
He Broke My Spirit, I Soared
I was the fiancée of the Chicago Outfit’s heir, a bond sealed by blood and eighteen years of history.
But when his mistress pushed me into the freezing pool at our engagement gala, Jax didn’t swim toward me.
He swam past me.
He scooped up the girl who pushed me, cradling her like fragile glass, while I struggled against the weight of my gown in the murky water.
When I finally dragged myself out, shivering and humiliated before the entire underworld, Jax didn’t offer a hand. He offered a scowl.
"You’re making a scene, Eliana. Go home."
Later, when that same mistress shoved me down the stairs, shattering my knee and my dance career, Jax stepped over my broken body to comfort her.
I overheard him telling his friends, "I’m just breaking her spirit. She needs to learn she’s property, not a partner. Once she’s desperate enough, she’ll be the perfect obedient wife."
He thought I was a dog that would always return to its master. He thought he could starve me of affection until I begged for scraps.
He was wrong.
While he was busy playing protector to his mistress, I wasn't crying in my room.
I was packing his ring into a cardboard box.
I cancelled my transfer to UCLA and enrolled at NYU instead.
By the time Jax realized his "property" was missing, I was already in New York, standing next to a man who looked at me like a queen, not a possession.
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Chapter 2
Eliana Carter POV
The Little estate loomed over the neighborhood like a feudal fortress. It was a compound of iron gates, armed guards, and manicured lawns that smelled of old money and fresh blood.
I drove my car right up to the front entrance. The guards waved me through, their expressions deferential. They still thought I was the future lady of the house.
I snatched the box from the passenger seat, my grip tightening until the cardboard buckled.
Karen, Jax's mother, met me in the foyer. She was the quintessential Mafia wife-blind to the sins, focused entirely on the appearances.
"Eliana, darling," she said, reaching for my cheek with a perfectly manicured hand. "I heard there was a little accident at the gala. Are you alright?"
"Is he upstairs?" I asked, ignoring her touch.
Karen blinked, sensing the radiating tension. "Yes, but-"
I walked past her. I climbed the grand staircase, my footsteps heavy and deliberate on the marble.
I didn't bother to knock on the door to his suite. I shoved it open.
Jax was lounging on his leather sofa, a tumbler of whiskey in his hand.
But he wasn't alone.
Catalina was there. She was sitting on the edge of his desk, swinging her legs playfully.
She was wearing his football jersey. The one with 'LITTLE' emblazoned on the back.
In our world, wearing a man's jersey wasn't just a fashion choice; it was a claim. It was a territory marker.
She saw me and smirked, taking a slow sip from her own glass.
Jax looked up. He didn't look guilty. He looked bored.
"I told you to go home," he said, his voice flat.
I walked to the center of the room. I didn't look at Catalina. I refused to give her the satisfaction of an audience.
"I brought you something," I said.
I dumped the box onto the coffee table. The lid popped open. The photos spilled out like dirty secrets. The locket slid across the wood. The diamond engagement ring, a promise made by our fathers before we could speak, clattered loudly against the glass.
Jax stared at the ring. His jaw tightened.
"What is this drama, Eliana?"
"It's a return policy," I said, my voice devoid of emotion. "I'm returning the goods. They're defective."
Catalina laughed, a sharp, brittle sound. "God, you're pathetic. Do you think he cares about your little scrapbook?"
"Shut up," I said calmly.
Jax stood up. He towered over me. He used his size to intimidate, a tactic that used to work when I still had a heart to break.
"Pick it up," he commanded.
"No."
"I said, pick it up."
"Trash it," I said. "Burn it. I don't care. It means nothing to me."
I turned to leave.
"You don't walk away from me!" Jax roared. He grabbed the box and hurled it toward the mezzanine railing.
It smashed against the banister, raining memories down into the foyer below in a shower of paper and metal.
"You are mine, Eliana! You don't get to decide when this is over!"
"It was over the moment you left me in that water," I said.
I walked out onto the landing.
Catalina followed me, her heels clicking aggressively on the floor. "You just don't get it, do you? He wants a woman, not a doll."
She stepped in front of me at the top of the stairs, blocking my path.
"Move," I said.
"Make me."
I tried to step around her. Catalina grabbed my arm. She yanked, trying to haul me back to face her.
But she underestimated her own balance in those stilettos.
She stumbled. Her grip on my arm tightened, dragging me down with her.
We fell.
The world spun into a blur of motion. My shoulder slammed into the railing. My knee hit the marble step with a sickening crack.
I tumbled down four steps before catching myself on the banister. Pain exploded up my leg, white-hot and blinding.
Catalina had landed on the landing, barely bruised. She immediately started screaming.
"She pushed me! Jax! She pushed me!"
Jax came running out of the suite.
I was clutching my knee, gasping for air, tears springing to my eyes from the sheer physical agony.
Jax didn't even look at me.
He rushed to Catalina, checking her for invisible scratches.
"Are you okay?" he asked her, his voice frantic.
"She's crazy!" Catalina sobbed, pointing a manicured finger at me. "She tried to kill me!"
Jax turned to me. His face was twisted in a rage I had never seen directed at me before.
"Get out!" he screamed. "Get out of my house before I forget who your father is!"
I pulled myself up using the railing, grit and adrenaline the only things keeping me upright. I couldn't put weight on my left leg.
"Jax," I gasped. "My knee..."
"I don't care!" he shouted, his voice echoing off the walls. "You're lucky I don't throw you down the rest of them. Get out!"
He turned his back on me. He helped Catalina up and walked her back into his room, slamming the door shut.
I stood there, balancing on one leg, the silence of the house ringing in my ears.
Karen was at the bottom of the stairs, hand over her mouth. She didn't move to help me. She knew better than to cross her son.
I limped down the rest of the stairs, each step a fresh torture. I walked out the front door.
I drove myself to the ER.
While I sat in the waiting room, icing my swollen knee, my phone buzzed.
It was a notification from Instagram.
Catalina had posted a photo. It was Jax, holding her on the sofa, kissing her temple.
Caption: My protector.
I looked at the screen.
The pain in my knee was sharp and real. But the pain in my chest was gone.
There was nothing left there to hurt.
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7.7
I fled my werewolf pack five years ago to hide in a human city, all to escape a recurring nightmare.
Every full moon, a terrifying, golden-eyed Lycan slaughters everything in his path, forces me to my knees with a crushing Alpha command, and claims I am his fated mate.
The vivid dreams were destroying my inner wolf, forcing me to finally agree to return to my pack for the annual Pack Run to seek a cure.
But right before my flight home, I accidentally bumped into Rick Miller, the most arrogant, tyrannical Alpha on our college campus.
He looked down at the coffee spilled on his expensive leather jacket with pure disdain, publicly humiliating me in front of the entire airport.
"Do you have any idea what this jacket costs? Never mind. It's not like you could afford to replace it."
As he coldly insulted me, a terrifying realization suddenly froze my blood.
He smelled exactly like the ancient pine and storm from my nightmares, and his brief touch sent a mate's electric spark straight to my soul.
How could this cruel, spoiled campus bully possibly be the legendary, terrifying Lycan King who haunted my every sleeping moment?
As he turned and boarded his private jet, I looked down at my trembling hands and realized the horrifying truth.
My trip back to the pack wasn't a journey to heal my trauma.
I was walking straight into the cage of the very monster I had spent five years trying to outrun.

