
His Sacred Promise, My Stolen Dreams
My fiancé, Ethan, insisted we use our life savings-the money for our dream architectural firm-to buy a house for his widowed friend, Kiera. He called it a sacred promise. I called it betrayal.
After weeks of fighting, I discovered the truth. He hadn't been asking for my permission; he had already emptied our joint account two months ago.
A photo confirmed it: him and Kiera, toasting with champagne, celebrating the day he stole our future. He then had the nerve to ask me to design her new house for free.
When I finally confronted him, he chose to believe her fake pregnancy and her staged fall, calling me a "monster" as he rushed her to the hospital.
He didn't just take our money; he stole my voice and painted me as the villain in his story.
So while he played the hero for her, I quietly canceled our wedding, sold our assets, and booked a one-way ticket to a new life. He thought he was breaking me, but he was setting me free.
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Chapter 5
Cassie POV:
He stayed out late again. The hours dragged by, marked by the escalating silence of the apartment. I cleaned. I packed. I systematically dismantled the life we had supposedly built together. With each item I placed in a box, each surface I wiped clean, I felt a layer of grime being scrubbed from my soul.
His social media, which I'd sworn off, still found a way to infiltrate my consciousness. Brenna, bless her persistent heart, kept sending me screenshots. Kiera, posing with Ethan at a charity gala, her hand possessively intertwined with his. He was smiling, a genuine, dazzling smile that he rarely bestowed upon me anymore. He looked at her with a certain adoration, a kind of protective tenderness that made my stomach churn. It was the look of a man deeply invested, deeply charmed.
I scrolled past it quickly, not allowing the image to sink in. My resolve was a fragile thing, but it was hardening with every passing hour.
The next morning, I drove to my parents' house. They were already worried; my voice on the phone had been too thin, too brittle.
"Cassie, honey, what's wrong?" my mother asked, her eyes searching mine as I walked through the door. My father, usually stoic, put down his newspaper and looked at me with an unusual intensity.
"I called off the wedding," I said, the words falling flat in the cozy living room.
My mother gasped, placing a hand over her heart. "What? Why? Is everything alright with Ethan?" Her immediate concern was for him, of course. They adored Ethan, the charming, successful lawyer.
"No, Mom. Everything is not alright with Ethan," I replied, forcing a tight smile. "It just... wasn't going to work. We decided to go our separate ways." I kept the details vague, a shield against their inevitable disappointment and questions. I couldn't bear to rip open the wound of his betrayal for them, not yet.
My father cleared his throat. "Are you sure, sweetheart? Ethan seemed... dedicated. He's a good man." His eyes held a subtle, unarticulated skepticism, a slight flicker of doubt about Ethan, which I hadn't noticed before, but it was there, now that I looked.
A pang of guilt pricked me. I was keeping the full, ugly truth from them. But they loved me, and protecting them from the true extent of his deceit felt like the last act of kindness I could perform in this whole sordid affair.
"I'm sure, Dad," I said, my voice firm. "It's for the best. I'm going to take that fellowship, after all. Start fresh."
They looked at each other, concern etched on their faces. They wanted me to be happy. They just didn't understand the depth of unhappiness I had been living in.
The next few days were a whirlwind of activity. I forwarded my mail, changed my address. I closed accounts, transferred money to a new, private one only accessible by me. I sold off our joint assets quickly, efficiently, leaving Ethan with a hefty sum from the sale of my car and a generous portion of the apartment's equity. I didn't want his money. I didn't want anything that reeked of him. My dignity was worth more than any material possession.
Finally, with a sense of grim satisfaction, I blocked Ethan's number. And then Kiera's. And then, for good measure, I blocked him on every social media platform, deleting my own accounts where necessary. I wanted no trace of him, no possibility of him finding me, no window into the life I was meticulously building without him.
A serene, almost eerie calm settled over me. It was the peace of utter detachment. The apartment, now nearly empty, felt vast and silent. The echoes of our life together were fading, replaced by the quiet hum of my own breath. I was reclaiming my space, physical and emotional.
Ethan, lost in his self-appointed heroics, was still completely oblivious. The subtle changes in the apartment, the slow disappearance of my belongings, the quiet shift in my demeanor-he hadn't noticed any of it. He was too busy being the center of Kiera's universe to even register the slow implosion of ours. And that, I realized, was the perfect cover. His blindness was my invisibility cloak.
This was it. The perfect moment to slip away. The last administrative tasks were done. The airline ticket was purchased. My old life was packed into two suitcases, waiting by the door.
That evening, I ate a solitary meal on the kitchen floor, surrounded by bare walls and the ghost of a shared past. A single fork, a paper plate. It felt fitting. My future was just as stark, just as unburdened.
I looked at the empty space where his books used to be, where his framed photos of Kiera and her son once sat. He had been so proud of his role in their lives. He had been so blind to the wreckage he caused in ours. My soul, which had been crushed and suffocated for so long, felt as if it were slowly, painstakingly, unfurling its wings.
He had promised me a future, and delivered a lie. But the lie, inadvertently, had set me free.
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7.1
He doesn't believe in love.
He believes in ownership.
Lucien Vale built his empire the same way he destroys his enemies-quietly, strategically, without mercy. To the world, he's the youngest billionaire in Europe. To those who cross him, he's something far darker.
They call him The Devil in a Suit.
When struggling art conservator Amara Rossi unknowingly restores a painting tied to one of Lucien's most dangerous secrets, she becomes collateral in a war she never saw coming. To protect her-and control the damage-Lucien does what he does best.
He claims her.
What begins as a contract meant to silence her turns into an obsession neither of them expected. Amara refuses to be owned. Lucien has never been denied.
But behind Lucien's cold precision is a man forged by betrayal, raised in violence, and taught that love is a weakness exploited by enemies. And behind Amara's defiance is a woman who has spent her life surviving powerful men.
Their chemistry is volatile. Their power dynamic intoxicating.
Their connection? Terrifyingly real.
Because the devil doesn't fall in love.
He possesses.
And when Lucien realizes he would burn empires for her, the question isn't whether he can keep Amara-
It's whether she can survive being claimed by him.

