
I'm the Young Master's New Pet
After her father's gambling debts put a target on her back, Elara Vance is sold at a private auction to the most feared man in the city: Julian Blackwood, the ruthless heir to a dark empire. But Julian doesn't want a maid or a lover-he wants a "pet." Stripped of her autonomy and forced into a gilded cage, Elara must survive Julian's cruel games and shifting moods. As a dark attraction ignites, she realizes she is a piece in a much deadlier game of revenge. To survive, she must play the pet-while secretly planning to bring the Young Master to his knees.
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Chapter 2
The heavy iron gates of the Blackwood estate didn't just open; they groaned, a low, mechanical warning that Elara was leaving the world of the living and entering a kingdom of shadows. The limousine purred up the winding drive, the headlights cutting through a thick, unnatural fog that clung to the ancient oaks lining the path.
Beside her, Julian Blackwood was a silent statue of power. He didn't look at her. He didn't have to. His presence filled the back of the car, a suffocating weight that made the plush leather feel like a cage. He was scrolling through his phone, the blue light reflecting in his steel-gray eyes, making him look more like an advanced machine than a man.
Elara's fingers brushed against the cold silver of the collar still resting in its box on her lap. She hadn't put it on in the room-she couldn't bring herself to do it-and he hadn't forced her. Not yet. But the silence between them was a ticking clock.
The car came to a smooth halt in front of a sprawling gothic manor. It wasn't a home; it was a fortress of glass and black stone.
"Out," Julian commanded. It wasn't loud, but it carried the absolute expectation of a man who had never been disobeyed.
Elara stepped out into the biting night air. Before she could take a breath, Julian was there, his hand firm on the small of her back. The heat of his palm through her thin silk dress felt like a brand. He guided her up the steps, his pace relentless, forcing her to stumble slightly to keep up.
The foyer was a cathedral of cold minimalism. White marble floors, black walls, and a chandelier that looked like a cluster of falling stars. Standing in a perfect row were five servants, their heads bowed so low she couldn't see their faces.
"This is Elara," Julian announced to the room, though his eyes remained fixed on the grand staircase. "She is the new addition to the household. She is to be given anything she needs to remain... healthy. But she is never to leave the grounds. If she reaches the gate, you are all terminated. Am I clear?"
"Yes, Young Master," they chimed in a haunting, singular voice.
Julian finally turned to her, his gaze dropping to the box in her hands. "You haven't put it on."
Elara felt the sting of tears-not of sadness, but of a white-hot rage that was starting to boil beneath her fear. "I am not a dog, Julian."
His reaction was instantaneous. He stepped into her space, his chest brushing hers, forcing her head back. "In this house, Elara, names are a privilege. Dignity is an expensive luxury. I paid fifty million for you. That makes you whatever I say you are."
He reached into the box, his fingers nimble and terrifyingly steady. He took the silver collar and brought it to her throat. Elara tried to pull away, but his other hand snaked around the back of her neck, his thumb pressing firmly against the sensitive skin behind her ear.
"Don't fight me," he whispered, his voice dropping to a seductive, lethal silk. "I want to see how the diamonds look against your skin. I want everyone who looks at you to know exactly who you belong to."
The click of the magnetic clasp echoed in the silent foyer like a gunshot.
The silver felt heavy, an anchor around her neck. It was cold, biting into her skin, reminding her with every pulse of her heart that she was no longer her own.
"Beautiful," Julian murmured, his eyes darkening with a flash of something that looked dangerously like hunger. He leaned down, his lips ghosting over her forehead, a gesture that was more possessive than affectionate. "Now, I believe it's time for your first lesson in the rules of the Blackwood Estate."
He led her up the stairs to a wing of the house that felt even more secluded. The walls here were lined with heavy velvet curtains, muffling every sound. He stopped at a set of double doors and pushed them open.
It was a bedroom, but not like any Elara had ever seen. The bed was massive, draped in black silk, and the far wall was entirely glass, overlooking a sheer drop into the crashing waves of the ocean below. On the nightstand sat a single, ornate bell.
"This is your cage, Elara," Julian said, walking toward the window. "You will sleep here. You will eat here. And when I ring this bell from my study, you have exactly three minutes to appear before me. If you are late, the collar gets tighter."
"You're a monster," she breathed, her voice shaking.
Julian turned, the moonlight catching the sharp, cruel lines of his face. He walked back to her, stopping so close she could smell the dark spice of his cologne. He reached out, his fingers tracing the edge of the collar, his touch feather-light and devastating.
