
Husband's Lies, Mistress's Son
My world crumbled when I saw my husband, Arthur, across the street with his mistress, Karin, and a son who was his spitting image. For years, he' d told me he wasn' t ready for a family. It was all a lie.
But the true horror began at my own awards ceremony.
Karin' s son, coached to hate me, rushed the stage and attacked me. The assault caused me to miscarry the baby Arthur swore he never wanted. As I lay bleeding on the stage, my husband didn't help.
He shoved me aside, his eyes blazing with fury.
"You monster!" he roared, scooping up his son and leaving me shattered in front of everyone.
Later, Karin cornered me, her voice a triumphant whisper. "I made sure you'd lose the baby." Then, she pushed me off a cliff into the churning ocean below.
But I didn't die. A fisherman pulled me from the water, broken but alive. As the world mourned the "accidental drowning" of Elenora Dawson, I made a call to the Vienna Conservatory.
"I accept."
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Chapter 1
My world crumbled when I saw my husband, Arthur, across the street with his mistress, Karin, and a son who was his spitting image. For years, he' d told me he wasn' t ready for a family. It was all a lie.
But the true horror began at my own awards ceremony.
Karin' s son, coached to hate me, rushed the stage and attacked me. The assault caused me to miscarry the baby Arthur swore he never wanted. As I lay bleeding on the stage, my husband didn't help.
He shoved me aside, his eyes blazing with fury.
"You monster!" he roared, scooping up his son and leaving me shattered in front of everyone.
Later, Karin cornered me, her voice a triumphant whisper. "I made sure you'd lose the baby." Then, she pushed me off a cliff into the churning ocean below.
But I didn't die. A fisherman pulled me from the water, broken but alive. As the world mourned the "accidental drowning" of Elenora Dawson, I made a call to the Vienna Conservatory.
"I accept."
Chapter 1
My world crumbled around me, not with a bang, but with the soft laughter of my husband, Arthur, holding another woman's hand and a child who looked exactly like him.
The coffee shop was bustling. Sunlight streamed through the large windows, illuminating dust motes dancing in the air. I was supposed to be lost in my latest composition, but my eyes snagged on a scene across the street. A quaint little park, a carousel spinning. And there he was. Arthur. Unmistakable.
He was laughing, a genuine, unrestrained sound I hadn't heard in years. His arm was wrapped around a sleek, dark-haired woman. Her head was tilted back, her smile wide. In his other arm, a small boy, perhaps four years old, was cradled. The boy' s hair was the same rich auburn as Arthur' s. His eyes, even from this distance, held the same mischievous glint.
My blood ran cold.
I knew that woman. Karin Kirby. The sharp, media-savvy political pundit. Her face was splashed across news channels regularly. What was she doing with Arthur? And that child... that little boy. He was a miniature Arthur. A perfect, terrifying replica. My heart hammered against my ribs, a frantic bird trying to escape its cage.
They looked like a family. A complete, happy, undisturbed unit. The kind of family Arthur had always said he wasn't ready for. "Elenora, darling," he'd purr, his voice a low rumble, "my career is just taking off. A child now would be unfair to them, unfair to us." He'd held my hand, his thumb tracing circles on my skin, his eyes full of what I thought was genuine regret.
Lies. All of it. Every late-night meeting, every "urgent" political crisis, every canceled dinner. They weren't political. They were family dinners. They were bedtime stories. They were a life I had yearned for, a life he had built with someone else.
My hands began to tremble. The pen slipped from my fingers, clattering onto the table. No one noticed. They were all too busy with their own lives, their own happy, uncomplicated worlds.
Then, the little boy, Leo, pointed a sticky finger. Not at the carousel, not at a balloon vendor. At me. He giggled, pulling away from Arthur' s grasp and darting towards the coffee shop entrance.
Before I could react, he was inside. He slammed into my table, sending my latte flying. Hot, milky liquid splashed across my pristine white blouse, soaking into the delicate silk. My composition papers, covered in nascent melodies, were ruined.
"Oopsie!" Leo chirped, his innocent face alight with mischief.
Karin rushed in, a practiced look of concern on her face. "Leo, darling, what have you done?" Her eyes, however, found mine. They were cold, calculating. A silent challenge.
"Oh, it's you," she said, her voice dripping with mock surprise, loud enough for a few patrons to turn. "Elenora, isn't it? Arthur's… wife." The word 'wife' was a venomous whisper, an insult. "Such a clumsy boy. He just gets so excited around new people. Especially... composers." Her gaze flickered to my ruined papers. A cruel, knowing smile played on her lips.
The humiliation burned. My cheeks flushed crimson. My mind screamed at me to fight, to rage. But my body froze. Numbness spread through my limbs, replacing the frantic hammering of my heart. I just wanted to disappear.
I mumbled an apology-an apology!-and scrambled out of the coffee shop, leaving my ruined work, my shattered composure, and a lifetime of lies behind. The fresh air hit me like a physical blow, but it couldn't cool the fire raging inside.
Later that evening, numb and hollow, I found myself pacing our shared study. Arthur' s desk was meticulously organized, as always. But something glinted under a stack of policy briefs. A small, silver frame. I picked it up.
It was a picture of Arthur, Karin, and Leo. Arm in arm, smiling broadly. Taken on a beach, a sunset painting the sky in vibrant hues. A perfect family vacation. He'd told me he was at a political conference in D.C. that week. The date was clearly visible on the back of the photo. It was two years ago. Two years of perfect, happy lies.
The betrayal was a physical weight, pressing down on my chest until I could barely breathe. My world didn't just crumble; it dissolved into a toxic, bitter fog.
