Follow
Chapters
Share
Love Beyond the Lies Novel Cover

Love Beyond the Lies

The leather seat of Rex's luxury car felt cold beneath me despite the warmth of the evening. I smoothed down the front of my emerald gown, the fabric hugging my curves in all the right places. Tonight was supposed to be special. Tonight was supposed to change everything. I reached down, adjusting the lace trim of the midnight blue lingerie set I'd purchased specifically for this occasion. The silk was impossibly soft against my skin, the design intricate and delicate—the twenty-fourth piece Rex had ever complimented. "You look stunning tonight," Rex said, his eyes briefly leaving the road to glance at me. His smile was practiced perfection, the same one that had melted my defenses two years ago. "Thank you," I replied, my fingers still lingering on the lace. "I wanted to look perfect for your company gala." He reached across the console, his hand finding mine.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

The Seattle bus station smelled of stale coffee and disinfectant. I stepped off the Greyhound, my single suitcase feeling heavier than it should have. Two years of my life had been reduced to what I could carry—clothes, a few photos, and the shattered pieces of my dignity.

"Miss? You okay?"

I looked down to find a young man watching me. He couldn't have been more than twenty, with dark hair that stuck up at odd angles and eyes that had seen too much hardship. His jacket was worn thin at the elbows, and his shoes had seen better days.

"I'm fine," I replied automatically, then paused. Something in his expression—a mixture of wariness and hope—reminded me of myself at his age, before Rex had taught me what it meant to trust the wrong person.

He shifted uncomfortably. "You're not from around here."

"No," I admitted, adjusting my grip on my suitcase. "I just arrived."

The young man glanced at the sandwich I was holding—purchased hours ago at a rest stop but untouched since I'd overheard Rex's conversation. My stomach had been in knots ever since.

"You going to eat that?" he asked, then quickly added, "I mean, if you're not going to eat it..."

I looked at the sandwich, then back at him. "I'm Layne," I said, offering it to him. "And no, I'm not hungry."

"Charlie," he replied, accepting the sandwich with careful hands. "Thanks."

He didn't wolf it down like I expected. Instead, he took small, deliberate bites, as if savoring each one.

"Are you heading somewhere specific?" I asked.

Charlie shrugged. "Nowhere in particular. Just... away from Riverside."

Something in his voice struck a chord with me. "What happened in Riverside?"

His eyes darkened. "Foster family didn't work out. Been on my own since I was sixteen."

The words hit me like a physical blow. I remembered being sixteen, alone and adrift after being separated from my biological parents. The fear, the uncertainty—it was all written across Charlie's face.

"Come with me," I said impulsively.

His sandwich paused halfway to his mouth. "What?"

"My parents—my biological parents—they're here in Seattle. I'm going to their place. You can... come too. At least for tonight."

Charlie studied me with newfound interest. "Why would you do that for a stranger?"

I thought of all the times I'd wished someone had helped me when I was younger. "Because everyone deserves a chance."

---

Margaret and David Wood lived in a modest house on the outskirts of Seattle. The front yard was neatly trimmed, with flowers lining the walkway. It looked like the kind of home I'd dreamed of growing up in—stable, safe, loved.

As I approached the door with Charlie trailing uncertainly behind me, it swung open before I could knock.

"Layne," my mother whispered, her hands flying to her mouth.

She looked older than I remembered from our occasional video calls—more gray in her hair, more lines around her eyes. But the resemblance between us was unmistakable.

"Mom," I managed, my voice breaking on the word.

She pulled me into an embrace that smelled of vanilla and home. "Oh, sweetheart. We missed you so much."

My father appeared behind her, his eyes already glistening. "Welcome home, honey."

For a moment, we stood frozen in an awkward embrace—three people trying to bridge years of separation with arms around each other.

"Uh, sorry to interrupt," Charlie said quietly from behind me.

My parents pulled back, noticing him for the first time.

"This is Charlie," I explained. "He's... a friend from the bus. He didn't have anywhere to go."

Something flickered across my mother's face—concern, perhaps, or suspicion—but my father stepped forward with an extended hand.

"David Wood," he said warmly. "And you're welcome here, son."

The tension in Charlie's shoulders eased slightly as he shook my father's hand.

---

The community barbecue was my parents' way of helping me readjust—a chance to meet neighbors and feel connected to something larger than my own pain.

I stood at the edge of the gathering, watching families laugh and children play. It all felt surreal after everything that had happened.

"Layne?"

The voice sent a shiver down my spine. I turned slowly, already knowing who I would find.

Winston Lee stood before me, taller than I remembered, his features matured but still holding that same gentle kindness I'd known as a child.

"Winston," I breathed.

"You came back," he said simply, as if no time had passed between us.

"Finally," I agreed.

He gestured toward an ancient oak tree at the edge of the property. "Remember that tree?"

I nodded, following him as he walked toward it. "We used to climb it every summer."

"And you always got stuck on the third branch," he teased gently.

"I did not!"

"You totally did. I had to rescue you every time."

We stood beneath the sprawling branches, the afternoon sun filtering through the leaves. For a moment, I could almost forget the pain of the past few days.

"It's good to see you, Layne," Winston said softly.

I looked up at him, seeing both the boy I'd known and the man he'd become. Something stirred within me—a feeling I wasn't ready to examine.

"You too," I replied carefully, guarding the hurt I still carried. "It's been too long."

