
His Ultimatum, Her Dying Heartbreak
My family and fiancé begged me to donate my last remaining kidney to my twin sister, Kyleigh. They didn't know I was already dying.
My fiancé, Axel, gave me an ultimatum.
"Donate the kidney, or I'll break our engagement and marry Kyleigh. It's her dying wish."
I agreed, only for them to frame me for plagiarism with my own thesis, forcing me to confess on camera. They never knew I was the one who secretly saved our father with my other kidney five years ago-a sacrifice Kyleigh had stolen all the credit for.
As they wheeled me into the operating room, they celebrated with Kyleigh, promising her a future built on my death. I was already a ghost to them.
But I died on the table. The surgeon, seeing the old surgical scar and the poison riddling my body, walked out to face them.
"This wasn't a donation," she announced, her voice cold as steel. "This was murder."
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Chapter 1
My family and fiancé begged me to donate my last remaining kidney to my twin sister, Kyleigh. They didn't know I was already dying.
My fiancé, Axel, gave me an ultimatum.
"Donate the kidney, or I'll break our engagement and marry Kyleigh. It's her dying wish."
I agreed, only for them to frame me for plagiarism with my own thesis, forcing me to confess on camera. They never knew I was the one who secretly saved our father with my other kidney five years ago-a sacrifice Kyleigh had stolen all the credit for.
As they wheeled me into the operating room, they celebrated with Kyleigh, promising her a future built on my death. I was already a ghost to them.
But I died on the table. The surgeon, seeing the old surgical scar and the poison riddling my body, walked out to face them.
"This wasn't a donation," she announced, her voice cold as steel. "This was murder."
Chapter 1
Jana Doyle POV:
The bitter truth was a quiet hum beneath my skin, a melody of inevitability. My life, meticulously crafted by others, was finally reaching its crescendo, not in triumph, but in a silent, tragic fade. It was a strange kind of peace, this surrender.
Axel walked into the sterile waiting room, his usually impeccably composed face now a mask of heavy concern. His eyes, normally sharp and calculating, were clouded with a torment that wasn' t for me. He looked at me, then past me, as if I were a ghost already.
"Jana," he began, his voice rough, "it's Kyleigh."
Of course, it was Kyleigh. It always was. Five years ago, her health issues had first cast a long shadow over our lives. Now, her remaining kidney was failing, a ticking clock that echoed the one inside me.
He didn't waste time with pleasantries. "She needs a kidney. Immediately." The words hung in the air, heavy and absolute, a demand rather than an plea.
My breath hitched. I knew this was coming. I' d seen it in my parents' strained smiles, in Kyleigh' s increasingly desperate pleas for attention. My sister, the fragile one, the golden child, needed saving again. And I was expected to be the savior.
Axel pulled a folded document from his jacket. It was a prenuptial agreement, but with a horrifying twist. "If you refuse, our engagement is off. I'll marry Kyleigh. It's her dying wish, Jana." His voice was low, but the threat was clear, cold steel. He would sacrifice me to fulfill a morbid fantasy, to play the hero to her damsel in distress.
Marry Kyleigh. The thought was a fresh wound, but my existing ones were too deep to let it truly sting. I was already dying. What did a broken engagement matter when my own breath was a borrowed gift?
"Axel," I said, my voice barely a whisper, "you know the risks. She's delicate. Time is critical." I was talking about Kyleigh, but the words felt like a cruel joke, a twisted echo of my own silent countdown.
He leaned closer, his voice laced with a desperate urgency. "This is her last chance, Jana. She won't make it without you. You're strong. You always have been." His words were a balm, a poison, a testament to how little he truly saw.
"Your parents... they agree," he added, his gaze flicking away. "They say it's your duty. For the family." That was a familiar refrain, one that had played on an endless loop for as long as I could remember. My duty. My sacrifice.
His hand reached for mine, a gesture that once meant comfort, now felt like a leash. "Jana, I love you," he whispered, his thumb caressing my knuckles. "I do. Just... just get through this. After Kyleigh is well, after... after this is all over, we'll be together. I promise."
The words tasted like ash. After Kyleigh is well. After I am gone. Did he even hear himself? He was promising a future that had no room for me, built on a foundation of my imminent demise.
I remembered the quiet agony of five years ago, my father' s fading strength, the frantic search for a donor. I remembered the hushed conversations, the desperate prayers. And I remembered stepping forward, anonymously. My body still bore the scar, a silent testament to a sacrifice no one knew I' d made.
I had only one kidney left. My kidney. The other was beating in my father' s chest.
