
Married To The Fake Comatose Billionaire
Justice was dragged back from the slums by her biological father, only to be sold off to the billionaire Aguirre family. Her purpose was simple: marry their comatose heir to secure a three-hundred-million-dollar lifeline for his company.
Her stepmother and stepsister sneered at her cheap canvas shoes, treating her like a contagious disease.
"A high school dropout from the slums marrying a billionaire? It's a miracle your trashy bloodline is getting anywhere near the estate," her stepsister Emery mocked.
At the sprawling estate, the "comatose" heir, Auguste, was secretly conscious. Disgusted by his new bride, he orchestrated her enrollment at an elite prep school, hoping the ruthless rich kids would break her. On her very first day, Emery ambushed her, loudly broadcasting Justice's "dropout" status to the entire classroom and turning her into an instant social pariah. The teachers tried to humiliate her with impossible calculus, and the students treated her like garbage.
They all thought she was just a pathetic, uneducated pawn they could easily crush and discard. They had no idea that her "dropout" file was a manufactured ghost, or that the Aguirre family's top intelligence network had just hit a military-grade firewall trying to look into her past.
Justice didn't panic. She flawlessly solved the university-level equation on the board, then walked into the cafeteria and looked right at Emery.
"She has no Barnes blood. She is a squatter living in my father's house."
With three casual sentences, Justice completely incinerated her stepsister's elite life. The billionaire heir wanted to play games? She was about to show them all what a real monster looked like.
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Chapter 1
The heavy mahogany double doors swung open.
The butler stood to the side, his eyes dropping to the scuffed canvas shoes on Justice's feet. His upper lip curled, just a fraction, before he looked away.
Justice stepped over the threshold. Her cheap rubber soles sank into the thick Persian rug. She didn't look at the butler. She didn't look at the multi-million dollar view of the Manhattan skyline stretching beyond the floor-to-ceiling windows.
Her gaze locked onto the man sitting behind the massive glass desk.
Derek Barnes tapped his index finger against the glass. The sound was sharp, rhythmic, and impatient.
Meredith sat on the white leather sofa to his right. She held a bone china teacup suspended in the air. Her lips were stretched into a smile that didn't reach her cold, assessing eyes. Her fingers absentmindedly stroked the heavy pearl necklace resting against her collarbone.
Leaning against the towering bookshelves was Emery. She held the newest smartphone up, angling her face for a selfie. As Justice walked in, Emery's eyes flicked to the screen, catching Justice's reflection. Emery let out a sound that was half-laugh, half-snort.
Derek stopped tapping. He placed his hand flat on a thick, leather-bound folder resting on his desk. He shoved it forward.
The folder slid across the smooth glass and stopped exactly one inch from the edge, right in front of Justice's stomach.
"Sign it," Derek said. His voice was a flat command. "The Aguirre family expects the paperwork finalized by noon."
Justice looked down. The gold-foil crest of the Aguirre family gleamed against the dark leather.
"It really is for your own good, Justice," Meredith said. Her voice was dripping with artificial sweetness. She set the teacup down with a soft clink. "This marriage will pull you out of the Rust Belt. You won't have to worry about your next meal."
Emery lowered her phone. "Honestly, you should be on your knees thanking Dad. A high school student from the slums marrying a billionaire? Even if he is a vegetable, it's a miracle your trashy bloodline is getting anywhere near the Aguirre estate."
Justice felt nothing. Her heart rate didn't spike. Her palms didn't sweat. She looked at the three of them, and her stomach felt completely hollow. It was like watching a poorly acted play.
She lifted her eyes from the folder and met Derek's stare.
"What is the exact dollar amount of the capital injection?" Justice asked. Her voice was quiet, completely devoid of emotion.
Derek's jaw tightened. The skin around his eyes twitched. He hadn't expected the uneducated girl he'd dumped in the countryside to understand the mechanics of a corporate buyout.
He slammed his palm against the glass desk. The impact rattled the pen holder.
"You don't get to ask questions," Derek spat, his face flushing a dull red. He tugged violently at his silk tie. "You sign the paper. You go to the estate. You do what you are told."
Justice's facial muscles remained entirely slack. Her lips didn't curve, and her eyes didn't hold a single ripple of emotion. She looked at the red-faced man with absolute, chilling apathy, as if watching a remarkably dull insect thrashing against a windowpane.
She reached out. Her long, pale fingers flipped the heavy leather cover open.
She didn't read the fluff. Her eyes scanned the dense legal text, jumping straight to the financial clauses on page fourteen. There it was. A three-hundred-million-dollar liquidity line extended to Barnes Holdings upon the legal binding of the marriage.
Meredith stood up. She unclasped her designer handbag and pulled out a sleek black credit card. She tossed it onto the glass desk. It landed with a plastic clatter next to the contract.
"Consider this your allowance," Meredith said, her chin lifting. "Buy yourself something decent. You smell like a bus station."
Justice didn't look at the card. She reached past it and picked up the Montblanc fountain pen resting in its silver cradle.
Emery stared at Justice's hand. Her teeth dug into her lower lip. Even wearing a faded, oversized t-shirt, Justice's hands were elegant-the fingers impossibly long and graceful. It made Emery's stomach twist with sudden, hot jealousy.
Justice flipped to the final page. She pressed the gold nib to the thick paper.
She didn't hesitate. She signed her name in a fluid, sharp script.
Derek exhaled. His shoulders dropped an inch. The greed in his eyes flared so bright it was almost physical.
Justice tossed the pen. It hit the glass desk and rolled off, clattering onto the Persian rug.
She looked at Derek. Her eyes were dead.
"Done," Justice said.
She turned her back to the desk. She didn't look at the credit card. She didn't look at Meredith or Emery.
"Go change your clothes," Meredith called out, her voice rising in pitch. "There are bags in the guest room. Do not embarrass the Barnes name when you walk into that estate!"
Justice didn't break her stride. She walked straight through the mahogany doors.
She moved down the silent, carpeted hallway. She pressed the elevator button. The metal doors slid open, and she stepped inside, watching the numbers tick down toward the lobby where the stretched Lincoln waited.
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7.8
Alexis signed the divorce papers, leaving her with no assets, no alimony, and just the clothes on her back.
To forget her abusive husband Carlos, she got drunk and bought a high-end gigolo for the night with her last 800 dollars.
But the man she slept with wasn't an escort. He was Jarrett Hughes, a ruthless billionaire CEO.
And while she was gone, her ex-husband was busy destroying her entire life.
Carlos framed her with fake photos of her cheating to justify the penniless divorce.
Then came the real nightmare.
Carlos and her own aunt secretly drained her family's corporate accounts, driving her father to jump off a building.
At the hospital, her grieving mother blamed her for the tragedy, violently attacking her in the ER.
To top it off, her cousin Josie—who was secretly sleeping with Carlos—held her father's ashes hostage.
"Crawl on your knees and pick it up, or the ashes go in the river," Josie sneered, throwing cash into the freezing slush.
Stripped of her marriage, her father, and her dignity, Alexis sat bleeding in the snow.
She couldn't understand why the people she loved most had coordinated such a brutal slaughter against her.
But Carlos and Josie made one fatal mistake.
They didn't know the "gigolo" Alexis had accidentally bought was the most powerful man in New York.
Alexis looked at the towering billionaire standing behind her, a vengeful fire burning in her eyes.
"I need you to get my father's ashes back," she said, pulling him into a kiss right in front of her ex-husband. "I don't care what it takes."

