
His Loss, The Tycoon's Gain: The Lost Heiress Returns
When I called my husband while trapped in a kidnapper's warehouse, he laughed. "Stop faking," he said, "my delicate mistress needs her sleep." He hung up. I signed the divorce papers drenched in my own blood, giving up everything just to escape the monster I married.
His mother threw a broken umbrella at me in the rain. I had nothing—no money, no identity, no hope.
But the moment I turned away, eight black Escalades encircled the street. A man in a tailored suit stepped out of a Rolls-Royce, shielding me with an umbrella. In his hand was a DNA test—and twenty-three years of relentless search.
"Your last name isn't Smith," he said, wiping blood from my wrist with his handkerchief. "It's Wilder. The Wilder family. And the man who left you to die?" He smiled, icy. "He owes us nine billion dollars."
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Chapter 1
Kinsley opened her eyes.
The warehouse smelled of motor oil and rotting wood.
Panic seized her chest, squeezing her lungs until she could barely draw a breath.
The rough hemp rope bit into the skin of her wrists. Warm blood dripped down her fingers.
In the far corner, two men in black ski masks leaned against a rusted metal barrel.
"When does the Bitcoin transfer clear?" one of them asked, his voice a harsh rasp. "The boss said the rest of the money comes tonight."
"Relax. The crypto wallet is set up. She just wants this bitch gone," the other replied, spitting on the floor.
She was kidnapped.
Kinsley forced her breathing to slow down.
Her fingers brushed against something sharp near her right hip. A sharp, rusted metal gear from some discarded machinery.
She gripped the jagged metal edge.
It sliced into her thumb, but she ignored the sting. She began sawing at the thick rope binding her wrists behind her back. Back and forth.
The friction burned her open wounds. It was agonizingly slow work.
The thick hemp barely frayed at first, but she kept her movements steady, hiding the effort behind her back.
Ten minutes passed in agonizing tension as the men bickered about their payout, giving her the precious time she needed to wear the fibers down.
The taller kidnapper walked over and kicked her thigh. The impact sent a jolt of pain up her spine.
"Your Wall Street husband does not give a shit about you," he laughed, blowing smoke into her face. "We grabbed you three hours ago. No cops. No search party. You are nothing."
She kept her mouth shut. Her eyes locked onto the cheap, older model burner phone clipped to his belt.
A siren suddenly screamed, not distant, but screaming down the immediate block. The flashing red and blue lights bled through the cracks in the rolling door, painting the dark warehouse in frantic strobes.
Both men stiffened, thinking it was a raid. They dropped their cigarettes and jogged toward the metal rolling door to look outside.
This was her chance. She pulled her arms apart with every ounce of strength she had. The frayed rope snapped.
Her wrists bled freely now, but she did not stop. She crawled across the concrete, silent as a shadow, and reached the metal barrel. She snatched the burner phone off the table where the man had just tossed it.
She threw herself behind a stack of rotting wooden crates just as they turned back around.
Her hands shook violently as she dialed Joaquin's private number. Her heart hammered against her ribs so hard she thought it might break them.
The line rang twice. He picked up.
"What kind of game are you playing now, Kinsley?" Joaquin's voice was ice.
"Joaquin, please," she whispered rapidly, pressing her hand over her mouth to muffle the sound. "I was taken. I am in a warehouse, maybe the edge of Brooklyn. They have knives. You have to call the police."
A soft, weak cough came through the receiver.
"Joaquin, my chest hurts," Ember's fragile, high-pitched voice whined in the background.
The temperature of Joaquin's voice dropped to absolute zero. "Are you out of your mind? Faking a kidnapping because you are jealous of Ember? She is sick, Kinsley."
"I am bleeding. They are going to kill me," she pleaded, tears burning her eyes.
