
News Flash Ex-husband, I'm Alive!
"I know you're pregnant, Valentina. That's why you have to die tonight. Two lives for the price of one, efficiency was always my strong suit."
On her third wedding anniversary, Valentina was gifted a shallow grave.
Her husband, Kennedy, the man she adored, was never a billionaire. He was a fraud who drugged her, watched her drown in a poisoned bath, and ordered her burial so he could marry his mistress.
He didn't know the gardener would hesitate. He didn't know she would crawl out of the mud, pregnant, broken, and alive. And he never imagined that ghosts would come back with teeth.
Dragged from the storm by Ian Kingston, the Titan of industry, Valentina is saved by a man so powerful that Kennedy is nothing more than a disposable bookkeeper in his empire.
To the world, Ian is a monster.
To Valentina, he is survival.
But Ian doesn't see a victim.
He sees Misha, his vanished wife, the mother of his two children, the woman who disappeared without a trace.
"You have 365 days to prove you aren't her, little bird. Until then, you will sleep in my bed, wear my name, and obey every rule I set."
Trapped in a deadly case of mistaken identity, Valentina signs the contract.
She becomes Misha Kingston, cold, ruthless, untouchable. Wrapped in emerald silk and Ian's dark protection, she walks back into the world that tried to bury her.
The next time Kennedy sees his dead wife, she isn't in a coffin.
She's in the arms of his boss. Wearing a queen's crown. Looking down at him from a throne of gold.
But as Ian's control turns into obsession, Valentina faces an impossible truth.
She is hiding a child conceived by her enemy... While being claimed by a king who refuses to let her go.
He buried a wife.
He's about to kneel before a Goddess.
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Chapter 3
The rain began as a cold, mocking drizzle, turning the grime of the alley into a slick black sludge.
Valentina.... no, she had to stop thinking of herself as the woman who loved Kennedy forced her fingers to dig into the wet pavement. Her muscles screamed, the paralytic leaving behind a lingering, leaden tremor that made every movement feel like wading through thick tar.
She dragged herself upright, leaning against a graffiti-stained brick wall. Every breath felt like swallowing shards of glass; her throat was a ring of fire where Kennedy's thumbs had tried to extinguish her soul.
She began to walk. Each step was a battle against gravity. She was a phantom in a torn silk gown, a ruined bride of the night, trailing the faint, ironic scent of expensive lilies and cemetery dirt.
As she stumbled toward the mouth of the alley, the neon glare of the city hit her like a physical blow. She passed a high-end boutique, its glass polished to a mirror finish. Valentina stopped. She didn't mean to look, but the creature in the reflection demanded her attention.
A hollow-cheeked woman stared back. Her hair was a matted bird's nest of mud and dried rose petals. Her neck was branded with a grotesque, blackened necklace of bruises, the fingerprints of a man who had promised her forever. She looked like something that had crawled out of a nightmare, not the socialite who had graced the covers of local galas.
I died in that tub, she thought, a hysterical sob bubbling in her chest. This is just the ghost walking home.
She reached a public park, the wrought-iron benches glistening like bone in the moonlight. She needed a phone.
A priest. A stranger with a shred of mercy. But as she approached a passerby, a man in a sharp suit, he recoiled, his lip curling in disgust.
"Get away from me, you crackhead," he spat, sidestepping her as if her misery were contagious.
The rejection stung more than the cold. She was invisible to the world she once belonged to. She was trash now, just as Kennedy had said.
Suddenly, a white-hot spike of pain detonated in her lower abdomen.
Valentina gasped, her knees buckling. She collapsed behind a large oak tree, the rough bark scraping her bare shoulder. She clutched her stomach, her breath coming in panicked, shallow hitches.
"No," she whimpered, her voice a shredded rasp. "Not you. Please stay. Don't leave me alone."
