
His Cruel Revenge, Her Secret Child
Rory stood on the witness stand, forced by her father into an impossible choice: secure her dying mother's medical funding, or save her innocent boyfriend.
She looked Corbin right in his trusting eyes and lied to the court, testifying that he was the one driving the car during the fatal hit-and-run, sending him to a maximum-security prison for ten years.
The betrayal destroyed him. Corbin's father died of a heart attack upon hearing the guilty verdict. Six years later, Corbin returned as a ruthless billionaire and systematically blacklisted Rory from every job in the city. He cornered her into singing at his private club, humiliating her by forcing her to drink scotch—knowing she was severely allergic—and making her throw away his promise ring just to earn a stack of cash.
"Remember this moment. This is only the beginning."
She endured his cruel revenge because she was hiding a desperate secret: she was raising his five-year-old daughter, Willa. But when Willa's congenital heart defect suddenly worsened, requiring an impossible one-million-dollar surgery, Rory realized Corbin's calculated blockade had left her completely trapped with no way to save their child.
Staring at the sterile hospital walls, the last shred of her guilt burned away, replaced by a cold, hard resolve. He had destroyed her career and backed her into a corner, but he was the only one with the money. Wiping her tears, Rory turned and headed straight for Vance Tower.
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Chapter 5
Fear was a cold, heavy stone in Rory's stomach as she pushed open the heavy oak door to the VIP booth.
The room was thick with expensive cigar smoke. Corbin was sprawled on a plush leather sofa, the undisputed king in his court. Kade Wexler and Julian Roth were positioned on either side of him like sentinels.
Kade's eyes roamed over her, a smirk playing on his lips. "Well, well. If it isn't little Rory Conway. Six years is a long time. Didn't picture you ending up on a stage, singing for your supper."
Rory ignored him. Her focus was entirely on the man in the center of the room. She kept her chin high, her hands clasped in front of her to hide their trembling. "Mr. Vance," she said, her voice tight. "You wanted to see me?"
Corbin let out a soft, humorless chuckle. He gestured with one hand toward the low table in front of him. On it sat an unopened bottle of Macallan 25 Year Old Scotch and a thick stack of hundred-dollar bills. It had to be fifty thousand dollars.
"Your voice," he said, his tone deceptively mild, "brought back some... unpleasant memories for me." He leaned forward, his eyes glinting in the dim light. "I'm prepared to offer you fifty thousand dollars to drink three glasses from that bottle of scotch. A small price to pay for an apology, don't you think?"
Rory's blood ran cold.
He knew. Of course, he knew. He remembered everything. He remembered the night in college when a single shot of tequila had landed her in the emergency room with a violent allergic reaction. He had been the one to hold her hair back while she was sick, the one who had stayed by her hospital bed all night, terrified.
He was using her body's greatest weakness as his weapon.
Julian shifted uncomfortably. "Corbin, come on. This isn't necessary. She..."
A single, glacial look from Corbin silenced him.
"Fifty grand to drink a few glasses of booze," Kade goaded, enjoying the show. "I'd call that a bargain. What's the matter, Conway? Too good for our money now? I seem to recall you taking a lot more from him in the past."
Every word was a needle, sinking deep into her skin.
She stared at the money. Fifty thousand dollars. It wasn't just money. It was a number. It was the down payment for Willa's surgery. It was months of the best medication. It was a safety net, a breath of air when she was drowning.
Her dignity versus her daughter's life. It wasn't a choice at all.
Corbin watched the war play out on her face, his expression one of detached, clinical interest. He was enjoying this, savoring the power he held over her.
"No?" he purred, his hand moving toward the stack of cash as if to withdraw the offer.
"I'll drink it," Rory heard herself say, her voice a raw croak.
A flicker of surprise crossed Corbin's face before it was replaced by a look of dark satisfaction. He had been right about her all along. She'd do anything for money.
She walked to the table on unsteady legs. Kade slid a heavy crystal tumbler toward her with a smug grin.
Rory ignored him. She picked up the heavy bottle, her fingers fumbling with the seal, and poured a generous measure into the glass. The amber liquid swirled, catching the light. She picked up the glass, raised it in a mock toast to Corbin, and downed it in one go.
The scotch was fire, a searing, molten liquid that scorched her throat and burned a path straight to her stomach. Her eyes watered, but she didn't stop. She slammed the empty glass down and immediately poured another, just as full. And then a third. She drank them both with the same desperate, self-destructive speed, the poison igniting a fire under her skin.
Corbin's smirk faltered. He had expected her to sip, to choke, to beg. He had not expected this raw, desperate display of self-destruction.
Julian turned his head away, unable to watch.
After the third glass, she dropped the bottle onto the plush carpet with a dull thud. Tears of pure physical agony were now streaming down her face. The room was starting to spin. A hot, prickling rash was already blooming across her neck and chest, a furious red tide. Her throat was tightening, each breath a sharp, whistling effort.
The allergic reaction was starting. Fast and violent.
She swayed on her feet, her vision blurring at the edges. She looked directly at Corbin, her gaze a mixture of shattered pride and raw hatred. "Now," she rasped, her voice thick and swollen. "Can I have my money?"
A violent cough wracked her body, and she struggled to draw a breath.
Corbin stared at her, at the angry red flush spreading across her skin, at her swollen lips, at the tears that made her eyes shine with a broken, feverish light. The triumphant thrill of revenge he had expected to feel was absent. In its place was a sharp, unfamiliar pang of something he refused to name.
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8.2
For three years, nineteen-year-old Ella Campbell rotted in a freezing psychiatric isolation room.
Her billionaire family didn't visit her once, only pulling her out today to force her to publicly apologize to Ashlyn, the perfect sister who had framed her.
At Ashlyn's glamorous engagement gala, Ella was treated worse than a stray dog and forced to watch her childhood sweetheart propose to her sister.
When Ella showed no jealousy, her brother Ivan dragged her onto a dark balcony and nearly choked her to death.
Her mother didn't even check if Ella was breathing, merely ordering a makeup artist to paint thick concealer over the dark purple handprints on Ella's neck so the family's stock price wouldn't drop.
Standing under the blinding stage lights in a shapeless gray dress, facing three hundred mocking Wall Street executives, Ella was supposed to be the broken, obedient psycho the Campbells needed.
"I am deeply sorry for the pain I caused."
She was supposed to end the apology there and bow to her abusers, but Ella didn't shed a single tear.
"My only regret is that I didn't insist on waiting for the police to arrive that night. I deeply regret that I didn't demand a full, legal toxicology report to prove to everyone exactly what happened."
As the ballroom erupted into suspicious whispers and her paralyzed twin brother finally saw the violent bruises hidden beneath her makeup, Ella's counterattack against the Campbell family officially began.

