
His Trophy Wife Is A Predator
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.
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Chapter 2
Braden wiped the freezing water from his eyes with a shaking hand.
He gritted his teeth, his jaw muscles jumping as he tried to push himself up from the wet grass. A spark of humiliated rage flared in his chest. He wanted to fight back.
Hazel tossed the empty plastic bottle into a nearby metal trash can.
The hollow clatter echoed loudly across the quiet landing zone.
She turned back to him. Her face was completely devoid of warmth.
"Let's go up for a second jump," she said.
Her tone was flat, conversational, and entirely dead.
Braden opened his mouth, a bitter insult sitting right on his tongue.
"Only this time," Hazel added, cutting him off, "we go without the parachutes."
Braden's pupils dilated. His breath hitched in his throat.
He stared intensely into her eyes, desperately searching for a smirk, a twitch, any sign that this was a sick joke.
There was nothing. Her eyes were like dark, bottomless wells. They held no emotion, no hesitation, and absolutely no mercy.
A sharp gust of wind swept across the field. Braden's entire body violently shuddered. The last wall of his psychological defense cracked wide open.
Chandler stepped forward, clearing his throat.
"Mrs. Powers, the schedule-"
Hazel raised her right hand.
It was a slow, deliberate gesture. The angle of her wrist, the slight lift of her chin-it was a posture of ancient, unquestionable nobility.
Chandler's jaw snapped shut. The words died in his throat. He felt a heavy, invisible weight press down on his shoulders, forcing him into silence.
Braden watched the Chief of Staff back down. The terror in his chest expanded, suffocating him. If his brother's ruthless right-hand man was intimidated, Braden knew he was completely screwed.
"I... I need to go back to Manhattan," Braden stuttered.
He scrambled to his feet and practically ran toward the armored black SUV, his wet clothes clinging to his shaking body.
The motorcade started its engine.
Inside the back of the SUV, the silence was thick and suffocating.
Hazel leaned back against the premium leather seat. She closed her eyes, resting her head. Her posture was so relaxed and dominant, she looked like a queen inspecting her conquered territory.
Braden pressed himself into the far corner of his seat. He kept his head turned toward the window, but his eyes kept darting back to the woman beside him.
In the passenger seat up front, Chandler adjusted the rearview mirror.
He stared at Hazel's reflection. The cold sweat on his palms made the steering wheel feel slippery.
Chandler reached into his briefcase and pulled out his encrypted iPad. He tapped the screen, bringing up a security report generated just three hours ago.
Chandler hesitated for exactly three seconds. His fingers tightened around the cold metal of the device. As the Chief of Staff, his duty was to protect the family, not arm its volatile members with dangerous information. But a dark, calculating thought crept into his mind. He needed a knife to test the true depths of this terrifying woman. Braden's impulsive stupidity and fragile ego made him the perfect, disposable tool for the job. If she was truly a monster, Braden would draw her out. Chandler masked his cold intentions with a blank expression, reached back, and handed the iPad to Braden.
Braden frowned, his trembling fingers taking the device. He tapped the play button on the video file.
The screen showed the indoor tactical training facility at the base, recorded right before their jump.
Braden's breath stopped.
On the screen, Hazel was running a high-intensity combat drill. Her movements were a blur of lethal precision. She did not fight like a modern soldier; she moved with the ruthless, elegant efficiency of a phantom from an ancient, blood-soaked battlefield. She executed a series of archaic, devastating joint locks and brutal disarms that defied all conventional training. It was a killing art, refined over centuries of aristocratic survival, executed with a cold-blooded grace that made the modern tactical gear she wore look entirely out of place.
Braden watched in horror as the woman on the screen grabbed a heavy training dummy, twisted its arm into an unnatural angle, and snapped its simulated neck with her bare hands.
A cold shiver violently ripped down Braden's spine.
He slowly lifted his head and looked at Hazel. She was still resting with her eyes closed. He felt his stomach churn. He was sitting next to a monster.
The video reached its final second. The Hazel on the screen, who had been adjusting her heavy leather gloves, suddenly stopped her movements. She slowly lifted her head, her chin tilting upward as her gaze drifted with chilling intent toward the exact corner of the room where the security camera was hidden. She did not glare directly into the lens like a modern exhibitionist. Instead, her eyes swept over the space with the cold, indifferent authority of a predator surveying its domain. Yet, that single, sweeping look felt as though it had pierced straight through the concrete walls and the glass of the screen. It was an ancient, suffocating aura of pure slaughter.
Braden's fingers went numb.
The heavy iPad slipped from his hands and crashed onto the carpeted floor of the SUV.
Hazel slowly opened her eyes.
She turned her head and looked down at the device near her boots. The corner of her red lips curled into a slow, mocking smile.
"Pick it up," she ordered.
It was the tone of a master speaking to a disobedient dog.
Braden swallowed hard. The lump in his throat felt like sandpaper. Without a single word of protest, he bent down and picked the iPad up from the floor.
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9.6
Brenda Vincent thought her biggest nightmare was catching her boyfriend cheating with her roommate on her own sofa.
But her life truly derailed after a drunken night led her into the bed of Bryon Reeves, the ruthless billionaire CEO and older brother of the student she tutored.
Trying to pay off the most dangerous man in New York with a crumpled twenty-dollar bill was her first mistake.
Fleeing the hotel, she accidentally rear-ended his custom Maybach. Bryon used the massive repair bill to blackmail her into being his fake date, parading her at a gala just to make his sister-in-law jealous.
When Brenda finally snapped and fled the humiliation, only to be rescued by his biggest corporate rival, Bryon's twisted possessiveness turned completely destructive.
"If you feel kidnapped, call the police. But your teaching license will be permanently revoked."
He didn't just threaten her. He systematically dismantled her life, using his influence to force the university to freeze her tenure and suspend her without pay.
Brenda couldn't understand why this terrifying man was going to such extreme lengths to ruin a simple tutor who just wanted to be left alone.
Now, stripped of her career, her income, and her independence, she was forced into the sprawling Reeves Manor.
Hearing the heavy mahogany door lock from the outside in her signal-jammed bedroom, Brenda's panic slowly morphed into a cold, clinical rage.
She was trapped, but she refused to be his helpless pawn.

