
He Found My Secret Revenge
Faith Neal had vanished, burying her powerful past under layers of anonymity as an ER doctor. She was secretly dismantling the empire of the man she'd left behind, brick by costly brick, from the shadows. Until he walked into her trauma room, bleeding from a bullet wound, shattering her carefully built world with a single, dangerous glance.
Her heart hammered: Earl Hampton, the ruthless CEO she abandoned, was on the gurney, demanding only "Faith."
His presence shattered her new life. He accused her of running, his touch a possessive reminder. Soon after, old rivals Chad Miller and Tiffany Vance ambushed her, humiliating her, sparking a fight.
Panic and anger flared as Chad mocked her, calling her a "bitch." Shame burned, but a deeper fear gripped her – the architect of her revenge was bleeding in her ER, and he knew.
Before Chad could inflict more harm, Earl reappeared, violently intervening.
"I'm the man who's going to reclaim his assets," he rumbled. "I found you. I'm not losing you again."
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Chapter 7
Faith woke up with a gasp, her lungs dragging in air as if she'd been underwater.
The knife. The alley. The cold.
Her eyes flew open, expecting damp brick walls and darkness.
Instead, she was met with grey. Soft, expensive grey.
She was lying in a bed that was larger than her entire kitchen. The sheets were Egyptian cotton, cool and smooth against her skin, smelling faintly of lavender and starch.
Faith sat up, clutching the duvet to her chest. The room was bathed in the pale, blue light of early morning. The curtains-heavy, automated velvet-were slowly retracting, revealing the Chicago skyline waking up under a blanket of fog.
Memory crashed into her.
Earl. The penthouse. The deal.
She looked at the nightstand.
There was a stack of clothes there. Folded with military precision. A pair of soft grey sweatpants, a white t-shirt, and...
Faith reached out and picked up the lace bra sitting on top of the pile.
It was her brand. La Perla. And it was her exact size. 34C. She didn't blush. Instead, a cold shiver ran down her spine. These weren't new. The lace was slightly worn at the strap. These were hers. The ones she had left at the estate two years ago. He had kept them. He had kept everything.
"Control freak," she whispered, her fingers tightening around the silk. It was a reminder. Even when she thought she was free, she had been archived in his life, stored away in a box like a dormant asset waiting to be reactivated.
She threw the covers off and dressed quickly, feeling the strange intimacy of wearing clothes he had preserved. They fit perfectly. It was terrifying.
She opened the bedroom door and stepped out into the hallway.
The smell of coffee hit her first. Rich, dark roast. Then, the salty, savory scent of bacon.
She followed the smell to the open-concept kitchen.
Earl was there.
He wasn't wearing a suit. He was wearing black athletic shorts and nothing else.
Faith stopped dead in her tracks.
He was hanging from a pull-up bar mounted in the reinforced frame of the pantry door. His back muscles rippled and bunched like shifting tectonic plates as he hauled his massive frame up, chin over the bar. Down. Up. Down.
But it was wrong. He wasn't using his legs. His right leg-the injured one-hung dead weight, the toes of his sneaker dragging slightly on the mat below. He was compensating entirely with upper body strength, his teeth gritted in a rictus of exertion, sweat slicking his bronze skin.
"Ninety-eight... ninety-nine..." he grunted.
He dropped.
He tried to land on his left leg, but the momentum carried him forward. His right foot tapped the floor to stabilize. A sharp, guttural hiss of pain escaped his lips as the impact shuddered through his wounded thigh.
He stumbled, catching himself against the granite island, his chest heaving.
Faith stared. Her mouth went dry. It was a physiological reaction, she told herself. Just biology. And horror at the fresh bloom of red staining the white bandage on his thigh.
He saw her.
"Morning," he grunted. He didn't seem embarrassed to be half-naked or in pain. If anything, he stood a little taller, shifting his weight entirely to his good leg. "Sleep well?"
Faith cleared her throat, forcing her eyes to stay on his face. "Yes. Actually. It's the first time in months I haven't woken up every hour."