"I am exactly what your father made me," he said, his voice devoid of emotion. "He sold you to settle a debt. I simply bought the most beautiful thing he had left. Do you know why I chose this specific room for you?"
Elara shook her head, unable to speak.
"Because from here, you can see the gates," he said, pointing to the distant, glowing lights at the end of the long drive. "I want you to watch them every night. I want you to see exactly how far away your freedom is. And I want you to know that as long as you wear my mark, you will never reach them."
He moved toward the door, pausing with his hand on the handle.
"There is a dress on the bed. Put it on. We have a guest arriving for a late supper, and I expect my pet to be perfectly presented. You have thirty minutes."
He stepped out and closed the door. Elara heard the unmistakable sound of a heavy electronic lock engaging.
She was alone.
She turned to the bed, seeing the "dress" he had mentioned. It wasn't a dress at all; it was a slip of sheer, crimson lace that left nothing to the imagination. Beside it lay a pair of silk ribbons.
Elara slumped onto the floor, her back against the cold door. She clutched the silver collar at her throat, the diamonds digging into her palms. She wanted to scream, to break every glass wall in this cursed house, but she knew that would only play into his hands.
She stood up, walking to the massive glass wall. The ocean below was a churning abyss, much like her future. She looked at the crimson lace on the bed, then back at the door.
She realized then that Julian hadn't just bought her body. He was trying to dismantle her soul, piece by piece, until there was nothing left but a hollow shell that obeyed his every whim.
I won't let you, she whispered to her reflection in the glass. I will find the crack in your armor, Julian Blackwood. And when I do, I will shatter you.
She picked up the crimson lace, her fingers trembling. She began to dress, the fabric feeling like a second skin of shame. As she tied the silk ribbons, she heard a faint sound coming from the vent in the ceiling.
It was the sound of a violin playing-a sad, haunting melody that she recognized from her childhood.
She froze. That song... her mother used to play it.
How did Julian know?
The door suddenly buzzed, and Julian's voice came through the intercom, cold and impatient.
"Ten minutes, Elara. Our guest is here. And he's someone you know very well."
Elara's heart stopped. She rushed to the door as it clicked open, her mind racing. Someone she knew? Her father? Or someone worse?
She stepped out into the hallway, her legs feeling like lead. She made her way back down to the grand dining room, where the table was set for three. Julian was already there, standing at the head of the table, a glass of dark wine in his hand.
In the chair opposite him sat a man with silver hair and a face lined with greed and desperation.
"Father?" Elara gasped, her hand flying to the collar at her throat.
Her father didn't look up. He looked at Julian, his eyes wide with fear. "I did what you asked, Blackwood. I brought the documents. Now give me the money."
Julian didn't look at the older man. He looked only at Elara, his gaze raking over her in the crimson lace, settling on the silver collar he had forced her to wear.
"Tell me, Arthur," Julian said, his voice dropping to a lethal whisper. "Does it hurt to see your only daughter wearing a price tag? Or are you too busy counting the zeros on the check?"
Elara's father finally looked at her, and the shame in his eyes was eclipsed by something much worse: relief. "She looks well, Julian. You're taking care of her."
"I'm taking care of my investment," Julian corrected. He turned to Elara, gesturing to the empty chair between them. "Sit, Elara. Your father and I were just discussing the final terms of your... permanent transfer."
Elara felt the room spin. Permanent? She sat down, her eyes locked on her father. "How could you? You told me it was just for a few months. You told me you'd win the money back!"
"The debt was larger than I told you, Elara," her father whimpered, refusing to meet her gaze. "Julian offered me a way out. A way for us both to survive."
"You didn't survive," Elara spat, the fire finally breaking through her shock. "You died the second you handed me over to him."
Julian set his glass down with a sharp clink. "Enough drama. Arthur, the money has been wired. You have one hour to leave the country. If I ever see you on this continent again, I will personally ensure the rest of your debts are collected in blood."
Her father scrambled to his feet, not even glancing at Elara as he rushed toward the exit.
"Father! Wait!" Elara cried, starting to rise.
"Sit down," Julian commanded.
Elara ignored him, running toward her father, but before she could reach the door, Julian was there. He moved with the speed of a strike, his arm barring her path. He grabbed her by the waist, lifting her off her feet and pinning her against the wall.
"He doesn't want you, Elara!" Julian roared, his composure finally breaking into raw, jagged emotion. "He never did! I am the only one who truly knows what you're worth!"
