
My Baby, My Strength, Our Future
The mangled car teetered on the cliff's edge, my leg crushed, gasoline fumes thick in the air. My husband, Holden, stood safe on the highway, directing the rescue – but not for me. He was saving her, the woman in the passenger seat, leaving me and our unborn child to the ocean below.
I woke trapped in the crushed Maybach, leg pinned. The cliff loomed; the driver's seat was empty.
Holden, safe outside, directed paramedics past me to Giana, his "most valuable asset," ordering her rescue first.
I watched him comfort Giana, oblivious, as the car slid. My baby barely viable. Holden offered a black card for silence; Giana gloated.
Ten years of devotion, a cruel lie. Rage fueled me: how could he abandon his wife and child?
I swore a venomous oath: never again an accessory. I flicked his card away, shielded my pregnancy, and promised my baby escape.
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Chapter 3
Elise POV:
The heavy oak door of the VIP suite swung open, hitting the rubber stopper with a dull thud. Holden strode into the room. He was still wearing the same custom-tailored white shirt from last night, the expensive fabric now marred by dried streaks of mud and a faint smear of someone else's blood.
Right on his heels were two sharp-looking members of his corporate PR team. One of them, a young man with slicked-back hair, was already holding up a compact, high-definition camera, a small red light blinking on its side.
Dr. Evans took one look at the camera, gave me a brief, tight-lipped nod to confirm our silent agreement, and tactfully backed away into the corner of the room.
Holden crossed the distance to my bed in three long strides. The moment the camera lens was pointed at him, his normally cold, calculating face morphed into a mask of pure, agonizing concern.
He leaned over the mattress, reaching out both of his large, warm hands to grasp my right hand, which was resting limply on top of the white blanket.
My stomach gave a violent, sickening lurch. The image of those exact hands tenderly wrapping his jacket around Giana's shoulders flashed behind my eyes, triggering a wave of pure physical revulsion. I yanked my hand back, sliding it deep under the covers before he could make contact.
Holden's empty hands hovered awkwardly in the air. A flash of dark, genuine irritation sparked in his eyes, but he smoothed it over instantly, his public facade flawless.
He smoothly transitioned the failed gesture into pulling a chair close to the bed. He sat down, leaning in so close I could smell the stale rain and the faint, sweet trace of vanilla perfume on his collar. "Play along, Elise," he warned, his voice a barely audible, menacing hum meant only for my ears.
"Let's get some natural light on Mr. Howard," the PR manager instructed softly, stepping over to adjust the window blinds so the morning sun hit Holden's face, highlighting his manufactured exhaustion and devotion.
Holden sat back, his expression softening into a portrait of a terrified, loving husband. "Darling," he said, his voice loud enough for the microphone to pick up perfectly. "Does your leg still hurt? You terrified me last night."
I stared at him. I didn't blink. I didn't offer a single trace of emotion. I just looked at him with the cold, dead eyes of a stranger.
The camera's red light pulsed steadily, capturing this grotesque pantomime of a devoted marriage.
Holden, undeterred by my silence, reached out again. This time, he aimed for my face, intending to lovingly brush a stray lock of hair from my bruised forehead.
I snapped my head to the side, dodging his fingers completely. I locked eyes with him and asked, my voice flat and devoid of any warmth, "Is Giana dead yet?"
Holden's jaw clenched so hard a muscle ticked visibly in his cheek. The loving husband mask cracked for a fraction of a second. "You are a vicious piece of work," he hissed under his breath through a forced smile.
He stood up, deliberately shifting his broad shoulders to block the camera's view of my face. He leaned down, his lips brushing my ear. "I had to get her out first. The front half of the car was unstable. It was basic physics, Elise."
I listened to his pathetic, calculated lie, and a slow, mocking smirk curled the corner of my lips. He really thought I was stupid enough to believe his damage control.
"I think we have enough B-roll, sir," the PR manager chimed in, checking his monitor. "This will definitely calm the board down and stabilize the stock price at the opening bell."
Holden instantly straightened his spine. He rolled his shoulders back, his hands automatically moving to adjust the knot of his silk tie. The anxious husband vanished, replaced by the ruthless CEO of the Howard Group.
He reached into the inner pocket of his ruined suit jacket, pulled out a sleek, heavy titanium black card, and tossed it carelessly onto my bedside table. It landed with a sharp clatter.
"Buy whatever makes you feel better," he said, his tone dripping with patronizing charity. "Just stay here and be a good patient until the press cycle moves on."
I stared at the black card glinting under the fluorescent lights. This was the sum total of ten years of my youth, my dignity, and my near-death experience. A limitless credit limit to buy my silence. It was the ultimate insult.
I slowly reached out with two fingers, pinching the edge of the titanium card as if it were contaminated. Without breaking eye contact with Holden, I flicked my wrist and dropped it straight into the red biohazard medical waste bin next to my bed.
The heavy plastic card hit the bottom of the empty bin with a loud, echoing crack. The PR team behind him collectively gasped, the sound loud in the quiet room.
Holden stared at the trash can, then back at me, absolute disbelief warring with fury in his eyes. He clearly thought I was throwing a childish, irrational tantrum.
"You better know when to stop, Elise," he said, his voice dropping to a freezing, lethal register. He turned on his heel, marching toward the door.
As he gripped the door handle, he paused, not bothering to look back at me. "I have a board meeting this afternoon. I won't be back."
I watched his broad back, not even bothering to waste the oxygen required to tell him to go to hell.
The heavy door slammed shut, sucking the suffocating, hypocritical tension out of the room with it.
But the silence didn't last. Less than sixty seconds later, the brass doorknob slowly, silently began to turn again.
"Save your cheap acting for the press."
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8.4
I worked three double shifts at the garage just to buy a velvet-boxed cake for my wealthy girlfriend, Arleen.
But when I pushed open the VIP room door, I saw her lover kissing her bare leg.
She didn't push him away. Instead, she laughed and swirled her martini.
"I only forgot Finn because I knew he would stay. He is a poor boy from Queens who follows me around like a loyal dog."
Later that night, her lover intentionally crashed a Porsche to scare me, sending a piece of jagged metal into my skull.
Lying in a growing pool of my own blood, I watched Arleen crawl out of the wreckage.
She didn't even look at me. She threw herself at her uninjured lover, screaming for a medic.
"He just got scraped by a piece of plastic. He is faking it. Deal with Jaquez first!"
When I woke up, I wasn't free. Arleen had locked me in a private hospital wing with 24-hour security, planning to isolate me and keep me as her broken, captive toy forever.
My blind, pathetic devotion finally froze into absolute disgust.
I looked at the heart monitor next to my bed and grabbed an IV needle.
I severed the sensor wire to trigger a flatline, slipped out the fire stairs while the nurses panicked, and burned my identity to ashes.
This time, I was going to disappear to London, build my own empire, and watch hers burn.

