
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 4
The door to Elara’s room didn’t just close; it sealed. The heavy, pressurized hiss of the electronic lock was a sound she was beginning to loathe. It was the sound of her autonomy being stripped away, one click at a time.
Inside the suite Julian had designated as her "cage," the luxury was suffocating. The sheets were silk, the carpet was plush enough to swallow her ankles, and the air was scented with expensive jasmine. But it was a prison nonetheless.
Elara stood by the window, watching the moonlight dance on the restless waves of the Atlantic. Her neck itched. The silver collar was a constant, cold weight. Every time she swallowed, she felt the bite of the metal against her skin. Property of J.B. The words burned in her mind even if she couldn't see them.
I have to get out, she thought, her heart racing. If I don’t find a way out tonight, I’ll become exactly what he wants—a broken thing.
She began to pace the room, searching for a weakness. The windows were reinforced, likely bulletproof glass. The door was solid oak with a steel core. She turned her attention to the walk-in closet. It was a cavernous space filled with designer clothes Julian had bought for her—each piece more revealing and scandalous than the last.
She pushed past the racks of silk and lace, reaching the back wall. She tapped on the wood, listening for a hollow sound. On the third panel, she heard it. A gap.
With trembling fingers, she searched for a release. She found a small, recessed lever hidden behind a row of fur coats. She pulled it.
A section of the back wall swung inward, revealing a narrow, unlit passage.
The air that wafted out was stale and smelled of old paper. Elara grabbed a small decorative candle from the vanity, lit it, and stepped into the dark. Her heart was a drum in her ears, each beat a warning.
The passage was tight, the stone walls cold to the touch. She walked for what felt like miles, though it couldn't have been more than fifty feet. The path ended at another small door. She pushed it open and stepped into a room that froze the blood in her veins.
It wasn't a bedroom. It was an archive.
The walls were covered in photographs. Thousands of them. They weren't of the estate or the Blackwood family. They were all of her.
Elara moved closer, the candlelight flickering. There were photos of her at her high school graduation. Photos of her sitting in a park three years ago. Photos of her sleeping on a train. Some were taken from a distance, through telephoto lenses; others were so close she could see the individual lashes on her eyes.
This wasn't just a recent purchase. This was an obsession that spanned years.
"Oh, god," she whispered, her hand flying to the collar at her throat. Julian hadn't just bought her at an auction to settle a debt. He had been waiting for the debt to happen. He had been lurking in the shadows of her life, a silent predator waiting for the perfect moment to strike.
In the center of the room was a desk. On it sat a leather-bound file with her name on it: VANCE, ELARA - SUBJECT 01.
She opened it. Inside were medical records, school transcripts, and a detailed log of her daily routine from the last five years. But it was the final page that made her breath hitch. It was a contract, dated three years ago—long before her father’s gambling debts had peaked. It was a deal between Julian Blackwood and a private investigator to "ensure the financial ruin of Arthur Vance."
Julian hadn't just bought her. He had engineered her downfall. He had destroyed her father to make her a commodity he could own.
The rage that surged through her was unlike anything she had ever felt. It was a cold, shimmering fire. She reached for the file, intending to take it, when she heard the sound of voices coming from the other side of the wall.
She pressed her ear to the wood.
"Julian, don't be absurd," a woman’s voice drawled. It was sophisticated, sharp, and dripping with entitlement. "The board expects an announcement. Our families have been aligned for decades. You can't let a... 'pet' stand in the way of a merger."
"The board expects what I tell them to expect, Lydia," Julian’s voice replied, his tone like a glacier.
"You're being sentimental, darling," the woman, Lydia, countered. Elara heard the unmistakable clink of a glass. "You’ve had your fun. You bought the girl. You branded her. Now, put her in the servant’s quarters where she belongs and let’s discuss our wedding date."
Elara’s blood ran cold. Fiancée. She scrambled back toward the passage, her mind reeling. She had to get back to her room before she was discovered. She shut the secret door and raced through the dark, her lungs burning. She slipped through the closet, closed the panel, and threw herself onto the bed just as the main bedroom door buzzed.
It swung open.
Julian stood there, but he wasn't alone. Beside him was a woman who looked like she had stepped off the cover of a high-fashion magazine. She had sleek blonde hair, eyes like emeralds, and a smile that didn't reach them. She looked at Elara on the bed—disheveled, breathing hard, and still wearing the silver collar—and laughed.
"So this is her?" Lydia said, walking into the room as if she owned the air Elara breathed. She stopped at the foot of the bed and leaned over, squinting at the silver collar. "It’s a bit gaudy, Julian. But I suppose it suits a creature of her... background."
Julian remained by the door, his expression unreadable. "Lydia, I believe I told you to wait in the drawing room."
"I grew bored," Lydia said, her eyes locked on Elara. She reached out a gloved hand and flicked the silver collar. "Tell me, little bird. Does it hurt when he pulls the chain?"
Elara sat up, her eyes flashing with the fire of the secrets she had just discovered. She didn't look at Lydia. She looked straight at Julian.
"He doesn't need a chain," Elara said, her voice steady and lethal. "He’s already taken everything else. Haven't you, Young Master?"
Julian’s eyes narrowed, a flicker of suspicion crossing his face. He looked from Elara to the closet, then back again.
Lydia turned to Julian, her smile fading. "She has a tongue. We’ll have to fix that. After all, a pet should be seen and not heard, especially at our engagement gala next week."
Lydia stepped closer to Elara, leaning down until they were nose to nose. "Enjoy your time in the master’s bed, Elara. But remember—I’m the one who will be wearing the Blackwood diamonds. You’re just the one wearing the leash."
Lydia turned on her heel and strutted out of the room.
Julian didn't follow her immediately. He stepped further into the room, the door closing automatically behind him. He walked to the edge of the bed and looked down at Elara. The silence between them was a physical weight.
"You were out of bed," he said. It wasn't a question.
"The room is small," Elara replied, her heart hammering. "I was exploring."
Julian reached out, his hand grasping her chin, forcing her to look up at him. His touch was electric, a terrifying mix of the man who had stalked her and the man who now owned her.
"Don't explore too far, Elara," he whispered, his thumb brushing over her lower lip. "You might find things you aren't ready to understand."
"I understand enough," she hissed.
Julian leaned down, his lips ghosting over hers, a touch so light it was an agony. "We'll see. Tomorrow, you meet the staff. And Elara?"
"What?"
"If I ever find you in the archives again, the collar won't be the only thing keeping you in this room."
He let go and walked out, the lock clicking into place with a finality that felt like a death sentence.
Elara sat in the dark, the silver collar feeling heavier than ever. He knew. He knew she had found the room. And yet, he had let her stay.
She looked at the closet. She didn't just have to escape the estate anymore. She had to survive a fiancée who wanted her gone and a Master who had been planning her capture for years.
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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?