
Once The Rejected Bride, Now His Eternal Nightmare
BLURB: Ashley Marsh was left at the altar, her fiancé choosing her stepsister in front of all of New York. Labeled "The Rejected Bride," she vanished in a cloud of humiliation. Five years later, she returns, but the shy heiress is gone. In her place is Ashley Sterling-a venture capitalist so powerful, so untouchable, that the very elite who laughed at her now scramble for her favor. Her mission is simple: a calculated, merciless takeover of the families that destroyed her. But when the man who broke her heart sees the woman she has become, his regret threatens to unravel her perfect plan for vengeance.
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Chapter 2
Ashley’s Point of View
I wake up knowing something is wrong.
Not because of the pain—though it’s there, pulsing dully behind my eyes—but because of the emptiness. A hollow so vast it feels like my soul slipped out of my body while I slept and never found its way back.
The ceiling above me is unfamiliar. Too white. Too bright.
Hospital.
The word forms slowly, sluggishly, like my brain is wading through mud.
When I try to move, my skull protests violently. I gasp, fingers clutching at the sheets.
“Ashley.”
My father’s voice.
I turn my head an inch. That’s all I can manage. Liam Marsh sits beside the bed, his shoulders hunched, his expensive suit wrinkled in a way I’ve never seen before. He looks older. Smaller.
For a split second—just one—I feel something dangerous rise in my chest.
Hope.
Then I remember.
The altar.
The microphone.
Cole’s voice, calm and merciless.
“No.”
My breath stutters.
“You collapsed,” my father says quickly, as if speed might soften the words. “You hit your head. The doctors said it was exhaustion and emotional distress. You’ll recover.”
Recover.
As if this were a sprained ankle.
I swallow. My throat feels raw, scraped bloody from screaming I don’t remember making.
“How long?” I ask.
“Two days.”
Two days while the world tore me apart without me.
My fingers twitch. “My phone.”
He hesitates.
I don’t look at him. I don’t have to. I’ve known this hesitation my entire life—the pause before disappointment, before avoidance, before he chooses the easier path.
“Please,” I say. My voice is flat. Empty.
He hands it to me.
The screen lights up like a weapon.
Notifications explode across it.
My name. My face. My humiliation.
I open the first article without thinking.
REJECTED MARSH HEIRESS FAINTS AFTER EVANS’ PUBLIC REJECTION
Below it, a still frame of me standing frozen at the altar, eyes wide, bouquet trembling in my hands. I look small. Breakable.
Another headline.
EVANS CHOOSES MIRA MARSH: THE SMARTER, STRONGER SISTER
I scroll.
Comments pour in endlessly.
She always looked like a mouse.
Marsh blood clearly skipped her.
Imagine fainting like that. Embarrassing.
Mira won fair and square.
My vision blurs.
I keep scrolling anyway.
Because some part of me believes that if I read enough, I’ll find something—anything—that says this isn’t my fault.
I don’t.
My fingers go numb. The phone slips from my hand and lands on the bed.
My father clears his throat.
“You shouldn’t read those things,” he says.
A laugh claws its way out of me, sharp and humorless.
“They watched it live,” I say. “What did you think would happen? Sympathy?”
He rubs his temples. “Ashley, everyone is under a lot of pressure right now.”
Everyone.
Not me.
Never me.
“Did you know?” I ask.
He looks up. “Know what?”
“That he was going to humiliate me in front of the world.”
“No,” he says immediately. Too fast. “Of course not.”
“Did Sophia?”
Silence.
It stretches until it hurts.
My chest tightens. “Did Mira?”
“Ashley—”
“Answer me.”
He exhales slowly. “There were… conversations. Concerns.”
Concerns.
A word so small it feels obscene.
I turn my face away.
The door opens softly.
“Oh, sweetheart.”
Sophia’s voice glides in like silk over a blade. “You’re awake.”
I don’t respond.
She approaches anyway, heels clicking gently, deliberately. I can almost feel her assessing me—pale, broken, inconvenient.
She sits on the edge of the bed and takes my hand. Her skin is cool.
“You scared us,” she says. “Stress can be so dangerous for someone as… sensitive as you.”
Sensitive.
There it is.
