing?"
Julian turned, his movement fluid and practiced. He was beautiful in the way a statue was beautiful-chiseled, imposing, and cold to the touch. He placed his other hand over Sienna's, his thumb stroking her skin in a rhythm that felt less like comfort and more like a warning.
"My wife is the inspiration for everything I do," Julian told the reporter, his eyes locking onto Sienna's with a look of such profound devotion that a collective sigh rippled through the press line. "Her strength in the face of... personal challenges... is the beacon that guides the Sterling family."
Sienna felt the heat rise in her cheeks. Personal challenges. That was the code. The polite Manhattan shorthand for Sienna is broken. Sienna is fragile. Sienna is the crazy wife of the Saint of Wall Street.
A sharp, hot needle of pain shot up from her left ankle. She flinched, a microscopic movement, but Julian caught it. He always caught it.
"We need to go inside," he announced, his tone shifting to that of a protective guardian. "Sienna has been on her feet too long."
He swept her away from the cameras, guiding her toward the entrance. As they passed through the heavy glass doors, the noise of the city was severed, replaced by the hushed, expensive air of the museum.
"I was fine, Julian," Sienna said, her voice sounding thin to her own ears. "I could have stood there a little longer."
Julian stopped. He turned to her, his blue eyes searching her face. He reached out and tucked a stray strand of blonde hair behind her ear. His fingers lingered on her neck, resting on her pulse point.
"You were trembling, Si," he said softly. "You were dissociating again. I saw your eyes glaze over. You were about to have an episode right there on the stairs."
Sienna blinked. Had she? She remembered the flashes. She remembered the pain in her ankle. But the panic? The dissociation? She searched her memory, but it was like trying to catch smoke. The gaps were happening more often lately.
"I... I didn't think I was," she stammered.
"That's the scary part, isn't it?" Julian's expression was a masterpiece of pity. "You never know when it's happening until I pull you back. Thank God I'm here."
He leaned down and kissed her forehead. His lips were dry.
"Thank God," Sienna repeated, the words tasting like ash. She looked down at her left foot. The ankle that had shattered her career three years ago throbbed in agreement. The doctors said it should have healed by now. They said the pain was psychosomatic. A manifestation of her trauma.
Julian offered his arm again. "Come. Eleanor is waiting by the bar. Try not to drink too much tonight, darling. You know how it interacts with your medication."
Sienna hadn't had a drink in six months. But as she took his arm, she wondered if she had forgotten that, too.
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8.3
On our sixth anniversary, I found my fiancé Carter had given my grandmother's heirloom locket to his "fragile" colleague, Carmen.
When I confronted him, he slapped me across the face.
He then dragged me out into the snow, forcing me to my knees to apologize to Carmen for upsetting her. The stress and his violence triggered a miscarriage. I was losing our baby right there at his feet.
He never even noticed the blood staining the snow. He was too busy comforting the woman he chose over me and our child.
I left that night and never looked back.
Three years later, after building a new life and a successful bakery, he showed up on my doorstep, a ghost of a man, dying of cancer.
He collapsed, coughing up blood at my feet, begging for a forgiveness I no longer had to give.

8.2
I was the biological daughter, yet my mother looked at me with disgust while worshipping my adopted sister, Carina.
When I vanished for two months, my mother laughed it off as a "tantrum" designed to ruin my grandmother's jubilee.
She only stopped laughing when the detective slammed a forensics report on the table.
"Your daughter didn't just die, Mrs. Fowler," the officer said, his voice cold. "She was buried alive by the elements. It took her three days to suffocate in that ravine."
My mother turned pale, stammering that she never got a call for help.
The detective' s eyes narrowed. "Oh, she called. Five times. Someone answered the last one, listened to her scream, and then deleted the log to cover it up."
The room went dead silent.
Slowly, my mother' s horrified gaze turned toward Carina, the "perfect" daughter, who was trembling violently in the corner.
My ghost watched from the shadows of the interrogation room as the realization finally hit her.
She hadn't just neglected me; she had raised the monster who left me to die.

9.0
There was blood on his hands, and something worse in his eyes. And it terrified her to death.
---
Crystal Peterson's only crime was to fall in love with her brother's best friend, Jaden Astor. She thought he loved her, too. Until he came back home one day with Valerie, the woman he was going to marry in two weeks.
Already pregnant and disowned by her adoptive family, Crystal ran away from home without even a word to Jaden.
Five years later, Crystal and her son, who had a terminal illness, were barely surviving and trying to make ends meet when she answered a knock on her door one day and found the one man she would rather stay away from all her life standing there and begging for her forgiveness.
But forgiveness was something Crystal never had to offer Jaden. Not when she had to sell one of her twins just to keep the other twin alive. Not after being disowned and mocked by her family and everyone she once held dear, loosing everything she ever worked for, including her education.
But what happens when she finds out who had actually bought one of her twins four years ago?
Does she have a place for Jaden in her heart anymore, or she'd rather stick to Noah, the only man who was ever there for her when her world crumbled to the ground?
***
Obsession. Possession. Love. Betrayal.