"Do not ever call this number and disturb Ember's rest again," Joaquin snapped.
The line went dead. The dial tone buzzed in her ear.
She stared at the dark screen. The tears stopped falling. The cold reality of her three-year marriage settled into her stomach like a block of lead. He left her to die so his mistress could sleep.
"Where is the phone?" a voice roared across the warehouse.
Footsteps pounded against the concrete, coming straight toward her hiding spot. She switched the phone to silent and shoved it down her bra.
Her fingers wrapped around a rusted iron pipe lying in the dirt. She gripped it until her knuckles turned white.
The taller kidnapper peered around the wooden crate.
She swung the pipe with everything she had. The heavy iron smashed directly into his kneecap.
He screamed, a wet, cracking sound echoing through the room, and collapsed to the floor.
The second man pulled a switchblade from his pocket and charged at her.
She shoved the stack of heavy, rotting crates. They toppled over, crashing into him and blocking his path.
She did not look back. She scrambled over the fallen wood and sprinted toward a broken window at the side of the building.
The man lunged, his blade slicing through the fabric of her jacket and grazing her shoulder.
She threw herself through the shattered glass frame. She hit the muddy ground outside hard. Her ankle twisted, sending a sharp spike of agony up her leg.
Adrenaline flooded her veins. She forced herself up.
The warehouse door kicked open behind her. Flashlight beams cut through the darkness.
She ran into the dense woods. The freezing rain poured down in sheets, soaking her clothes instantly and washing away her blood.
Thorns tore at her cheeks and arms. Her lungs burned. She kept running.
Through the trees, she saw the faint yellow glow of streetlights. A highway.
She stumbled out of the treeline and onto the slick, wet asphalt. Headlights pierced the heavy rain, rushing straight toward her.
She stepped into the middle of the road and raised her arms.
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7.1
I sat alone at my long marble dining table, staring at a plate of cold truffle risotto. My husband, Jere, was late again, claiming he was stuck in a "war zone" of a board meeting for a multi-billion dollar merger.
A single Instagram notification shattered the silence. It was a photo of a candlelit birthday dinner, featuring a man's hand resting on a white tablecloth. I recognized the slight veins, the jagged scar on the thumb, and the navy-faced Patek Philippe watch I had spent six months tracking down as a wedding gift. Jere wasn't in a boardroom; he was celebrating his ex-girlfriend Irina's birthday while texting me to "don't wait up."
The next morning, I followed him to a VIP hospital wing. I watched through a cracked door as my husband cuddled a five-year-old boy and whispered tender promises to Irina. When he came home, he tried to buy my silence with a rare pink diamond bracelet, but I found the receipt: he had bought two identical ones. He had branded his wife and his mistress with matching jewelry, using hidden trackers to keep us both on a leash. When I confronted him, he didn't flinch. He coldly reminded me that he owned my father's massive debts and could send him to prison for insolvency fraud with one phone call.
"Stop with the attitude, Deliah," he said.
I felt like a ghost haunting my own life, trapped in a gilded cage by the man who paid for my mother's heart surgery while keeping a secret family across town. The humiliation peaked at our rescheduled anniversary dinner when Jere received a text, threw a stack of hundreds at me like I was a stranger, and abandoned me in a crowded restaurant to rush back to her.
"Pay the bill," he commanded before walking out.
Standing in the wreckage of a shattered crystal vase back at the penthouse, I realized my silence was the only thing keeping his empire standing. I pulled the crumpled divorce papers from my purse and signed my name with a steady hand. I wasn't just walking away; I was calling his sister to help me burn his perfect world to the ground.