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After My Husband Abandoned Me During My Miscarriage Novel Cover
8.7
On my birthday, some thugs cornered me, trying to kidnap and extort me. Panicking as I tried to escape, I desperately dialed Julien Ramirez for help. His irritated voice came through, "Do you have to bother me with every little thing? Why would any thug bother with you?" After managing to dive into a nearby pond and evade capture, I finally turned on my phone. There it was, a post on Salem's Facebook page. "I mentioned wanting to see penguins in Antarctica, and someone made it happen." The picture showed Julien holding her affectionately, the wedding ring conspicuously absent from his finger. At that moment, I realized our marriage was over. When Julien returned from the trip, I lay exhausted on the couch. He tasted the leftover food and sneered, "Your cooking's as bad as ever." In the past, I would have argued with him over such remarks. But now, I just closed my eyes, too weary to respond.
Double Regrets: My Boyfriend Is My Ex’s Boss Novel Cover
7.9
For six years, Adrian Hale had a wife nobody knew about. He liked it that way. Until the night he paraded his dying ex-girlfriend in front of the press — and his real wife walked into the ballroom carrying a homemade birthday cake. Until his five-year-old son told four hundred strangers Amelia was "just the cleaning lady." Until she walked out of his life without a sound. By the time Leo's fever spikes at 2 a.m. and he's crying for the only mommy who ever made him soup, Amelia is in Paris. By the time Adrian unblocks her number, she's blocked his. By the time he sees the photograph — his wife, in buttercup yellow, on the arm of his Chairman — it's already too late. Some women fall to pieces when their husbands break their hearts. Amelia Quinn became someone else's headline.
Escaping The Billionaire's Deadly Surrogate Trap Novel Cover
7.2
Blaire woke up in a Manhattan penthouse, her body covered in bruises and her innocence stolen. Before she could process the terror, her adoptive sister Danita burst in, acting heartbroken and accusing Blaire of shamelessly seducing the powerful Kamryn Lane. Kamryn threw a one-million-dollar check at Blaire's bleeding face, calling her a calculating gold digger. That night, Blaire overheard a conversation in the family study that shattered her entire reality. "Once she gives birth to the Lane family's seed, we'll stage an accident, drain her blood, and transplant her healthy heart into your chest." Her adoptive mother and Danita were celebrating the success of their trap. She wasn't an adopted daughter; she was a living organ bank and a disposable surrogate. Even her adoptive brother, Calhoun, knew everything, trapping her in the dark hallways with a sick, possessive obsession to ensure she never escaped. The horrific truth suffocated her. The family that had taken her in had raised her like livestock for slaughter. How could they smile at her every day while planning to carve out her heart? Terrified but burning with a desperate will to survive, Blaire swallowed a Plan B pill to ruin their surrogate plot and fled the estate. To get the money and power she needed to crush her adoptive family, she pulled out Kamryn Lane's business card. This time, she would make a deal with the devil.
Ex's Bet on Reconciliation Fails Novel Cover
8.0
Six years after Colten Rice ended our engagement, I returned home from my studies. During that time, Colten had just divorced Joanna Carpenter, the woman he thought was perfect for him. I overheard someone asking him, "Melina's back. What's your plan?" I'm Melina. Colten replied with a tone of certainty, "I got divorced, and she came back right away. What plan could I possibly have?" Another voice added, "She was pretty keen on Colten back in the day. She must've come back to give it another go." Colten made a wager with his friends that within a week, I'd be on his doorstep, pleading for a reconciliation. A week later, the news arrived—I was married. I even sent him an invitation to my daughter's birthday party. ============================== I caught sight of Colten Rice at "The Crestview" restaurant, a favorite spot for the city's affluent crowd.
Fake Divorce, Real Retribution Novel Cover
8.0
The American Express alert chimed on my phone at exactly 2:47 PM, interrupting my review of quarterly investment reports. I glanced at the notification with the casual indifference of someone accustomed to substantial charges—until I saw the amount. Six thousand dollars. Hermès Beverly Hills. I set down my Mont Blanc pen, the burgundy leather of my home office chair creaking as I leaned back. Six thousand dollars wasn't unusual for our household expenses, but something about this particular charge felt off. Tanner typically consulted me about major purchases, a courtesy born from years of managing our combined finances with military precision. I opened the detailed statement on my laptop, my manicured fingers clicking across the keyboard with practiced efficiency. The transaction details populated: one limited-edition children's backpack, custom monogrammed, purchased for immediate delivery to the Shaw residence on Maple Drive. Atlas and Eliana's address.
His Unwanted Wife: The Genius's Spectacular Comeback Novel Cover
9.0
For seven years, I was the perfect wife to Denny Sanford and the brilliant CTO who built the core technology of his billion-dollar empire. But at my brother-in-law's memorial service, I hid behind a velvet curtain in the study and caught my husband passionately kissing the grieving widow, Brittany. They weren't just having an affair. Brittany was pregnant with Denny's child. "Once the paternity test confirms the baby is a Sanford heir, we control everything," she whispered. "Christa is brilliant with data, but clueless with people. She's completely harmless," Denny sneered, dismissing me as a convenient tool. My world shattered. Under his protection, Brittany had already stolen the credit and millions of dollars in consulting fees for my patents. To maintain his perfect facade, Denny even abandoned our six-year-old daughter's championship to hold his mistress's hand through a fake hospital visit. I had sacrificed my days and nights to build his company, only to realize my entire marriage was a calculated lie designed to fund his second family. He thought my scientific detachment made me blind, stupid, and weak. Harmless? I smiled coldly in the dark, backed up every server log proving my intellectual property, and messaged the most ruthless divorce attorney in New York. If he wanted to build his future on stolen data, I would show him exactly how a scientist dismantles a flawed experiment.