But something else stirred beneath the pain. A flicker. A memory. The deferred residency at the Vienna Conservatory. A dream I' d put on hold for Arthur. For us. I had told myself it wasn't the right time. Now, it was the only time.
I pulled out my phone, my fingers still trembling, but with a new kind of resolve. I found the old email, the one offering me the chance of a lifetime. I typed a reply. "I accept."
The next afternoon, a text from Arthur popped up on my screen: "Hey, gorgeous. Wrapping up a meeting. Looks like I'll be late for dinner. Campaign donors are a handful, you know? Love you."
My stomach churned. Rage, cold and sharp, cut through the numbness. He was lying again. Still lying. I knew where he was. He was at a charity gala, a glittering affair downtown for prominent political figures. He'd told me it was an optional, low-key event, too boring for me. But I saw the invitation on the counter this morning. It listed Karin Kirby as the keynote speaker.
I took a cab. The ballroom glittered, a sea of diamonds and designer suits. I spotted Arthur almost immediately. He was on stage, a practiced, charming smile plastered on his face as he introduced Karin. She was radiant, draped in emerald silk, her arm linked casually through his. He looked at her with an adoration that had once been reserved only for me.
My heart didn' t break this time. It turned to stone.
Karin took the microphone, her voice smooth and confident. "Arthur and I," she began, her gaze sweeping the room, lingering on Arthur, "have built something truly special together. A partnership, professionally and personally, that I cherish." Murmurs rippled through the crowd. This wasn't just about politics. This was a public declaration.
Then, she leaned into Arthur, her hand tracing the lapel of his tuxedo. She pulled him close. And she kissed him. Right there, on stage, under the blinding lights, for everyone to see. A long, lingering, possessive kiss.
The air left my lungs. Not from shock, but from the sheer, brutal finality of it.
After the speeches, a children's corner had been set up for the gala attendees' kids. Leo was there, dressed in a tiny tuxedo, looking precisely like a mini Arthur. He was playing with a toy train set, giggling maniacally. I watched him, a morbid curiosity guiding my feet closer. He picked up a small, hand-painted figurine. It was a woman with long, dark hair, wearing a white dress. It vaguely resembled me.
He held it up to Karin, who stood nearby, sipping champagne. "Mommy, look!" he chirped, "The ugly lady!" He giggled, then deliberately snapped the figurine in half, tossing the pieces onto the floor.
Karin glanced at me, a smirk playing on her lips. "Good job, sweetie," she cooed, ruffling his hair. "She was ugly anyway."
My vision blurred. I heard Karin' s voice, hushed but perfectly clear. She was kneeling beside Leo, whispering conspiratorially. "Remember, Leo, we don't want Elenora to ever be happy, do we? Not when we have Daddy all to ourselves." Leo nodded, his eyes bright with a chilling understanding. It wasn't just Arthur's betrayal. It was Karin's calculated cruelty.
I remembered Arthur' s whispered promises, the way he' d cradled my head against his chest, murmuring about our future. How could I have been so blind? Every tender touch, every loving gaze, every sweet word-it was all a performance. A carefully constructed facade to hide this grotesque reality.
My phone vibrated in my hand. Arthur. His name flashed on the screen, a cruel irony. I answered, my voice a flat line.
"Elenora, darling! Just leaving the gala," he said, his voice a little too cheerful, a little too loud. "Long night of schmoozing, you know how it is. Just wanted to say goodnight."
I closed my eyes. "Is that so, Arthur?"
"Absolutely, babe. Exhausting. Can't wait to be home, curl up with you."
Then, a child's voice, clear and unmistakable, cut through his forced cheer. "Daddy, don't forget my special night-night story!"
Silence. A beat. Two beats. Arthur's breath hitched. "Uh, Elenora, gotta go. Emergency. Work thing. Love you!" He hung up before I could respond.
I stood there, the receiver still pressed to my ear, listening to the dial tone. No, I wasn't just accepting the residency now. I was going to disappear. And I was never, ever coming back. I would take that offer, and I would leave him to his perfect little family.
I wouldn' t just go. I would vanish.
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8.4
Title: 365: The Architecture of Yearning
Five years. That's how long Sebastian Moretti has been a ghost, haunting the streets of London in search of the girl with green eyes who shattered his cold, Sicilian heart.
To the world, Sebastian is the "King of Shadows"-a man of ice, blood, and absolute power. But in the silence of his private villa, he is a man hollowed out by a single, obsessive memory. He didn't just want a woman; he wanted the soul of the girl who didn't even know his name.
When he finally takes her, he gives her a choice that feels like a sentence: 365 days to fall in love with him, or she goes free.
Elara Vance was a woman of logic, a quiet architect building a life out of glass and steel in London. She never expected to be the centerpiece of a mafia king's obsession. She should hate him for the gilded cage he's built for her. She should run from the darkness that follows him like a shroud.
But as the days bleed into nights, the lines between captive and queen begin to blur. Behind Sebastian's terrifying dominance is a raw, agonizing yearning that pulls at Elara's soul. In the heat of the Sicilian sun and the unfiltered intimacy of the midnight hours, she discovers that the man who stole her is the only one who truly sees her.
As a Russian war looms and betrayals surface from within, Elara must decide: is she a prisoner of his walls, or the architect of his heart?
In a world where every touch is a claim and every kiss is a battle, 365 days might not be enough. Because once the monster falls in love, he doesn't just want your time.
He wants your forever.