7.9
After her twin brother's unexplained death at Alpha Academy, Alexandria Hyde takes his place and his name to uncover the truth. Now living as "Alex," she's thrown into a world of hot, testosterone-fueled Alphas who fight to the brink of death... and she has to survive it while hiding who she really is.
But staying hidden isn't easy–
Not when the Alphas start noticing her.
Not when the truth she's chasing might destroy her first.
And definitely not when they start fighting for her instead.

7.7
Rory stood on the witness stand, forced by her father into an impossible choice: secure her dying mother's medical funding, or save her innocent boyfriend.
She looked Corbin right in his trusting eyes and lied to the court, testifying that he was the one driving the car during the fatal hit-and-run, sending him to a maximum-security prison for ten years.
The betrayal destroyed him. Corbin's father died of a heart attack upon hearing the guilty verdict. Six years later, Corbin returned as a ruthless billionaire and systematically blacklisted Rory from every job in the city. He cornered her into singing at his private club, humiliating her by forcing her to drink scotch—knowing she was severely allergic—and making her throw away his promise ring just to earn a stack of cash.
"Remember this moment. This is only the beginning."
She endured his cruel revenge because she was hiding a desperate secret: she was raising his five-year-old daughter, Willa. But when Willa's congenital heart defect suddenly worsened, requiring an impossible one-million-dollar surgery, Rory realized Corbin's calculated blockade had left her completely trapped with no way to save their child.
Staring at the sterile hospital walls, the last shred of her guilt burned away, replaced by a cold, hard resolve. He had destroyed her career and backed her into a corner, but he was the only one with the money. Wiping her tears, Rory turned and headed straight for Vance Tower.