9.7
Eighteen months ago, the man I loved shattered my heart, claiming everything between us was a mistake. Now, he's back, a ghost of his former self, a rookie tryout in my pro esports team. And I will make him regret crawling back.
Clifton, captain of a legendary esports team, was secretly battling a severe wrist injury that threatened his career, every match a fight against his own body. He pushed through the pain, ignoring doctors' warnings, desperate to maintain his god-like status.
His world was already on the edge, but nothing prepared him for seeing Justice Terry again in the team basement. Justice, pale and trembling, his eyes wide with naked terror, was now a rookie tryout.
Clifton had spent a year and a half trying to forget that rainy Chicago alley, the raw revulsion in Justice's eyes, the whispered "it wasn't real" that had left him heartbroken. Justice had vanished, and Clifton had erased every trace. Now, the boy who once looked at him like he was the sun was back, flinching at his touch, displaying a deep, primal fear. Amidst sponsor pressure and whispers of being "washed," Clifton saw Justice's return as a chance for vengeance. He publicly humiliated Justice on a live stream, forcing him into a suicide mission, then coldly benched him.
Yet, the satisfaction never came. Instead, a hollow emptiness and a torrent of questions: What had truly happened in the past? Why was Justice here, and what trauma had carved such fear into his bones?
Clifton, unwilling to be fooled again, swore to uncover every secret and every lie. He would force Justice to explain why he had returned, even if it meant tearing down everything they both had left.

