
One Night With The Unstable Billionaire
Arla was supposed to marry Clinton Freeman, the perfect fiancé who had promised to love her and protect her five-year-old son.
But instead, the cold steel of a dagger pierced her chest.
As she collapsed onto the freezing basement floor, she watched her adoptive sister Blair laugh.
"Look at her," Blair sneered, kicking her son's small, blue, lifeless body.
Clinton stood there, calmly wiping the bloody blade on a pristine handkerchief.
In her dying moments, the horrifying truth became clear. Her fiancé and her adoptive family had been plotting all along to steal her massive trust fund.
To break her, they had secretly tortured her child. Clinton had watched Blair pierce the little boy's arms with sewing needles, rewarding him with candy to keep him silent.
Arla's lungs burned with the taste of copper and ash.
She couldn't understand why the family she trusted could be so monstrous, or why they had to brutally murder an innocent child just for money.
The darkness swallowed her whole, drowning her in suffocating hatred and absolute despair.
Then, she gasped for air.
The concrete floor was gone, replaced by the silk sheets of a hotel penthouse suite.
Arla had been reborn to the exact night six years ago—the very day Blair first dragged her son into the dark attic.
This time, she picked up a solid silver letter opener, ready to burn them all to the ground.
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Chapter 1
The blade had done its work.
Arla did not feel the pain—not yet. What she felt was a cold so complete it erased the boundary between her body and the freezing concrete beneath her. The damp basement air clung to her skin like a second shroud, and somewhere in the narrowing tunnel of her vision, two figures stood watching.
"Stupid fool," Blair's voice sliced through the haze, sharp and grating. "You know what I cannot stand about you, Arla? You walked into this house with nothing. Less than nothing. And yet somehow, you still ended up with everything."
The words landed somewhere above her, disconnected from the reality of what was happening. A shoe—expensive, the heel catching the dim light—nudged at something small and still lying just beyond Arla's reach. She could not turn her head to see it. She did not need to.
Caden. Her son. Five years old. She knew, with the certainty that comes only at the end of all things, that he was already gone.
"Don't be too hard on her, Blair." The voice was smooth, almost gentle—the same voice that had whispered goodnight to Caden only hours earlier. "She's about to learn."
Arla's vision collapsed to a single point of grey. The two figures—the woman who had tormented her, the man who had sworn to protect her—blurred into indistinct shapes against the basement's yellow light. Clinton wiped something dark from his hunting knife with a white handkerchief, the motion unhurried, almost fastidious.
A sound clawed its way up Arla's throat. It was not a word. It was the shape of everything she had lost, pressed into a single ragged breath.
Then darkness—heavy, absolute—swallowed her whole.
*In the void between what was and what came next, one thought crystallized, sharp as broken glass: If I had known sooner. If I had come home earlier. *
Air punched into her lungs.
Arla jerked upright, her hands flying to her chest, fingers scrabbling against skin that should have been wet and warm and was instead dry, overheated, covered in silk. The slick slide of expensive sheets tangled around her legs. Her pupils contracted against the dim yellow glow of a wall sconce, her brain misfiring, unable to reconcile the absence of pain, the absence of concrete, the absence of her son.
Thunder cracked overhead, shaking the floorboards. Lightning flooded the room for a heartbeat—sprawling, unfamiliar, impossibly luxurious.
And with the thunder came a sound that turned the blood in Arla's veins to ice.
A growl. Low, animal, vibrating with something suppressed and agonizing. It came from the space beside her.
She turned. Her neck moved stiffly, as though the muscles had forgotten how to function.
A man lay on the other side of the massive bed. His upper body was bare, every muscle pulled taut as steel cable on the verge of snapping. He was built like something designed for violence—broad shoulders, lethal lines, a predator even in stillness.
But it was his hands that stopped her breath.
Heavy steel cuffs locked his wrists to the brass headboard. The metal had bitten deep, and the evidence of his struggle was smeared across the polished brass in streaks of red. His eyes were squeezed shut, veins standing out against his forehead. His chest heaved with the rhythm of someone fighting a battle no one else could see.
Arla scrambled backward. Her spine hit the cold headboard with a hollow thud.
The man's ragged breathing stopped for a single, terrifying second.
Then memory crashed into her—the luxury hotel, the thunderstorm, the man in the restraints. She knew this night. She knew this room.
This was the night the Sargent family had forced her to drink. The night she had stumbled into the wrong suite—the suite where rumor said a madman was kept hidden by powerful men.
If this was real. If she was back.
Today was the day Blair's cruelty would cross a line from which there was no return. The day Arla would discover the truth about the attic.
The thought of her son crushed every other fear. She had to get back to the manor. She had to reach Caden before Blair did.
She threw the duvet aside. Her bare feet hit the thick wool rug, and she dropped to her knees, hands shaking as she grabbed the black evening gown crumpled on the floor. She pulled it over her head, shoved her arms through the sleeves, reached behind her back. The zipper caught. Sweat beaded on her forehead. She pulled—hard—and the sound of tearing fabric cut through the room as the seam gave way. She did not care.
She turned toward the door.
Behind her, the violent energy in the room shifted. The thrashing stopped. The silence that replaced it was heavier, pressing down on her shoulders like a physical weight.
Her survival instincts screamed at her to run. She did not look back.
She crossed the room, her cold fingers closing around the brass doorknob. She pressed down. The lock clicked, and a rush of freezing air from the hallway hit her face.
Then came the sound—the shriek of metal pulled to its breaking point.
The man's eyes snapped open in the dark. Bloodshot. Wild. Sharper than they had any right to be.
He stared straight through Arla's back.
"Overwatch," he rasped, his voice raw and ruined. "Hold the line."
The words meant nothing to her. She was already gone.
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7.8
Alayna was working a grueling catering shift in worn-out heels to support her broke college boyfriend, Caiden, who claimed to be studying at the library.
But through the crack of a VIP suite door, she saw him wearing a bespoke suit and a Patek Philippe watch, sipping expensive liquor.
"It's a little poverty role-play. Keeps things interesting."
He was laughing with his rich friends, mocking her as his clueless "charity case."
To make matters worse, she was forced into a humiliating mascot costume just in time to watch him passionately kiss his wealthy ex-girlfriend.
That same night, Alayna's mother collapsed with gastric cancer, requiring a half-million-dollar surgery.
When a desperate Alayna begged Caiden for help, he refused.
"Why don't you just apply for Medicaid? That's the path for people like you."
For two years, she had starved herself to buy his textbooks, his tickets, and his shoes.
He had stolen her sweat and her sacrifices, all for a cruel game.
The sheer audacity of his betrayal made her blood run cold.
When a billionaire stranger stepped in to pay her mother's medical bills in exchange for a one-year fake marriage, Alayna didn't hesitate to sign the contract.
She slipped the flawless diamond ring onto her finger, opened a spreadsheet, and sent Caiden an invoice for every single cent.
This time, she was going to dismantle his entire life.