Behind her, Mira leans against the doorframe, arms crossed. She’s dressed impeccably, as always. No sign that she’s the woman who destroyed my life forty-eight hours ago.
She smiles at me.
Not wide. Not obvious.
Victorious.
“I told everyone she needed rest,” Mira says lightly. “She’s always been fragile.”
Something inside me snaps.
I pull my hand away from Sophia’s grasp.
“I want to be alone.”
Sophia blinks, just once. “Of course.”
She stands, smoothing her skirt. “Come, Mira. Let your sister recover.”
Mira doesn’t move right away.
She tilts her head, studying me like I’m a puzzle she’s already solved.
“I hope you’re feeling better,” she says. “The press has been… relentless.”
I say nothing.
Her lips curve. “But don’t worry. I’ve been handling things. Making sure the Marsh name stays respectable.”
Respectable.
At my expense.
They leave.
The room feels colder without them.
I’m discharged that night.
The drive back to the penthouse is silent, thick with everything unsaid. New York’s lights flash past the window, dazzling and indifferent.
When we arrive, reporters linger at a distance, cameras hungry. Security ushers us through a private entrance.
The penthouse doors close behind us.
Sophia exhales like she’s relieved to be home.
Mira’s phone buzzes almost immediately. She glances at it and smiles.
“Cole,” she says casually. “He wants to make sure Ashley is… stable.”
Stable.
My hands curl into fists.
I walk past them toward my room.
Halfway down the hall, I hear Mira’s voice again.
“Oh—Dad?” she calls.
I stop.
“There’s something you should see.”
I turn slowly.
Mira stands in the living room, holding up her phone. Sophia is beside her. My father approaches them, frowning.
“What is it?” he asks.
Mira taps the screen and turns it toward him.
“It’s been circulating online,” she says. “Someone leaked security footage from the hospital.”
My stomach drops.
Footage?
Liam’s face darkens as he watches.
I can’t see the screen, but I don’t need to.
“I was disoriented,” I say automatically. “I don’t even remember—”
“It’s not about that,” Mira interrupts gently.
She looks at me with something dangerously close to pity.
“It’s what you said.”
Sophia gasps softly. “Ashley, how could you?”
My heart pounds.
“What did I say?” I demand.
Mira sighs and turns the phone toward me.
The video plays.
It’s me. In the hospital bed. Pale. Hollow-eyed.
My father’s voice is faint in the background.
And then my own.
“I hate her. I hate all of them. I wish she were dead.”
The room tilts.
“That’s not—” My breath comes in sharp bursts. “That’s cut. I was talking about the situation—I didn’t—”
“People don’t know that,” Mira says softly. “They’re saying you threatened me.”
Threatened.
Sophia presses a hand to her chest. “This is serious, Liam. If this gets worse—if the Evans family sees this—”
“I didn’t mean it,” I whisper. “I was in shock.”
Liam looks torn. Exhausted.
Then Mira steps closer to him.
“Dad,” she says quietly, “I’m scared.”
She gestures to her arm.
There’s a red mark there. Faint. Finger-shaped.
I stare.
“I didn’t do that,” I say. My voice shakes. “I never touched you.”
“She grabbed me,” Mira says, eyes glossy. “When I tried to comfort her.”
The lie lands like a gunshot.
Sophia’s face hardens. “Ashley, this has gone too far.”
My father closes his eyes.
When he opens them, something in him has shifted.
“Ashley,” he says slowly, “you need to leave the penthouse.”
The words don’t register at first.
“Leave?” I echo.
“Just for now,” he says. “Until things calm down. This environment isn’t healthy—for anyone.”
“For me,” Mira whispers.
I laugh.
It bursts out of me, wild and broken.
“You’re sending me away,” I say. “Because she lied.”
“Ashley,” he snaps. “Lower your voice.”
That’s when it hits me.
Not the betrayal.
The finality.
He isn’t choosing peace.
He’s choosing them.
“Where am I supposed to go?” I ask.
Sophia answers smoothly. “We’ve arranged a hotel. Quiet. Discreet.”
A hotel.
I look around the penthouse—the marble floors, the portraits of a family that was never really mine.
“I understand,” I say softly.
They all blink.
I nod. “I’ll pack.”
I don’t cry while I pack.
