
HIS CONTRACT WIFE IS HIS RUIN
He married her to control her.
To break her.
To own her.
Seraphina let him believe it.
She plays the quiet wife-
soft voice, lowered eyes, perfect obedience.
But behind every smile...
is a plan he was never meant to survive.
Because this marriage was never about love.
Not even power.
It was revenge.
And when Lucien finally uncovers the truth-
when he realizes who she really is...
he won't be fighting to keep her.
He'll be begging to escape her.
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Chapter 2
“You will not speak unless spoken to.”
A hush dropped when the words landed, sharp as a judge's knock. Not an offer open for discussion, certainly not something up for change. Spoken as if her entire surrender were already built, already lived in, assumed complete.
A hush sat thick in the penthouse, though the place dripped with luxury. Out past the tall windows, Lagos unfolded - sharp points of light scattered wide, glowing bright but distant somehow
Inside, the air felt heavy, thick with silence that seemed planned. Not a sound escaped without purpose - not even the soft drone of machines keeping time. Each breath carried weight, shaped by unseen hands. Temperature stayed fixed, never rising nor falling an inch. Stillness ruled, pressed down like a lid.
Lucien stayed close to the window, fingers buried in coat pockets, body arranged like still water - quiet on purpose. His calm seemed planned, almost too smooth for someone who held such weight. Stillness clung to him, sharp beneath the ease
His eyes stayed away from hers as he talked, a quiet way of showing where she stood in what mattered to him.
“You do not interrupt,” he stated, his voice a smooth, dangerous velvet. “You do not question in the heat of the moment. You listen.”
Then silence came, heavy with what might happen next.
After that, his voice steady like someone reciting secrets they’d long known, he went on - “Watch closely. Pick up patterns. Shift when needed.”
Her stillness held the space just behind him, measured by silent steps. Without asking, she stayed there - positioned as if waiting for a role that hadn’t been named
Stillness sat in her eyes, not empty but edged like a blade honed on quiet. It shaped space around words unsaid, built walls without noise.
Out of the corner of his eye, Lucien turned - his stare landing on her like a scalpel, cold and precise, hunting for any sign of shake he couldn’t find. Then nothing moved
Out of nowhere, he realized something. She skipped every ritual a lesser person was supposed to follow
A quiet stillness held his face, yet eyes stayed open wide. Not even a twitch broke the calm across his shoulders. Weight remained steady on both feet, unmoving. The moment passed without so much as a breath changing pace.
Nothing moved. Just silence, thick and cold.
He advanced a fraction, encroaching on her radius. “The rules are elementary,” he declared. “You adhere to them, and existence remains… comfortable.”
A silence stretched out, bent by his disbelief, like kindness made him laugh. Over near the middle stood a dark stone table - empty except for one clear cup and a thin file
A sudden rap hit the folder, crisp and steady. The beat snapped once, then again - clean timing. Each knock cut through the quiet like a metronome set loose.
“You do not depart without leave.”
Another sharp tap.
“You do not tether my name to your own decisions.”
One last hit, steady in its beat.
“And you do not presume an equality of standing in the empires I have built.”
A hush pressed in, heavy and slow. Waiting made him tense, ready for the usual burst of anger, that sharp flare signaling someone near their edge.
Nothing came from her hands. Yet her eyes measured him - ignoring bone and skin, tracing instead how cruelty moved through his silence
Into her mind slipped each rhythm of his voice, shaped long by claiming spaces. Noticing how he filled the room came next - like walls leaned closer when he spoke. Each detail locked into place without sound, cold and precise.
Frowning just slightly, Lucien let irritation show through. His voice carried a sharp edge when he said you seemed too calm, unusually so.
Her head leaned slightly, like a memory pretending to be real, measuring what he said. In the end, she decided it didn’t earn even silence.
It wasn’t anger that cut deepest - it was her silence. Closer he moved, step by step, till the space between them felt like a wall about to break. The air changed when he stopped just near enough to feel cold breath on skin.
“This arrangement is predicated upon a singular truth,” he murmured, his voice descending into a low, resonant register. “I do not repeat myself. And I do not negotiate the laws I have already codified.”
A hush fell, thick as wet wool, clinging to every breath. Stillness pressed close, heavy with what might come next
Still, she held her ground. The second truth emerged slowly: everywhere he pulled influence like gravity, yet she stood fixed - intimidation itself seemed to break apart just trying to reach her.
