
Nowhere To Run From The Cold-Hearted CEO's Obsession
Aurora didn't cry when Grayson dumped her; she vanished after his line, "Wherever I am, you can't show up."
Three years on, she returned as the city's star anchor; he watched nightly, haunted.
Five years on, free of his family's leash, he staged a dinner to win her back. She met him like a stranger and refused.
Learning she was engaged to his nephew, he dropped restraint. By any means, he would reclaim her.
As she walked away, his voice shook. "Until I die, I won't let go."
In college she'd chased him, not knowing he was a Rockefeller-until his father's snub proved the gulf she'd never cross.
Whether it was five years ago or now, they were never meant to be, she thought.
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Chapter 2
"You're kidding, right, Mr. Rockefeller? Life's like tasting wine—some vintages are meant to savor once and never again. I'm perfectly content with the one I have now." Aurora raised her glass, lips curved in a polite smile, though a glint of frost shimmered behind her calm eyes.
The words struck like a blade wrapped in silk. Grayson's expression hardened; his gaze slid away, and his elegant fingers tightened around his tumbler before he tossed back the liquor in one harsh swallow. That distant, formal "Mr. Rockefeller" cut deeper than any insult—just as it had the day she'd walked out five years ago with half a million dollars and not a backward glance.
A brittle tension settled over the table, chilling the air.
Marc faltered mid-smile as he noticed both Grayson and Leland wearing dark expressions.
"Since you've made it all the way here, Aurora, why not join us for a meal and chat for a little?" Marc gently steered Aurora toward the seat beside Grayson. "It's just a simple dinner, a friendly chat. If your fiancé won't even allow that, how will you manage working at a TV station? Come on, fill your glass and share a drink with Mr. Rockefeller."
While speaking, Marc poured her a brimming glass of strong liquor.
Her fingers trembling faintly, Aurora lifted the glass, her movement stiff. "Mr. Rockefeller, may I share a drink with you?"
Grayson's eyes flickered. He took the glass from her hand and downed it in a single swallow.
A crease formed between Aurora's brows as their fingertips brushed—just a fleeting touch, yet it tugged at a buried chord. Old memories slipped through the cracks—echoes of a love that had ended five years ago.
She remembered the girl she'd been back then: competing in academic contests, skipping meals to chase research deadlines, pushing herself until she landed in the hospital with stomach pain. Grayson had taken it upon himself to oversee her meals ever since—making sure she ate on time, kept a balanced diet, and steering her away from spicy food and alcohol. Just now, despite their breakup years back, he'd downed her glass of liquor to keep her away from alcohol.
Aurora's eyes shifted to Grayson in quiet observation.
His long, sharply defined fingers wrapped around the wine glass, and though his face remained calm and austere, there was a dangerous allure beneath that polished surface—an undercurrent that drew people in like a forbidden bloom.
She pulled her gaze back, forcing composure, and poured herself a glass of red wine. "Mr. Rockefeller, I'll take care of this one myself," she said evenly.
Before the words had fully faded, she tipped the glass back and finished it in one steady motion.
Grayson's hand, poised to stop her, froze awkwardly midair.
Aurora acted as if she hadn't noticed. Getting entangled with Grayson again was the last thing she wanted, and accepting his concern would only feel like another debt she'd never repay. Whatever warmth she once held for him had been buried five years ago. No familiar gesture of his could soften the resolve she'd built since walking away.
She knew Grayson belonged to a world far above hers—a realm of power and privilege she could never touch. She was just a girl from a modest family, and she wouldn't repeat the naïve mistake she'd made five years ago, letting herself believe they could ever stand side by side.
As dinner dragged on, Lana and Leland settled into an easy rhythm, kissing and caressing each other like a couple long past the awkward stage.
The sight only sharpened Aurora's awareness of her own solitude. Staying any longer would make her look like an outsider clinging to a table that wasn't hers.
When Grayson stepped away to answer a call, Aurora seized the chance to slip out quietly. Marc didn't bother to stop her from leaving.
To Marc, as long as the sponsorship was landed, that was what mattered. He didn't care whether it was Aurora or Lana who secured it.
Cool evening air brushed Aurora's face as she stepped outside, relief barely settling before her phone buzzed. A single message flashed across the screen. "If you still want a year's worth of sponsorship, wait for me at the door."
The domineering tone was unmistakable. Anyone else's arrogance she could've brushed off as a wrong number. But this—this was Grayson, exactly as he'd been back then.
Summer had just settled over the city, wrapping the air in warmth that broke now and then into sudden downpours.
Aurora stepped back beneath the porch roof, sheltering from the sheets of rain that swept across the street. Raindrops splashed against her high heels, streaking down her sheer stockings, as echoes of her earlier exchange with Grayson replayed in her mind.