7.8
Elie Joyce’s entire life was controlled by Ebert Ewing, a ruthless billionaire who held her sick grandmother's survival and her family's freedom in his hands.
But on a freezing, stormy night, he forced her into a scandalous scrap of red silk and handed her over to a notorious, disgusting predator.
"You aren't an escort. You're just a free gift."
Ebert mocked her, using her as a disposable bargaining chip to secure a corporate funding round.
When the predator humiliated her, forced high-proof vodka down her throat, and violently pinned her to the floor, Ebert simply watched with dead eyes.
And when Ebert finally intervened to brutally beat the man, it wasn't out of mercy.
"She is my property. Even if she is trash that I threw away, a filthy pig like you doesn't get to touch her."
Afterward, he dragged her battered, barefoot body into his car, only to kick her out into the torrential rain, leaving her on the dark streets to die.
Standing in the storm, shivering and bleeding from broken glass, the last shred of Elie's hope shattered.
She had sacrificed her dignity and soul, enduring his violent bites and cruel control, just to keep her family alive.
Why did she have to suffer this endless, twisted humiliation for a psychopath who only saw her as trash?
But she didn't break.
Tearing a strip of his expensive shirt to bandage her bleeding foot, Elie gripped her broken stiletto like a knife.
With her eyes turning cold and calculating, she limped out of the shadows.
She was going to survive, and Ebert Ewing would soon realize she was no longer his obedient prey.