9.3
They say you can't have it all. I'm about to prove them wrong-or destroy myself trying.
When my struggling mother married billionaire Richard Stone, I thought I was gaining a family. Instead, I found three stepbrothers who became my obsession, my downfall, and my salvation.
Dominic, the eldest, cold and commanding, who kisses me like he's claiming his kingdom and looks at me like I'm the only thing he can't control.
Julian, the charming playboy who hides a vulnerable soul beneath his perfect smile, making me feel like I'm the only woman he's ever truly seen.
Asher, the brooding artist who paints me like I'm his muse and touches me like I'm his masterpiece, seeing parts of my soul I didn't know existed.
They're forbidden. They're dangerous. They're everything I shouldn't want.
But when I discover my father didn't die by suicide that he was murdered by the very man who now calls himself my stepfather, these three powerful men becomes my unlikely allies.
First it was a forbidden attraction, now it's an arrangement that defies every rule.
The rules are simple:
I'll give each of them a chance.
I'll take everything they offer.
And in the end, I'll have to make the hardest decision of my life:
Choose one of them. Choose all of them. Or choose myself.

9.6
For five years, I was Barron Santana's elite bodyguard and loyal shadow. I stood between him and bullets, giving him my youth and my entire heart.
But last night, the CEO announced his engagement to a flawless socialite on national television.
Heartbroken, I got blackout drunk and ended up crashing on the couch of Cassidy Gross, a billionaire tech CEO who saved me from a bar creep.
When I showed up late to work, Barron locked me in his freezing office. He pinned me against the glass, smelling Cassidy's cologne on my clothes.
"Are you already looking for your next meal ticket?"
He snarled the words, treating me like a cheap whore. When I defended myself, he pulled out a silk handkerchief and wiped his fingers, acting as if my very touch contaminated him.
Then, he coldly ordered his assistant to draft my termination papers.
Five years of risking my life for him, thrown away like garbage just because of his twisted ego.
Devastated, I ran out and collapsed in the hallway, sobbing uncontrollably until a kind coworker gently pulled me into his arms to comfort me.
I didn't know Barron had followed me out.
Seeing me clinging to another man, his legendary control completely shattered, replaced by a dark, violent possessiveness.
But it was too late. I was done playing his obedient dog, and it was time to take Cassidy up on his offer.