My family, blinded by their adoration for Kyleigh, had always viewed her as Fred' s savior. They had praised her "bravery," her "selflessness," never once questioning the convenient narrative. If I told them the truth now, they would simply dismiss it as malice, as a twisted attempt to steal Kyleigh' s glory. They had done it before.
When I tried, once, years ago, to hint at my own contribution, their dismissal was swift and sharp.
"Jana, don't be ridiculous," my mother, Joyce, had snapped, her eyes wide with feigned offense. "Kyleigh was so brave. You were... well, you were just being difficult, as usual."
My father, Fred, had added, "Don't be ungrateful. Your sister saved my life. You just stood there, so selfish."
The words were a physical blow, a dull ache that resonated in my chest. They painted me as resentful, jealous, unfeeling.
They had thrown me out that day, not with a bang, but a chilling quiet. "Go on then," Joyce had said, waving a dismissive hand. "If you can't be supportive, you can leave."
And Axel, my Axel, had been there. He had found me, a lost, broken thing, and he had promised to be my sanctuary. But even he, in his misguided loyalty, had called me "ungrateful" for challenging Kyleigh's narrative. He saw my pain as a flaw, my voice as a complaint.
Now, here he was, asking me to perform the ultimate sacrifice, again, with my last vital organ. And I was so tired. The illness, this insidious poison stealing my life, had worn me down to a fragile husk. The fight had long since left me.
I looked at Axel, at the desperation in his eyes, at the way his hand trembled slightly on mine, not with love for me, but with fear for Kyleigh. A ghost of a smile touched my lips, a bitter, private acknowledgment. They would never understand. They never had.
"I'll do it," I said, my voice flat, devoid of emotion. "I'll donate."
Axel' s head snapped up, his eyes widening. Relief flooded his face, quickly followed by a triumphant glint. He stared at me, astonished, as if I had just pulled a miracle from thin air. He hadn't expected me to agree, not without a fight. He hadn't known how truly broken I was.
"Jana!" he exclaimed, his voice thick with gratitude. He crushed me in a hug, a desperate, almost painful embrace that was meant for his own relief, not for my comfort. "Thank you. Thank you so much. You're a lifesaver."
He pulled away, his eyes shining, and then, without a word, he snatched up the prenuptial agreement. He tore it in half, then again, the sound a sharp rip in the quiet room. The pieces fluttered to the floor like discarded promises. My fate was sealed. The contract dissolved, but my death sentence remained.
The next few hours were a blur of frantic activity. I was whisked away, a mere commodity, a spare part. My parents arrived, a flurry of agitated whispers and worried glances directed solely at Kyleigh' s room. They didn't even look at me as I was prepped for surgery.
Joyce, my mother, rushed to Kyleigh' s bedside, collapsing into a chair, tears streaming down her face. "My poor baby," she sobbed, clutching Kyleigh' s hand. "You'll be okay. You have to be."
Fred, my father, his face etched with worry, paced the hallway, barking orders at nurses, demanding updates. "She's strong," he kept repeating, as if to convince himself. "She'll pull through. Our family will be whole again."
He returned with the consent forms, his pen already poised. He signed quickly, without a second glance at the details, his focus entirely on the perceived outcome for Kyleigh.
Then, he looked at me, a flicker of something in his eyes-not genuine concern, but a distant, almost perfunctory acknowledgment.
"You're being so mature, Jana," he said, patting my arm, a gesture devoid of warmth. "This is what family does. We look out for each other."
Mature. A word they used when I complied.
"We know we haven't always been... fair," Joyce added, dabbing her eyes. "But Kyleigh needed us more. She was always so fragile. You were always so independent." It was their usual excuse, a thinly veiled justification for decades of neglect.
"Don't worry," Fred interjected, pulling out his wallet. He waved a credit card. "Your share of the family trust is still yours. This doesn't change anything, financially."
"I don't want it," I said, my voice dull. The words felt foreign, even to me. What good was money when I was signing away my life?
Joyce stared at me, her eyes narrowing. "Jana, don't be ungrateful. That's a substantial amount. It' s for your future."
But I had no future. The poison in my blood ensured that. The world seemed to tilt, blurring at the edges. My body was a battlefield, and the war was nearly lost.
My mind drifted, five years back. The hospital corridor, the hushed fear. Fred, lying pale and still, waiting for a kidney. Kyleigh, my twin, suddenly hailed as a hero, her "sacrifice" whispered with awe. Her scar, a thin, perfect line from a cosmetic surgeon, became the emblem of her selflessness. And my scar, deep and ragged, the one that truly saved him, remained unseen, unknown.
