
Married To My Ex's Ruthless Uncle
My father was dying in the ICU, and our family company, the Martin Group, was on the verge of total collapse.
While I was desperately trying to sign the consent form for his life-saving surgery, my fiancé, Eston, sent me a text.
"I told you not to be stubborn. The company is mine by Friday. Beg me, and I might pay for the funeral."
He had been secretly looting my family's assets from the inside, waiting for me to break so he could steal everything. He thought I would crawl back to him in absolute despair, surrendering my father's legacy just to survive. The sheer weight of my helplessness crushed my chest as the heart monitor next to my father's bed let out a frantic, high-pitched scream.
The betrayal tore through me, but the despair quickly hardened into a cold, sharp stone.
Why should I let the man who ruined me dance on my family's grave? Why should I let him walk away with everything while I lost the only family I had left?
I wiped away my tears and blocked his number permanently.
Then, I stepped out into the freezing Manhattan rain and went straight to the top floor of the Maxwell building.
I threw my remaining shares onto the desk of Ellwood Maxwell—the apex predator of Wall Street, and Eston's untouchable, ruthless uncle.
"I want you to marry me," Ellwood said, pushing a marriage contract toward me. "That is the only way your company survives."
I picked up the pen. If Eston wanted to destroy my life, I would become his aunt and make him bow.
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Chapter 7
The shrill ringing of the bedside phone shattered the morning silence.
Audriana bolted upright, her heart instantly hammering against her ribs. She snatched the phone from the nightstand.
"Audriana!" Her mother's voice was a hysterical shriek on the other end. "He's crashing! The doctors say that mass they found—it's cancer. It has spread. His organs are failing. They told me to say goodbye!"
The phone slipped from Audriana's fingers, hitting the carpet with a dull thud. Her brain short-circuited. The mass. The thing Dr. Finch had warned about. She had pushed it to the back of her mind, buried it under the chaos of the gala and the marriage and Eston's assault. And now it had come due. She threw the blankets off and sprinted out of the bedroom, her bare feet slapping against the hardwood floor.
She burst into the living room and collided hard with a solid wall of muscle.
Ellwood grabbed her arms to steady her. He was wearing black sweatpants and a grey t-shirt, sweat glistening on his neck from a morning run.
He saw her chalk-white face and the wild terror in her eyes. He dropped the towel he was holding. "What happened?"
"My dad," Audriana choked out, her lungs refusing to expand. "He's dying. The mass—it was cancer all along. It spread."
Ellwood's expression hardened into granite. He didn't waste a single second asking questions. He pulled his phone from his pocket and hit a speed dial number.
"Get the car out front. Now," he barked into the phone. He grabbed Audriana's hand and pulled her toward the private elevator.
Ten minutes later, the black Maybach was tearing through the streets of Manhattan, running three red lights. Ellwood sat next to Audriana, making rapid-fire calls. He was mobilizing the top oncologists and surgeons in the state, his voice a low, commanding whip that demanded impossible results.
The car screeched to a halt at the emergency entrance of the hospital.
The hospital director and three department heads were already standing outside, sweating profusely in the cold morning air.
Ellwood threw the car door open and pulled Audriana out. The director rushed forward, practically bowing. "Mr. Maxwell, the cancer has spread rapidly. A standard operation will kill him on the table."
Audriana's knees buckled.
Ellwood caught her by the waist, holding her upright. He glared at the director, his eyes burning with a terrifying intensity. "Then don't use a standard operation. Fix him."
They reached the ICU waiting area. Edythe was collapsed on a plastic chair, sobbing violently. When she saw Audriana, she lunged forward, wrapping her arms around her daughter's neck. "The sedatives wore off and they told me everything," Edythe sobbed into Audriana's shoulder. "I've been sitting here all night. I couldn't leave him." Audriana held her mother tightly, the guilt of abandoning her to this vigil slicing through her chest.
Ellwood stepped back, giving them space. He turned and walked directly into the doctors' conference room, slamming the door behind him.
Inside the room, Dr. Finch pointed to a brain scan. "There is an experimental targeted therapy. If we administer it during a high-risk bypass… he might survive. But the mortality rate is eighty percent. No one wants to take the liability."
Ellwood slammed his hand down on the conference table. The loud bang made all four doctors jump.
"I take the liability," Ellwood snarled, leaning over the table, projecting absolute dominance. "Use the experimental drug. Do the surgery. If he dies, I will personally ensure this hospital loses every dime of its research funding for the next decade. Do your jobs."