7.9
June was an ordinary architect struggling to pay rent, completely estranged from her high-society mother.
But one night, she was kidnapped and beaten in an abandoned warehouse by Gage Becker, the city's most ruthless billionaire, who demanded payback for her mother's sins.
Gage pointed a high-definition camera at June's battered face and video-called her mother, threatening to release the footage and ruin her upcoming billion-dollar wedding.
"I will never throw away a billion-dollar marriage for a useless daughter."
Her mother's cold voice echoed through the warehouse before the line went dead.
From that moment, Gage systematically destroyed June's life. She was publicly humiliated and forced to hack off her own hair with a cigar cutter. She was blacklisted from every firm in the city, evicted by her landlord, and violently mugged in a freezing New York blizzard.
Curled up in an icy tunnel waiting to die, June felt a suffocating despair. She hadn't spoken to her mother in months. Why did she have to endure this hell for a woman who didn't even care if she lived or died? Why was a monster like Gage so obsessed with driving her to the grave?
When Gage's armored Maybach pulled up, he stepped into the snow to mock her, waiting for her to finally surrender and beg for his mercy.
But the absolute humiliation snapped the last thread of June's sanity.
Instead of crying, she lunged forward with feral energy and sank her teeth directly into the devil's flesh.

8.3
Half a month into our cold war, I, Claire Parker, found an abortion procedure slip tucked inside Daniel Carter's suit pocket.
The patient's name belonged to the fragile little childhood sweetheart he had always protected so fiercely-Sophie Bennett.
I folded the paper calmly and slipped it back where I had found it.
Daniel noticed the movement immediately. His eyes flicked toward me through the rearview mirror, resignation coloring his voice.
"What are you overthinking now? Sophie was just keeping a friend company at the hospital. She accidentally left it there."
I turned toward the window and said nothing.
This was Sophie declaring war on me, yet the man who could crush competitors without mercy in the business world believed her completely.
The silence inside the car grew suffocating until Daniel finally stopped outside an upscale jewelry boutique.
He reached over and ruffled my hair with easy familiarity, his tone indulgent and affectionate.
"Come on. Pick out a ring. Your birthday's next month anyway, so we might as well register our marriage too."
I bit down hard on my lip as tears fell soundlessly onto the back of my hand.
What he still didn't know was that I wouldn't live long enough to see next month.

