
Marrying My Cheating Ex's Billionaire Boss
Alena landed at JFK, eager to call her fiancé of three years.
But a sudden message from her best friend shattered her world: a high-resolution photo of Darrin passionately kissing another woman. The woman was Katrina, her older sister.
Alena rushed to the grand ballroom and confronted them in front of New York's elite. Instead of an apology, her own mother slapped her across the face.
"You jealous, spiteful girl. Trying to ruin your sister's happiness because you can't handle your own failures."
Darrin coldly wrapped a protective arm around Katrina. The nightmare worsened when they ambushed Alena at her apartment, demanding she sign an NDA to cover up the affair and save their family's failing business. If she refused, her father threatened to tell her frail grandfather the truth, knowing the shock would trigger a fatal heart attack.
Alena was suffocated by the sheer magnitude of the betrayal. Her family was weaponizing the only person who truly loved her, treating her like a disposable pawn to protect the sister who stole her life. How could her own flesh and blood be so sickeningly cruel?
Cornered and entirely out of options, Alena pulled a matte-black business card from her pocket.
It belonged to Andrew Spencer, the ruthless billionaire who had rescued her from the freezing rain, and the apex predator Darrin feared most. He had offered her a transactional marriage. If her family wanted to destroy her, she would become their worst nightmare. She picked up her phone and dialed his number.
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Chapter 3
The lead thug pressed a hand to his bleeding head. He squinted into the blinding light, his chest puffing up with liquid courage.
"Mind your own business, rich boy!" he yelled, his voice cracking slightly as he tried to mask his fear.
Andrew didn't blink. He raised his hand and slowly crushed the cherry of his cigar against the wet brick wall. The movement was elegant, but it radiated pure, suffocating violence.
He tilted his head a fraction of an inch.
From the shadows behind him, his executive assistant, Sam, stepped forward. Two massive men in tailored suits flanked him.
Sam didn't wait for an order. He moved with terrifying speed. He grabbed the lead thug's arm, twisted it behind his back, and shoved upward.
A loud, sickening pop echoed in the alley as the man's shoulder dislocated.
The thug dropped to his knees, screaming in agony.
The other two men sobered up instantly. They turned to run, but the bodyguards lunged. They grabbed the men by their cheap leather collars and slammed them face-first into the muddy pavement, pinning them down with their knees.
Andrew ignored the groans of pain. He stepped over the puddles, his expensive leather shoes making no sound. He stopped right in front of Alena.
Alena was curled into a tight ball next to the dumpster. She was shivering violently, her clothes soaked with freezing rain and mud. She slowly lifted her head.
Through her blurred vision, her eyes focused on the razor-sharp line of his jaw.
Andrew crouched down. He didn't care that the muddy water was soaking into the knees of his custom trousers. His dark, piercing eyes locked onto her trembling pupils.
He reached up and unbuttoned his black overcoat. He pulled it off his shoulders and wrapped it tightly around Alena's shivering body.
The coat was heavy. It was warm from his body heat and smelled faintly of cedar and expensive tobacco.
The sudden rush of warmth, combined with the heavy crash of the alcohol, made Alena's brain short-circuit. Her survival instincts finally shut down.
She reached out with a freezing, shaking hand and grabbed the cuff of his white dress shirt. Her fingers dug into the fabric.
"Take me away," she whispered. Her voice was so fragile it barely carried over the rain.
Her eyes rolled back, and her body went completely limp.
Andrew caught her before she hit the ground. A dark, dangerous storm brewed in his eyes. He scooped her up into his arms, holding her tight against his chest.
He walked out of the alley. Sam was already standing on the curb, holding a massive black umbrella over the open rear door of the Maybach.
Andrew ducked inside, settling Alena onto the leather seat next to him. The heavy door slammed shut, instantly cutting off the sound of the rain and the city.
The car was warm. Andrew pulled a thick cashmere blanket from the compartment and draped it over her legs.