A sleek Maybach eased to a stop at the curb. The tinted window slid down, revealing a face cut sharp as marble—handsome, composed, and watching her with unreadable eyes. "Get in." The command was short, cool, unmistakably Grayson's.
Aurora frowned. Five years apart hadn't changed him—still the same man who expected obedience, never requests.
Aurora lifted her handbag over her head, intending to make a run for it, when the driver appeared, unfolding a black umbrella. Without a word, he strode toward her and held it aloft, guiding her through the rain toward the waiting car.
Grayson's gaze drifted toward Aurora, seated quietly beside him. His eyes lingered on the delicate curve of her legs, still glistening faintly from the rain, her heels damp and her sheer stockings clinging to her skin with a shimmer of pale warmth. Without a word, he reached for a towel and leaned forward, his movements steady as he began gently wiping the moisture away.
The sudden contact startled Aurora; her muscles tightened beneath his touch. Reclaiming the towel, she murmured a courteous "thank you," her tone smooth but distant, like a polite stranger.
That cool detachment struck harder than any accusation—proof that the closeness they once shared had turned to ash.
A shadow crossed Grayson's face. He leaned back against the seat, eyes fixed on the streams of rain blurring the glass, his fingers absently tightening into slow, rhythmic twists. When he finally spoke, his voice was low, controlled, and threaded with something unreadable. "Have you set the date for the wedding?"
Aurora hesitated before giving a faint shake of her head, signaling that no date had been set yet.
Outside, rain slicked the roads, and traffic crawled. The driver eased the car forward, wipers sweeping rhythmically as the city blurred past in streaks of gray.
A quiet settled over the car, broken only by the soft patter of raindrops. After a long pause, Grayson's low voice cut through the silence. "Is he good to you?"
Her breath hitched, expression briefly faltering before she answered, "He is."
"How good?" His tone was steady, but his gaze remained fixed on her.
Aurora's fingers tightened around the hem of her coat. "He treats me like I'm the most precious thing in his world," she said evenly. "His love is real—devoted and constant."
Grayson said nothing more. Every word she spoke about her fiancé echoed like a quiet reproach aimed straight at him. His hand, once idly twisting his fingers together, curled into a fist against his knee.
Neither spoke after that.
The hum of the engine filled the space between them until, at last, the rain tapered off.
Aurora turned her head toward the window, letting the blur of streetlights and passing buildings hold her attention rather than prying into Grayson's life. Five years had gone by, and he still occupied that lofty, untouchable world—so far removed from her modest existence, from a paycheck barely scraping fifty thousand a month.
The luxury car eventually rolled to a stop in front of the small two-bedroom apartment Aurora had bought with painstaking savings. She didn't bother asking how he'd found her address—or how he'd gotten her number. For someone like Grayson, such things were trivial.
Her hand reached for the car door handle when his voice broke through the quiet. "Why didn't you continue in IT? What made you switch to broadcasting?" He still remembered she'd graduated at the top of her class as an IT major.
Aurora's hand froze on the handle as she turned back to meet his eyes. "Mr. Rockefeller, I'm not the kind of person who clings to the past. Once IT failed me, I cut it loose and chose a path that truly fits who I am now."
Her tone carried a quiet sting that didn't escape him.
Just as she was about to step out, Grayson called her name—but no words followed.
She leaned down slightly, her reflection glinting in the dark glass, voice cool as frost. "You once told me it'd be best if we never crossed paths again, remember?"
Without waiting for an answer, she shut the door with finality and walked off, heels clicking against the pavement in steady defiance.
Grayson sat there watching her silhouette fade into the night, the tension draining from his clenched fist until it dropped uselessly to his side. She'd left with the same unshakable resolve as she had five years ago.
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7.7
A Whitmere Family Romance
Ten years ago, Sloane Hart ran from the only man she ever loved.
Not because she stopped loving him-
but because loving Rhett Whitmere meant risking everything.
Now she's back in Whitmere County, standing inside the luxury hotel he built from heartbreak, legacy, and a love he never let go of. Rhett is no longer the boy she left behind. He's a powerful CEO bound by family expectation, haunted by the past, and still hopelessly in love with the woman who shattered him.
Sloane only planned to stay long enough to complete a high-profile spa expansion.
She never planned to fall for him again.
But in a town that remembers everything, whispers turn into scandals, and old wounds reopen fast. When a dangerous betrayal threatens Rhett's empire and puts Sloane at the center of a storm, they're forced to face the truth they've both been avoiding:
Some loves don't fade.
They wait.
And this time, Rhett Whitmere isn't willing to lose her again.
Forever Yours, Almost is a slow-burn, second-chance romance filled with family legacy, small-town secrets, emotional tension, and a love worth fighting for

