
ONE WILD NIGHT
She's lying," he tells the cameras. But the truth in his eyes says otherwise.
Struggling on scholarship and multiple jobs to support her family, she never expected one night to change everything. But when a pregnancy test confirms her worst fears, the father, a billionaire's heir, publicly denies her claims to protect his own future.
Now she's fighting a battle on two fronts: keeping her scholarship while raising a child alone, and facing down one of the most powerful families in the country.
In a world where money talks and reputations can be bought, she has only one weapon, the truth.
But when lies have billion dollar consequences, will the truth be enough to survive?
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Chapter 1
My phone buzzed for the fourth time during my microeconomics lecture. Hospital. Again.
I slipped out of the back row, ignoring the professor's disapproving look. In the hallway, I answered with shaking hands.
"Maya Collins?"
"Yes."
"This is Dr. Patterson. I need you to come to the hospital immediately. Your mother's condition has taken a serious turn."
The world tilted. "How serious?"
"We need to discuss treatment options in person. How quickly can you get here?"
"I'm on my way."
I ran across campus to my dorm, my heart hammering against my ribs. Zoe was getting ready for her afternoon class when I burst through the door.
"I need to borrow your car," I said, grabbing my purse and keys to our room.
"Maya, what's wrong? You look"
"Mom's in the hospital. I have to go. Now."
Zoe tossed me her keys without hesitation. "Call me."
The drive to Hartford General took thirty minutes that felt like hours. I found Dr. Patterson in the oncology wing, his expression grave.
"Maya, sit down."
"Just tell me."
He pulled out a file. "The latest scans show significant progression. Your mother has maybe six months. There is one option an experimental treatment program, but..."
"But what?"
"The cost is two hundred thousand dollars. Insurance won't cover experimental procedures."
Two hundred thousand dollars. I stared at him, the number echoing in my head. I made maybe fifteen thousand a year between my tutoring and restaurant jobs, sending most of it home for bills and Jake's school expenses.
"There has to be something else. A payment plan, charity programs""
"I've already checked everything, Maya. I'm sorry."
I drove back to campus in a daze. Two hundred thousand dollars to save my mother's life. Impossible. But I had to try something.
That evening, I sat at my desk researching everything I could find. Emergency loans, fundraising ideas, selling everything we owned. Nothing came close to the amount we needed.
"You missed dinner again," Zoe said, returning from the dining hall with a container of food. "And you look like you're planning to tunnel through the earth with your bare hands."
"Two hundred thousand," I said without looking up from my laptop.
"What?"
"That's how much it costs to save my mom's life. Two hundred thousand dollars."
Zoe set down the food and sat on her bed, studying my face. "Maya..."
"Don't. Don't tell me it's impossible. I know it's impossible. But I have to try something."
"Okay. What's the plan?"
I laughed bitterly. "I don't have one. Work more hours? I'm already working every minute I'm not in class. Take out loans? I've been rejected by everyone. Sell my organs?"
"There's got to be another way."
"Like what? Rob a bank? Marry rich?" I slammed my laptop shut. "I'm out of options, Zoe."
Zoe was quiet for a moment. Then she said, "You know what you need?"
"A miracle?"
"A break. One night where you're not Maya Collins, responsible daughter and sister. Just Maya."
"I don't have time for breaks."
"You don't have time not to take one. You're going to burn out completely, and then what happens to your family?" Zoe pulled out her phone. "There's this party tomorrow night at the Grandview Hotel. Some trust fund kids are hosting it."
"I can't afford hotel parties."
"You don't need money. Just show up and exist for three hours. Talk to people who don't need help with homework. Drink expensive wine someone else is paying for. Remember what it feels like to be young."
"Zoe"
"Maya, when's the last time you did something spontaneous? Something just for yourself?"
I thought about it. I couldn't remember.
"Never. The answer is never." Zoe stood up. "Which is exactly why you're coming with me tomorrow night."
"I have to work"
"I already called Romano's and told them you're sick. You're taking one night off whether you like it or not."
Part of me wanted to argue. The responsible part that had been running my life for three years. But another part, a part I'd buried under endless obligations, whispered that maybe she was right. Maybe I did need to remember what it felt like to just be twenty-two.
"I don't know how to party with rich people."
"You don't party with them. You just show up and let them pay for everything while you drink their champagne and pretend to be impressed by their trust funds."
I laughed despite everything. "You make it sound so appealing."
"Come on, Maya. One night. What's the worst that could happen?"
The next evening, I found myself in the back of an Uber wearing Zoe's black dress, heading toward the Grandview Hotel. The most expensive hotel in the city, where rooms cost more per night than I made in a month.
"You look beautiful," Zoe said, checking her lipstick in her compact mirror. "And terrified. Relax."
"I don't belong here."
"Nobody belongs anywhere until they decide they do."
The hotel lobby was all marble and crystal chandeliers. Young people in designer clothes moved through the space like they owned it, which they probably did. I felt like an imposter in borrowed clothes.
"Smile," Zoe whispered as we followed the crowd toward the elevators. "You're supposed to be having fun."
"I don't remember how."
"Fake it till you make it."
The party was on the top floor, and it was everything I'd expected from rich college students with unlimited budgets. Expensive champagne, catered food, and a view of the city that probably cost more than my entire education.
I grabbed a glass of champagne and found a corner where I could observe without participating. Everyone looked so confident, so sure of their place in the world. I envied them.
After an hour of small talk about spring break trips and summer internships at daddy's company, I needed air. I found a door that led to a rooftop balcony and stepped outside.
The city lights stretched out below me, beautiful and distant. For the first time in months, I was alone with my thoughts, away from responsibilities and pressure and the constant noise of other people's expectations.
"Not enjoying the party?"
I turned around, startled. A man stood in the doorway, tall and dark-haired, wearing a suit that probably cost more than my car. But his eyes looked tired, almost as tired as I felt.
"Not really my scene," I admitted.
"Mine either." He stepped onto the balcony, closing the door behind him. "I'm Alex."
"Maya."
He leaned against the railing beside me, close enough that I could smell his cologne. Expensive, but not overwhelming. "You look like someone with the weight of the world on your shoulders."
I laughed, surprised by his directness. "That obvious?"
"Takes one to know one." He smiled, and it transformed his entire face. "What's your story, Maya?"
For some reason, maybe because he was a stranger, maybe because the champagne had loosened my tongue, maybe because I was just so tired of carrying everything alone, I told him. About my mom, about Jake, about feeling trapped by responsibilities I never chose but couldn't abandon.
"What about you?" I asked when I finished. "What's weighing you down?"
His smile faded. "Family expectations. A life that's been planned out for me since birth. The feeling that I'm drowning in other people's dreams."
We talked for hours. About books we'd read, places we wanted to travel, dreams we'd given up. He listened like my words mattered, like I mattered. When I started crying about my mother, he didn't try to fix anything. He just handed me his jacket and let me fall apart.
"I should go," I said eventually, though I didn't want to leave.
"Should," he repeated. "But do you want to?"
I looked at him then, really looked. This beautiful stranger who'd listened to my problems without judging, who made me feel like maybe I deserved something good for once in my life.
"No," I whispered.
He stepped closer, his hand touching my cheek. "Then stay."
It was the first impulsive decision I'd made in years. And as he kissed me under the city lights, I let myself forget about everything else for just one night.
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7.4
Forced into an unwanted marriage, quiet schoolteacher Delina Brooks is bound to Andrew Kingsley.He is a ruthless billionaire musician, cold and arrogant, and he hates Delina from the moment they wed.
But Andrew's world is not just his own. His glamorous ex-girlfriend, Camilla Laurent, and his manipulative sister, Veronica, are determined to destroy Delina-and reclaim Andrew for themselves. Surrounded by lies, secrets, and relentless enemies, Delina must fight for her dignity, her family, and her future.
As fate twists and turns, one question remains: Will the woman he despised become the only one he can't live without?

