
His Two Wives
When Dawn Collins agrees to marry a stranger, love is the last thing on her mind.
All she wants is to protect her siblings and give them a better life. But fate leads her into the arms of Adam Manchester-a man whose heart belongs to a wife lying in a coma.
As Dawn slowly melts the ice around Adam's heart, she begins to believe that maybe, just maybe, love can bloom from sacrifice.
But on the night she's ready to claim her happiness, Adam's wife wakes up.
Now, caught between guilt, love, and heartbreak, Dawn must decide whether to fight for the man she's grown to love... or walk away from the life she risked everything to build.
Because some hearts never let go-and some love stories were never meant to have an easy ending.
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Chapter 5
The phone on the counter buzzed again and again. Alex's fingers hovered over it, then snatched it up, then dropped it. Dawn's name filled the screen. Missed calls stacking like worry. She paced behind the counter, the pizzeria's oven heat doing little to warm the knot in her chest.
The manager stormed in as if the door were a battleground. "Tell your friend not to bother coming here because she's fired!" he barked, then stomped away.
Alex's smile fell apart into something raw and small. Confusion bunched her brows; then worry folded itself into the lines around her mouth. Dawn wasn't just late, she'd vanished from every plan Alex had for the afternoon. Was she sick? Had something happened?
* * * * * *
Dawn and Daphne raced through the city like two ships in a storm. Dawn's breath ragged in the cold, Daphne's heels clicking like a metronome of panic. They asked everyone they could: cab drivers, delivery boys, the security guard outside a shuttered store. Each "no" was a small blade.
Then Daphne's voice broke, "Adam!" and she closed the distance in two hasty steps, wrapping him in an embrace that looked like desperation disguised as relief. Tears cut tracks down her face. Dawn came up behind them and lay a steadying hand on Daphne's back, the touch saying what words couldn't.
Back inside the house, Daphne's fear turned rough and loud. "What were you planning on doing? Leaving me alone in this world?" Her voice cracked halfway through the sentence, grief and fury braided together.
Adam was hollowed out, eyes distant. He sat like someone who'd been waiting inside a locked room for too long. Dawn could see it: the man's spirit wasn't where his body sat. The temptation to give up, an ugly, whispering tide, had been close enough to touch.
"Can I have a word with him?" Dawn asked, quieting her own racing heart.
"Please. Be my guest," Daphne snapped, and stalked off to her room.
Dawn sat beside Adam. She reached, then pulled her hand back, unsure how to reach a man whose hands were full of someone else's memory.
"Hi," she tried, the greeting thin and human.
Silence answered.
She tried again, softer: "This isn't your fault. You're doing your best."
"My best isn't enough." He rose, retreating into his room, leaving Dawn with the weight of questions that didn't have permission to be asked yet.
She checked her phone. Alex had been calling all afternoon. Dawn slipped out the door without a coat, breath clouding in the winter air as she ran.
* * * * * *
The bell over the pizzeria door jingled and Dawn shoved it open, lungs burning.
"My uniform...where is it?" she demanded, voice rough.
Alex didn't have to say the words. She could see it in the manager's face. Dawn had been fired.
It would have been a blow once. But tonight felt different. Maybe it was the adrenaline, or the way scaled-up wealth felt like borrowed air. She gave Alex a small smile, it was half brave, half brittle.
"Don't worry about me. I'll be fine."
Alex worried the corner of the apron between her fingers. "Are you sure?"
Dawn blinked and let the worry in. "I promise. I'm fine." She hugged Alex, a brief, honest hold, and stepped back out into the cold.
* * * * * *
Back at the apartment, groceries still on the counter, a knock came sharp, official. Dawn's stomach flipped.
Two strangers stood at the door: polite, professional, names clipped into their introductions. Child Protective Services.
"We received a call concerning the welfare of the children in this household," the woman said, voice even but not unkind.
Dawn felt her throat go dry. Peige. The thought was a hot coal in her mouth.
"The kids are safe," Dawn said, shoulders straightening. "I'm their guardian."
"Do you have documentation?" the man asked.
She pictured the guardianship papers, folded in a drawer at the landlord's office. She'd planned to fetch them, but life had exploded, and survival had louder priorities.
"They're with me," she lied-truth stretched thin at the edges. "Just... not here."
The woman's face softened for a moment, then professionalism returned. "Without documentation we can't verify guardianship. We need that paperwork as soon as possible."
"And employment?" the man added bluntly. "How are you supporting the children?"
Dawn's mouth went dry. The pizza job was gone, and the Manchester arrangement-what could she tell them about that? Truth would invite more questions than answers.
"Miss Collins, this isn't a removal order yet," the woman said, voice steady. "But unless we receive proof of guardianship and stable income within ten days, we'll have to initiate foster placement."
Ten days. The words struck like a hammer.
From the staircase, Amy's small face appeared, wide and frightened. "Dawn... are they taking us away?"
Dawn dropped to her knees and brushed a crumb of hair from Amy's forehead. "Not if I can help it. I promise."
But inside, fear had teeth.
* * * * * *
At the hospital, Daphne and Adam sat vigil by Ava's bed. Daphne's hand was a lifeline in Adam's grasp.
"Everything's going to be okay," she whispered, though even her whisper shook. "She'd want you to live, to love."
Adam's jaw clenched so hard it ached. "Move on? There's no life without Ava." The words scattered between them like broken glass.
Dawn, elsewhere in the house, made another promise. This one to Amy that they'd shop for New Year's together, that nothing and no one would take them apart. The vows were small and stubborn, the way light is stubborn in a room that's been dark for too long.
* * * * * *
Rage propelled Dawn to Mr. Harrow's door. No answer. She huffed and kept going, Peige, next. Her fist hit the door hard enough that the sound echoed.
Peige opened it with a measured, smug smile and a wineglass still in her hand. "To what do I owe this visit?"
Dawn looked at her and the words spilled out: anger, fear, exhaustion braided into a single rope of sound. "You called CPS. You've been scheming. I will not be played."
Peige's smile never left her lips. "Pipe down, Dawn. You're beginning to sound like your mother. I'm not her."
A flare of fury and grief rose in Dawn's throat. "If you were my mother, I'd have ended things long ago," she spat. "I despise you. When your downfall comes, I'll be dancing."
Dawn stalked away, breath ragged in the cold night air. She felt small and dangerous at once-the kind of combination that can change everything or break it.
She walked home slower this time, listening to the city breathe around her. Ten days was a deadline. The fight had just begun.
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9.3
She sells flowers. He spills blood. And he will stop at nothing to make her his. Elena Rossi has always lived quietly among roses and lilies, dreaming of love as gentle as the petals she arranges. She thought she found it in Daniel, the man she planned to marry. Until her wedding day when a dangerous stranger walked into the church and shattered everything. Adrian Volkov is a king in the underworld, a man feared for his ruthlessness and power. But to him, Elena is not just a prize. She is an obsession. A storm he cannot live without. And he will burn the world and anyone in it, to claim her. Torn from the life she knew, Elena resists him, manipulates him, and even runs from him. But Adrian is relentless. His love is dark, his touch both punishing and tender, and his obsession inescapable. When betrayal and bloodshed close in, Elena must face the truth: She doesn't just fear him. She doesn't just hate him. She loves him. Petals and Blood is a haunting, passionate tale of obsession, betrayal, and the dangerous kind of love that blooms in shadows.

