
MY HIDDEN IDENTITY OF BETRAYAL AND REVENGE
I used to believe love meant enduring. Staying. Shrinking myself so someone else could grow.
I told myself it was worth it-hiding who I was, working jobs I never had to work, pretending my life was smaller than it was. I loved him. I thought that was enough.
It wasn't.
He chose her.
My best friend looked me in the eyes and took everything I had built with him. And I remember standing there, wondering how I could feel so empty when my heart was still beating.
For a long time, I blamed myself. For trusting too much. For giving too much. For not being enough.
But I'm tired of carrying guilt that was never mine.
I am not broken. I was betrayed.
And there's a difference.
I'm going back-not to beg, not to explain-but to take back the parts of myself I abandoned. My name. My power. My voice. They don't know who I really am, and that might be the only advantage I have left.
Then he appears-calm, powerful, watching me like he sees the cracks I try to hide. And suddenly, revenge doesn't feel as simple as it used to. Neither does healing.
This is my second chance.
Not to love recklessly... but to choose myself, even if it changes everything.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 4
I didn't celebrate when it started.
I didn't smile or laugh or feel that rush people imagine revenge brings. What I felt instead was... stillness. The kind that settles after a storm, when the air is too quiet and your ears ring because they've been waiting for noise.
Michael's promotion was postponed.
Just postponed. Nothing dramatic. No scandal. No announcement. Just a carefully worded email sent late on a Thursday evening, the kind designed to sound temporary but smell permanent if you read it closely enough.
Due to internal review... restructuring... timing considerations.
I read the message twice on my phone, standing by the kitchen sink, hands wet, heart steady. No fireworks. No satisfaction. Just a slow, sinking realization:
This was real.
I leaned back against the counter and closed my eyes.
For a moment-just a moment-I remembered the version of him who had once paced our tiny living room, nerves tight, hands shaking as he practiced speeches. The man who had clutched my hands and said, "If I ever get there, it'll be because of you."
That memory hurt more than I expected.
Grief doesn't disappear when love dies. It lingers. It waits. It sneaks up on you in quiet rooms and familiar moments. I pressed my palm to my chest and breathed through it.
This wasn't about that man anymore.
This was about the one who had looked me in the eye and called me nothing.
At work the next day, the air felt different. Subtle, but unmistakable. People whispered. Not loudly-never loudly-but enough. I moved through it all like a ghost, unnoticed, listening.
Michael arrived late.
I didn't turn around when I heard his voice, but I recognized the edge immediately. Tight. Controlled. Trying too hard to sound calm.
Something inside me softened. Not with pity-but with understanding.
This was how it began.
Power doesn't leave all at once. It erodes. It makes you doubt yourself first.
At lunch, I passed Sherry near the elevators.
She looked perfect, as always. Hair smooth. Makeup is flawless. But her eyes flicked toward her phone too often, her smile slightly delayed. Anxiety, thinly veiled.
"Henrietta," she said suddenly.
My name landed between us like glass.
I turned.
"Yes?"
For a split second, she looked unsure. As if she hadn't expected me to answer so easily. As if she hadn't expected me to exist at all.
"You work here now?" she asked, tone light, casual, and rehearsed.
I nodded. "For a while."
A lie. But not the kind that matters.
She smiled, but it didn't reach her eyes. "Funny how small the city is."
"Is it?" I asked gently.
Something flickered across her face. Suspicion. Then dismissal.
"Well," she said, lifting her chin, "some people get lucky."
I held her gaze.
"Yes," I said softly. "Some do."