From that day, Kyleigh became untouchable. Every whim, every complaint, every fabricated illness amplified. She accused me of mocking Dad' s condition, of being jealous of her "bravery." My parents believed her, their golden child, without question.
"Jana, you're just trying to hurt your sister," Joyce would sigh, whenever I tried to speak.
"Why can't you be more like Kyleigh?" Fred would demand, his voice laced with disappointment.
I stopped fighting. It was easier to disappear, to become the silent shadow they expected me to be.
Now, in the pre-op room, they gathered around Kyleigh's bed, a tableau of love and concern. Joyce stroked Kyleigh's hair, Fred held her hand, Axel sat on the edge of the bed, his gaze fixed on my sister with an intensity that burned. They laughed, hushed and nervous, shared private jokes, whispered words of encouragement.
I stood by the window, a silent sentinel, watching the last rays of sun bleed across the sky. I was on the brink of giving my life, yet I was utterly alone, an invisible presence in my own tragedy.
They don't even see me. The thought was a dull throb, a truth that no longer stung, only resonated with an empty echo. I was a means to an end, a forgotten sacrifice.
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9.4
My brother and his wife slapped the contract on the table, forcing me to marry Alpha Stone. He was a cruel monster known for breaking his mates' bones, and I was just the price for a new trade route.
Right before I surrendered, the legendary Blackwood Pack arrived. But they didn't offer a glorious rescue. They claimed I was the fated mate of Kaelan, a disgraced, wolfless Omega.
My family laughed in my face, eagerly taking the dowry and throwing me out like garbage. They mocked my miserable future, sending me off to a crumbling shack in the woods. When they later summoned us back to publicly demand a humiliating "tribute" to bleed us dry, they waited for me to break.
"Couldn't handle life in a shack with an Omega? Come crawling back already?" my sister-in-law sneered.
But I refused to let them shame him. I didn't understand why the Moon Goddess gave me an Omega, but Kaelan was kind, giving me the only bed while he slept on the cold floor. Why did my family value a cruel Alpha over a gentle soul? I declared to their faces that his loyal spirit was worth more than any title.
Then, a vicious rogue wolf threatened us at the local market.
My "wolfless" husband stepped in front of me and grabbed the rogue's wrist.
Suddenly, a suffocating, terrifying Alpha King's aura exploded from Kaelan, bringing the rogue to his knees in pure terror.
I stared at my quiet, supposedly weak mate in absolute shock. Who exactly did I marry?

9.3
She thought their love could survive anything. She was wrong.
For five years, Amara Hayes was the perfect wife - loyal, gentle, and endlessly forgiving. She believed her husband, Ethan Blackwell, when he said his late nights were for business. She trusted him when he swore his heart was hers.
Until the night she walked into his office and saw him making love to another woman.
Humiliated, heartbroken, and betrayed, Amara left without a word - leaving behind her wedding ring, her identity, and the man who destroyed her faith in love.
Three years later, she returns to New York as a powerful businesswoman with a new name and a cold smile. She's no longer the naive wife he controlled - she's his rival, his downfall, and his punishment.
But Ethan isn't the same man either. He's haunted by the woman he lost and desperate for redemption. And when fate throws them together again, old flames reignite amid a storm of revenge, pain, and forbidden desire.
He once broke her heart. Now, she'll make him wish he never did.

9.3
"She's mine tonight, asshole, you had her last week." Zack, taller and broader, with those piercing blue eyes, shoved him back hard. "Fuck off, Zade. Her tight little pussy belongs wrapped around my dick." And then there was Mark, my stepdad, looming in the doorway like a goddamn predator, his arms crossed over his broad chest. "Both of you back the fuck off. I'm the man of the house and that sweet ass is mine to pound whenever I want."
❤️❤️❤️
Dive into this sizzling erotica collection of taboo tropes where forbidden flames erupt in shadows of power and secrecy. Stepfamily sparks fly between a seductive step sis and stepbrothers under one tense roof. Mythical beasts knot with innocent human girls in primal forest trysts. A mafia kingpin claims a pure-hearted nun in a ruthless game of dominance. Captor hunts prey in a thrilling chase of possession. "Dad's Best Friend" awakens cravings in his ally's daughter, shattering loyalty. "Boss x Stripper" ignites when an executive ensnares his hypnotic dancer in high-stakes control. "Professor X Student," where forbidden mentorship spirals into obsessive bonds in lecture halls after dark. "Coach x Cheerleader," rigorous drills turn into steamy locker room rituals after hours. "Priest x Parishioner," sacred confessions unravel into sinful midnight vows.
Read if you're ready for some heat.

9.2
Celestia woke up heavily sedated, her wrists bound tightly to the legs of a grand piano in a cold, opulent room.