9.6
Areli was the hardest-working medic in the Blackridge Clan, but her efforts only earned her the title of a useless burden.
Her supposed lover, Eugene, and her senior mentor, Gloria, lured her to the edge of the deadly Blackwind Cliff and shoved her straight into the abyss.
She miraculously survived the freefall, only to return and find Gloria standing before the entire clan, wearing a mask of fake sorrow.
"Look! The traitor is back! She eloped with wild males!" Gloria shrieked.
Eugene stepped up, looking heartbroken, and publicly accused her of betraying his love.
The crowd erupted, raining hisses and boos upon her, completely ignoring the horrific, life-threatening bruises that covered her battered body.
They blindly believed the lies, treating her like garbage while Gloria secretly plotted to poison her water and destroy her completely.
Areli felt a chilling sense of betrayal. How could the man who claimed to love her watch her fall with such cold eyes?
To make matters worse, her modern biochemist instincts revealed a terrifying truth: she was unexpectedly pregnant with the child of a savage Warlord she had encountered in the wild.
In this brutal, primitive world, showing any weakness was an absolute death sentence.
But she wasn't going to cower or run away.
Refusing the Warlord's offer to simply rescue her, Areli calmly placed a highly toxic herb on her drying rack and left her tent flap open.
The bait was set. Now, she just had to wait for the screams.