9.2
When Alma's father stood in front of the bulldozers to protest, the energy company's thugs beat him half to death in the mud.
Instead of arresting the attackers, the police handcuffed her bleeding father and threw him into a cruiser.
"Stay back, kid," the officer barked, shoving Alma away.
Her father was denied bail and framed for assaulting an officer. The corrupt mayor just smiled and told her not to cause a scene. Meanwhile, the company mailed her weeping mother a severance check that barely covered a month of groceries.
Alma was forced to watch her family be completely destroyed by men with money and power.
Kneeling in the cold dirt where her father's blood had spilled, she didn't shed a single tear. The panic in her chest died, replaced by a cold, absolute hatred.
She realized that crying wouldn't do anything. In this world, justice didn't exist for the weak.
Years later, Alma stepped onto a prestigious Ivy League campus, her cheap backpack slung over her shoulder.
She was surrounded by the arrogant children of the very executives who ruined her life.
She lowered her head, hiding her dead eyes, and put on the perfect mask of a timid, helpless charity case.
Undergrad was just a training ground, and these elite kids were just her practice dummies. The hunt was officially on.

7.6
Top DEA agent Kaitlynn Bruce woke up to a heavy, chemical lethargy, only to realize she was trapped in the body of a weak, abused war widow.
Before she could even process her new reality, she heard her sister-in-law counting cash, selling her unconscious body to a local thug for a measly two hundred dollars.
The thug dragged her new seven-year-old son, Cason, into the bedroom.
"Mommy!"
When the boy reached out, the man brutally kicked his small body into a wooden doorframe, leaving him gasping and bleeding on the floor.
Memories flooded Kaitlynn's mind. Her predecessor was a pathetic doormat whose husband's military pension had been bled dry by these greedy in-laws, leaving her children to starve and suffer endless abuse.
But as Kaitlynn looked at the bleeding boy's dark, unnervingly alert eyes, a chilling piece of DEA intelligence clicked in her mind.
Cason Richmond.
The name, the town, the abusive aunt—it all matched the classified files of the "Director of the Hive," the most ruthless and feared cartel puppet master in the criminal underworld.
How could this battered, starving child be destined to become the ultimate monster she used to hunt?
The original widow's tragic death was supposed to be the catalyst that pushed this boy into total darkness.
But Kaitlynn Bruce was not a victim.
Adrenaline burning through the drugs, she cracked the thug's neck with a brass lamp and choked the sister-in-law against the wall.
Looking down at the boy who was supposed to become a global nightmare, she made a vow. She was going to rewrite his script, even if she had to burn the whole world down to do it.

8.4
Arlene was the illegitimate daughter of the wealthy Boone family, treated worse than a stray dog. To keep her meager scholarship, she had to swallow her pride and apologize to the frat boy who tormented her.
But he didn't just want an apology. He forced her to drink twenty shots of liquor laced with pure capsaicin extract.
"Drink us under the table, or take off your clothes and crawl out."
Arlene drank until her stomach tore, vomiting blood and collapsing on the filthy club floor.
When she dragged her half-dead body back to the Boone estate, her biological father and half-sister didn't care. Instead, her sister ground Arlene's SAT admission ticket into the dirt with her stiletto.
"Throw her out. Dad doesn't want to look at her before Hardie's engagement."
The guards threw her onto the gravel, leaving her bleeding and barefoot in the freezing night.
Arlene sat shivering at a dark bus stop, her dignity completely stripped away. She never wanted a dime from the Boones, so why did they insist on crushing her only way out? And why did Dr. Hardie Boone, the untouchable head of the family, look at her with such a twisted, terrifying obsession?
When Hardie's black Aston Martin pulled out of the shadows, he scooped her up, took her away, and locked her inside his penthouse.
"You carry the Boone name. Whether you live or die is my decision."
Trapped by the dangerous man who demanded total control over her life, Arlene finally realized that simply running away was no longer an option.