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Love Remade – When Love Goes Haywire

Love Remade – When Love Goes Haywire

When her mother's medical bills threaten to destroy her family, Flora Bennett accepts billionaire Harris Kingston's shocking proposal: marry him for one year, and he'll pay every debt. But Flora soon discovers her husband isn't who he claims to be-and the women before her have vanished without a trace. Now trapped in a deadly game of identity and deception, Flora must uncover the truth before she becomes the next victim of a psychopath's twisted obsession.
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Chapter 1

Flora's Pov The fluorescent lights in the hospital corridor buzzed like angry wasps above my head as I stared at the stack of bills in my trembling hands. Each crisp white paper felt like a death sentence, the numbers blurring together until they became one impossible mountain of debt that threatened to crush what remained of my family. Fifty thousand dollars. That was the magic number that stood between my mother living and dying. Between my sixteen-year-old brother Tommy going to college or dropping out to work minimum-wage jobs for the rest of his life. Between keeping the small Brooklyn house that had been in our family for three generations or watching strangers tear it down for condos. I pressed my back against the cold hospital wall and closed my emerald eyes, trying to block out the antiseptic smell that always made me think of death and desperation. When I opened them again, the numbers hadn't magically disappeared. They never did. "Flora, sweetheart, you look exhausted." My mother's voice made me quickly shove the bills into my worn leather purse. Sarah Bennett lay propped against white pillows, her once vibrant auburn hair now streaked with premature gray, her face pale but still managing that gentle smile she reserved for moments when she was trying to protect me from the truth. "I'm fine, Mom." The lie tasted bitter on my tongue, but what else could I say? That the insurance company had denied her heart surgery claim? That the bank wanted to foreclose on our house in thirty days? That her medical bills were buried so deep in my father's gambling debts that I couldn't see daylight anymore? "You're a terrible liar, you know that?" She reached for my hand with fingers that felt too thin, too fragile. "Just like your father." The mention of Dad made my chest tighten. Patrick Bennett had been dead for five years, but his mistakes lived on like ghosts that haunted every corner of our lives. His gambling addiction hadn't died with him-it had simply transformed into a different kind of prison, one made of medical bills and overdue notices and desperate phone calls from debt collectors. "The doctors say you're responding well to the medication," I said, changing the subject as I always did when thoughts of Dad threatened to overwhelm me. "That's good news." "Flora." Her voice carried that tone I remembered from childhood, the one that meant she saw through my attempts at distraction. "I know we're in trouble. I know you're carrying this burden alone, and it isn't fair." Before I could protest, Tommy burst through the door like a tornado of teenage energy and barely contained frustration. His sandy brown hair was disheveled from running his hands through it-a habit he had inherited from me-and his green eyes blazed with an anger that made him look older than his sixteen years. "Flora, we need to talk." His voice cracked slightly, betraying the fear beneath his fury. "Now." "Tommy, not here-" "Yes, here." He pulled out his phone and thrust it toward me with shaking hands. "I just got off the phone with Kingston Investments. They own Dad's debts now. All of them." The world tilted sideways. Kingston Investments. Everyone in New York knew that name, knew the man behind it. Harris Kingston, the youngest billionaire in the city, famous for his ruthless business tactics and his ability to destroy anyone who stood in his way. "That's impossible," I whispered, but even as the words left my lips, I knew Tommy wouldn't lie about something like this. "They bought out the gambling debts six months ago," Tommy continued, his voice growing stronger with each word. "And guess what? They want to meet with you. Tomorrow. Ten AM sharp at their Manhattan office." My mother's hand tightened around mine. "Flora, you don't have to-" "Yes, I do." The words came out steadier than I felt. "I have to try." That night, I stood in front of my tiny bathroom mirror in the apartment I shared with Maya, practicing what I would say to Harris Kingston. How do you beg a billionaire for mercy? How do you explain that behind every number on his spreadsheet was a real person, a real family falling apart? My reflection stared back at me-auburn hair that refused to stay neat, emerald eyes that revealed every emotion I tried to hide, and a face that looked far too young to be carrying the weight of my family's survival. I wasn't sophisticated like the women who probably graced Kingston's arm at charity galas. I was just Flora Bennett, an art teacher from Brooklyn who made thirty-five thousand dollars a year and dreamed of painting in Paris. But I was also the only thing standing between my family and complete destruction. The next morning arrived gray and cold, matching my mood as I stood outside the gleaming glass tower that housed Kingston Investments. Forty-seven floors of steel and ambition stretched toward the cloudy sky, making me feel impossibly small. I had worn my best dress-a simple navy blue number I had bought for parent-teacher conferences-and my only pair of heels that weren't scuffed beyond repair. My hands shook as I pushed through the revolving door into a lobby that probably cost more to decorate than I would earn in a lifetime. "Flora Bennett to see Mr. Kingston," I told the receptionist, a woman so perfectly polished she looked like she had stepped out of a magazine. She looked me up and down with barely concealed disdain. "Forty-seventh floor. He's waiting." The elevator ride felt like ascending to heaven or hell-I wasn't sure which. When the doors opened, I stepped into a world of marble and mahogany that screamed power and money. Floor-to-ceiling windows offered a view of the city that took my breath away. "Miss Bennett?" I turned toward the voice and felt the air leave my lungs completely. Harris Kingston stood behind a desk the size of my kitchen table, and he was nothing like the cold, calculating businessman I had expected. He was tall-easily six feet two inches-with dark hair that looked like he had been running his hands through it and steel-gray eyes that seemed to see straight through me. His sharp jawline was softened by a small cleft in his chin, and when he moved around the desk toward me, every step was controlled, predatory. He was devastatingly handsome in a way that made my heart skip beats I couldn't afford to lose. "Mr. Kingston." I managed to keep my voice steady despite the way he was looking at me, like I was a puzzle he was trying to solve. "Thank you for seeing me." "Please, sit." He gestured to a chair in front of his desk, but he didn't return to his own seat. Instead, he leaned against the edge of the desk, close enough that I could smell his expensive cologne and see the way his perfectly tailored suit emphasized his broad shoulders. "I know why you're here," he said, his voice a low rumble that sent unexpected shivers down my spine. "Your family owes me a considerable amount of money." "Yes." The word came out as barely more than a whisper. "And I'm here to ask for more time. My mother needs surgery, and-" "I know about your mother's condition." He cut me off, but his tone wasn't cruel. If anything, there was something almost gentle in those steel-gray eyes. "I know about your brother's college applications. I know about your job at Brooklyn Elementary and your dreams of opening an art gallery someday." My blood turned to ice. "How do you-" "I make it my business to know everything about the people who owe me money, Miss Bennett." He pushed off from the desk and walked to the window, his hands clasped behind his back. "But I didn't ask you here to discuss payment plans." Confusion swirled through me like fog. "Then why-" He turned to face me, and something in his expression made my heart stop completely. "I asked you here to propose marriage." The world went completely silent. Even the sound of traffic forty-seven floors below seemed to disappear as I stared at this stranger who had just turned my universe upside down with four impossible words. "I'm sorry, what?" A smile ghosted across his lips-not kind, not cruel, but something infinitely more dangerous. "Marry me, Flora Bennett. And I will make all your family's problems disappear forever."

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