He sat back and stared at her. Her face was pale, except for the angry red handprint swelling on her cheek. Her breathing was shallow.
He reached out. His long, rough fingers gently brushed against the corner of her mouth, wiping away a fresh drop of blood. His eyes darkened to pitch black.
From the front seat, Sam looked in the rearview mirror. "Hospital, sir?"
"The hotel," Andrew said. His voice was absolute ice.
The Maybach glided smoothly through the streets, pulling into the private underground garage of a hyper-luxury hotel overlooking Central Park.
They took the private VIP elevator straight to the top floor.
The doors opened directly into the penthouse. Andrew carried Alena down a long hallway lined with Persian rugs. He pressed his thumb to the biometric scanner on the master bedroom door.
He walked to the center of the room and gently laid her down on the massive king-size bed. He moved with a careful precision, as if she were made of thin glass.
Alena whimpered in her sleep. Her brow furrowed in distress. Her hands were locked in a death grip on the lapels of his black overcoat. Her knuckles were white.
Andrew reached down, trying to loosen her fingers so he could take the wet coat off her.
The second he pulled on the fabric, Alena thrashed her head side to side, letting out a panicked noise in the back of her throat.
Andrew stopped. He let out a slow breath. He sat on the edge of the mattress and let her hold onto his coat. He sat there in the dark, watching her chest rise and fall, for thirty full minutes.
When her breathing finally deepened into a real sleep, Andrew stood up.
He walked out to the living room and went straight to the wet bar. He poured two fingers of scotch and drank it in one swallow, letting the burn settle the violent rage in his blood.
He pulled his phone from his pocket and dialed Sam.
"Break both of their hands," Andrew said to the empty room. "Then throw them out of New York."
He ended the call and walked over to the floor-to-ceiling windows. He stared down at the glittering lights of Manhattan, his eyes burning with a possessive, calculated hunger.
Hours passed. The sun began to rise.
A sliver of morning light slipped through the smart blinds and hit the bed. Alena groaned. A massive headache pounded behind her eyes.
She slowly forced her eyelids open.
She stared at a vaulted ceiling she didn't recognize. The room smelled intensely of masculine cedar and clean linen. Her brain completely stalled.
She shot up into a sitting position. She looked down at herself. She was still wearing her dirty dress, wrapped tightly in the black overcoat. She let out a breath she didn't know she was holding.
At that exact moment, the frosted glass door of the master bathroom clicked open.
A cloud of steam rolled into the bedroom. Andrew stepped out. Water dripped from his wet hair down his chest. He was wearing nothing but a white towel slung low on his hips.
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8.0
My abusive step-family isolated me completely, holding my mother's medical funds hostage to control my every move.
Yesterday, they finalized my sale.
"You will marry Rudy Petrov next month. He is fifty, wealthy, and willing to overlook your lack of pedigree."
Pushed to the absolute edge, I did the insane. I posted an ad online offering my life savings of $50,000 for a contract husband. A stranger named Brennan agreed.
But my family wouldn't let me go. They forced me back for a dinner by threatening my mother's life-saving prescriptions.
At the table, they relentlessly mocked my new "poor IT guy" husband and intentionally burned my hand with boiling tea.
Worse, the housekeeper locked me in a guest room and forced drugs down my throat so Rudy could come in and assault me.
I lay there paralyzed on the floor, bleeding from Rudy's slap, utterly terrified. I couldn't understand why my own family would throw me to the wolves, and I felt a crushing guilt for dragging an innocent, ordinary guy into my nightmare.
Until a pitch-black Maybach smashed through the estate's wrought-iron gates at eighty miles an hour.
My "poor" husband kicked the solid oak doors off their hinges, beat Rudy half to death, and carried me out into the rain.
I didn't know it yet, but the ordinary man I hired to save me was a ruthless billionaire, and he was about to erase my family's entire empire by morning.