Elara struggled against him, her fists hitting his chest, her tears finally spilling over. "I hate you! I hate you both!"
Julian caught her wrists, pinning them above her head against the cold stone wall. His face was inches from hers, his breath ragged. The intensity in his eyes was terrifying-a mix of ancient pain and obsessive need.
"Hate me then," he growled. "Fuel yourself with it. Use it to survive. Because I'm never letting you go."
He leaned in, his lips hovering just a hair's breadth from hers. For a moment, the world stopped. The anger, the betrayal, the silver collar-everything faded into the magnetic pull between them.
But then, the front door slammed shut. Her father was gone.
Julian pulled back, his mask of ice sliding back into place. He released her wrists, leaving red marks on her pale skin.
"Go to your room," he said, his voice flat. "Tomorrow, your training begins. And Elara?"
She looked at him, her chest heaving.
"The violin music?" he said, a cruel glint in his eyes. "That was just to remind you that I know everything about you. Every memory, every weakness. You have no secrets from me."
He turned and walked back to the table, picking up his wine as if nothing had happened.
Elara fled. She ran back up the stairs, through the velvet-lined halls, and slammed her bedroom door. She threw herself onto the bed, sobbing into the black silk.
But as the hours passed and the moon rose high over the ocean, her tears dried. She sat up, touching the cold silver collar.
Julian thought he had won. He thought he had broken her by showing her her father's betrayal. But he had actually given her the one thing she needed: a reason to fight back.
She walked to the nightstand and picked up the bell. She looked at it for a long time, then set it back down.
Suddenly, a soft light flickered from under the closet door.
Elara frowned. She walked over and pushed the door open. Inside, hidden behind the rows of expensive clothes Julian had bought for her, was a small, keypad-locked safe.
But the door was slightly ajar.
Inside was a single, handwritten note on yellowed paper.
He thinks he's the master, but the pet always knows where the keys are hidden. Look under the third floorboard in the library. - M.
Elara's heart thundered. M? Who was M?
Before she could think, a loud, piercing ring echoed through the room.
The bell. Julian was calling her.
She looked at the clock. She had three minutes.
She looked at the note, then at the door. If she went to him now, she was his pet. If she stayed to find the floorboard, she was a rebel.
The bell rang again, longer and more insistent this time.
Elara reached up, her fingers grazing the magnetic clasp of the collar.
Three minutes.
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8.6
I was the youngest Paladin in history, the absolute pride of the Azure Blade.
But after a disastrous mission in the snow, I was falsely accused of slaughtering my own squad.
Grand Master Bernardo Rowe didn't just exile me; he surgically severed my connection to the magic Aether, turning me into a crippled mortal.
Desperate to survive, I tried to climb the Holy Stairs to reclaim my legendary sword, "Rebellion."
Instead of answering my call, my own blade shrieked in absolute rejection and blasted me down the thousand stone steps.
My bones snapped like dry twigs, and I was left in a pool of my own blood.
The pilgrims laughed at me. The guards declared me a lost cause and left me to rot in the dirt.
I should have died there, betrayed by the Order and the holy magic I once served.
But a silent, massive laborer named Cato Sims dragged my mangled body into the shadows.
He healed my shattered skeleton in mere days with impossible skill, yet he allowed lowly servants to spit on him and beat him just to keep my presence hidden.
I didn't understand why my holy sword had abandoned me, and I understood even less why this stranger was protecting a condemned criminal.
When I finally snapped and demanded to know his price for saving my life, he didn't ask for money or my body.
"The mountain does not forget its debts. I am reclaiming what was taken from it."
Staring into his unyielding eyes, I realized my exile wasn't the end, but the beginning of a terrifying truth.

9.3
Born into privilege, Eleanor never imagined her life could shatter in a single night. Then her father disappeared with his mistress, her mother fell from a building and slipped into a coma, and everything she once owned turned to dust.
Determined not to ruin Jonathan's future with her family's disgrace, she ended their relationship and became the bride of a man trapped in a vegetative state.
She believed that was the last time their paths would cross. But two years later, Jonathan pinned her in the dark and whispered, "Long time no see, my sister-in-law."

9.3
The first sign I was going to die wasn't the blizzard. It wasn't the bone-deep cold. It was the look in my fiancé's eyes when he told me he had given my life's work-our only guarantee of survival-to another woman.
"Kelsi was freezing," he said, as if I were being unreasonable. "You're the expert, you can handle it."
He then took my satellite phone, shoved me into a hastily dug snow pit, and left me to die.
