
His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress
She married him out of desperation, becoming the perfect docile wife while he treated her like dirt beneath his shoes. But everything shattered the night she overheard him mocking her with his friends-and discovered the necklace she'd cherished, her only link to the boy who once saved her life, didn't even belong to him.
It was all a lie.
No longer the doormat he married, she discards her fake identity and reclaims her birthright as the hidden heiress of Salvadore City. Now she's on a mission: find the necklace's true owner among his circle of friends, no matter how many hearts she has to break along the way.
But her husband isn't ready to let go. Convinced she's playing games to make him jealous, he's blindsided when divorce papers land in his hands. By the time he realizes the woman he dismissed was never who he thought she was, she's already moved on-living her truth, chasing her destiny, and leaving him choking on regret.
Some cages, once opened, can never be closed again.
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Chapter 6
Chapter 6
ADRIA
"I'll try harder," I said, forcing the words past the rage building in my throat. "I promise."
"I know you will." He finished with the ointment and wiped his hands on a towel he'd apparently brought from the bathroom. "You always do. That's what I appreciate about you, Adriana. You're willing to improve."
Willing to improve. Willing to shrink myself down to nothing. Willing to accept abuse and call it love because I'd convinced myself he was someone he'd never been.
Damien stood and held out his hand. "Come on. Let's go to bed."
I stared at his outstretched hand like it was a snake about to strike. "Bed?"
"Yes, bed. Where married couples sleep." He said it like I was being deliberately obtuse. "Unless you'd prefer the guest room?"
The guest room was where I usually slept when Damien bothered to come home. We'd shared a bed maybe a dozen times in eighteen months, and most of those had been in the first month of our marriage before he'd made it clear that my presence disturbed his sleep.
"No, I-" I took his hand and let him pull me to my feet. "I just thought you might want your space tonight."
"Why would I want that?" He led me toward the stairs, his hand warm around mine. "You're my wife. You belong in our bed."
Our bed. The bed he'd bought before we got married, the bed he'd probably shared with Amber before she left for Paris, the bed I'd been slowly exiled from over the course of our marriage.
I followed him up the stairs, my mind racing. This didn't make sense. Damien didn't do spontaneous affection. He didn't do concern or care or tenderness unless there was an audience to perform for. So why now? Why this sudden shift in behavior?
Maybe his friends had said something. Maybe watching me stand there covered in soup had triggered some vestige of conscience he'd forgotten he had. Maybe this was his idea of making amends without actually apologizing.
Or maybe-and this thought made my stomach turn-maybe he was giving me hope on purpose. Maybe this was another game, another way to keep me dependent and desperate. Build me up just enough that I'd be grateful for scraps of affection, then tear me down again when I started expecting more.
I'd seen him do it before. The pattern was familiar: cruelty followed by just enough kindness to make me question whether I'd overreacted, whether things were really that bad, whether I should just try harder to be what he needed.
We reached the bedroom, and Damien released my hand to head into the bathroom. I stood in the doorway, uncertain. The room looked the same as always-impeccably clean, decorated in shades of gray and white that felt more like a hotel than a home. The bed was made with military precision, not a wrinkle in sight.
"Are you just going to stand there?" Damien called from the bathroom. "Get ready for bed, Adriana."
I moved mechanically to the dresser where I kept my sleepwear-modest cotton pajamas that covered everything from neck to ankle because Damien had once commented that my nightgowns were "too revealing." I changed quickly, wincing as the fabric brushed against my burns.
Damien emerged from the bathroom in his own pajamas, his hair damp from washing his face. He looked younger like this, almost vulnerable, and I hated that some part of me still wanted to see good in him.
"Come here," he said, patting the bed beside him.
I climbed into bed, staying on my side, maintaining a careful distance. The mattress dipped as Damien settled in, and for a moment, we lay there in silence, the space between us feeling like an ocean.
Then Damien reached over and pulled me against him.
I went rigid, every muscle in my body tensing. This was wrong. This wasn't how we worked. We didn't cuddle. We didn't sleep intertwined like normal couples. We occupied the same bed on rare occasions and maintained careful distance, like magnets with the same polarity.