A breath slipped out from Lucien, quiet and measured, like gears quietly shifting into place. Could it be clear to you what this truly is?
A sharpness cut through the way he asked. To own meant going past just following orders - it required complete surrender, a low bow given without choice
Her eyes moved to the folder first. The man caught her attention next. After that, she looked past the window, where the vast city stretched out without care.
Out of her mouth came words that cut. Not gentle at all - each one felt like ice shaped into blades.
“Yes.”
A single term. Stripped bare, sharp in its silence, free from feeling. Not soft. Never blurred by sentiment.
Still staring, Lucien's thoughts sprinted ahead
Strange how she replied. Not giving in, but not fighting either. Calm, like she followed rules without believing them. Like walking through walls built by someone else's mind. That quiet difference hit hard.
A quiet moment passed as he moved toward the glass, hand pausing midair. Instead of drinking, he returned it to the table - sound echoing like a soft period at the end of an unfinished thought.
“You are confined to this floor,” he dictated. “The staff answers only to me. Your movements shall be tracked with a loose leash - do not mistake such negligence for liberty.” He scanned her for a fracture, a tremor, a flaw.
None existed. “You will appear when summoned. You will be at my disposal when required. And you will refrain from asking impertinent questions regarding matters that do not concern you.”
Leaning closer, he spoke so softly it barely stirred the air. A hush slipped out between his words
should you harbor the desire to test these
Hold on. Think again about those limits
A hum stayed behind, like the last sound of something ending
Back he moved, shoulders turned away, as if the talk were already done. Silence settled, heavy with what came next. Not surprise, but waiting - for that sharp gasp, maybe a word cutting through. Heat rising slow, held tight under skin.
Still, she stayed, taking it in, sorting each detail - seeing far beyond what her face let on. Quiet? Not at all. Hers held weight, like water pooled beneath stone.
Lucien turned, his back a statement of superiority. “Those are the parameters. Deviate, and this ends with immediate effect.”
Across the room he moved, thoughts dropping away like old paper tossed without a second glance.
His mistake started there. Not seeing it as shared, he treated the outcome as one-sided.
A shiver ran through the stillness just behind his back - thin ripples in the air before she spoke.
“Understood…”
Back stiff, Lucien hesitated - one ear cocked toward the command just delivered. Victory hung in the pause he let stretch without breath or blink.
After that, she stopped speaking, her words quiet like a smooth edge wrapped in cloth
“…for now.”
Heavy air sat unmoved, yet something deep inside had shifted beyond repair. Only when he began to turn did she feel it - slow, deliberate, like glass dragging across stone. His gaze found hers, not with rage, but a silence so sharp it cut before contact
A stillness sat where anger might have shown. Silence held instead of a startled breath.
Slowly, it began to show - this fear that crept through. A quiet knowing rose, cold and sharp.
A stare frozen, not by fear but by confusion. Something stood there - unfamiliar, slipping past labels. His eyes narrowed, searching for a name it wouldn’t accept. The moment stretched, resisting explanation. Not shock, not curiosity, just the quiet halt of understanding hitting a wall
Her eyes locked on his, steady, showing no regret, holding firm against retreat. Empty air filled the space between them, quiet now pulled tight like a live cable humming under pressure.
Forward moved Lucien. Another step followed.
A sudden shift broke the silence when the folder on the table began to move, gliding forward without touch, guided by something unseen through the still air. The dark surface of the marble reflected nothing but motion as it advanced.
Again, tell me that," he whispered, each word a low spark hanging between them.
She stood firm, eyes fixed, unblinking, refusing to turn her gaze elsewhere.
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8.0
On the night of their third wedding anniversary, Ashley was ready to reveal a secret to her husband-
She was pregnant.
But moments after their passionate intimacy, her Alpha coldly delivered the blow-he wanted a divorce.
His fated mate had returned.
Stripped of her wolf spirit, abandoned by the pack, and carrying his child, Ashley was cast aside like a disposable Omega.
Just as she prepared to leave alone-
The boy she had once rejected had now risen as the most formidable Alpha King. The possessive hunger in his gaze sent shivers through her-did she dare face him? Was this vengeance, or something more? But did she even have a choice?