The elevator doors opened behind her. She stepped in, glancing back once before the doors closed.
Her smile was gone.
I didn't follow.
That evening, alone again, I sat on the floor of my apartment, back against the couch, knees drawn to my chest. The city lights spilled through the window, painting the walls in soft gold.
I thought I'd feel powerful by now.
Instead, I felt... hollow.
Not empty. Not broken. Just aware.
Awareness changes you. Once you see people clearly, you can't unsee them. Once you stop hoping they'll be better, you grieve the version of them that never existed.
My phone buzzed.
K:
Are you okay?
I stared at the message longer than necessary.
Me:
I don't know what that means anymore.
A pause.
K:
It means you're still human. That's not a weakness.
I exhaled slowly.
Me:
You knew this would happen.
K:
I knew it would start.
Another message followed.
K:
Are you ready to see how he handles pressure?
My throat tightened.
Me:
I'm not sure I want to see him break.
That was the truth. Not because I cared for him-but because I remembered loving him. And watching someone fall when you once held them upright... it changes you.
K:
You don't have to watch.
But you should understand.
People show you who they really are when they lose control.
I didn't reply.
The next week was worse for Michael.
Meetings rescheduled. Invitations withdrawn. His name was left off an internal memo he should have been included in. Small things. Death by a thousand paper cuts.
I saw it in the way he snapped at interns. The way his smile became strained. The way he laughed too loudly at jokes no one told.
Sherry hovered.
Too close. Too supportive. Too desperate to keep everything intact.
One afternoon, I passed a conference room and heard raised voices.
"-told you this wasn't the right time," Sherry hissed.
"And I told you I had it handled," Michael shot back.
I kept walking.
My heart pounded-not with triumph, but with a strange ache. This wasn't the cinematic revenge story promised. This was quiet. Ugly. Human.
That night, Ken called.
Not texted. Called.
I hesitated before answering.
"Yes?"
"You sound tired," he said.
"So do you."
A soft exhale. Almost a laugh. "Fair."
Silence settled between us. Not uncomfortable. Just... open.
"I didn't expect it to feel like this," I admitted finally.
"No one ever does."
"I thought I'd feel stronger."
"You are stronger," he said. "You're just not numb."
I closed my eyes.
"What happens next?" I asked.
Another pause. Longer this time.
"That depends," he said carefully, "on whether you want justice... or transformation."
I frowned. "What's the difference?"
"Justice ends things," he replied. "Transformation changes them. And everyone involved."
Including me.
The thought sent a shiver through me.
"Michael requested a meeting," Ken added quietly.
My breath caught. "With you?"
"No," he said. "With my company. He doesn't know who I am to you."
The room felt smaller suddenly.
"And?" I asked.
"And he's nervous," Ken said. "Which means he's already losing."
I stood and walked to the window, pressing my forehead lightly against the glass.
"What are you asking me?" I whispered.
"I'm not asking," he said. "I'm warning you. Once you step further into this... you don't get to be invisible anymore."
Below me, the city moved on, unaware of the shift happening beneath its surface.
"I've been invisible my whole life," I said. "I'm tired of it."
Silence.
Then, softly: "Then tomorrow changes everything."
My pulse raced. "How?"
"You'll find out," he said. "Be ready."
The call ended.
I stood there for a long time after, phone still pressed to my ear, heart racing-not with fear, but with anticipation.
Somewhere in the city, Michael was scrambling. Sherry was lying awake, sensing the ground beneath her shift. And neither of them knew that the woman they had discarded was standing at the edge of something irreversible.
Tomorrow, I wouldn't just watch the cracks.
I would step into them.
And once I did-
There would be no turning back.
You may also like

