
Immune To The Billionaire's Toxic Regret
Elmore Thomas rushed into the emergency room, clutching his feverish seven-year-old son, Buddy, tightly to his chest.
When the privacy curtain was pulled back, the air in Elmore's lungs vanished. The attending physician standing under the harsh lights was his wife, Kendal—the woman everyone believed had burned to death eight years ago.
But there was no tearful reunion. Kendal looked at him, and her eyes froze into impenetrable ice. She treated him like a biohazard, strictly referring to him as the family member.
Worse, she didn't recognize Buddy. She comforted their crying son with the same gentle warmth she used to reserve for Elmore, completely unaware she was soothing the baby she thought had died.
Days later, Elmore watched from the shadows as she picked up another boy outside a prep school, her left hand flashing a massive diamond engagement ring.
When his butler accidentally recognized her, Kendal shielded her new stepson with pure disgust in her eyes.
"Tell that psychopath to sign the divorce papers immediately. I have a new family now."
The words 'new family' echoed in Elmore's skull, tearing him apart. For eight years, he had lived in a hell of guilt and madness, raising their son in the shadow of her ghost. How could she just erase their past? How could she give her tender smiles to a stranger and look at him with absolute revulsion?
Standing in a luxury ballroom, Elmore squeezed his hand until his crystal champagne flute shattered, thick blood dripping onto the rug. The murderous obsession in his dark eyes returned as he called his lawyer.
"Freeze her divorce application. Use every dirty trick in the book. She isn't leaving."
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Chapter 1
The automatic sensor doors of Manhattan General Hospital's emergency room slid open with a violent mechanical hiss. A brutal gust of New York winter wind ripped into the sterile lobby.
Elmore Thomas strode through the entrance. He wore a black cashmere overcoat, but his usual calculated composure was gone. His large hands tightly gripped his seven-year-old son, Buddy, against his chest. The boy's face was flushed a dangerous, unnatural red. Buddy was unconscious, his small body burning with a high fever.
A triage nurse behind the front desk stood up, holding a clipboard. She pointed toward the waiting area, telling him to take a number and fill out the intake forms.
Elmore did not stop walking. His jaw clenched so hard a muscle ticked visibly beneath his skin. He reached into his coat pocket, pulled out a solid black titanium credit card, and slammed it flat onto the linoleum counter. The sharp smack echoed over the low hum of the waiting room. He demanded an isolated cubicle immediately.
The nurse looked at the card, then up at the cold, murderous panic in Elmore's dark eyes. She swallowed hard, picked up her radio, and immediately called for the attending physician. She stepped out from behind the desk and quickly guided them down the chaotic hallway toward Cubicle Three.
Elmore laid Buddy down on the stiff hospital mattress. Buddy twisted uncomfortably on the crinkling paper sheet. His small, hot fingers blindly found the cuff of Elmore's overcoat and gripped the fabric in a white-knuckled hold. A weak, rattling cough tore through the boy's chest.
Elmore reached down and wrapped his large hand over his son's tiny one. His breathing was shallow and uneven. The sterile smell of iodine and bleach made his stomach churn. He reached up with his free hand and roughly yanked at his silk tie, loosening it around his neck to let air into his tightening lungs.
Outside the thin fabric of the privacy curtain, the steady, rhythmic clicking of flat-soled shoes approached. The sound was accompanied by the sharp rustle of paper as someone flipped through a medical chart.
A hand wearing a blue latex glove gripped the edge of the white curtain and pulled it back.
Kendal Butler stepped into the small space. She wore a standard white lab coat over a pair of dark-colored scrubs. A blue surgical mask covered the lower half of her face. Only her eyes were visible-eyes that looked exhausted, clinical, and entirely detached.
Elmore lifted his head.
His line of sight collided with hers in the harsh fluorescent light.
The air in Elmore's lungs vanished. His heart slammed against his ribs like a physical blow, so hard he felt the impact in his teeth. The blood drained from his face, leaving his skin ice-cold. His fingers went numb.
Kendal's fingers, which had been turning a page on the clipboard, stopped moving. Her gaze dropped to the faint, jagged scar near Elmore's jawline.