"Good." Earl walked to the coffee machine, a slight limp betraying him. "Me too."
He poured a mug and slid it across the marble island toward her. Black. Two sugars. Just how she liked it.
Faith took the mug. "Thank you."
Her phone buzzed in her pocket.
She jumped, nearly spilling the coffee. She pulled it out. The screen flashed a name: Mr. Henderson. Her elderly neighbor.
Faith's stomach dropped. She tapped answer.
"Mr. Henderson? Is everything okay?"
"Faith, dear," the old man's voice was trembling, thin with fear. "That man... the one in the cheap suit? Chad? Or... no, he was screaming about money. He was banging on your door at 3 AM. He kicked it in, Faith. He was screaming he was going to kill you."
Faith gripped the phone so hard her knuckles turned white. The blood drained from her face.
"Did he... is he still there?"
"The police came," Mr. Henderson said. "But he was gone. Faith, you can't come back here. The door is off the hinges."
Faith lowered the phone. Her hand was shaking uncontrollably. The coffee in her mug rippled.
Earl was there in a second. He took the phone from her hand.
"Mr. Henderson," Earl said. His voice was a low rumble, calm and authoritative. "This is Detective Grant, private security for the building. I'm working with the police on this case."
Faith looked at him, confused. Grant? It was his middle name. And he lied so easily.
"Lock your door, sir," Earl continued. "We have a protective detail stationed in the lobby now. They will be there in five minutes. Do not open the door for anyone who doesn't have the code word 'Olympus'. Can you remember that?"
He listened for a second, then nodded. "Thank you. Stay safe."
He hung up and slid the phone into his pocket. Not hers. His.
"Grant?" Faith asked, her voice breathless.
"Earl Grant Hampton," he said, turning back to the stove to flip a piece of bacon. "Less baggage attached to the middle name. And people trust authority figures. It keeps him calm."
"But my apartment," Faith stammered, panic rising again. "If Chad kicked the door in... anyone could get in. My... things."
She meant the hardware key. The encrypted USB drive taped to the underside of her bedside drawer. It was the physical failsafe for the Oracle network. If Chad ransacked the place, he might knock it loose. If he found it, he wouldn't know what it was, but if he sold her stuff to a pawn shop... or worse, if Mr. Black's men swept the wreckage...
"I have to go back," she said, stepping toward the door.
"No." Earl didn't even turn around. "The site is compromised."
"I have to go to work then," Faith improvised, desperate for a reason to leave, to get to a secure terminal, to initiate the remote kill switch. "I have a shift. I can't just no-call no-show. It looks suspicious."
"You're not going to work," Earl said, plating the bacon. "You're dead to the world, remember?"
"If I disappear the same day my apartment is broken into, the police will start asking questions," Faith argued, her mind racing. "I have to go in. Just to... just to resign. To get my things from my locker. There's... personal medical data in there."
Earl paused. He looked at her, weighing the risk.
"Fine," he said finally. "You go in to resign. You clear your locker. But you don't go alone. And you don't stay longer than twenty minutes."
"Private security is expensive, Earl. I can't afford-"
"Employee benefits," he cut her off. He pointed to a sleek, new iPhone sitting on the counter next to the fruit bowl. "That's for you. Encrypted. New number. Throw the old one in the lake."
Ding-dong.
The doorbell rang.
Faith flinched.
"Relax," Earl said. He walked to the door and opened it.
A man stood there. He was dressed in a UPS uniform, but his posture was too straight, his eyes too sharp. It was Alfred, Earl's head of personal security.
"Package for Mr. Grant," Alfred said, keeping his face perfectly neutral. He pushed a dolly loaded with boxes into the hallway.
"Thanks, Al," Earl said.
Alfred nodded once at Faith, a flicker of amusement in his eyes, and left.
Earl started unpacking the boxes.
Faith watched, stunned.
Organic kale. Grass-fed steaks. A crate of avocados. And... a box of La Mer face cream. Tampons. Shampoo.