9.3
For five years, I was Ashton Miller's invisible partner, his loyal fiancée, pouring my life into building his empire from the shadows. Tonight, the Bronze Deer exhibition, my masterpiece, was finally opening at the Met, a testament to our shared future.
Then, Bianca, a third-tier actress, stepped into the spotlight in *my* custom Vera Wang wedding dress. My blood ran cold as Ashton's arm circled her waist, his whispered words promising to make her the "new queen of the city."
Five years of trust and sacrifice crumbled. I was a blood bag, drained and discarded. When I publicly exposed their lies, Ashton cornered me backstage, his face twisted in fury, threatening to ruin me, to blacklist me forever. I ripped off his engagement ring, tossing it at his chest. "We're done," I said, walking out as his enraged screams echoed.
The man whose empire I secretly built called me a parasite, his mistress feigning tears, painting me as delusional. My guilt vanished, replaced by freezing, absolute hatred for the man who twisted reality to erase my existence.
Standing in the New York rain, I finally pulled out the military-grade encrypted phone hidden for five years. The line clicked open instantly, a low, gravelly voice asking, "Is it you?" Before I could answer, Archer's voice hardened: "Give me the location. I'll be there in ten minutes. Who touched you? I want his life."

7.1
The night before her wedding to Wall Street billionaire Everette Baird, Deliah Quinn stood happily in her haute couture gown.
Then, her younger sister Arvilla walked in, handed her a drugged glass of champagne, and slammed an ultrasound on the vanity.
"I'm pregnant with Everette's child," Arvilla sneered.
Before Deliah's paralyzed body could react, Arvilla dragged in a canister of industrial gasoline, soaked the bridal suite, tossed a lighter, and locked the heavy oak doors from the outside.
To escape the roaring inferno, Deliah smashed the glass balcony and threw herself into the freezing, violent waters of the Atlantic Ocean.
For five agonizing years, everyone believed the Quinn heiress was dead.
Deliah returned to New York entirely reborn—a top architectural designer and a single mother, having scrubbed her past clean and forgotten the people who destroyed her.
She only wanted a peaceful life with her five-year-old genius son, Leo.
But she had no idea her son was secretly hacking airport security cameras to find himself a wealthy stepdad.
Leo deliberately bumped into a terrifying, cold-blooded tycoon, spilling scalding coffee on his custom suit to get his attention.
When Deliah frantically rushed over to protect her son and apologize, the air in the terminal vanished.
Everette Baird stared at the exact face he had obsessively mourned for five years, his eyes turning pitch black as he crushed his phone in his bare hand.

7.7
Alondra spent three hours making soup for her husband, only to find him at the hospital tenderly holding another woman's hand.
"I'm four weeks pregnant, Gerard," the woman said softly.
Gerard coldly handed Alondra a divorce agreement, claiming their three-year marriage was just a placeholder because this woman had once saved his life.
Heartbroken, Alondra fled in her car, only to realize her brakes had been completely disabled.
She spun out of control and crashed head-on into a massive delivery truck.
As she lay trapped in the mangled wreckage with her ribs crushed and blood filling her mouth, Gerard's black Maybach pulled up to the curb.
He stared at her dying body through the window with a completely blank expression.
He didn't call an ambulance or even open his door.
He simply rolled up his tinted window and drove away into the rain.
A raw, suffocating hatred burned in her chest, hotter than the pain in her shattered bones.
She couldn't understand how the man she had loved and served so devotedly could just coldly watch her die like a piece of trash.
Opening her eyes again, Alondra gasped for air.
She had returned to the exact morning two years ago, right before she was supposed to deliver that pathetic soup.
When Gerard walked in and threatened her with divorce, she didn't cry or beg.
"I agree. Let's divorce," she said calmly, packing her bags to reclaim her true identity as a billionaire heiress.

9.5
Janet woke up gasping, the phantom fire of a deadly explosion still scorching her lungs. She had been reborn three years in the past, on the exact day her mother forced her into a marriage contract with Gaylord Bradford, a paralyzed and severely disfigured billionaire.
Before she could even process her second chance, her cousin Kandy kicked the bedroom door open, flaunting a massive diamond ring. Kandy, who had also been reborn, smugly announced she had stolen Janet's Wall Street golden boy fiancé, Jax Adler.
"You're going to marry that paralyzed monster," Kandy spat, gloating that she would build a billionaire dynasty with Jax while Janet wiped drool off a rotting corpse. Kandy expected Janet to have a complete mental collapse, completely unaware that Gaylord's own medical team was secretly injecting him with lethal neurotoxins to finish him off.
But Janet only felt a cold, clinical pity. Kandy's "prophetic" memories were a polluted lie. Jax was actually sterile and dying of irreversible kidney failure, while Gaylord wasn't a dying freak—he was a dormant god whose body was merely in a high-dimensional hibernation. Why would Janet mourn losing a doomed fraud?
Leaving her delusional cousin behind, Janet packed her bags and headed straight to Gaylord's maximum-security military cell. She physically tackled his corrupt doctor, drove three bio-electric silver needles into the crippled king's spine to awaken his deadened nerves, and looked him dead in his glacial blue eye.
"Sign the marriage contract," Janet whispered. "I will make you walk again, and we will take back everything."

9.6
I was trapped in a locked-in state for six months, fully conscious but unable to move a single muscle.
My step-family, Delma and Jazmyne, marched into my hospital room, forged a Do Not Resuscitate order, and yanked out my oxygen tube just to stop paying my medical bills.
When my three-year-old daughter, Amari, leaped out from under the bed to protect me, they beat her mercilessly.
They kicked my tiny girl in the stomach, smashed a heavy metal IV pole into her fragile shoulder, and dragged her out by her ankles.
They even tied her to a tree in their backyard and let a massive Rottweiler tear into her flesh, laughing as they recorded her agonizing screams.
I lay in that hospital bed, hearing every blow and every desperate cry.
I didn't understand why they had to torture an innocent toddler just because they thought I was a worthless piece of trash with amnesia.
A tidal wave of absolute fury crashed against the invisible walls of my paralyzed body, burning away the despair.
Gritting my teeth until my jaw popped, I forced my dead weight off the mattress and dragged my atrophied legs across the freezing floor to a landline.
With trembling, bloody fingers, I punched in a twelve-digit military-grade encrypted code.
It was time for my real family—the most powerful men in the country—to make these monsters pay.