7.6
Dumped by her fiancé just days before their wedding, only to watch him marry someone else-what would you do? Cry yourself to sleep, or dress to kill for revenge?
That was Elaina's reality. She's no Cinderella, yet she lost a shoe while recklessly crashing her ex's wedding. Her revenge plan went up in flames, but fate had other ideas, throwing her into the path of Alister-a man who is handsome, charismatic, and dangerous... and ironically, the person closest to her ex-fiancé.
Amidst heartbreak and vendettas, Alister paints her world in new colors, turning Elaina into a modern-day Cinderella. But will this story end in "happily ever after," or is Alister merely leading her into a much more dangerous game?

8.3
My husband watched as my skin melted, scalded by boiling soup, yet his hands were busy comforting my attacker. Five years of marriage, built on a foundation of my family's power, crumbled with a single, brutal act of betrayal. He bought me off with a penthouse and a trust fund, but I tore out my IV and threw his charity back in his face.
It was our fifth anniversary, but my husband, Ethan, remained distant, avoiding any talk of Chicago or the mafia protection my family once offered him. He then pushed a black velvet box across the table.
Inside was a Separation and Property Division Agreement, not a diamond. He told me to sign for Ilene's security, offering millions. When I refused, Ilene hurled boiling soup. Ethan shielded her, not me, as the scalding liquid melted my dress.
With second-degree burns, he blamed me, ordering me from our home for Ilene’s comfort. My family saved him, yet he sacrificed my body and marriage for another woman.
The love I felt turned to ash. What kind of debt demanded my flesh and marriage?
I ripped the IV from my arm, hurling his "charity" keys back. My diamond ring placed on the agreement, I walked away. From today on, Ethan, you and I are dead to each other.