8.2
For three years, I scrubbed tables as a "wolfless runt," hiding my identity as the Lycan King's daughter.
It was a test for my fiancé, Alpha Connor. I wanted to see if he loved the girl, or just the crown.
He failed spectacularly tonight.
His mistress, Jaden, deliberately knocked a tray of drinks onto me during the dinner rush.
The liquid wasn't alcohol. It was concentrated silver.
My flesh hissed and bubbled as the poison ate through my skin, blocking any ability to heal.
I fell to the floor, clutching my melting hand, while Jaden faked tears and claimed I attacked her.
When Connor finally answered the video call, he saw my mangled hand. He smelled the burning flesh. He knew it was silver.
But he didn't help me.
He looked at his watch, annoyed that I was interrupting his business meeting with investors.
"Apologize to Jaden," he ordered, using his Alpha Command to crush me into submission.
"On your knees. Now."
The pain was blinding, but the betrayal cut deeper. He was forcing his Fated Mate to bow to the woman who tried to maim her.
My knees bent under the pressure, but my Royal blood refused to break.
I looked straight into the camera lens.
"No," I whispered.
I reached into my apron, bypassing the notepad, and pulled out a black satellite phone I hadn't touched in years.
"Code Black," I said to the King on the other end. "Send the Guard."
Connor thought he was disciplining a waitress.
He didn't know he just declared war on the Royal Family.

9.5
As the fetal monitor screamed in the delivery room, Danae begged the nurses to call her billionaire husband to save their dying baby.
Instead of Adrian, his chief lawyer arrived with a chilling directive: all emergency interventions were explicitly denied.
While security guards pinned her arms to the mattress, Danae was forced to listen to her baby's heartbeat flatline. The lawyer simply dropped divorce papers on her bed and walked out. A sympathetic doctor helped Danae fake her own death to escape the family. Stripped of her assets and kicked out into the freezing rain, she tried to drown herself with her child's ashes, only to be saved by a mysterious benefactor.
Three years later, Danae returned as a top medical researcher. But at a high-profile symposium, she crossed paths with Adrian and his new fiancée—a cheap lookalike of Danae. The woman maliciously staged a bloody miscarriage using a restricted chemical, perfectly framing Danae's lab for the crime.
Adrian pinned Danae against the wall, his eyes black with rage, vowing to make her beg for death. Three years ago, he let their real child die without even answering the phone. Now, he was ready to destroy her over a fake pregnancy.
Just as Adrian's private guards dragged her away to be locked up, the hospital doors were violently kicked open. A rival billionaire stepped in with a team of ruthless lawyers, shielding Danae behind his back and declaring war.

7.1
Jenna lay dying in the ICU, kept alive by a ventilator.
Her twenty-year-old twins walked in wearing designer clothes, looking at her with pure disgust.
Before Jenna could even reach out, Arthur stepped back.
"Don't touch me. You'll ruin my jacket."
Clio shoved a photo in Jenna's face, revealing their billionaire father was marrying someone else next week.
They told Jenna she was a penniless nobody, nothing but a cheap incubator for the Knight family heirs.
Then, checking his luxury watch, Arthur complained they were going to be late for a charity gala.
Smiling coldly, he reached out and unplugged her life support.
Jenna suffocated in agony, watching her own children walk away without looking back.
As the heart monitor flatlined, she swore a blood oath. If she ever got another chance, she would make them bleed.
When she opened her eyes again, she was back fifteen years in the past.
Her five-year-old son was kicking her bed, screaming at her to make his pancakes.
The trauma of her death ignited into pure, freezing rage. She finally understood that to this family, she was just livestock.
This time, Jenna didn't drop to her knees to coax him.
She dragged the brat over her knee and slapped him hard.
She demanded a divorce, escaped her locked mansion using torn bedsheets, and ran into the dark.
Finding a bleeding, heavily armed military operative hiding from assassins, Jenna pressed her hands against his wound.
"I get you out of this kill zone. In exchange, you protect me."