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?

8.1
HOSTILE OATH
8.1
Vivian bears the weight of an ancestral curse, a yoke forged in darkness, which was meant to be broken. A future ravaged by war and chaos loomed, threatening her destiny but Vivian's path was not yet set to answer to her inheritance. Ignorant of her true identity, she couldn't control the powers she possessed, losing loved ones in the process and consumed by self-guilt. Yet, from the ashes of despair, she felt the rage and determination to harness the powers consuming her in her shadow and forge a new path; maybe she could get back all she had lost in all possible ways she could.
Prophecy were made, and a formidable force stirred, rising to challenge her claim. When a greater threat arose, Vivian faced a brutal reality: prepare for battle or succumb to the shadows but there was a price to pay.
She was left with two options; reclaim her birthright or shatter the chains of destiny!

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.

7.8
I returned to Boston after three years, not for forgiveness, but to die.
My family, who blamed me for my mother's death, had cast me out, replacing me with a quiet, grateful orphan named Gabriela. She stole my father's love, my brother's affection, and my childhood sweetheart, Corey.
Now, terminally ill, my only wish was to reclaim my mother's wedding dress, a final piece of her to hold onto. But Gabriela was wearing it to marry Corey.
When I confronted her, she destroyed my mother's locket and cursed me to drop dead. In a blind rage, I slapped her. She shrieked, stabbed her own arm, and framed me for the attack.
As my family and Corey looked on with disgust, calling me a maniac, my body gave out. I collapsed, coughing up blood, my secret illness revealed in the most brutal way possible.
"You always blame me," I gasped, the words bubbling out with blood. "But I was just... dying."
Their faces filled with dawning horror, but it was too late. I was already gone.
Until I opened my eyes again, and my mother, who had been waiting for me all along, took my hand. "We'll be reborn," she promised, her eyes blazing with fury at the family who had destroyed me. "Together. As mother and daughter, again."

8.9
Eleanor POV:
My husband, Adrien, was my shield against the world, the only one who understood the trauma that haunted me after my family was murdered. I clung to him, my fierce loyalty a desperate attempt to keep the monsters at bay.
Then he brought home Daphne, a quiet barista he called innocent. I saw the manipulation in her downcast eyes, but he saw only purity.
His affection turned to violence. He threw me against a wall, his words cutting deeper than any blow.
"You disgust me," he spat.
He let her get pregnant, and when I lost our child in the chaos, he accused me of murder. "You killed my child!" he roared, his love replaced by a chilling hatred.
He bound me, broke me, and left me for dead in a burning helicopter, choosing to save her instead. I was the monster, the madwoman, the one who deserved to be destroyed.
How could the man who swore to protect me become my greatest tormentor?
But I survived. After faking my death to escape his hell, I watched him mourn me with crocodile tears while building a new life with my replacement. Now, I'm back to reclaim my name, my fortune, and to make him understand what a real monster looks like.