7.2
Allie Patterson poured fifteen years into her husband Grayson’s tech startup, living in a cramped San Jose apartment. Every penny, every late night coding session, was for their shared future, built on his constant claims the company struggled, always on the verge of its big break.
Then, a grant deed arrived: a stunning $4.2 million Atherton villa, paid in full, listing Grayson and an unknown Kacey Schmidt as joint tenants.
Her coffee mug shattered as Allie’s world imploded. Driving to the mansion, she found Kacey in silk pajamas, flaunting a massive pink diamond and, beneath it, Grayson’s grandmother’s heirloom ring – the one he’d tearfully claimed to have lost years ago.
Kacey purred, "He's in the shower. We were so tired last night."
The words were a serrated knife, twisting, confirming years of lies.
Humiliation and rage burned out, leaving a terrifying, absolute silence. All her sacrifice and trust were a cruel, elaborate joke, orchestrated by the man she loved.
Allie calmly took photos, then gave herself one minute in her beat-up car to mourn. When it passed, her tears stopped, replaced by cold, calculated murder in her eyes. She typed a text to Grayson:
"Come home early tonight. I have a surprise for you."

9.6
My world revolved around Jax Harding, my older brother's captivating rockstar friend.
From sixteen, I adored him; at eighteen, I clung to his casual promise: "When you're 22, maybe I'll settle down."
That offhand comment became my life's beacon, guiding every choice, meticulously planning my twenty-second birthday as our destiny.
But on that pivotal day in a Lower East Side bar, clutching my gift, my dream exploded.
I overheard Jax' s cold voice: "Can't believe Savvy's showing up. She' s still hung up on that stupid thing I said."
Then the crushing plot: "We' re gonna tell Savvy I' m engaged to Chloe, maybe even hint she' s pregnant. That should scare her off."
My gift, my future, slipped from my numb fingers.
I fled into the cold New York rain, devastated by betrayal.
Later, Jax introduced Chloe as his "fiancée" while his bandmates mocked my "adorable crush"-he did nothing.
As an art installation fell, he saved Chloe, abandoning me to severe injury.
In the hospital, he came for "damage control," then shockingly shoved me into a fountain, leaving me to bleed, calling me a "jealous psycho."
How could the man I loved, who once saved me, become this cruel and publicly humiliate me?
Why was my devotion seen as an annoyance to be brutally extinguished with lies and assault?
Was I just a problem, my loyalty met with hatred?
I would not be his victim.
Injured and betrayed, I made an unshakeable vow: I was done.
I blocked his number and everyone connected to him, severing ties.
This was not an escape; this was my rebirth.
Florence awaited, a new life on my terms, unburdened by broken promises.

9.4
I was a New York photographer, but I woke up under the brutal sun of the African savanna.
Worse, I wasn't human. I was trapped in the body of a male cheetah, with two starving cubs clinging to my fur, telepathically calling me "Mom."
But I am a real man!
To keep my adopted sons alive, I had to fight hyenas and dodge rogue lions. But the real nightmare was my bizarre survival mechanism. Under extreme threat, I would uncontrollably shift back into my human form—stark, undeniably naked. I was forced to sprint across the plains with my bare skin exposed, carrying two cubs while escaping furious lionesses. I became a freak, the most confusing and humiliating legend of the animal kingdom.
Covered in bloody scratches and mud, I was pushed to the brink of despair. Why was I thrown into this beast's body? Why did my only defense mechanism involve profound social death?
Just when I barely survived a cliff dive to escape the lions, my path was blocked by two massive, highly intelligent prime male cheetahs.
But the alpha, Bradley, didn't want to kill me for my territory.
His intense gaze raked over my naked, bleeding human body with a dark, possessive hunger.
"You are full of surprises."
He purred smoothly, teaching me to magically summon a fur skirt before demanding I join his coalition.
"Oh, you'll come to me. I guarantee it."
Looking into his predatory eyes, I realized I was no longer just surviving the wild; I was the prey of a completely different kind of beast.