
Married To The Ruthless Disgraced Billionaire
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.
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Chapter 5
My heart slammed against my ribs. A sickening wave of panic washed over me.
I sprinted past Kayden, ignoring the destruction in the living room, and threw myself into my bedroom. The cheap mattress was ripped to shreds. A few plain t-shirts and a pair of jeans—clothes Josef had picked up from a thrift store yesterday at Kayden's instruction—were scattered across the floor.
I dropped to my knees, frantically digging through the debris. I clawed at the broken floorboards where I had hidden it. A sharp splinter of wood drove deep under my fingernail. Bright red blood welled up, but I didn't stop.
It wasn't there. My mother's diary—the thin leather book I had kept hidden inside the lining of my bra throughout my entire prison sentence, the only physical proof I had that she ever loved me, the only thing that kept me sane in a concrete cell—was gone.
A raw, agonizing sob tore out of my throat. I collapsed onto the ruined mattress, pulling my knees to my chest, my vision blurring with hot tears.
In the living room, Kayden was inspecting the lock on the apartment door—a fresh set of scratches around the keycard reader, different from the damage to the building's outer door weeks ago. His jaw was clenched tight. "Tactical entry. Professional. This isn't the same crew that hit the building entrance. Someone else is tracking us."
Josef dropped down from the fire escape outside, landing lightly on the windowsill. He was grinning, tossing a small, heavy object in his hand. He flicked it toward Kayden.
Kayden caught it. It was a solid gold cufflink, engraved with a distinctive crest.
"Well, well. Look what we have here," Josef cackled, pointing at the gold in Kayden's hand. "A Schroeder family crest. Looks like your dear family is sending their regards. Or someone wants us to think they are."
The name hit me like a physical blow to the stomach. My breath stuttered. The trauma of my past coiled around my throat, choking me.
My phone vibrated in my pocket. I pulled it out with shaking, bloody fingers. An encrypted text message flashed on the screen: Upper East Side. The Carlyle Cafe. Come alone.
Kayden crossed the room in two strides and snatched the phone from my hand. He read the text, his eyes narrowing. "It's a trap. You aren't going."
I stood up, my chest heaving. I grabbed the phone back, my fingers brushing harshly against his. "They have my diary! It's the only thing I have left! I have to go."
"You'll get yourself killed!" Kayden roared, the sudden volume of his voice shaking the thin walls.
"It's my life!" I screamed back, my throat raw.
We glared at each other, the air crackling with tension. Finally, Kayden's jaw ticked. He stepped back. "Fine. But Josef and I are shadowing you. If things go south, I'm pulling you out."
An hour later, I pushed open the heavy glass doors of the upscale cafe. The scent of roasted espresso beans and expensive perfume filled the air. A string quartet played softly in the corner.
My borrowed clothes—a black turtleneck and dark jeans—drew immediate, disgusted stares from the wealthy women sipping champagne. I kept my eyes fixed straight ahead.
In the darkest corner booth sat Javon Schroeder, my adoptive third brother. He wore a bespoke Italian suit. He was swirling a glass of scotch, his posture radiating lazy arrogance, but I noticed the tight grip of his fingers on the crystal glass.
I marched up to the table and slammed the side of my fist—the uninjured one—down onto the marble surface. The impact sent a dull shock up my arm, but it was nothing compared to the fire in my chest.
"Where is it?" I hissed, my voice trembling with suppressed rage.
Javon didn't look at my face. He reached into his breast pocket, pulled out a thick piece of paper, and slid it across the table.
It was a cashier's check. The number written on it had six zeros.
"Take the money and get out of New York," Javon said, his voice flat and cruel. "You're an embarrassment to the Schroeder name. Don't ever come back."
I stared at the check. The sheer, unadulterated insult of it made bile rise in the back of my throat. He thought he could buy my absence. He thought my mother's memory was worth a payout.
My vision went red. I snatched the check off the table. With a violent, jerky motion, I ripped it in half. Then into quarters. I shredded the heavy paper until my fingers cramped.
I threw the handful of confetti directly into Javon's handsome face.
"You cold-blooded, hypocritical bastards," I spat, my voice cracking.
Javon squeezed his eyes shut as the paper rained down on him. His jaw muscles jumped, and for a split second, a look of profound agony crossed his face. But he forced it down, maintaining his mask of indifference.
I grabbed the crystal glass of ice water from the table and threw the freezing contents directly onto his chest. The water soaked his expensive silk tie.
I turned on my heel and ran.
I burst through the revolving doors, hitting the cold Manhattan air. The adrenaline crashed. My knees buckled. I stumbled into a dark, narrow alley beside the cafe, pressing my back against a filthy dumpster.
I slid down to the wet pavement, buried my face in my hands, and sobbed. The sound was ugly, broken, and completely out of my control.
Suddenly, a large, warm hand reached out from the shadows. Strong fingers wrapped around my upper arm and hauled me upward, pulling me directly into a broad, solid chest.
The scent of expensive cigars and rain washed over me. Kayden didn't say a word. He just opened his heavy wool trench coat and wrapped it around my violently shivering shoulders, pulling me tight against his body.
He pulled a clean black handkerchief from his pocket. With agonizing slowness, he wiped the wet tears from my cheeks. His rough thumb brushed against my lower lip.
I rested my forehead against his chest. The steady, powerful thud of his heartbeat vibrated through my skull, grounding me.
Above my head, Kayden stared out of the alley, his eyes locked on the cafe window. He watched Javon wipe the water from his suit. Kayden's eyes were pitch black, filled with a terrifying, absolute promise of murder.
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7.8
Alayna was working a grueling catering shift in worn-out heels to support her broke college boyfriend, Caiden, who claimed to be studying at the library.
But through the crack of a VIP suite door, she saw him wearing a bespoke suit and a Patek Philippe watch, sipping expensive liquor.
"It's a little poverty role-play. Keeps things interesting."
He was laughing with his rich friends, mocking her as his clueless "charity case."
To make matters worse, she was forced into a humiliating mascot costume just in time to watch him passionately kiss his wealthy ex-girlfriend.
That same night, Alayna's mother collapsed with gastric cancer, requiring a half-million-dollar surgery.
When a desperate Alayna begged Caiden for help, he refused.
"Why don't you just apply for Medicaid? That's the path for people like you."
For two years, she had starved herself to buy his textbooks, his tickets, and his shoes.
He had stolen her sweat and her sacrifices, all for a cruel game.
The sheer audacity of his betrayal made her blood run cold.
When a billionaire stranger stepped in to pay her mother's medical bills in exchange for a one-year fake marriage, Alayna didn't hesitate to sign the contract.
She slipped the flawless diamond ring onto her finger, opened a spreadsheet, and sent Caiden an invoice for every single cent.
This time, she was going to dismantle his entire life.