9.1
My family and fiancé begged me to donate my last remaining kidney to my twin sister, Kyleigh. They didn't know I was already dying.
My fiancé, Axel, gave me an ultimatum.
"Donate the kidney, or I'll break our engagement and marry Kyleigh. It's her dying wish."
I agreed, only for them to frame me for plagiarism with my own thesis, forcing me to confess on camera. They never knew I was the one who secretly saved our father with my other kidney five years ago-a sacrifice Kyleigh had stolen all the credit for.
As they wheeled me into the operating room, they celebrated with Kyleigh, promising her a future built on my death. I was already a ghost to them.
But I died on the table. The surgeon, seeing the old surgical scar and the poison riddling my body, walked out to face them.
"This wasn't a donation," she announced, her voice cold as steel. "This was murder."

8.8
My husband thought I was just a docile wife, easily controlled. He didn't know I'd spent five years meticulously dismantling his life. Tonight, his world would finally crumble into dust.
For five years, I endured Jackson's entitled demands and his family's greed, silently funding their lavish life in our Beverly Hills mansion.
My illusion shattered finding his mistress Amber's lingerie in his suitcase. My attorney just severed all financial ties, making Jackson's arrogant demands hollow.
I tossed my diamond ring into the trash, summoning an industrial compactor. Jackson, his mother, and mistress watched in horror as their designer luggage, bought with my money, was crushed, turning their lavish trip into garbage.
A cold, dead smile marked my cathartic release from five years of betrayal. How could they be so blind to the woman they dismissed?
Stepping into an armored Maybach, I left them in chaos. My iPad confirmed Jackson's credit cards freezing. This wasn't just divorce; it was a calculated demolition, making their pampered lives very real.

8.5
After surviving years in the Alpha King's brutal prisons, I returned to my pack only to be stripped of my family home and exiled to a rotting cabin.
I accepted the humiliation in silence, until I found a dying baby girl abandoned in a trash-filled alley.
Taking her in awoke the terrifying, protective beast I had kept chained in my mind. The pack, fueled by rumors and a jealous woman's bruised ego, viewed us as abominations. They trespassed on my land to uncover my "dirty secrets," forcing me to build a massive stone fortress with my bare hands just to keep my daughter safe from their cruelty.
We lived in isolated peace for years, until the day I took her outside the walls to visit my parents' graves.
A convoy of royal Alphas arrived, and their Luna fell to her knees at my mother's cousin's grave, weeping and calling her "sister."
I didn't understand. Why was my forgotten family connected to the royals? And why did Cassian Vargan, the most powerful Alpha in the world, freeze in absolute shock the moment he realized who I was?
"You... are you Gideon Stone's son?"
The bloody past I had buried under a mountain of stone had finally found me.
I didn't answer him. I just pulled my daughter behind me and tightly gripped my knife, ready to slaughter a king if he took one more step.

7.4
The house was a living inferno, the heat devouring the air in my lungs as I clutched my five-year-old daughter to my chest. Emily was dead weight, her skin already cooling even as the room turned into a furnace of orange and black.
Through the stinging smoke, I saw my husband, Kenney, crawling toward the door with a wet handkerchief pressed to his face. He didn't look back at the crib, and he didn't call my name; he was simply leaving us to burn.
I lunged forward and grabbed his ankle, my nightgown catching fire, but he didn't reach down to save me. He recoiled in horror at the sight of my burning hair and our dead child, kicking me back with a panicked shriek.
"Let go!" he shrieked.
I died as a massive, flaming timber snapped from the ceiling and crushed us both into silence. I couldn't believe that the man I loved would leave his family to die just to save his own skin, but the rage I felt was colder than the death that followed.
But then the burning stopped instantly, replaced by a cold so sharp it made my teeth ache. I gasped, jerking upright in my bed to find the velvet duvet cool under my palms and the nursery quiet, with Emily still breathing softly in her crib.
I had returned to the winter morning two years before the fire, the exact day Kenney finalized the deal to sell me to the King for a promotion. As Kenney stepped into the room with a practiced mask of concern, I realized I was no longer the victim of this story.
"A nightmare, my love?" he asked, reaching out to touch my shoulder.
I flinched away, my eyes burning with a hatred he couldn't yet understand. Tonight was the Winter Masquerade, the night he planned to offer me to the King as a prize, but this time, I was going to turn his social ladder into a gallows.