8.4
Cari Butler woke up in a damp, smelly dorm room, realizing she had transmigrated into the body of a disgraced fake daughter who had just been kicked out of a wealthy family.
Before she could even process her reality, the real daughter's friends kicked her door open to mock her, flaunting a custom Tiffany necklace that supposedly cost a mere eighty cents.
Cari thought they were crazy, until she saw the news: a top Manhattan mansion had just sold for a record-breaking $3,500.
The entire world's currency value had shrunk by ten thousand times!
This meant the original owner's bank balance of $854,000 gave Cari the purchasing power of eight and a half billion dollars.
But a mysterious system froze her funds, forcing her to work demeaning gig jobs to unlock the money bit by bit.
While working as a hotel server for twenty cents a day, she caught her ex-boyfriend kissing up to the real daughter, mocking Cari for being a desperate beggar.
Even her snobby roommates laughed at her, claiming she couldn't afford a ten-cent iPhone.
What truly angered Cari wasn't the humiliation, but receiving a five-cent transfer from her poor biological brother, who was starving himself just to keep her fed.
Yet, the system strictly forbade her from giving her unlocked billions directly to her family.
Looking at the restrictive system and the arrogant elites who thought they owned the city, Cari's eyes turned icy cold.
"If I can't just hand them the cash,"
Cari sneered, pulling out her phone to outright buy the luxury hotel and fire everyone who wronged her.
"Then I will just buy the entire world and place it at their feet."