8.5
Kaelyn spent three years believing Andrew loved her completely, until one overheard conversation shattered everything.
He had never returned for her. He had come back to save another woman, even if it meant taking Kaelyn's heart.
Humiliated and done with loving alone, she agreed to marry Theodore, the blind yet powerful heir chosen by his grandfather.
After the wedding, no matter how many times she tried, she just couldn't get past his walls.
Then at a banquet, her desperate ex came begging. Before Kaelyn could react, Theodore drew her into his arms and murmured, "Giving up already? Try again. I'm ready to surrender."

8.7
I was trapped in a greasy diner by my own mother.
She was forcing me to marry my abusive cousin because he had paid her twenty thousand dollars.
To escape, I used a contract marriage app and begged a complete stranger to marry me at City Hall that very day.
Ethan drove a cheap Ford and wore a plain suit. I thought he was just an ordinary guy needing a fake wife.
When my mother found out, she brought thugs to destroy my flower shop—my only home and livelihood.
To protect Ethan from her endless extortion, I shielded him and screamed that he was bankrupt and drowning in credit card debt.
My mother fled in disgust, and Ethan took me into his apartment for the night.
But out of trauma and habit, I locked my bedroom door, muttering that he must be old and desperate.
He stormed out into the freezing night, leaving me terrified that I had ruined my only lifeline.
I didn't understand why he was so furiously offended, completely unaware that my "broke" husband was actually the most ruthless billionaire in New York, and I had just trampled his massive ego.
The next morning, his face was a mask of ice as he dragged me back to City Hall to annul the marriage and get rid of me.
"Annulment. Now," he demanded.
But the clerk just popped her gum and slid a pink paper across the counter.
"State law changed. Mandatory thirty-day cooling-off period."

8.6
Aubree pushed Ezra down the grand staircase, crippling the only man who silently protected her.
She thought she was finally escaping his control to be with her true love, Foster Newton.
But she had no idea it was a vicious trap meticulously set by Newton and her sweet, innocent cousin, Brandi.
Once Ezra was driven out of New York in despair, Aubree's life became a living hell. Her father completely disowned her. Brandi smoothly took over her home and her millions in inheritance.
"You were just a stepping stone for us, Aubree."
That was the last thing Newton sneered before leaving her to die.
Lying on the freezing floor, her warm blood pooling in her palms, Aubree finally saw the horrifying truth. She had destroyed her own family and ruined the one man who genuinely cared for her, all for a pair of greedy parasites.
Endless regret and suffocating hatred consumed her fading consciousness. Why was she so blind? Why did she let them manipulate her into destroying her own life?
Then, her eyes snapped open.
A violent wave of dizziness hit her. She looked down at her pale, flawless hands. There were no deep cuts. There was no sticky blood.
She was back. She had miraculously returned to the exact night she pushed Ezra, just two hours before his private jet was scheduled to leave forever.
Hearing her father's furious roar outside her bedroom door, Aubree didn't cower.
She wiped the smeared makeup from her face, her eyes turning dead cold. This time, she was going to make Ezra stay, and she was going to send those leeches straight to hell.

9.7
Charity woke up in a hellish, acid-rain-soaked slum, trapped inside a bloated body covered in festering, toxic sores. She was the exiled Grand Princess of the Empire.
But the real nightmare wasn't her ruined body. It was the fact that the original owner had used her royal authority to force genetic marriage contracts onto four top-tier, powerful men.
Now, she was bound to them, and they absolutely loathed her.
Hjalmar, chained to a bed in her filthy room, smiled like a feral beast and promised to rip her head off the second his chains snapped.
Braden, a ruthless military officer, saved her from a mutated rat only to look at her with pure disgust.
"If you want to die, go die somewhere else. Don't dirty my patrol sector."
Even the locals mocked her fallen status, and a wealthy heiress publicly framed her for stealing a hundred-thousand-coin energy core just to see her rot in a dark cell.
She was universally despised, physically repulsive, and a lethal biological toxin gave her exactly 59 days left to live. How was she supposed to survive this absolute hell when her starting affection with her partners was at negative 100?
Then, a mechanical voice echoed in her skull, activating a survival system. To purge the poison, she had to harvest emotional energy by making these four men fall for her. Charity accepted the mandate, unlocked a top-tier culinary skill, and grabbed a rusted meat cleaver to start her counterattack.

8.3
My husband, Derek, once called me his princess. But when my parents died and I miscarried our child, he told me to be "radically independent" and handle my grief alone.
After I tried to end my own life, I woke up in the hospital to see him holding his crying assistant, Krystal.
He whispered to her, "You never have to be strong with me."
He told the doctors I was just seeking attention and hung up. Krystal later visited, blaming me for the miscarriage before destroying my mother's heirlooms. Derek believed her lies, throwing me out of our home and leaving me with nothing.
He thought I was a weak, dependent woman he could easily discard. He thought his tech empire was his own creation.
He never knew his "self-made" success was a gift, secretly funded by my billionaire family. Now, he's about to learn what happens when a princess decides to become a queen.