"Is this... employee benefits too?" Faith asked, picking up a jar of moisturizer that cost more than her car payment.
"Tactical resupply," Earl said, deadpan. He shoved a carton of almond milk into the Sub-Zero fridge. "Can't have the asset deteriorating due to poor nutrition."
He turned to look at her. He was still shirtless, holding a carton of eggs. The domesticity of it-the billionaire making breakfast, the boxes of groceries-clashed violently with the violence of the night before.
"Given the threat level," Earl said, closing the fridge door with his hip. "Until the Board backs off, this is your base of operations."
Faith looked at him. She looked at the food. She looked at the man who had secured her building, replaced her phone, and stocked her fridge, all before she had even brushed her teeth.
She felt a crack in her armor. Just a small one.
"Thank you, Earl," she said softly.
Earl walked over to her. He stopped inches away, looking down. He smelled of sweat and coffee.
"Don't thank me yet," he said, his voice dropping an octave. "Eat your eggs. We have a wedding to get to."
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8.1
"I don't share my women, Adele. Breeder or not. Go on your knees." He instructed, his hands going to unbuckle his trousers.
My heart burned with hatred as I clutched the knife behind me. "Of course, Alpha Loic. I was wondering... If you were to choose between a quick death and a slow one, which would you choose?"
I smiled brightly. He was taken aback for a moment. Then his face twisted in anger. "Have you forgotten your place so soon, Omega? Go down on your fucking knees."
"Omega? Aww. Adele would be so hurt. Tonight, I'll pronounce your death. The Alpha of the Vanguard pack, killed by fire. Touchè." I snapped my hands, and fire sprang up from all corners, encircling the room, with us in it.
"Y-you are not Adele. Who are you?" His eyes widened.
...
The Demon Queen, a name that struck terror in the minds of mortals and werewolves alike. Who'd have thought she'd meet her end during one of her adventures at a nightclub?
After being struck dead by the Alpha of her most hated race, Ophelie returns in the body of a wolf-less girl with only one mission in mind. To kill her murderer.
But sometimes, things never go as planned. When love is thrown in the mix, Ophelie finds herself and her previous plans swaying.
Refusing to kill Loic is to lose herself and her powers. What would she choose?

7.7
Not only was I drugged, blinded and assaulted. I was deceived into carrying a baby by a stranger I never knew. Then he appeared and took my child away.
I was sent to a militia by the father of my child. I thought I was rescued but I was recruited to be a weapon for killing. Who was manipulating me, I didn't know. The answers were far from what I knew.
Forced to blend into the world that I could never believe I would be to, a place where brutality reigned, kill or be killed was the only language. I have survived but he has to pay for everything he did to me, because I believed every phase of my life was set by him and him alone. Have I really survived?
Who would have thought, he existed twice in the same world? Do I really know who I should take revenge on? Him or the person I would sacrifice everything for?
Was my mother the one who orchestrated everything? What kind of pawn am I?

7.7
I was suffocating in a borrowed Valentino gown at the Met Gala, but it wasn't the corset that was killing me. It was the debt collector, Vargo, stalking me through the crowd like a wolf.
Desperate to hide, I ducked into a private lounge and threw myself at the silhouette of a man sitting in the shadows, pressing my lips to his in a frantic plea for cover. When I pulled back, the air turned to ice; I was staring into the ocean-blue eyes of Kingsley Osborn, the billionaire who believed I’d sold his company secrets six years ago.
Kingsley didn’t save me; he trapped me. The next morning, he slid a "Marriage Service Agreement" across his desk, revealing he knew everything about my father’s illegal Ponzi scheme and the quarter-million dollars I owed to loan sharks. He offered to pay my debts and protect my father, but only if I signed over two years of my life to be his trophy wife.
"I don't want your money, Cassidy. I want your life."
The marriage was a cold, calculated war. He forced me into his glass fortress, banned me from contacting my friends, and treated me with a distilled hatred that felt like a physical weight. When I accidentally broke his grandfather’s vintage watch during a nightmare, he didn't see an accident—he saw a crime, threatening to destroy my father if I didn't "charm" his board of directors into submission.