For a fraction of a second, her pupils dilated. Then, faster than a heartbeat, the recognition in her eyes froze over into solid, impenetrable ice. She looked at him the way she would look at a stain on the floor.
She did not say his name. She did not gasp. She simply looked away, dropping her gaze directly to the sick child on the bed. Her voice emerged flat and entirely devoid of inflection as she asked about the onset of the fever.
Elmore's throat was coated in sandpaper. He swallowed, his Adam's apple bobbing painfully as he tried to force her name past his lips.
Kendal cut him off before the sound could form. She stated that she needed quiet to assess the patient. She reached up and pulled the stethoscope from around her neck. She bent over the bed to listen to Buddy's chest.
The metal chest piece of the stethoscope was cold. As it neared Buddy's skin, the boy shivered violently.
Without missing a beat, Kendal pulled the instrument back. She pressed the metal disc flat against the warm palm of her own hand, holding it there for three seconds to heat it up before placing it gently against the boy's chest.
That tiny, subconscious motion hit Elmore like a bullet. A physical ache ripped through his chest, sharp and jagged. It was the exact same thing she used to do for him when he was sick eight years ago.
Kendal moved down the bed to check Buddy's abdomen for a rash. As she leaned sideways, the hem of her white lab coat shifted, and the bottom of her scrub pants rode up slightly along her lower leg.
Elmore's eyes dropped. There, just above her right ankle, exposed by the shifted fabric, he saw it. A thick, angry, raised burn scar.
The memory of the fire eight years ago, the smell of smoke, and the sight of her lying in a pool of her own blood on an operating table crashed into his skull. A wave of nausea hit him so hard his knees buckled slightly.
He took a sudden step forward. His hand reached out, his fingers trembling violently as he tried to touch the scarred skin of her leg. A broken, guttural sound escaped his throat.
Kendal snapped upright. Her thumb instantly dug hard into the knuckle of her index finger. She took a swift half-step backward, her body rigid with absolute defense.
She looked at him with eyes like dirty glass. She instructed the family member to maintain a safe distance and not interfere with a basic medical examination.
The words "family member" sliced through Elmore's chest. His extended hand froze in the empty air between them. Slowly, his fingers curled into a tight fist, and he let his arm drop heavily to his side.
Kendal turned her back to him. She grabbed a pen, scribbled an order for an IV drip on the chart, and handed it to the nurse who had just stepped in. Her movements were fluid, mechanical, and entirely devoid of hesitation.
She did not look at Elmore again. She pushed past the curtain and walked out of the cubicle.
The white fabric fell back into place, sealing Elmore inside. The strength left his legs. He gripped the metal railing of the hospital bed to keep from collapsing to the floor.
He stared at the white curtain. His chest heaved as a terrifying mixture of manic relief that she was alive and sheer, suffocating panic at her dead eyes clawed at his throat.
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9.3
Candice Luna thought her marriage to Julius Hansen was a lifeline to save her father's struggling company.
She didn't know it was a death sentence until Julius coldly slid divorce papers across his mahogany desk.
His true love, Amina Rowe, was nestled in his arms with a triumphant, mocking smile. The "merger" Julius promised had been a brutal, hostile takeover designed to bleed the Luna Group dry from the inside. Bankrupted and utterly broken, Candice's father stepped off the roof of their corporate tower. Meanwhile, Candice was publicly humiliated, stripped of her dignity, and mocked by all of Wall Street as a discarded stepping stone.
She died in a car accident, her final moments consumed by an agonizing, feral scream. She hated herself for letting her blind devotion destroy the father who had always believed in her.
But when Candice opened her eyes to the harsh fluorescent lights of a hospital room, she realized she wasn't dead.
She was twenty-two again. Three years before the wedding. Three years before her father's suicide.
When Julius's assistant walked in holding a bouquet of blue roses to discuss the preliminary merger, he expected a docile, desperate heiress.
Instead, Candice grabbed a glass of water from the nightstand and flung it directly into his smug face.
"Tell Julius Hansen to never, ever send his dogs to my door again."
This time, there would be no engagement. This time, the Hansen family would choke on her family's legacy.