Ellwood's lead surgeon from the private team—a gray-haired man Audriana recognized from the first surgery—stepped forward from the corner of the room where he had been reviewing scans. "We have the protocol ready, Mr. Maxwell. But we need the hospital's full surgical infrastructure to execute it. That is why Director Chen is in the room." The hospital director swallowed hard, nodding. The doctors scrambled out of the room, yelling orders to the nurses.
Ellwood walked back out to the hallway. He held a clipboard with a surgical consent form. He handed it to Audriana. "Sign it. It's his only chance."
Audriana took the pen, but her hand was shaking so violently she couldn't grip the plastic.
Ellwood stepped behind her. He wrapped his large, warm hand over hers, his chest pressing against her back. He guided her hand, forcing the pen down, helping her trace her signature onto the paper.
Her hand stilled. The pen hovered over the page. She looked up at him, her eyes searching his face. "What aren't you telling me about this procedure?"
Ellwood's hand tightened over hers. "Sign it, Audriana."
"What aren't you telling me?" Her voice was barely a whisper, but it did not waver.
A muscle feathered in his jaw. For a long moment, he said nothing. Then: "The drug is not FDA-approved. If he survives, there will be legal exposure. I will handle it."
Her breath caught in her throat. She stared at the signature line. The weight of the risk pressed down on her chest—not just her father's life, but Ellwood's exposure, the company's fragility, everything. Then she pressed the pen down and signed.
The steady, rhythmic thumping of his heart against her back acted like a physical anchor. The panic in her chest slowly receded. She looked up at him, her eyes shining with desperate gratitude.
At some point during the long hours of the surgery—she could not remember exactly when—a nurse had approached her and silently handed her a pair of soft hospital slippers. Audriana had put them on without thinking, her bare feet numbed from the cold linoleum.
The surgery took five agonizing hours.
When the operating room doors finally swung open, Dr. Finch walked out. He looked like he had run a marathon, but he was smiling. "The tumor is out. The drug stabilized his vitals. He's going to make it."
Audriana let out a loud, broken gasp. She spun around and threw her arms around Ellwood's waist, burying her face into his chest. She cried, her tears soaking through his sweaty t-shirt.
Ellwood's body went completely rigid. For a long moment, his arms hovered in the air. Then, slowly, he lowered his hands and wrapped them around her back, pressing her closer.
Edythe wiped her eyes and walked over. She cleared her throat loudly.
Audriana jumped back, her face burning red. She quickly wiped her face, looking at the floor.
Ellwood didn't look embarrassed at all. He adjusted his shirt and looked at Edythe. He gave a polite, measured nod. "Mother-in-law."
Edythe froze. Her eyes darted from Ellwood's calm face to the massive diamond ring on Audriana's left hand. Her expression morphed from relief to absolute shock.
"I need to settle the hospital accounts," Ellwood said smoothly, stepping away. He gave Audriana a meaningful look. "I will leave you two to talk."
He walked down the hall, leaving Audriana to face the storm.
Edythe grabbed Audriana's arm and dragged her toward the empty stairwell.
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8.6
In my past life, the Cerberus strain leaked, turning the world into a blood-soaked hell of rotting flesh and mutated monsters.
I thought my boyfriend Declan and my best friend Hailee would have my back as we fled the quarantine zone.
Instead, when the surging crowd of the infected cornered us, they didn't hesitate.
They shoved me backward into the horde just to buy themselves three seconds to run.
As I fell into the mud, I saw them fleeing without a single backward glance.
"She's dead weight anyway!" Hailee screamed.
"Just keep running, she'll distract them!" Declan yelled back.
I was torn apart, feeling the agonizing tear of rotting teeth sinking into my neck and the hot spray of my own blood.
Before the apocalypse, my greedy uncle had locked away my ten-million-dollar trust fund, leaving me with nothing but a fake boyfriend who only wanted me for my money.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand how the people I loved most could trade my life for a head start.
Why did I blindly trust them? Why didn't I see through their perfectly choreographed lies?
Opening my eyes again, the stench of decaying flesh vanished, replaced by the sterile smell of my college dorm room.
Hailee and Declan were standing over my bed, faking tears of concern over my meningitis fever.
I was back exactly seven days before the world ended, and my spatial vault ability had come back with me.
This time, I'm extorting my uncle for every cent, hoarding the city's supplies, and leaving them all to rot.