I was a prisoner in a three-piece suit, until I found a mislabeled file buried in his company’s server. It contained evidence of a massive, illegal hostile takeover that would ruin Kingsley if the Feds ever saw it.
I held the gun that could destroy the man who had cornered me. But as I looked at the champagne roses he’d secretly kept from my "peace offering," I realized I didn't want to pull the trigger. I wanted to see how far he’d go to keep me from leaving.

8.1
Iverson played the role of a rebellious, useless loser to survive in his mother's new wealthy family. He deliberately tanked his grades and hid his genius so his perfect stepbrother wouldn't feel threatened.
But when a violent gang extorted Brenda, the only woman who actually acted like a real mother to him, Iverson dropped the act. He brutally dismantled four armed thugs with a broken aluminum pole to save her life.
At the police station, he faked being a terrified victim to avoid jail. But when his biological mother arrived, she didn't even ask if he was hurt. Instead, she glared at him with pure disgust.
"How much more humiliation are you going to put me through?"
She threw a tutoring folder at his chest, praising his stepbrother's Ivy League prospects while threatening to cut off Iverson's trust fund for fighting over slum trash.
Iverson clenched his fists in silence. He had deliberately played the idiot and ruined his own reputation just to keep her safe in that toxic mansion. Yet, she looked at him like he was absolute garbage. She truly believed he was just a brainless thug holding her back.
Back in his room, Iverson locked the heavy oak door and booted up his highly encrypted laptop. The screen loaded into the world's most elite underground academic network.
"Welcome back, Rank 1."
He stared at the glowing screen with a cold, dangerous smile. He was done playing the fool.

8.6
The Maybach glided through rain, Dante's cold cedar cologne a familiar comfort. Seven years, my life revolved around him, my fingers on his suit cuff, a silent promise. But tonight, our normal shattered with a single phone call.
He answered, speaking rapid Italian – a language he thought I didn't understand. Every word: a death knell. Confirming his engagement to Sofia Moretti, dismissing me as a 'consolation prize.'
Seven years of loyalty vanished. His loving mask back, he left for his fiancée. I stumbled into freezing rain, recalling my foster past. My numb fingers dialed his mother, Isabella, demanding fifty million for my silence. Her insults didn't sting.
The true gut punch: Sofia's Instagram, a prenup on Dante's desk, proudly showing *my* watch, captioned: 'Fourteen days left.' This wasn't their celebration; it was my death sentence.
I wouldn't stay another day in this gilded cage. My old duffel bag, packed, waited. The Australia brochure, a childhood dream, in my pocket. This time, I would live for myself, and they would all pay.

8.7
I died in a mangled wreck of metal and fire, abandoned by the man I thought was my soulmate. But instead of the void, I woke up pinned against a cold marble wall, staring into the turbulent, storm-gray eyes of Damian Vincent.
This was the night I destroyed my life. In my past world, I spat in Damian's face and ran into the arms of Eddie, a parasitic loser who was secretly plotting with my cousin Jill to strip me of my inheritance.
My "escape" turned into a slow-motion suicide. My brother Donavan died in a horrific car crash while racing to save me from another one of my messes. Damian, consumed by a toxic mix of grief and vengeance, crushed the Nelson family empire until my father was a broken man. I spent years as a drugged-up social pariah, finally dying alone while the people I trusted laughed at my funeral.
The most bitter realization didn't hit me until the end. The "controlling monster" I spent years fighting was the only person who ever truly protected me. I had traded a man who would burn the world for me for a man who would burn me for the world.
Opening my eyes three years in the past, I find myself back at the airport, the rain lashing against the windows. My brother is pleading with me to run, and Damian is standing there, braced for the slap he thinks is coming.
But I don't strike him. I press my palm to his burning cheek and give him the only piece of my soul he couldn't buy.
"I'm not going anywhere, Dami. Keep this as my collateral."
The game has changed. This time, I'm not the victim-I'm the one holding the match.