Follow
Chapters
Share
Married To The Vulture Of Wall Street Novel Cover

Married To The Vulture Of Wall Street

I had exactly forty-five minutes to get married, or I would lose the voting shares needed to stop my father from laundering millions through our family foundation. Everything was riding on this one legal signature at the City Clerk’s office. But just as I reached the front of the line, my phone buzzed with a high-definition photo of my fiancé, Preston, tangled in sheets with a junior associate at a SoHo hotel. The man I was about to tie my life to was a fraud, and my deadline was ticking toward zero. When I shoved the evidence in his face, he didn't even flinch. Instead, he gripped my wrist until the bone ground together, whispering that I was just a "junkie" fresh out of a Swiss clinic and that no one else would ever marry a liability with a personality disorder. My father was already standing by with a fraudulent medical affidavit, ready to force me into a conservatorship and strip me of my freedom the moment the clock hit 5 PM. They had spent years using my fake "instability" as a leash, treating me like a broken doll while they bled the company dry. I was the only one with the evidence to take them down, yet I was being discarded like a sunk cost by the very men who were supposed to protect me. I looked at Preston’s smug face and realized I didn't need a husband; I needed a predator. I scanned the room and spotted Dominik Mack, the "Vulture of Wall Street," a man who specialized in hostile takeovers and stripping men like my father of everything they owned. I walked straight up to the most dangerous man in New York and offered him a business transaction. "Do you want to get married?" I asked. He looked at my trembling hands, then at the man chasing me, and adjusted his collar with clinical detachment. "Deal," he said. I didn't just find a groom; I found an accomplice. This wasn't a wedding anymore—it was a declaration of war.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The water from the faucet was freezing, but it didn't shock her. Nothing really shocked her anymore. She stared at her reflection in the spotted mirror of the City Clerk's bathroom. Her mascara was perfect. Her skin was pale, translucent under the harsh fluorescent lights. She looked like a porcelain doll that had been dropped and glued back together too many times.

She reached into the hidden lining of her clutch and pulled out an amber prescription bottle. The label read Sertraline, her supposed lifeline, the chemical leash her father thought kept his unstable daughter from embarrassing the family. She popped the cap.

She shook two white mints into her palm. She'd spent a month conditioning herself to mimic the slight hand tremor associated with Sertraline withdrawal, a performance detail for her father's benefit.

She crunched down on the sugar, letting the sharp peppermint burn her tongue. It was the only thing real about that moment. Her phone buzzed against the marble countertop. It was the final data packet from the encrypted server she'd set up. Her own work.

She unlocked the screen. The photo was high-definition, captured by a micro-camera she'd swapped onto his favorite coat two days ago. Preston Hayes. Her fiancé. He was tangled in sheets at SoHo House, his mouth on the neck of a junior associate from his father's firm. The timestamp was two hours ago.

She checked her watch. Forty-five minutes.

If she wasn't married in forty-five minutes, the trust fund clause regarding her grandfather's super-voting shares would expire. The Miller Group would be carved up like a Thanksgiving turkey, and her father would sell the scraps to the highest bidder. Her team at Interpol had flagged the Miller Foundation for laundering, and losing those shares meant losing her only legal way inside.

She didn't feel sad. She didn't feel betrayed. She felt the cold, hard click of a lock sliding into place in her mind.

She pushed through the bathroom door. The heels of her Louboutins struck the marble floor with a military cadence. The waiting area was a purgatory of beige walls and nervous couples clutching paperwork. The air smelled of stale coffee and bureaucratic apathy.

Preston was standing near the front of the line. He checked his Rolex, tapping his foot. He was wearing a custom Tom Ford suit that cost more than most people's cars. He looked the part. The perfect heir. The perfect husband.

He saw her. His face transformed instantly. The irritation vanished, replaced by a practiced, dazzling smile. It was the smile that had charmed the board of directors and fooled the gossip columnists.

"Ivy, finally," he said, reaching for her. "You're dragging your feet. We're going to miss the reservation at Le Bernardin."

His hand aimed for her waist. It was a possessive gesture, a claim of ownership.

She sidestepped him. It was smooth, a muscle memory honed from years of dodging things thrown in her direction.

Preston's hand grasped at empty air. His smile faltered, the edges cracking.

"Did you forget your meds again?" he whispered, his voice dropping to that patronizing tone he used when he wanted to remind her that she was broken. "You're acting twitchy."

She didn't speak. She just held up her phone.

She shoved the screen into his face. The brightness was turned all the way up. The image of him and the girl was unavoidable.

Preston's pupils contracted. It was a physiological reaction to fear. She watched it happen with clinical detachment. His hand shot out to snatch the phone.

She was faster. She took a half-step back, locking the screen and gripping the device until her knuckles turned white.

"Don't," she said. Her voice was flat.

The couple behind them-tourists in matching sweatshirts-stopped whispering and stared. The hum of the room seemed to dampen, creating a vacuum around them.

Preston stepped into her personal space. He smelled of expensive cedar and the faint, metallic scent of panic.

"Put that away," he hissed. "You're being paranoid. It was stress relief. It means nothing. Think about the merger, Ivy. Think about your father."

"Clause 14 of the prenuptial agreement," she recited. "Any act of infidelity or dishonesty prior to the signing of the marriage certificate renders the asset allocation void."