7.6
I was once the untouchable heiress to the Schroeder empire, until a corporate fraud conviction stripped away my life and threw me into federal prison for five brutal years.
On the day of my release, I stepped out into the freezing rain only to realize I had been utterly abandoned by everyone I loved.
My family sent no one. My former best friends blocked my number, and high-society women took photos of my shivering, pathetic state for laughs. To survive, I made a desperate deal to act as the fake fiancée of Kayden Washington, a ruthless, disgraced billionaire fighting his own blood. But the moment we joined forces, the nightmare escalated. Our safehouse was ransacked, we were hunted by tactical hitmen in the dark, and my adoptive brother stole my dead mother's diary just to bribe me into leaving New York forever. Worse, the digital trail of my framing traced back to a top-tier operative manipulating both our families from the shadows.
I didn't understand why my own family had sacrificed me like a worthless pawn to ignite a massive, invisible war. What dark secret was I actually taking the fall for?
Just as Kayden and I prepared to burn both empires to the ground, a mysterious courier dropped a package at my door. Inside rested the Schroeder Patriarch's solid gold ring—the ultimate symbol of absolute power—sent directly to me, the disgraced exile.
"They took your past, but I will give you the power to forge a new future."
The game hadn't just changed. The board had been flipped, and I was going back to take the throne.

8.8
My fiancé, Knox, was the man I’d spent ten years building a life with, the one I’d poured my family’s fortune into. But then I found the lockbox. Inside, a photo of him smiling, his arm around a heavily pregnant woman, marked: *To my only wife Deana.*
I’d been looking for a charger in our Boston penthouse closet when I stumbled upon it. The faded Polaroid showed Knox, younger, beaming, with a heavily pregnant stranger. Its timestamp: "Ten years ago"—the exact year I funded his Ivy League PhD.
Flipping the photo, I saw Knox’s familiar handwriting: *To my only wife Deana and our upcoming miracle.* My world crumbled. The man I’d loved had a wife, making me the unwitting mistress. My opulent life was built on his lies.
His text, "Baby, I'm coming home to *our house*," twisted into a cruel joke. My tears froze. A decade of sacrifices, of family alienation—all for a man who used my money and trust—shredded in my mind. The fragile woman in me vanished; my eyes turned cold and clear. I relocked the box, smoothed the rug, and applied crimson lipstick. Practicing a flawless smile, I whispered, "Welcome home, my sweet liar."

8.6
As the eldest daughter of the Sharp family, I was treated worse than a stray dog, while my younger sister Seraphina was their precious princess.
When the family needed someone to marry a dying billionaire heir, they naturally chose me to take her place.
To force my consent, my brothers held a peanut butter sandwich to my face—knowing it was a lethal allergy—while dangling my EpiPen just out of reach.
On speakerphone, my own mother sighed in annoyance.
"Let her die. It might be for the best."
I choked out an agreement just as my throat closed up. But the forced engagement broke my sacred mystical vow, causing me to violently cough up my own lifeblood.
Seeing the blood, Seraphina dramatically fainted. My brothers instantly carried her to the hospital, stepping over my dying body and leaving me to bleed out on the cold marble floor.
I had to use a forbidden blood rune, draining my last ounce of strength, just to survive the night.
Even the mystical Order I served offered no comfort, calling only to demand I secure ten billion dollars for them or forfeit my soul for eternity.
Abandoned by my blood family and my spiritual master, I was completely alone, left with nothing but a broken body and a ticking clock.
But they made one fatal mistake: they let me live.
I turned to the dying heir they forced me to marry, a man plagued by a dark curse only I could cure.
"I will be your wife, and I will save your life," I told him.
In exchange, I would use his unimaginable wealth and power to make everyone who threw me away pay the ultimate price.

9.4
Blurb;
"I don't love you and I will never love you, Isabelle Yang!" I froze as the hatred in his eyes held me captive. I knew he wasn't happy with this arrangement. Neither was I.
"But I am your wife, Emerson."
"Wife?" He scoffed, stepping closer until my back hit the wall and I was trapped between his arms.
"You mean wife... or just the woman chosen to carry my heir?" His words were the truth. That was the only reason I was here. Still, they hurt more than I expected.
"You hurt my girlfriend by coming into our lives," he continued coldly.
"And I plan to make you feel twice the pain you caused her."
Then he did something worse than yelling-he sanitized his hands after touching me, as if I disgusted him.
He walked away, leaving me heartbroken and shaking, wondering what I had done to deserve so much hatred.
...
Isabelle Yang never imagined that her life could spiral into more darkness after catching her boyfriend and twin sister in bed on the night meant to celebrate their two-year anniversary.
Before she could even recover, a call from home changed everything. Her marriage had been arranged with the Winters-one of the most powerful families in Europe. And her husband? Emerson Winters, the ruthless heir who cared about only two things... himself and his childhood sweetheart, Salma Hayden.
But what happens when his love isn't enough to bear an heir, and he is forced into a marriage with Isabelle-a woman he sees as a mistake, a burden, an obligation?
What will become of two hearts trapped in a marriage where hatred and resentment rule the day?
Read this book to find out;
The Billionaire's Unwanted Wife
A novel by Queenebunoluwa15