I move mechanically, folding clothes, choosing only what fits into one suitcase. My wedding dress hangs untouched in the closet, sealed in plastic.
I don’t look at it.
I find my mother’s veil in the drawer and hold it for a moment.
“I’m sorry,” I whisper. “I tried.”
No one comes to stop me.
When I roll my suitcase into the living room, Sophia is already there.
“I hope you’ll take this time to heal,” she says.
Mira doesn’t look at me.
My father stands stiffly near the window.
“I’ll call you,” he says. “When things settle.”
I nod.
The elevator doors slide shut.
As the penthouse disappears from view, something inside me goes numb.
Outside, the city waits.
My phone buzzes.
A message.
Cole.
I stare at his name.
Then I turn off my phone.
And step into the night—homeless, nameless, and finally, completely alone.
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7.8
Nara has spent her whole life at the bottom of the pack.
The weak wolf.
The girl no one defends.
The one everyone believes will never shift, never matter, and never belong.
All she wants is to live quietly and survive another day without being beaten or humiliated.
But the Moon Goddess has a different plan.
During a rogue attack, Nara crosses paths with Alpha Kael Draven-a powerful, ruthless leader known for his strength... and his curse. The moment their eyes meet, the mate bond snaps into place with a force that shocks them both.
Kael rejects her instantly.
A weak mate is the last thing he wants.
But as he walks away, the bond does not break.
Instead, it burns.
Soon, strange things begin happening around Nara-her wounds heal too fast, shadows move when she panics, and wolves who once mocked her now fear her. Whispers spread. Someone demands her capture. And Kael, the Alpha who tried to reject her, suddenly can't stay away.
As an ancient prophecy resurfaces, Nara learns she is the last descendant of a lost bloodline-one powerful enough to break Kael's curse... or unleash a darkness even he cannot control.
Now hunted by enemies, betrayed by those she trusted, and torn between the Alpha who wounded her and the destiny she never wanted, Nara must rise from weakness to strength.
Because Kael's life is tied to hers.
Her power is awakening.
And the bond that was meant to be broken might be the one thing that saves them both-
or destroys their entire world.

7.9
He is cursed. She is a slave.
Their forbidden bond will either save their world or set it ablaze.
Caeser Varyn, the formidable Alpha King, is a figure of fear, his very blood tainted by a curse that has claimed every mate the Moon Goddess has given him. His existence is a lonely burden of twisted power, until a single, accidental touch changes everything.
Ava is a ghost in the royal palace-an unseen slave girl with a quiet grace and a hidden power. When the Moon Goddess's mating mark appears on her wrist, Caeser shatters ancient laws and claims her as his own.
Their forbidden union ignites a firestorm, forcing them to flee the burning palace and the outrage of the pack.
Turned out she's gifted by the Moon Goddess and to survive, Ava must master the power she never knew she possessed, expose the traitors who surround them, and find a way to break the ancestral curse.
If she fails, her love will be consumed, and their world will fall to the dark power of a corrupted god.

7.5
She was dead. Or at least, that's what they thought. Now, five years later, Ivy Richardson stood at her own grave, ready to face the man who put her there.
Ivy, in a custom coat, stood at her cold, black marble gravestone. "Beloved daughter and fiancée," the inscription read—a cruel joke mirroring her heart's wasteland.
A gravedigger dropped his shovel, face ashen. Trembling, he pointed, gasping, "Oh my God... you look exactly like her." He saw a ghost; Ivy was alive.
She paid for silence. Then, Clayton, her former fiancé, appeared, shaking: "Ivy? Where have you been?" She crushed his cheap lilies, her lethal gaze replacing the girl he'd abandoned.
He snarled, blaming her, justifying her "Do Not Resuscitate" order for his mistress, Ainsley. Ivy's cold laugh mocked his pathetic lies.
"Fiancé?" she echoed, revealing her new wedding ring. "That title expired when you signed the DNR... and Ainsley was watching, wasn't she?" With an icy "Go to hell," Ivy left him slipping in the mud.

9.3
My husband Hudson had kept me a medicated ghost for three years, convinced I was unstable. But a cheap pink hair clip, tangled with golden blonde hair in his car, ripped through the chemical haze. The bitter pill he forced me to take wouldn't numb the burning truth, only fuel my awakening.