Preston's face flushed a deep, ugly red. "You think you can walk away? You need her. You're a liability, Ivy. You're the crazy daughter fresh out of a Swiss clinic. No one else is going to marry a junkie with a personality disorder. I'm doing her a favor."

Her heart rate didn't spike. Her breathing didn't hitch. She looked at him and saw a bad investment. A sunk cost.

"I'm terminating the contract," she said.

He grabbed her wrist. His fingers dug into her tendons, grinding bone against bone. It hurt, but pain was just data.

"You are not making a scene here," he growled. "We are going to that window, and you are going to sign."

She wrenched her arm back. She didn't struggle; she used leverage. "Are you going to assault her in a government building, Preston? There are three cameras pointing at us right now."

He flinched. He looked up and saw the security guard by the metal detectors watching them. He let go of her wrist, smoothing his tie, trying to regain his composure.

She stepped back. She had a problem. She had eliminated the groom, but she still needed a marriage. The judicial waiver she'd secured that morning, fast-tracking the 24-hour waiting period, was only valid until 5 PM. Without a signature that day, she lost everything. Not just the money-she didn't care about the money. She needed the voting power to stop her father from laundering millions through the foundation.

She turned away from Preston. She scanned the room.

She needed a variable. Someone present. Someone male. Someone who looked like they understood the concept of a transaction.

Her eyes swept over the nervous boys in rented tuxedos and the sentimental couples holding hands. Useless. All of them.

Then she saw him.

He was standing in the far corner, near a marble pillar. He was wearing a black overcoat that absorbed the light around him. He wasn't looking at his phone. He wasn't looking at the line.

He was looking at her.

His eyes were dark, intelligent, and completely devoid of warmth. He looked like a predator who had stumbled into a petting zoo.

You may also like

After My Alpha Denied The Antidote, I Fought Back Novel Cover
8.8
Betrayed by the one she trusted most, a resilient werewolf must navigate the fallout of her Alpha's cruel decision to deny her the antidote. Left to suffer the consequences of his rejection, she refuses to succumb to despair. Instead, she harnesses her inner strength to challenge the pack hierarchy and reclaim her destiny. This gripping tale of defiance follows her journey as she fights back against injustice to forge a new path for herself.
After My Mate Betrayed Me Novel Cover
8.6
Betrayed by her mate and left for dead, a rejected werewolf finds herself at a crossroads of survival and vengeance. Abandoned by the one she trusted most, she must navigate a dangerous world of pack politics and ancient rivalries. As she uncovers hidden powers within herself, she rises from the ashes of her past to reclaim her honor. Forced into an uneasy alliance, she prepares to confront her former lover and the dark forces that tore her life apart.
Emiliano's Mafia princess  Novel Cover
8.1
In a world ruled by blood and power, the daughter of a notorious crime boss finds herself caught in a dangerous game of loyalty and desire. As the princess of a powerful mafia family, she is both a prize and a target. When Emiliano, a man with his own dark secrets, enters her life, their forbidden connection sparks a fire that threatens to consume both their worlds. They must navigate a landscape of betrayal and violence to survive.
Mated To The Ruthless Blood Moon Alpha Novel Cover
8.6
Today was my father's grand second wedding, but for me, it was the anniversary of my mother's death. My new stepmother, Marley, who was only four years older than me, cornered me. To establish her dominance as the new Luna, she ordered her servants to force me to my knees and violently ripped my late mother's necklace from my neck. It was the only memento my mother had left me. Marley sneered, threw it to the ground, and shattered the gems. When I scrambled to pick up the broken pieces, she dug her high-heeled shoe into the back of my hand, mocking me as dirty trash. No one stepped in to help. My father was too busy celebrating his new marriage under the dazzling lights, completely erasing my mother's memory and leaving me to be abused in my own pack. My heart was full of grievance and despair. Why did my mother's lifelong devotion end with her grave desolate and her daughter humiliated? I swore I would never become a weak, discarded she-wolf whose life depended on a man. Desperate to escape the suffocating wedding, I ran outside and stumbled right into the chest of a terrifying stranger. "No one should ever touch what is precious to you." His golden eyes blazed with fury as sparks instantly shot through my veins. He was Kade Blackwood, the ruthless Alpha of the feared Blood Moon Pack—and my fated mate.
Prisoner In Silk Sheets: A Wife With No Way Out Novel Cover
7.4
Anna Hart had no choice. To keep her family business from bankruptcy, she married Julian Ashford-heir to a financial empire and still in a coma after a wreck. It was meant to be a marriage on paper, a deal that existed in name only, until Julian opened his eyes. Awake, he wasn't gentle or grateful; he was cold, controlling, and relentless. With a plotting mother-in-law and wars inside the Ashford family, Anna learned to fight back. When she had twins, the rules changed. Caught between forced affection, secrets, and ruthless power grabs, she battled for her children-and her own survival.
PURE BLOOD Novel Cover
9.5
In a world where ancient werewolf bloodlines dictate power, a lone wolf must navigate a treacherous landscape of shifting alliances and primal instincts. As a forbidden romance blossoms between rival factions, the fragile peace is shattered by a sudden outbreak of violence. With their survival at stake, the protagonists must confront deep-seated prejudices and battle external threats to protect their bond. It is a high-stakes tale of loyalty, passion, and survival.