"Relax," Damien murmured against my hair. "You're so tense."
Because you poured soup on me five hours ago, I thought viciously. Because you called me pathetic in front of your friends. Because you're sleeping with your secretary and planning to leave me for your ex-girlfriend. Because I've spent eighteen months in hell for a borrowed necklace.
But I forced myself to soften against him, to play the role of grateful wife receiving her husband's affection. His arm was heavy across my waist, his breath warm on the back of my neck.
"Better," he said approvingly.
I lay there in the darkness, listening to his breathing gradually slow and even out as he fell asleep. The arm across my waist grew heavier, more oppressive. I was trapped between his body and the edge of the bed, pinned like a butterfly to a board.
My mind churned through possibilities. Maybe Marcus had pulled him aside after I left, told him he'd crossed a line. Maybe even Kieran, who seemed to have slightly more conscience than the others, had said something about the soup incident being excessive. Maybe Damien was trying to smooth things over before I got any ideas about leaving him.
Or maybe this was simpler than that. Maybe he'd come home and found me gone, and some primitive part of his brain that viewed me as a possession had panicked. Not because he cared about me, but because he liked knowing where his things were.
I almost laughed at that thought, then caught myself. Damien was a light sleeper.
The burns on my chest and stomach throbbed, a constant reminder of what this man was capable of. Of what I'd let him do to me, over and over, because I'd been chasing a ghost.
Beside me, Damien shifted, his arm tightening around me briefly before relaxing again. He murmured something in his sleep-a name that might have been "Amber" or might have been nothing at all.
I closed my eyes and focused on breathing, on staying still, on not waking him. This would be over soon. I'd figure out which of his friends owned that necklace. I'd find the boy who'd actually saved me all those years ago. And then I'd burn this entire life to the ground and walk away without looking back.
The thought sustained me as I finally drifted off to sleep, Damien's arm still heavy across my waist, his breath still warm on my neck, the burns still stinging beneath my pajamas.
I dreamed of fire and freedom, of a version of myself who'd never seen that necklace, who'd never convinced herself that this man was worth destroying herself for.
When I woke up, Damien was gone. The sheets beside me were cold, and I could hear the shower running in the bathroom. Everything was back to normal, as if last night's unexpected tenderness had never happened.
I touched the burns on my chest carefully, feeling the raised edges of the blisters through my pajama top. They would heal. Scars took time, but they eventually faded.
Some scars, anyway.
I got out of bed and looked at my reflection in the dresser mirror. The woman staring back at me looked tired, worn down, defeated. But underneath that carefully constructed exterior, I could feel something else stirring. Something sharp and dangerous and absolutely done with playing small.
Soon, I promised my reflection. Soon you get to come back.
The shower turned off. I heard Damien moving around in the bathroom, and I quickly smoothed the expression from my face, replacing it with the bland, pleasant mask I'd worn for eighteen months.
Just a little longer. Just until I found out the truth.
Then Adriana Chen could disappear forever, and Adriana Salvadore could reclaim everything she'd lost.
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9.3
Jessie's biological parents brought her back from a Rust Belt wasteland just to force her into marrying a paralyzed heir to save their bankrupt empire.
Three years later, when the global doomsday apocalypse hit, her own family shoved her into a swarm of infected corpses.
As she was being torn apart by mutated hounds, she was stunned by what she saw.
Her fake sister, Harley, was clutching the antique silver necklace she had stolen from Jessie—an heirloom that secretly contained a magical spatial dimension.
When the infected swarmed them, her biological mother didn't even look back.
"Jessie is just white trash, she is perfectly suited to buy us time to run!"
Harley used Jessie's stolen necklace to live in absolute safety and luxury, while Jessie's windpipe was ripped out in the rotting wasteland.
Until she died, Jessie didn't understand. She was their true flesh and blood.
Why did her parents hate her so much? Why was she sacrificed so easily while the fake daughter got everything?
Opening her eyes again, the blinding glare of a crystal chandelier stabbed into her retinas.
She was back in the Manhattan penthouse on the exact day they sold her off.
This time, Jessie calmly signed the marriage contract, demanded a one hundred million dollar buyout, and walked out to prepare for the apocalypse.