8.4
"I'm not scared of you, Tyler."
Erika's voice trembled, not with fear but with the force of instinct, adrenaline, and something deeper.
"You should be," Tyler growled, blood staining his knuckles and rage glinting in his eyes.
"Because if they touch you again, I won't stop. Not until the ice runs red."
Erika stepped forward anyway, chin lifted. "Then let it. Because I'm not leaving you."
Even with a target on her back and the league closing in, the omega who once hid behind textbooks now stood toe-to-toe with the alpha the world feared.
After a brutal on-ice collision throws omega student Erika into the path of disgraced alpha hockey star Tyler Wood, neither of them expect the fallout to spiral into threats, secrets, and a bond neither can control. As Erika's heat awakens something primal and dangerous Tyler must confront his violent past before those hunting them destroy everything they're fighting for.

7.1
For ten years, my family kept me locked away, forcing me to play the part of a broken, mentally unstable girl. They controlled me with sedatives and treated me like a ghost in my own home, a prisoner in a gilded cage.
But I had a secret. I was a world-famous anonymous artist with a hidden fortune, and I had an escape plan. On the day of my cousin's wedding, my rebellion was accidentally witnessed by a dangerous stranger who saw the predator beneath my fragile mask.
To silence him, I dragged him into a dark closet. The encounter turned raw and reckless, a violent collision I used as the perfect cover for my escape. I vanished with a new name and a one-way ticket to a new life, leaving him with nothing but a bloodstain and the bitter taste of betrayal.
I thought I was free, that I had successfully buried the girl I was forced to be and the man I was forced to use.
Three months later, on a superyacht in Monaco, he found me. He wasn't just some wealthy guest; he was the ruthless head of a powerful crime syndicate, and I was trapped in his private penthouse. He locked the door, his eyes black with possessive rage.
"The game is over," he whispered. "This time, you're not running."

9.0
I had been a wife for exactly six hours when I woke up to the sound of my husband’s heavy breathing. In the dim moonlight of our bridal suite, I watched Hardin, the man I had adored for years, intertwined with my sister Carissa on the chaise lounge.
The betrayal didn't come with an apology. Hardin stood up, unashamed, and sneered at me. "You're awake? Get out, you frumpy mute." Carissa huddled under a throw, her fake tears already welling up as she played the victim. They didn't just want me gone; they wanted me erased to protect their reputations.
When I refused to move, my world collapsed. My father didn't offer a shoulder to cry on; he threatened to have me committed to a mental asylum to save his business merger. "You're a disgrace," he bellowed, while the guards stood ready to drag me away. They had spent my life treating me like a stuttering, submissive pawn, and now they were done with me.
I felt a blinding pain in my skull, a fracture that should have broken me. But instead of tears, something dormant and lethal flickered to life. The terrified girl who walked down the aisle earlier that day simply ceased to exist. In her place, a clinical system—the Valkyrie Protocol—booted up.
My racing heart plummeted to a steady sixty beats per minute. I didn't scream. I stood up, my spine straightening for the first time in twenty years, and looked at Hardin with the detachment of a surgeon looking at a tumor.
"Correction," I said, my voice stripped of its stutter. "You're in my light."
By dawn, I had drained my father's accounts, vanished into a storm, and found a bleeding Crown Prince in a hidden safehouse. They thought they had broken a mute girl. They didn't realize they had just activated their own destruction.

7.5
This novel have multiple stories.
Life was always hard for Jae, but he felt completely broken when he had no other choice but to sleep with the most dangerous arm dealer for $30,000.
But he didn't know that his whole life was going to change after that night.
***
"Seems like you've forgotten that you're my sex doll, so how dare you disobey me?" said Chan, pinning Jae down on the bed.
It's love.
It's obsession.
Or is it just lust?
Chan himself doesn't know why he can't stay away from Jae. No matter what he does, he always finds himself near jae.
But for Jae, all of this was torture, until he found himself falling for Chan.

7.6
AKARI TANAKA didn't know she was a werewolf until she inherited a murder.
Summoned to a remote Carpathian town, she learns she's the last heir of an ancient alpha line-and her great-uncle's suspicious death has thrown the local packs into a war for succession. As her own latent power violently awakens, Akari is caught between a ruthless rival alpha who wants to control her and a fanatical uncle whose faked death masks a plan to sacrifice her in a ritual that will rewrite reality.
To prevent a genocide of her own kind, Akari must forge an alliance with her enemy, master the wolf within, and confront the monstrous truth of her bloodline.
The price of leadership is sacrifice. The cost of failure is annihilation. But in Lupinara, the greatest predator isn't the wolf... it's the past.

7.1
Perry Lake never believed in fate, especially not when it came to love. To take revenge on her cold, power-hungry father, she broke off her engagement to Richard Scott, the ruthless Alpha of the feared Bloodmoon Pack. Walking away from that world should have meant freedom.
But one impulsive night changes everything.
Perry walked into Richard's room to end things. She never expected to end up in the bed of a stranger-an Alpha who overwhelmed her senses. Even worse, the Moon Goddess has bound them as fated mates.
Now, torn between the desire to escape and the pull of a bond she can't deny, Perry must face a destiny she never wanted-with the man she tried hardest to forget. But can love bloom where betrayal and secrets still linger?