7.1
After five years in a federal prison, framed by my stepmother and fiancé, I was finally released.
Instead of a welcome home, my stepmother tossed me a one-way ticket to Geneva and a threat: renounce the family name and disappear, or end up in the Hudson River.
When our limo was suddenly ambushed by military-grade SUVs on the highway, their cowardice almost got us killed.
I took the wheel, crashed the attackers, and saved their lives.
But the moment the danger passed, my stepmother tried to slap me, called me a psycho, and abandoned me on the desolate roadside.
My ex-fiancé later cornered me in public, trying to assert his dominance by grabbing my arm.
They still thought I was the broken girl they sent to a cage just so they could steal my dead mother's biochemical research.
I didn't feel heartbreak, only a cold, absolute certainty.
They threw me to the wolves, not realizing the federal penitentiary had burned away my capacity for mercy.
I hacked into the dark web and found out Dante Meltoni, the most dangerous Mafia Don in New York, was tearing the city apart to find a legendary underground doctor.
I am that doctor.
I walked straight into his heavily guarded fortress, pulled out a syringe, and saved his dying grandfather.
Then I looked the terrifying Don right in the eye.
"Marry me. And let me use your empire to wipe my family off the map."

8.1
When the private elevator pinged. That was the moment Eleanor's two-and-a-half years as a billionaire's perfect fake girlfriend abruptly ended.
Julian was terminating her services early because his real first love was moving into the penthouse tomorrow.
His assistant stood by the marble counter, bracing for a screaming match. He handed over a brutal non-disclosure agreement.
He slid a five-million-dollar check across the table, fully expecting her to cry, beg, or throw the money back in his face.
"Miss Palmer... Giselle is moving in tomorrow," he warned.
Instead, Eleanor calmly borrowed his Montblanc pen, signed her name three times without hesitation, and slipped the money into her planner.
"Congratulations to Mr. Caldwell-Prentice on finally getting what he wants," she smiled flawlessly.
They all thought she was just a high-end, emotionless mercenary who felt absolutely nothing for the men she served.
They didn't know she was actually Cara Love, the last surviving heir of the ruined Love Foundation, living under a fake name to avenge her dead father.
For years, she swallowed her burning hatred, playing the perfect emotional substitute to buy dark web intel and hide her unnatural, rapid-healing body from a ruthless medical syndicate.
But now, a tech billionaire client had just uncovered her true identity, and her burner phone flashed with a terrifying emergency alert.
The syndicate had found her.
Eleanor grabbed her suitcase and ordered the private jet back to New York.
The facade was over; it was time to face the deadly storm.

9.0
I married the CEO of the powerful Powers Corporation, and everyone saw me as the perfect trophy wife. They assumed my days were filled with nothing but shopping on Fifth Avenue.
But this prestigious family was a house of cards. My husband's siblings were spoiled, useless children threatening to bring the entire empire down with their stupidity.
His brother, Braden, was a parasite who mistook his trust fund for "freedom." His sister, Chelsea, was a brainless socialite being used as a pawn in a public scandal by a con artist.
Even the family's ruthless Chief of Staff, a man meant to be their shield, looked at me with utter contempt, viewing me as just another problem to be managed.
They all saw a fragile doll. They had no idea that their weakness was an insult to the family name, and I was not going to stand for it.
It was time to discipline the children. The first lesson began at 3,000 feet, when I kicked my brother-in-law out of a plane mid-flight. His rehabilitation—and my takeover of this family—had just begun.

9.6
A billionaire art collector purchases a mysterious 19th-century portrait and begins having vivid dreams about the woman in it. After a near-fatal accident, he realizes the portrait is connected to a tragic past that mirrors his present life. As he grows close to a woman who looks exactly like the one in the painting, he must uncover the truth behind the portrait before history repeats itself.
Can love survive centuries of secrets and mistakes? And will he finally find the courage to fight for the woman in front of him, or will the past destroy them both?
#mystery
#lovetriangle
#hero
#betrayal

9.6
I was the devoted PR manager and secret girlfriend of A-list actor Vance Sterling for three years.
Just minutes after he promised me a romantic dinner, I caught him sleeping with a wealthy Los Angeles socialite.
When I confronted him, he didn't apologize. Instead, he mocked my status, froze my bank accounts, and left me completely homeless on the rainy streets of the city.
Blacklisted in Hollywood and utterly destitute, I ended up having a reckless, revenge-fueled one-night stand with the socialite's ruthless billionaire fiancé, Jory Elliott.
But my nightmare had just begun. My younger brother accrued a half-million-dollar gambling debt with a brutal cartel, and they threatened to chop off his fingers.
Jory stepped in and paid the ransom, only for my brother to beg the billionaire for more gambling money, calling me a selfish bitch for not milking him dry.
Then, Jory threw a marriage agreement at my face.
"Act as my devoted wife for two years, and I will wipe the debt and give you ten million dollars."
I gave my youth to an actor who discarded me like trash, and my own flesh and blood only saw me as a walking ATM.
Did these powerful men really think my dignity was just another corporate asset to be bought and traded?
I looked into the cold, calculating eyes of the billionaire who thought he owned me.
I threw the contract right at his chest and stepped out of his Maybach into the freezing rain.
I would rather rot in the gutter than be a pet bought with a checkbook.