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?

9.2
She loved him until she lost herself.
Now, behind locked doors and shattered glass, she must learn to breathe again.
When she first met Lloyd, he was magnetic and intoxicating. The kind of man who turned every head when he entered a room, who spoke in promises sweet enough to taste. With him, she felt chosen, cherished, and safe.
But safety was an illusion, and love became a weapon.
And slowly, piece by piece, he dismantled her until nothing of the woman she once was remained.
Now institutionalized after a breakdown, she begins to piece together the brutal truth of what really happened in the shadows of their love story. Memories sting like open wounds: the manipulation disguised as tenderness, the apologies that blurred into threats, the desperate hope that tomorrow he'd be the man she fell for again.
Yet beneath the grief and the shame, a quiet rebellion stirs, a vow to reclaim her voice, her freedom, and her life. Because this is not just a story of how she fell apart. It is a story of how she rises.
Haunting, raw, and achingly intimate, Boys like him peels back the glittering mask of a toxic love affair to reveal the kind of darkness that hides in plain sight, and the unbreakable strength it takes to escape it.

9.1
My husband, Dante Moretti, the feared Underboss, signed the divorce papers I slipped him without a glance. Too busy texting his true love, Sofia, he was blind to the annulment decree ending everything. The Reaper couldn't see the death of his own marriage.
For three years, I was Elena, his silent wife, the "Caged Canary," cleaning his messes while meticulously planning my escape from our loveless world.
He dismissed me for Sofia's every whim, publicly shaming me after a past love letter was read, then abandoning me again for her fake crisis.
That night, he violently shoved me against a wall, leaving me bleeding and concussed, rushing instead to protect Sofia. Discarded and injured, my invisible love became a weapon against me.
His crushing blindness, the cold realization I was a mere placeholder, fueled a profound injustice. How could he be so lethal, yet oblivious to his wife, favoring the one who betrayed him?
With chilling resolve, I uploaded Sofia's confession, initiated a massive financial transfer dismantling his empire, and staged my own death. Under a new identity, I fled to San Francisco, ready to build my power, far from his bloody, deceitful world.

9.7
I was an intern nurse working exhausting shifts, yet my mother constantly forced me into blind dates with wealthy, arrogant men to secure our family's social standing.
During a terrifying hospital lockdown, an assassin disguised as a doctor held a scalpel to my throat. I was almost killed, but a high-ranking military colonel threw his own body down a flight of concrete stairs to shield me.
I survived with cuts and bruises, but when I went home, my mother didn't care about my near-death experience. She was only furious that I had rushed out on my blind date with Preston, a rich financial analyst.
She forced me to meet him to apologize. When Preston grabbed my arm, bruised me, and mocked my attack as a pathetic lie, my mother still took his side.
"Men get angry," she told me coldly. "It's your job not to provoke them. You will beg for his forgiveness, or you are no longer welcome in this house."
I had narrowly escaped an assassin, yet my own family was willing to feed me to a monster just for a fat paycheck and neighborhood gossip.
My heart went completely dead.
So, when the intimidating Colonel appeared, offering me maximum military protection through a sudden marriage, I didn't hesitate.
I walked back into my parents' house and calmly slapped a crisp marriage certificate onto the coffee table.
"I won't be apologizing to Preston. I got married today."

8.9
Ava Kidd just wanted to escape her abusive stepmother when she got drunk at a high-end club and stumbled into the wrong hotel room.
She woke up the next morning in a luxury penthouse, lying naked next to a terrifyingly handsome man covered in her scratch marks.
Recalling rumors of the hotel's secret underground concierge, she immediately assumed she had accidentally slept with an elite male escort.
Desperate to settle the bill, she offered him her only debit card with a pathetic $1,800.
But the man, who was actually Garrison Terry, the ruthless billionaire CEO, was deeply insulted by the cheap plastic.
He trapped her against the bed, coldly demanding a half-million-dollar service fee.
When Ava frantically offered her dead mother's tarnished locket as collateral, he cruelly dismissed it as worthless junk.
Ava was humiliated, her heart pounding with absolute terror.
She didn't understand why this arrogant gigolo was acting like a deranged extortionist, demanding a fortune from a broke girl who had clearly made a mistake.
Furious and refusing to cower, she sneaked out, put on his oversized designer shirt, and aggressively ate his $800 truffle breakfast.
Having no money left, she grabbed her cheap red lipstick, wrote a defiant IOU on his expensive linen napkin, and fled the hotel.
She thought she had escaped a criminal, but upstairs, the billionaire traced her lipstick-stained name with a predatory smile.
"Ava Kidd, I will absolutely find you."