7.2
Elara Vex had everything-a flawless ice core, the title of prodigy, and a place at the pinnacle of the High Tower. But in one brutal night, it was all ripped away. Her mentor tore the core from her chest. Her fiancé drove a sword through her back. Her own sister smiled as she bled out on the cold marble floor.
When Elara wakes, she's years in the past, mere hours before her core is scheduled to be stolen. This time, she won't be anyone's sacrificial lamb. She shatters her own core with forbidden blood magic and forges something far more terrifying in its place-a bottomless, ravenous Chaos Core that devours magic itself.
Now, branded a worthless cripple and cast into the deadly Abyss, Elara is pulled from the darkness by the outcasts of Elysium Academy-a school for heretics, psychopaths, and everything the Tower despises. Under the tutelage of a reclusive principal who knew her murdered mother, Elara will master her forbidden power and uncover the Tower's darkest secrets.
When the Five Academies Ranking Tournament arrives, Seraphina Vex stands in the arena, draped in white saintess robes, ready to claim ultimate glory. She doesn't know that a ghost from her past has clawed her way back from hell. She doesn't know that Elara is coming-and this time, the prodigal sister isn't asking for mercy. She's bringing chaos.

8.0
Love and Revenge
8.0
Six months ago, Lila Falcone thought she knew love. She never imagined that a man she trusted, Nikolai, could vanish and that his death would drag her into a world of darkness she didn't even know existed.
Now, trapped in the hands of his twin brother, Nico, Lila must confront a twisted reality where desire and danger collide. He blames her for his brother's death, yet the line between punishment and pleasure is blurred. Every glance, every touch, every cruel game pulls her deeper into his world a world ruled by power, blood, and unrelenting revenge.
As Nico tests her limits, Lila discovers that survival might require more than just courage it might demand surrender. But can she trust the man who claims to love her while plotting vengeance? Or will passion and betrayal consume them both before the truth is revealed?
Love and Revenge is a dark, intense romance of passion, obsession, and the ultimate price of loyalty.