Before she could even process the panic, a towering billionaire named Sterling Sinclair IV stepped in, looking at her like a possessed piece of art.
The head maid then handed Celestia a thick surrogacy contract with her perfectly forged signature.
"You are here to bear an heir for Mr. Sinclair," the maid stated flatly.
Celestia screamed that they had the wrong person, but her desperate cries bounced uselessly off the soundproof walls.
Stripped of her clothes, phone, and identity, she was trapped on an isolated island surrounded by high-voltage electric fences and armed guards.
When she furiously fought back, Sterling physically overpowered her, punishing her resistance with brutal, terrifying dominance until she lost consciousness on the marble floor.
She didn't understand who had kidnapped her from her normal life.
Why was her biometric data perfectly faked in a classified dossier?
Who had framed her as a willing, ten-million-dollar premium product for a ruthless billionaire?
Driven by pure survival, Celestia began aggressively consuming raw garlic and bathing in harsh white vinegar to destroy her fertility and repel his touch.
And when Sterling finally reviewed her bizarre, self-sabotaging dietary logs, the terrifying truth hit his calculating mind like a physical blow.
The broken, innocent woman he had been brutally tormenting all week was never his hired surrogate.

7.4
"Take them off yourself, or I will do it for you."
Ten sessions. Two hundred thousand dollars. Her brother's life for her body.
Dr. Avery St. Clair signed a contract in blood. To save her family, she has to fix the mind of Obsidian City's most feared monster, Dominic Kessler. He's a Mafia Don rotting from the inside out. A bullet gave him C-PTSD and a touch so sensitive he can't stand being touched. Avery is the only antidote who can calm him down. So he locked her in his villa.
But Dominic is playing a game he's already lost.
He doesn't know Avery is the woman from seven years ago. The stranger who saved him on that dark gambling ship and disappeared before sunrise.
He doesn't know the scar on his wrist is burned into her memory.
And most of all, he doesn't know the autistic little girl hiding in her clinic is his own daughter.
While Avery hides the truth behind her professional mask, their little girl feels his every nightmare. Every flashback. Every crack in his monster mask.
When the secrets finally come out, his empire will fall. He'll lose his sight. His throne. The only woman who ever made him feel human.
To win her back, he'll have to destroy the monster he became. And help her burn down the man who murdered her parents.
She won't make it easy.
This is not a love story. It's a monster learning to beg.
Why read this?
Obsessive Mafia Hero
Secret Baby with an Autistic and Gifted Daughter
Identity Reveal
"Touch Her And You Die" Energy
Massive Groveling and Revenge
A Heroine Who Fights Back
No Cheating. Happy Ending Guaranteed.

7.2
The Ghost Who Guarded Me isn't your typical second-chance romance. It's the kind where the hero doesn't just break the heroine's heart. He puts a bullet in her shoulder. He leaves her for dead in a desert grave. He lets her believe he chose evil over her.
And he does it all to keep her alive.
The Reckoning
When the club discovers Catalina is alive, Cade reaches her first. He offers the only protection he can give: marriage. In the MC world, a wife is untouchable. Harm her and you declare war.
She agrees for her daughter. Not for him.
Living together, she discovers the truth: his safe holds five years of evidence, all prepared for her reckoning. His cruelty was never cruelty. It was the only way to keep her alive.
Now she must decide if understanding is the same as forgiveness.
And the club is already coming for them both.
The Premise
Catalina Salazar was the daughter of a motorcycle club president, a good man who believed in honor, even among outlaws. When her father dies under suspicious circumstances, Catalina becomes a target. The club needs a scapegoat for a federal investigation. She's convenient. Expendable.
Cade Reyes is the man she loves. He's also the club's rising enforcer. When the vote comes down, he faces an impossible choice: defend her and die beside her, or condemn her publicly and pray she survives.
He chooses condemnation.
In front of the entire club, he calls her a traitor. He volunteers to execute her. He puts a bullet in her shoulder deliberately and dumps her in a mass grave with a corpse to explain the blood.
He leaves her a bag: water, cash, a map, a passport.
She wakes among the dead. She walks out of the desert. She crosses the river alone.
She doesn't know he planned it. She only knows he chose them over her.
The Five Years
Catalina builds a new life in Texas. She discovers she's pregnant. She raises their daughter alone. She builds an embroidery business from nothing, one stitch at a time. She learns to survive without him.
Cade stays inside the club. He becomes the president's most trusted weapon while secretly collecting evidence against the men who killed Catalina's father and framed his daughter. He doesn't know she survived. He doesn't know about their child. He only knows he has to finish what he started.