8.0
She has thirty days. Ten billion dollars. And a quantum space that can swallow anything.
Kinsey Elliott died cold, starving, and betrayed—pushed into a frozen abyss by the uncle who stole her fortune.
Then she woke up.
Back in her penthouse. Back in her perfect body. Back with a silver mark on her wrist that lets her store entire warehouses of supplies in a dimension where time stands still.
The world has thirty days until a global ice age freezes everything.
Her family has thirty days to try to lock her away, steal her money, and have her killed.
And Kinsey? She has thirty days to turn ten billion dollars into an invisible fortress—and burn every last one of them to the ground.
She's not surviving the apocalypse.
She's building it.

7.8
Evelyn was already suffocating under her family's impending bankruptcy when she rear-ended a ten-million-dollar Rolls Royce in the freezing rain.
The tinted window rolled down, revealing the cold, predatory face of Julian Hawthorne—the man she had brutally abandoned three years ago.
Now a ruthless billionaire, he demanded a seven-figure repair check she couldn't afford, or she would have to pay with her body.
Desperate, she went to her wealthy fiancé, Preston, for the money, only to find him in a VIP club with another woman straddling his lap.
Instead of helping, Preston threw the repair bill on the floor and laughed with his rich friends.
"You want the money? Fine. Get on your knees, crawl over here, and kiss the tip of my shoe in front of everyone."
Evelyn trembled with pure humiliation.
Three years ago, she had sacrificed the only man she truly loved to save her family from ruin, only to end up engaged to this pathetic, cheating scum.
Just as her knees bent toward the carpet, the heavy velvet door was kicked completely off its hinges.
Julian walked in like the grim reaper, beat Preston half to death, and dragged Evelyn away.
He pinned her in his car, threatening to destroy everyone she cared about if she didn't return to him.
Evelyn was terrified and confused. Why was this powerful tyrant going to such extreme, violent lengths to trap a woman who had thrown him away?
The answer slipped out through an accidental phone call: the cold-blooded CEO had spent the previous night drunk, crying and screaming her name.
Realizing the monster caging her was actually just a desperate, heartbroken man, Evelyn wiped her tears and made a decision.
She was going to break her engagement, walk into his corporate fortress, and finally face the terrifying debt of their past.

7.6
"One signature. One life-long debt. One night to change everything."
Elara Vance thought she could escape her family's dark past, until the ruthless tech-mogul Silas Vane corners her with a contract she can't refuse. Her father didn't just owe Silas money-he owed him a blood-oath.
The deal is simple: Marry Silas for 365 days, endure his cold touch, and play the perfect doll for the media. In return, her family's sins are erased. But Silas isn't just looking for a wife; he's looking for the woman who shattered his heart ten years ago.
Elara is wearing a dead woman's face, and Silas is a man who never forgets a betrayal. As the line between hate and heat blurs, Elara realizes the debt isn't money... it's her heart. And Silas Vane is coming to collect.

8.8
I've always been the unwanted child-the invisible one. The rebel no one ever tried to understand.
And yet, I never resented my perfect, beloved sister. All I ever wanted was for her to be happy.
But one cruel twist of fate-and a devastating betrayal by someone I trusted-changed everything.
I woke up in a stranger's bed, losing the one thing I had guarded so carefully. Back then, I thought that was my greatest loss.
I was wrong.
Because not long after, my sister introduced me to her fiancé.
And the man standing in front of me... was the same stranger from that night.
Now he haunts me-day and night, in my dreams and in my waking hours. And just when I start to believe the nightmare might finally fade with the dawn, Alan walks back into my life.
This time, he has no intention of letting me forget.
Not the insult I dealt him.
...or that one unforgettable night.

8.9
Seraphina, a broke single mother of triplets, snuck into a billionaire's charity gala just for the free food, desperate to fund her daughter's urgent heart surgery.
But her genius five-year-old son secretly hacked the gala's raffle system, thrusting them directly under the spotlight. The untouchable billionaire host, Donovan Vance, froze when he saw the star-shaped birthmark on her wrist—the exact same mark from a dark hotel room five years ago.
Cornered, Seraphina was forced into a five-million-dollar marriage contract to appease Donovan's dying father and secure his corporate empire. She swallowed her pride, took the money to save her daughter, and moved into the penthouse. But Donovan's obsessive childhood friend, Gwendolyn, immediately targeted her. She humiliated Seraphina for her poverty and violently grabbed her in the foyer.
"I dare you to get a DNA test. When the world finds out they're not his, he'll throw you into the street himself!"
Gwendolyn's vicious threat made Seraphina's blood run cold. She was suffocating in sheer panic. She didn't even know if Donovan was actually the father. If a test proved he wasn't, she would be destroyed, and her daughter would lose her only lifeline.
But to her absolute horror, Donovan's father overheard the threat and ordered a legally binding paternity test that very day to permanently silence all doubts. With the medical team arriving and nowhere left to run, the terrifying secret Seraphina had buried for five years was about to be dragged into the light.