The cramp deepened, a dull, heavy ache that felt like an ending. She was terrified to look down, terrified to see red staining the muddy hem of her dress. If she lost the baby, she had nothing left to fight for. The child was the only thing Kennedy hadn't managed to steal yet.
She curled into a ball on the cold roots of the tree, whispering a frantic, broken lullaby to the life inside her, her tears carving clean streaks through the filth on her face.
Fight, little one. If I'm still breathing, you have to be too.
After ten minutes of agonizing stillness, the pain receded into a dull throb. A miracle. A temporary reprieve.
She forced herself back up, her vision swimming with exhaustion, her mind a fog of trauma and hunger.
The wind picked up, howling through the concrete canyons of the city. Something white and shimmering danced across the pavement a few yards away.
Her heart leaped. The silk clutch.
The one Kennedy wanted to bury alongside her.
Martha had packed it with the dirt and slyly given it to her before urging her to escape.
It was the bag she had carried during their romantic dinner. Inside was her wedding ring, a five-carat lie, and her ID.
It was the only proof that she existed, the only currency she had left to buy a way out of this city. It was her only hope to find a doctor, a place to hide, a future.
The bag tumbled, caught in a playful, cruel gust. It skittered toward the edge of the curb, toward the busy intersection of 5th and Main.
"Wait," she croaked, her legs moving with a sudden, desperate burst of adrenaline.
She ignored the ache in her womb. She ignored the way her lungs burned. That bag was her shield, her weapon, her identity. She chased it, her bare feet slapping against the cold asphalt, her fingers outstretched like a drowning woman reaching for a lifeline.
The bag flew into the center of the crosswalk.
Valentina lunged. Her fingers brushed the silk, cold, wet, and real. She snatched it to her chest, a sob of triumph breaking from her lips as she curled her body around the small treasure.
Then, the world turned white.
A roar of an engine, like a beast awakened, filled her ears. The screech of high-performance tires tore through the night air, a sound of tearing metal and screaming rubber. Two blinding, celestial orbs of light eclipsed the city, heading straight for her.
She didn't have the strength to jump. She didn't have the time to scream.
Valentina squeezed the bag to her heart, shut her eyes tight, and felt the hot, metallic breath of the radiator against her skin.
She braced for the impact, for the bones to shatter, for the final darkness to take her back to the water where Kennedy had left her.
I'm sorry, little one, she whispered in the silence of her soul. At least we'll be together.
But instead of the cold embrace of death, two small, frantic forces slammed into her side.
"Mommy!"
The impact knocked her off her feet, sending her rolling across the asphalt just as the black beast of a car hissed to a halt inches from where she had been.
Valentina gasped for air, her head spinning, only to find herself pinned to the ground by four small, trembling arms and the scent of vanilla and expensive soap.
"Mommy, you're finally back!"
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9.5
My boyfriend, Jefferson, convinced me to give up my Yale scholarship for him. He was my secret, my escape from the shame of my mother's past, and I threw away my future for our love.
Then, at a gala, he publicly announced his engagement to Aubrey Carroll-the girl who made my high school years a living hell.
He trapped me in his mansion, forcing me to become her personal servant. She tortured me daily, culminating in her brutally killing our dog, Charlie, with a garden trowel.
When her friends arrived, they joined in, stripping me half-naked and live-streaming my panic attack for the world to see.
The man who once promised to protect me watched as they destroyed me.
But as I lay bleeding out on the floor, it wasn't an ambulance that arrived. It was the private security of Alexzander Stevens-my estranged, billionaire grandfather.
He revealed I was his sole heiress, and now, we were going to make them pay for every last tear.