9.2
Marissa," he said softly, but there was nothing gentle about it. His voice was low, controlled to the point of fracture. "Walk away. Now. Or I won't be able to stop myself."
The sound slipped from me before I could cage it-a quiet, helpless moan.
I lifted my chin, meeting his gaze.
"Don't," I whispered. "Don't stop yourself, Carlton."
His last bit of restraint snapped, along with the clasp of my bra

8.2
BLURB:
The job was simple; to preserve the past. But Isla never expected her own past to walk through the door of the Thorne Estate.
Isla Campbell lands a career-defining project as a historian for organizing the archives of the Thorne estate, a task critical for a high-stakes foundation review. Her client, Cade Thorne, is the dedicated and undeniably handsome heir to a legacy he strives to honor and keep.
But on her first day, Isla is met with a shocking surprise: her boss, Cade, is the charming stranger she shared a fleeting, unforgettable night with just days before. Now, the undeniable spark between them threatens to ignite, risking the professional integrity of the project and the future of the very estate Isla was hired to protect.
As their passion deepens and secrets unravel, they must choose between the history they're preserving and the future they're dangerously close to writing together despite the odds. What happens when Isla finds out she is also a Thorne?

9.0
I married him to save my family.
He married me to destroy my life.
Evelyn Hart never imagined she would become the wife of the coldest billionaire in the city especially not the man who looked at her like she was his greatest enemy.
Five years ago, she loved Lucas Blackwood with her whole heart... until he accused her of betraying him and vanished from her life.
Now he's back.
Richer. Colder. Crueler.
When her father's company collapses, Lucas offers her a deal she can't refuse:
marry him for one year... and he will erase her family's debts.
But what Evelyn doesn't know is that Lucas believes she ruined his life and this marriage is his perfect revenge plan.
Every day, he humiliates her.
Every night, he reminds her that she means nothing to him.
Every touch burns with hatred... and desire.
But the deeper Evelyn falls, the closer the truth comes out.
She never betrayed him.
She was set up.
And when Lucas finally realised he married the wrong enemy...
Will he fight for her love...
or lose her forever?

7.9
Ariella Quinn never imagined that survival would come with a wedding ring.
Once, her life was quiet. Ordinary. Safe. Then her family's name was dragged into a scandal they did not create, their finances collapsed overnight, and every door that once opened to them slammed shut. Behind it all stood one name-Blackwood. A name whispered with fear, respect, and power. A name Ariella learned to hate without ever seeing the face behind it.
Lucien Blackwood is not a man who explains himself. As a billionaire with influence that stretches far beyond boardrooms, he is known for control, precision, and results-no matter the cost. When Ariella is summoned under the pretense of a legal negotiation, she expects humiliation. What she doesn't expect is a contract that will change the course of her life forever.
Marriage.
Cold. Legal. Non-negotiable.
Lucien offers protection, financial security, and silence in exchange for one thing: her name beside his. To the public, it will look like a fortunate match. To Ariella, it is a cage built by the very man whose decisions ruined her family. Refusal is not an option. Acceptance feels like surrender.
Their marriage is not born of love, attraction, or trust. It is built on resentment, fear, and secrets deliberately left unexplained. Lucien keeps his distance, enforcing rules rather than affection. Ariella enters his world surrounded by luxury that feels more like surveillance than comfort. Guards watch her movements. Strangers know her schedule. Danger lingers just beneath the surface.
And the worst part?
No one will tell her why.
As threats begin to surface and pieces of the past refuse to stay buried, Ariella realizes that her "ruin" may not have been accidental. The marriage that destroyed her freedom may also be the only thing keeping her alive. Every answer Lucien withholds deepens her anger-and her curiosity. Every moment of forced proximity tightens the tension between them.
This is a slow-burn romance driven by emotional restraint, power imbalance, and psychological conflict. Love does not arrive easily. Trust is hard-won. And forgiveness may be more dangerous than hatred.
Married to the Man Who Ruined Me is a gripping billionaire romance that blends contract marriage, suspense, and emotional depth. With carefully paced revelations and chapter-ending cliffhangers, the story keeps readers questioning motives, loyalties, and the true cost of power. It explores what happens when a woman is forced to bind herself to the man she blames for her destruction-and discovers that the truth is far more complicated than she was ever allowed to see.
In a world where appearances are currency and silence is survival, Ariella must decide: remain a victim of Lucien Blackwood's shadow, or learn how to stand beside him without losing herself.

8.8
Clara supported her boyfriend Leo for four years, paying his rent and buying his headshots while working dead-end extra gigs.
On his twenty-sixth birthday, she caught him in their bed with Veronica, a wealthy producer's daughter who constantly stole Clara's roles.
Leo mocked Clara as a "pathetic, poor stepping stone" who was just there until he got his foot in the door.
Veronica threatened to ruin Clara's career forever.
Clara dumped him, packed her bags, and impulsively entered a contract marriage with a cold stranger she met at City Hall.
But her nightmare wasn't over.
When her mother suddenly needed a $200,000 emergency brain surgery, Clara was forced to take a demeaning extra gig to survive.
There, Veronica and her starlet friend cornered Clara.
They mocked her cheap clothes, ridiculed her new wedding ring as fake glass, and intentionally poured scalding coffee on her feet.
"Well, maid, you better clean that up."
Veronica laughed, forcing Clara to her knees to wipe up the burning liquid while snapping photos.
Clara swallowed her burning humiliation, secretly recording their abuse on her phone.
She endured the pain, desperate for the $300 day rate to save her mother's life, feeling entirely crushed by their overwhelming wealth and power.
What she didn't know was that outside the soundstage, her new contract husband—the man she thought was just a struggling, broke tech worker—was sitting in a sleek black Maybach.
He watched his wife kneeling on the floor, and his dark eyes filled with a lethal, terrifying rage.