I was an architect once, but now I was just Cora, a docile wife trapped in his suffocating world. When he saw my shock, his concern was sickeningly sweet as he offered another Xanax. I pretended to swallow the poison, letting it dissolve under my tongue, a constant reminder of my awakening.
Back at the mansion, his massive car deliberately blocked mine, a crude barricade confirming his control. Then, a message from an old intern confirmed my darkest fears: this was domestic abuse. He urged me to check Hudson’s closet, to record everything.
I knew then I was living with a dangerous monster, and my denial shattered. The anger burned, fueled by the bitter taste of that undissolved pill.
That night, Hudson walked in, wearing a hideous, sloppily tied red polka-dot tie. It was a clear, undeniable sign of another woman. My architect’s mind was awake, cold and calculating. "Game on, Hudson." I would make him taste this bitterness back a thousand times.

9.6
Aiden Madden, Alpha of Blackwood, intended to reject his arranged mate, Emery Travis, whom he deemed "loose" from scandalous photos. But her scent hit him like a physical blow-his Fated Mate. Then, he watched in horror as another man intimately touched her, confirming his worst fears of betrayal and igniting a blinding rage.
Consumed by fury, Aiden rejected her via a cold text, leaving her humiliated. Unaware her new boss was this same man, Emery endured harassment and an attack at Blackwood Corp.
The rejection tore Emery's soul. Her father questioned her honor, and her tyrannical boss forced her to arrange his new lover's seating. Yet, she saw impossible pain in his eyes.
Broken yet defiant, Emery fought back, uncovering lies meant to destroy her. Aiden, witnessing her resilience, slowly realized the horrifying truth: the woman he condemned was his true Fated Mate, and he had made the biggest mistake of his life.

8.6
Temptations, a world of investigation, mystery, and the supernatural, unfolds through tales set in the Lovecraft County universe, where magic and science intertwine, magical families vie for power like imperial houses, and cosmic entities observe from the veils of reality. This saga, born from intrigues of power, mystery, debauchery, and passionate bodies, is a testament to this.
Tsuki, the man with red and white hair, is heir to a cursed lineage, always entangled in passionate affairs between men and women. Whenever his eyes meet, they reveal secrets that should not be seen.
His heart is always divided between forbidden passions and ancestral responsibilities. Throughout his life, his dealings, intrigues, and mysteries unfold, amidst love affairs, sex, and passions, as he becomes involved with his witches, each representing aspects of desire and seduction, bringing with them mysteries, intrigues, and dangers, amidst intrigues, love affairs, passionate affairs, darkness, light, and the entanglements of bodies and their moments of passion.
From masked balls to blood pacts, from living paintings to endless towers, Tsuki traverses scenarios that blend the cosmic horror of Lovecraft with the political intrigues of Dunes and space planets embroiled in political intrigue, where the magical atmosphere of magical worlds, amidst romances, is enveloped in conspiracy, each passion a prophecy, each choice a risk.
Temptations is more than a saga of love and magic. It's a universe of family intrigues, secret pacts, and cosmic entities.
While wandering among thrillers and detective cases, amidst the story of a man torn between temptation and destiny, between chaos and passion.
In the midst of embarking on a dark, mature, and captivating epic, where each page is an invitation to the abyss-and each temptation is a choice between living and being lost.
Tsuki was born under the reflection of this Mirror, his red and white hair a sign of the curse, and his eyes revealing secrets that should not be seen.
Still always involved, since he was a child, he was haunted by visions of witches and shadows, and each family saw him as a threat or prophecy, among demons and supernatural beings, in the midst of dark cities, warm beds, and his passions.
After traversing masked balls, blood pacts, living paintings, endless towers, and enchanted seas, Tsuki reaches the end of his journey.
As he embarks on stories that show the mirror, now broken into nine fragments, revealing its truth: every witch he loved, every intrigue he faced, every temptation that consumed him, was part of the same destiny.
In the final reflection, Tsuki sees himself-not as an heir, not as a lover, not as an artist, but as a bridge between worlds.
At various moments, he understands that love and desire are not curses, but forces capable of challenging even forgotten gods.