8.0
Finley's stepfather gave her a sickening ultimatum: marry her predatory stepbrother Shane tonight, or he would throw her fragile mother out on the street.
To escape this hell, she used a matchmaking agency and hastily married a complete stranger. Garrison Strickland claimed to be an ordinary data analyst making $95,000 a year, driving a beat-up Honda Civic, and needing a wife in name only. They got their marriage license at City Hall that very afternoon.
But when Finley returned home to pack her bags and threw the certificate on the table, her family just laughed. Dozier ordered Shane to drag her into the bedroom to "teach her a lesson" and trap her forever.
"Come on, little sister," Shane crooned, lunging at her. "Don't fight it."
Finley's own mother just stared at the floor, blaming Finley for ruining the family, watching blindly as Shane cornered her.
Terrified and desperate, Finley smashed an ashtray over Shane's head and frantically dialed her new husband's number. Shane snatched the phone, mocking the "imaginary husband" before the line went dead. Finley felt a bottomless despair. Garrison was just a normal guy; he would never risk his life against her violent family. She was completely on her own, waiting for the end.
Suddenly, deafening bangs echoed through the house, and Garrison stepped into the living room radiating a cold, terrifying fury. This supposedly "frugal data analyst" effortlessly snapped Shane's wrist, leveled a ruthless death threat that made Dozier tremble, and whisked Finley away in a waiting Bentley. Looking at the powerful man beside her, Finley's heart raced: just who exactly had she married today?

7.2
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."

7.9
On my wedding day, my fiancé Connor received an urgent phone call.
He told me a D-list actress had broken her leg on set, then abandoned me right at the altar.
In my past life, I cried until my throat bled, begging him not to leave.
But my tears only brought endless humiliation. My mother and adopted sister mocked me, framed me, and forged my signature to steal my multi-million dollar trust fund.
They kicked me out of the family estate without a single dime.
I ended up freezing to death in the minus-twenty-degree New York blizzard, listening to my mother's voicemail telling me to die in the street as long as I didn't bleed on her carpets.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand why my own blood relatives hated me so much, yet treated an adopted daughter like a precious princess.
The only person who showed me any mercy—draping his wool coat over my frozen corpse and giving me a proper burial—was Connor's ruthless, untouchable uncle, Harding Snow.
Opening my eyes again, I was back in the bridal suite, right as Connor was rushing out the door.
This time, I didn't shed a single tear.
I let him run to his actress, then walked straight into the VIP room to face the most feared billionaire on Wall Street.
"The wedding proceeds as planned, but the groom's name changes to yours."

7.6
Cora thought she was the luckiest woman alive, married to a devoted tech billionaire who showered her with custom haute couture and obsessive care.
But his "protection" involved locking her inside their San Francisco estate, forcing her to swallow foul neon-green supplements, and drawing her blood with highly classified veterinary needles.
She thought it was just his extreme paranoia, until a cynical doctor cornered her at a charity gala.
"Kendrick isn't raising a wife. He's curating a very rare, very fragile medical specimen. You're his personal pharmacy."
Terrified, Cora broke into Kendrick's hidden safe and found a medical report approving her total bone marrow and stem cell depletion.
Kendrick wasn't a doting husband. He was raising her as a human bloodbag to save his terminally ill cousin.
When she nearly uncovered the truth, Kendrick cried fake tears, claiming he only needed her antibodies.
"Tomorrow, we are going to my private island in the Caribbean. Just the two of us. No internet. No guards. Just peace."
Cora almost believed his vulnerable act, deeply confused by how a man who kissed her so tenderly could plan to slaughter her in cold blood.
Then, while packing for the trip, she dropped a wooden box, revealing a hidden flight manifesto.
Kendrick's return date was listed. Hers was completely blank.
Stapled to the back was a clinical schedule: Intensive Marrow Harvesting - Final Stage. Patient will not require return transport.
Hearing his heavy footsteps echoing in the hallway, Cora gripped the sharp edges of the broken box.
She was not going to be a slaughtered lamb on that island.

9.5
Banished for seven years.
Aubree returns to the Hopkins family, only to be despised and cast aside like trash.
Her twin brother bribes her to leave. Her stepsister frames her as a monster.
Her arrogant fiancé wants her ruined, caged, and erased forever.
They think she's a helpless country outcast.
They don't know she's the dark web's most ruthless hacker and strategist.
She doesn't beg. She doesn't cry.
She strikes a deal with Wall Street's deadliest tycoon.
Crush the Prescotts. Ruin her enemies.
She's back to take everything they stole.