9.3
Alyssa Gregory slept with Benton Steele, a recently disgraced and bankrupt heir, just to humiliate him.
She threw a massive check at his bare chest, treating the former prince of Wall Street like a cheap escort.
But Benton didn't take the charity.
Instead, he manipulated her anger, tricking her into signing an ironclad contract that surrendered absolute control of her entire trust fund to him.
When her abusive mother found out she had funded a penniless outcast, she slapped Alyssa across the face.
Her mother froze all her bank accounts, locked her inside her bedroom, and arranged to sell her off to a degenerate politician.
Desperate to escape, Alyssa climbed down her balcony, falling fifteen feet and shattering her ankle on the stones below.
Stripped of her money and freedom, she dragged her broken body to a VIP club just to publicly declare that Benton belonged to her.
She thought she was the boss, playing a rebellious game with a broken man.
But when Benton effortlessly carried her away from the club and locked her inside his rundown apartment, the terrifying calculation in his dark eyes shattered her illusion.
How could a man stripped of his entire empire still radiate such suffocating, violent power?
"You bought me," Benton whispered, his massive frame trapping her against the sofa. "That means I have to take care of you."
Physically trapped and completely broke, Alyssa stared into his consuming eyes, her mind racing to find a way to turn the tables.

8.8
Elizbeth married the wealthy heir Carlton Wilkinson to save her grandfather's life's work.
But on their wedding night, instead of a loving husband, she faced a cold tyrant. He forced her to sign a brutal prenup, stripped her of all family rights, and banished her to a dingy guest room.
He was convinced she was just a pathetic, gold-digging liar.
When a catastrophic pain attack drove Carlton to smash his own head against the wall, Elizbeth rushed in to save him using her specialized acupuncture. She risked her life to calm his spasming nerves.
But the moment he woke up, he nearly choked her to death. He threw her against the wall, bleeding and bruised, accusing her of using cheap parlor tricks to poison him.
The next morning, his greedy relatives openly mocked her cheap clothes, waiting like vultures for Carlton to drop dead so they could steal his fortune.
Elizbeth was humiliated and terrified, but she soon discovered a classified secret.
Carlton was a former Delta Force operator slowly going mad from an undetectable weaponized biotoxin. The poison made him paranoid and violent. He would rather die in agony than accept help from a woman he despised.
Begged by his desperate grandfather, Elizbeth knew she had to cure him in the shadows.
At 1:00 AM, she slipped a heavy, odorless sedative into his water and sneaked into his pitch-black bedroom to begin the detox.
But as her silver needle hovered over his skin, a massive hand shot out and pinned her violently to the mattress.
"How much did they pay you to poison me?" he hissed in the dark, his eyes wide awake and blazing with murderous fury.

8.8
Bella Danvers aka Isabella Powell is a 20-year-old college student who encountered the hot and ruthless CEO of the Rinaldi Corporation, Gabriel Rinaldi. They had a forgetful one-night stand that took a turn for the worst. Will he be able to find her before he is forced into an arranged marriage? Will she be able to tell him the news? Or will they be forced apart?

8.5
Aileen transmigrated into a dark, unfinished novel as the villainous, abusive wife of a powerful billionaire.
The moment she opened her eyes, her husband's calloused hand was crushing her throat, and her six-year-old stepson was pointing a box cutter at her face, screaming for her to die.
A cold system voice suddenly exploded in her brain, forcing a mandatory mission: save the villainous father and son, or face immediate death.
To survive the system's strict Out-Of-Character warnings, Aileen had to keep playing the role of the deranged, hateful wife.
She was despised by everyone. Her husband threatened to drag her to an asylum, and her terrified stepson scrubbed the floor with his own pajamas just to avoid her wrath.
Things escalated when the novel's original female lead publicly framed Aileen in Central Park, throwing herself onto the grass and clutching her pregnant belly.
"She pushed me. She tried to hurt the baby!"
Archer rushed over, shoved Aileen aside with absolute disgust, and looked at her with the eyes of a murderer.
Aileen felt a bitter wave of exhaustion. She had discovered the original owner's hidden antipsychotic pills; the woman wasn't just evil, she was severely mentally ill and completely broken by this loveless marriage.
Yet, no one cared, and her husband would always choose to believe his childhood sweetheart's fake tears.
Since everyone in this world was convinced she was an unpredictable lunatic, she decided to give them exactly what they expected.
Aileen turned her back on the ridiculous scene, a cold smile forming on her lips.
She was going to stage a massive, undeniable psychological breakdown, using her "insanity" as the perfect shield to play the system and rewrite her fate.