His new girlfriend, Kelsi, appeared, wrapped snugly in my shimmering smart blanket. She smiled as she used my own ice axe to slash my suit, my last layer of protection against the storm.
"Stop being so dramatic," he told me, his voice full of contempt as I lay there freezing to death.
They thought they had taken everything. They thought they had won.
But they didn't know about the secret emergency beacon I had stitched into my sleeve. And with my last ounce of strength, I activated it.

9.4
My husband of three years, Arthur Vanderbilt, came home smelling of his mistress's perfume and threw divorce papers on our marble kitchen island.
He demanded I sign away all rights to our assets for a five-million-dollar "severance," calling me a leech his family picked up from the suburbs to solve a temporary PR crisis.
When I refused and demanded my four percent equity in the Vanderbilt Group, he and his mistress, Serena, launched a vicious smear campaign. They planted false stories on Wall Street forums, accusing me of laundering money for an Eastern European crime syndicate.
They tried to force my hand with a check for five hundred million, which I tore up and threw in his face. To them, I was just a trophy wife they could easily discard.
They had no idea that the "leech" they so despised was the anonymous investor who had secretly bailed out their entire company three years ago, saving them from bankruptcy.
Their final move was to hire an actress to publicly accuse me of fraud in the lobby of the most powerful law firm in Manhattan. They didn't realize I was there to retain the firm's most ruthless lawyer. After security threw them out, I looked my replacement in the eye and made her a promise.
"Prepare for an FBI probe into perjury and corporate defamation."

9.5
He was born from the void between stars - a being of immense power, forged from cosmic origins.
For thousands of years, he walked among humanity, protecting them and keeping his true strength hidden. After losing the only family he had, grief led him to seek his own end... only to wake up in a world entirely unlike his own.
Here, cultivation is the main path to power. Those who master spirit qi gain superhuman strength, speed, and abilities that place them far above ordinary people. Four great sects rule the land, competing for resources, secrets, and dominance over each other.
Icaros joined the Li Sect, where he found companions he came to trust and care for: the capable and easygoing Li Han, the sharp and composed Su Yan, and the spirited Nelly. For a time, he felt he had found a place to belong, even as he kept his true nature hidden and wondered whether he could ever learn to cultivate like those around him.
Everything changed when their voyage was suddenly attacked. A powerful figure floating in the sky cut their ship apart with sharp, devastating energy strikes, leaving only destruction in his wake. Believing his friends had been lost in the disaster, Icaros chose to stop holding back any longer.
> "I am done hiding!"
He unleashed his full power: golden light blazed from his eyes, he flew at incredible speed, and he broke through every barrier and enemy in his way. On the shores ahead, he tore through hordes of powerful jade monsters, destroying them completely before flying deep into the interior of the island.
Meanwhile, survivors washed up scattered and alone. One young cultivator found himself on the shores of Jade Island - a place most cultivators avoid, as it holds no treasures or useful materials, only danger and endless deposits of ordinary jade. Yet despite the risks, ordinary people have built settlements here, finding safety from the conflicts and power struggles of the outside world.
This island works by different rules. Spirit qi is scarce and unstable, making cultivation far less effective than elsewhere. Instead, the people here rely on advanced technology - weapons and explosives that can injure or even defeat those with great physical strength. Here, skill and preparation can be just as powerful as raw strength, and even the strongest cultivators must move with caution.
Now, Icaros has vanished deep into the island. His companions are lost somewhere across this dangerous land. And the mysterious swordsman who destroyed their ship has already arrived here, searching for an ancient map said to lead to the legacy of a being from another world.
Will they find each other again? And can anyone survive in a place where the usual rules of power no longer hold true?
✅ Chapters 1–19: FREE
🔒 Chapters 20 onwards: PAID
(Continue the journey of power, friendship, and discovery!)

8.0
The moon chooses a mate for its immortal king every century-and Arielle was never supposed to be the one.
A low-ranked wolf with no power, no status, her quiet life shatters the night an ancient mate bond awakens, pulling the ruthless Moon King straight to her doorstep. Bound by a fate neither can break, she's dragged into his world of blood-soaked laws, buried secrets, and an Alpha who believes destiny gives him the right to own her.
But Arielle is no prize-and the Moon King is about to learn that controlling her is easy... trusting her, and craving her, is not.
As enemies close in and the moon demands its price, desire turns lethal. Survival means surrendering to a love neither planned for-one that could rewrite their fated bond entirely.
Because the moon never makes mistakes... or does it?