9.3
She sells flowers. He spills blood. And he will stop at nothing to make her his. Elena Rossi has always lived quietly among roses and lilies, dreaming of love as gentle as the petals she arranges. She thought she found it in Daniel, the man she planned to marry. Until her wedding day when a dangerous stranger walked into the church and shattered everything. Adrian Volkov is a king in the underworld, a man feared for his ruthlessness and power. But to him, Elena is not just a prize. She is an obsession. A storm he cannot live without. And he will burn the world and anyone in it, to claim her. Torn from the life she knew, Elena resists him, manipulates him, and even runs from him. But Adrian is relentless. His love is dark, his touch both punishing and tender, and his obsession inescapable. When betrayal and bloodshed close in, Elena must face the truth: She doesn't just fear him. She doesn't just hate him. She loves him. Petals and Blood is a haunting, passionate tale of obsession, betrayal, and the dangerous kind of love that blooms in shadows.

9.2
She loved him until she lost herself.
Now, behind locked doors and shattered glass, she must learn to breathe again.
When she first met Lloyd, he was magnetic and intoxicating. The kind of man who turned every head when he entered a room, who spoke in promises sweet enough to taste. With him, she felt chosen, cherished, and safe.
But safety was an illusion, and love became a weapon.
And slowly, piece by piece, he dismantled her until nothing of the woman she once was remained.
Now institutionalized after a breakdown, she begins to piece together the brutal truth of what really happened in the shadows of their love story. Memories sting like open wounds: the manipulation disguised as tenderness, the apologies that blurred into threats, the desperate hope that tomorrow he'd be the man she fell for again.
Yet beneath the grief and the shame, a quiet rebellion stirs, a vow to reclaim her voice, her freedom, and her life. Because this is not just a story of how she fell apart. It is a story of how she rises.
Haunting, raw, and achingly intimate, Boys like him peels back the glittering mask of a toxic love affair to reveal the kind of darkness that hides in plain sight, and the unbreakable strength it takes to escape it.

8.7
For seven years, I was Alpha Zane’s Chosen Mate, suppressing my warrior instincts to be the docile, supportive partner he demanded.
On our seventh anniversary, while I waited by a candlelit table, I accidentally overheard his mind-link with another woman.
"Seven years is a habit, my dear, not love. She's docile, she'll understand."
He told Seraphina, his new political ally, laughing as he dismissed my entire existence.
I didn't scream or cry. I scraped the anniversary cake into the trash, drafted a formal rejection letter, and walked out of the packhouse.
But Zane didn't even notice my departure. He was so consumed by his new lover that my rejection letter was treated as garbage and tossed into the incinerator.
He paraded Seraphina around the pack, even handing my hard-earned strategic command over to her—a woman who knew absolutely nothing about war.
When my loyal subordinates protested, he violently suppressed them, declaring my absence a "childish tantrum" and framing me as the bitter obstacle to his destined romance.
He honestly thought I was just hiding in my room, waiting to beg for his charity and accept a humiliating demotion.
He had no idea that I had already crossed the border into enemy territory.
Tonight, I am attending his grand celebration.
Not as the heartbroken mate he discarded, but as the newly appointed Gamma of his deadliest rival, the Sterling Pack.

7.4
Clara Davis was trained to seduce, deceive, and destroy.
Her mission is simple: infiltrate billionaire Jeffery Rothwell's life, gain his trust, and help seize his empire in exchange for the freedom she has always craved.
But the deeper she slips into his dangerous world, the more the lines between mission and desire begin to blur. Falling for him was never part of the plan and neither was discovering that the man she was sent to manipulate may not be the real Jeffery at all.
Now trapped in a deadly web of obsession, power, and hidden identities. Clara is caught between the organization that owns her, the monster who remade her, and a love that has turned into vengeance. Clara must survive a man who sees everything, controls everything, and may be far more dangerous than the organization that created her.
Because in this game of seduction and revenge, love might be the deadliest trap of all.

9.5
"You shouldn't be here, Fiona," his deep voice rasped against her ear, his hand still pressed against the wall behind her.
"Then tell me to leave," she whispered, her lips trembling inches from his. He didn't move. He didn't breathe. And in that moment, she knew he wanted her just as much as she wanted him.
Fiona Harry has lived her whole life in a golden cage of wealth, reputation, and suffocating rules. University was supposed to be her escape, her first taste of freedom. But nothing could prepare her for the moment she came face-to-face with Professor Jalen Hart, her father's best friend. One reckless night changes everything. A drunken mistake turns into an irresistible obsession, pulling her deeper into Jalen's forbidden world. But secrets don't stay hidden forever. Between Jude, her possessive friend who knows too much, Marian, Jalen's wicked wife, and the dangerous power of desire, Fiona is about to risk not only hers and her family's reputation but her entire future.
And what happens when the truth comes out especially to Marian?