9.6
I was his possession. The entire world knew that Jackson Walters, the ruthless tech mogul, had destroyed my life to claim me.
Then he brought home his new intern, Kaila, and sat me down.
"I've decided," he said casually, "I want you both."
When I fought back, he dragged me to a remote warehouse to teach me a lesson. My parents were bound and gagged, suspended by ropes over a massive, grumbling wood chipper.
He gave me ten seconds to accept Kaila, or he'd drop them. "I agree!" I screamed in surrender. But it was too late. A frayed rope snapped, and I watched my parents plunge into the machine's grinding teeth.
The horror of it all killed me. But when I opened my eyes again, I was back in his bed. The date on my phone was the day he brought Kaila home. This time, I wouldn't fight him. I would be his perfect, obedient wife. And while he was distracted, I would fake my own death and disappear forever.

9.6
I stood in the ballroom of the Pierre Hotel, holding a champagne flute that felt like a fragile anchor against a rising tide of anxiety.
Across the room, the crowd of New York's elite parted as my fiancé, Campbell Brock, stepped onto the stage to announce a historic merger-and a shocking engagement to someone else.
"I am proud to announce my engagement to Kandice Rose," he said, pulling the "real" daughter of the family into his arms while looking right through me as if I were a ghost. I dropped my glass, the crystal shattering at my feet, but the public humiliation was only the beginning. By the next morning, I was a viral meme dubbed the "Meltdown Girl," and the American Ballet Theatre had suspended me from my position as principal dancer for "moral turpitude." My bank accounts were frozen, my reputation was in tatters, and Kandice was on a livestream tearfully claiming I was a jealous foster girl who had tried to seduce Campbell behind her back.
I had spent four years building a life with this man, only to be discarded like a piece of old wallpaper the moment a better business deal came along.
How could the man who promised me a future turn me into a national joke overnight, and why was the world so eager to believe I was the villain in my own tragedy?
When my high school best friend, the notorious billionaire playboy Charlton Bernard, found me drinking tequila in a dive bar, he didn't offer me a shoulder to cry on. He slid a marriage contract across the table and pressed a black titanium credit card into my hand.
"Marry me for a year, Daphne," he said, his eyes burning with a dark, protective intensity that made my heart race. "We'll join their reality show as newlyweds and show the world exactly who the real winner is."
I looked at the card, then at the man who had always been my shadow, and realized that being sensible had only gotten me dumped on a stage.
"Let's go get married."

7.9
I was in the kitchen of the Vance mansion, slicing black truffles worth more than my car while my mother-in-law, Victoria, mocked my "backwoods" origins. My back throbbed from standing for six hours, and my head spun from the chronic anemia I’d developed since marrying into this family.
Suddenly, my phone vibrated with a call from my husband, Julian. He didn't ask if I was okay or if I’d eaten; he simply ordered me to get to the hospital because his "fragile" friend Caroline needed another emergency blood transfusion.
"Her hemoglobin is low, Seraphina. Get to St. Luke's now."
I looked down at my left arm, which was a roadmap of bruises and needle marks hidden beneath my sweater. When I tried to tell him that the medical guidelines forbade donating again so soon, Julian’s voice turned dangerous.
"I don't care about guidelines. She’s in crisis, and your anemia is manageable. Are you really going to be this selfish after the life we gave you?"
Seconds later, a photo arrived from an unknown number. It showed Julian sitting on Caroline’s hospital bed, tenderly feeding her apples. The text underneath was a visceral slap in the face: "He wouldn't even eat dinner with you, but he's feeding me. Thanks for the refill, blood bag."
At that moment, something inside me finally snapped. I realized that to the Vances, I wasn't a wife or even a human being—I was a biological spare part, a servant they kept around only to be drained dry for a woman who was faking her illness.
I untied my apron, dropped it into the trash, and walked past a screaming Victoria toward the front door. I picked up the phone and dialed the one number I had been forbidden to contact since my wedding day.
"Mr. Henderson, it's Seraphina Sterling. Prepare the divorce papers. And if they contest it... burn their entire empire to the ground."