8.4
I had just been brutally fired from my corporate firm, stripped of my career and dignity in a matter of minutes.
Before I could even process the loss, I was handed a brown envelope that shattered my reality. My billionaire sister, who had ruthlessly cut me out of her life fifteen years ago, had committed suicide.
She left behind a fifteen-year-old son I never knew existed, a $300 million trust, and a $3 million stipend for me to act as his guardian. But her suicide note contained a terrifying, desperate warning scrawled in tearing ink.
"DO NOT INVESTIGATE MY DEATH. Accept what I've given you. Protect my son. Forget I existed."
I met the boy, Elon. He crashed his bike into me on the street, bleeding and crying, begging me not to abandon him. Pity and fifteen years of guilt overwhelmed me. I sat in the sprawling office of her elite estate lawyer and signed my life away to protect this innocent, grieving child.
Why did my sister suddenly reach out after a decade and a half of cold silence? What kind of monster was she running from that drove her to such a desperate end? I thought I was honoring her final wish by taking the boy in.
But as the elevator doors were closing, I caught their reflection in the polished steel.
My terrified, weeping nephew stopped crying instantly. He turned and exchanged a chilling, imperceptible nod with the lawyer.
That silent look said everything. The first move was complete.
I hadn't just inherited a child. I had walked straight into a meticulously planned trap.

7.9
On my eighteenth birthday, the celestial pact hiding my aura finally expired. I stood on the rotting steps of the trailer, watching my foster family celebrate my eviction like they’d won the lottery. Brenda threw a liability waiver at me to sign, ensuring I’d never ask for a dime of their welfare checks again. Worse, her daughter Regina stood there smirking, flaunting the heirloom emerald bracelet she’d stolen from my secret stash—unaware it was a spiritual artifact soaked in fifty years of blood magic. "Consider it payment for room and board, freak," Regina sneered, forcing the silver band over her wrist. They thought they were discarding a burden. They didn't realize I was the only dam holding back a tidal wave of their own bad karma. As I signed the papers, voluntarily severing our ties, the air pressure plummeted. The bracelet began to constrict like a snake, turning Regina’s flesh a necrotic purple as the protection I offered vanished. Before they could scream, a matte black helicopter bearing the Sterling Industries crest descended onto the muddy lawn, blowing their plastic lawn chairs into the neighbor's yard. A man in a bespoke charcoal suit stepped out, ignoring the filth to bow before me. He looked at my terrified foster family and announced, "We are here to retrieve the Sterling heiress." I smiled at Regina, whose arm was already beginning to rot, and whispered, "Keep the bracelet. You'll need it to pay for the amputation."

7.2
I was dying in a rusted warehouse, paralyzed in a wheelchair while the man I loved and my own stepsister watched with smiles on their faces. The air smelled of old oil and damp concrete, and my vision was fading into a milky haze.
Dillon, the man I’d sacrificed everything for, smoothed his custom suit and pulled out a syringe filled with a clear, lethal neurotoxin. Beside him, my stepsister Bianca toyed with my mother’s sapphire ring—the one they’d just pried off my hand while I was too weak to even make a fist.
She leaned in and whispered that my father’s trust fund was already offshore and that they’d sent my husband, Kade, to the wrong coordinates to ensure he’d only find my corpse. Dillon slid the needle into my vein with the chilling efficiency of a man who had done this before.
"This will stop your heart in thirty seconds," he said, sounding as bored as if he were explaining a tax form. Ice flooded my chest, and my lungs seized, fighting for oxygen that wasn't there. As the warehouse lights blurred into white streaks, an explosion echoed in the distance. Kade had come for me, but he was too late.
I died staring at the ceiling, my heart giving one last violent kick of pure, unadulterated hatred. I had been such a fool, believing Dillon’s lies and running away from the only man who actually cared for me. I died with a single thought: if I ever get another chance, I will drag you both to hell with me.
Then, there was nothing. And then, there was air.
I sat up gasping, my silk pajamas drenched in cold sweat. The rusted beams were gone, replaced by a vaulted ceiling and the glittering Manhattan skyline. I grabbed the digital clock on the nightstand—it was five years ago, the exact night I first tried to run away with Dillon.
The bedroom door slammed against the wall, and Kade Mullen stood in the doorway, looking dangerous, furious, and very much alive. I looked at my shaking hands, then at the man I had once hated. This time, I wasn't going to run. I was going to make sure Dillon and Bianca lost everything.