9.6
On Valentine's Day, love is in the air-but so is danger.
At 30,000 feet, trainee captain Jane Harley proves she's more than just a rising pilot when she navigates a terrifying turbulence that leaves passengers shaken and lives hanging by a thread. Calm under pressurej and fiercely capable, Jane becomes the unexpected hero of Flight 423.
But while she's saving lives in the sky, fate is already setting something far more complicated in motion.
Among the passengers is the powerful and ambitious mother of Jayden-Aurelia Air's largest shareholder-whose midair health crisis is only the beginning of a chain of events. Grateful and intrigued, she sets her sights on Jane... not just as a hero, but as a future daughter-in-law.
Jayden, a grounded pilot with a sharp mind and guarded heart, has no interest in his mother's schemes-until one unexpected name changes everything.
In a world of wealth, expectations, and high-altitude emotions, two lives are about to collide.
Love, ambition, and fate take flight in Falling at 30,000 Feet.

7.6
I was the fiancée of the Chicago Outfit’s heir, a bond sealed by blood and eighteen years of history.
But when his mistress pushed me into the freezing pool at our engagement gala, Jax didn’t swim toward me.
He swam past me.
He scooped up the girl who pushed me, cradling her like fragile glass, while I struggled against the weight of my gown in the murky water.
When I finally dragged myself out, shivering and humiliated before the entire underworld, Jax didn’t offer a hand. He offered a scowl.
"You’re making a scene, Eliana. Go home."
Later, when that same mistress shoved me down the stairs, shattering my knee and my dance career, Jax stepped over my broken body to comfort her.
I overheard him telling his friends, "I’m just breaking her spirit. She needs to learn she’s property, not a partner. Once she’s desperate enough, she’ll be the perfect obedient wife."
He thought I was a dog that would always return to its master. He thought he could starve me of affection until I begged for scraps.
He was wrong.
While he was busy playing protector to his mistress, I wasn't crying in my room.
I was packing his ring into a cardboard box.
I cancelled my transfer to UCLA and enrolled at NYU instead.
By the time Jax realized his "property" was missing, I was already in New York, standing next to a man who looked at me like a queen, not a possession.

9.3
On the first anniversary of our reconciliation, I thought my tech mogul husband and I had finally turned a corner. Then I discovered our entire marriage was a spectator sport. It was a cruel, year-long revenge game orchestrated by him and his lover, and I was the punchline.
For their amusement, I was poisoned with food contaminated with dog feces, publicly humiliated with a twenty-million-dollar auction scam, and beaten until my ribs broke by his family's private security. I endured it all, playing the part of the clueless, loving wife while they laughed about it in a group chat called "The Jillian Andrews Comedy Hour."
But their grand finale was a step too far. I overheard him calmly planning to leave me to die in a remote cabin during a blizzard, a "tragic accident" that would finally set him free to be with his mistress.
He thought he was writing the final chapter of my life.
He didn't know I was about to use his murder plot as my own perfect escape. I faked my death, vanished into thin air, and left him to explain to the world how his beloved wife disappeared off the face of the earth.

9.0
The biopsy report slid across the cold metal desk, stamped with a brutal death sentence: advanced gastric cancer. Aretha had exactly ninety days left to live.
It was her twenty-sixth birthday, but her phone only rang with a furious call from her husband, Anders.
"Do you have any idea how much of a joke you made this family look like today? Post a public apology to Kelli right now."
He had completely forgotten her birthday, only caring that she skipped her adopted sister's yacht party.
When Aretha dragged her failing body back to the family estate, her biological mother slapped her across the face just for looking pale and embarrassing them in front of guests.
Seeing Aretha wasn't submitting to the usual abuse, Kelli deliberately threw herself down the stairs, playing the innocent, depressed victim.
Anders rushed in and shoved Aretha brutally against the wall to protect Kelli, while her biological father delivered his ultimate threat.
"I am freezing your trust fund. Get on your knees and apologize to Kelli right now, or you won't see another dime."
A massive, suffocating sense of absurdity washed over Aretha. She had spent six years lowering her head and begging for their approval, only to be treated like a disposable placeholder. Why should she spend her final days enduring this agonizing torture for people who didn't even care if she breathed?
Aretha wiped the blood from her chin and laughed. She publicly severed all ties with her family, whipped the signed divorce papers directly at Anders's face, and walked out into the freezing storm—ready to fight for her own life.

8.0
My wedding was tomorrow. I was a crisis counselor who had finally found peace with my loving fiancé, Dexter, and my best friend, Barbara.
A late-night call about a forced marriage led me to a hotel penthouse, where I found them naked in bed together.
It was all a cruel, three-year "savior game." They were bored heirs, and I was their project. They destroyed my career, caused me to lose our baby, and put my mother in the hospital.
They forced me to be a bridesmaid at their wedding-the one that should have been mine.
In front of hundreds of guests, they exposed my traumatic past and then tried to marry me off to a drunken stranger as a joke.
As I stood there, broken, a text from Barbara arrived.
"Your mother saw the livestream. She had a heart attack. She's not going to make it."
With nothing left, I ran to the 20th-floor window and jumped. They thought they had erased me. But my death was just the beginning.