8.8
I lived in the shadow of the Randolph estate, a scholarship girl who spent years calling the heir of the family "brother." I thought the cold distance between us was my protection, a boundary that would keep me safe in a world of wealth and power.
Then I woke up on the thick Persian rug of his private study, my body aching and my mind fractured by disjointed, violent memories of whiskey and his scorching touch. Panic flooded my chest as I scrambled to cover myself with a discarded blouse, desperately stammering that it was a mistake, a drunken lapse in judgment.
But Hunter sat on the sofa, unbothered and terrifyingly sober. He watched me with eyes that lacked any hint of the haze that clouded my own.
"I wasn't drunk, Herminia."
The air left the room. He had been fully aware while I was lost in the smoke. Before I could flee, he caught me, his fingers digging into my waist with a grip that felt more like a claim than a rescue. A dark purple bruise bloomed on my neck—a mark of possession that meant my life was over if our mother, Barbara, ever saw it.
Instead of letting me go, Hunter used my terror to tighten the noose. He manipulated Barbara into moving me to the East Wing, his private sector where no staff were allowed and every door was a dead end. I became a prisoner in a silk-lined cage, watched by bodyguards he hired to "protect" me from the very scandal he created.
At breakfast, I had to sit in silence as Barbara planned his marriage to a wealthy heiress, all while his foot pressed possessively against my leg under the table. He wanted a perfect wife for the cameras and me hidden in his wing as his "common distraction." He even tasted the blood from my wounded finger, whispering that I was his.
I looked at the high lace collar hiding my shame and the bars on my beautiful windows. My "brother" was a predator who had bought everyone I trusted, from the maids to my own assistant.
As the florists began delivering lilies for his engagement party, I realized I was standing on the edge of a bottomless abyss, and the only person holding the key to my cage was the monster who wanted to consume me.

7.6
"I will never carry your child," I spat.
The Alpha's grip on my jaw tightened, his eyes darkening with a hunger that wasn't just gold-it was primal. "I don't need you to carry it, Aria. I need you to pretend it's yours. One year as my Luna, or one lifetime in the pens. Choose."
One night, while returning from the clinic where she tended to the sick, Aria sensed she was being followed. Before she could react, three men ambushed her in the shadowed forest, claiming her father had gambled her away. Her desperate pleas went unanswered as she was struck unconscious, only to awaken in the heart of a notorious slave camp. There, she learned she was destined to serve as the breeder for the Alpha of the Hellbound Pack, Draven Darkmoon, a man feared for his cursed bloodline. But when Draven is thrust into Aria's world, her wolf recognizes him as her mate, igniting a dangerous collision of passion, power, and desire that neither can resist.

7.6
Cora thought she was the luckiest woman alive, married to a devoted tech billionaire who showered her with custom haute couture and obsessive care.
But his "protection" involved locking her inside their San Francisco estate, forcing her to swallow foul neon-green supplements, and drawing her blood with highly classified veterinary needles.
She thought it was just his extreme paranoia, until a cynical doctor cornered her at a charity gala.
"Kendrick isn't raising a wife. He's curating a very rare, very fragile medical specimen. You're his personal pharmacy."
Terrified, Cora broke into Kendrick's hidden safe and found a medical report approving her total bone marrow and stem cell depletion.
Kendrick wasn't a doting husband. He was raising her as a human bloodbag to save his terminally ill cousin.
When she nearly uncovered the truth, Kendrick cried fake tears, claiming he only needed her antibodies.
"Tomorrow, we are going to my private island in the Caribbean. Just the two of us. No internet. No guards. Just peace."
Cora almost believed his vulnerable act, deeply confused by how a man who kissed her so tenderly could plan to slaughter her in cold blood.
Then, while packing for the trip, she dropped a wooden box, revealing a hidden flight manifesto.
Kendrick's return date was listed. Hers was completely blank.
Stapled to the back was a clinical schedule: Intensive Marrow Harvesting - Final Stage. Patient will not require return transport.
Hearing his heavy footsteps echoing in the hallway, Cora gripped the sharp edges of the broken box.
She was not going to be a slaughtered lamb on that island.