7.7
The Cameron family clinic smelled like lemon polish and impending death. For three years, I'd been a vessel in a cold, forced marriage to Underboss Kade Cameron. But today, the doctor's words would shatter everything.
"No heartbeat," Dr. Finch declared, then, "Stage IV gastric cancer. Terminal." A double death sentence. As the world tilted, a news alert flashed: Kade, my husband, parading his mistress, Carla Shaw, across Europe-"a love that defies family lines."
Dying and carrying his dead child, I overheard nurses gossip Kade wanted me gone for his "true love." I chose to feel the D&C agony, cleansing him from my soul. Stumbling out, Kade accused me of killing his child, then rushed Carla, feigning illness, to OB/GYN, ignoring my bleeding and dying state.
Back at the mansion, I vomited blood, my body failing. Kade watched with disgust, dismissing my terminal diagnosis as a "performance." He called me "collateral," a "debt payment," then left me for his mistress. The last shred of loyalty shattered, replaced by chilling clarity.
I signed the divorce papers he dismissed as a "tantrum," leaving his ring. No longer a Cameron, no longer his possession. With Fluffy, I made one call, choosing to die on my own terms, finally free.

7.0
Five years after my ex, Clay, traded me for power, we met again at an exclusive summit. He and his new fiancée, Destany, publicly humiliated me, calling me a trespasser and a thief for looking for my son's lost locket.
Then, my three-year-old son, Justus, ran to me, crying "Mama!"
In a horrifying move, Destany snatched him from my arms.
She shrieked to the powerful crowd that I was a low-born commoner who had kidnapped a child of noble blood. The room erupted, calling for my arrest.
Clay, the man I once loved, watched with cold satisfaction as guards pinned my arms back. He ordered them to take my son away and deal with me. I screamed that Justus was mine, but my pleas were drowned out by their accusations.
How could this be happening? The man who once promised me everything was now helping to rip my child away from me, branding me a criminal.
But just as they were about to drag me away, an immense power slammed into the room, forcing everyone to their knees. A tall, imposing figure appeared, his golden eyes blazing with fury. My husband, Damien, had arrived.

7.3
Seven years ago, my fiancé, Don Dante Moretti, sent me to prison to take the fall for my adopted sister, Chiara. He called it a gift-a way to protect me from a worse fate.
Today, he picked me up from prison only to abandon me at my family's estate. His reason? Chiara was having another one of her "episodes."
My parents then informed me I'd be staying in the third-floor storage room, so as not to disturb the fragile girl who stole my life.
They celebrated her "recovery" with a lavish dinner party, while I was treated like a ghost. When I refused to join, my mother hissed that I was ungrateful, and my father called me jealous.
They assumed I couldn't understand their venomous whispers. But prison was my university. I learned Spanish. I understood every word.
It was then I realized I wasn't just a sacrifice; I was disposable. The love I once felt for all of them had turned to ash.
That night, in the dusty storage room, I logged onto an encrypted channel I'd set up years ago. A single message was waiting: "The offer stands. Do you accept?" My hands, scarred and steady, typed back, "I accept."

7.6
I was kneeling on the cold concrete of an abandoned warehouse, staring at a ticking timer while a masked man held a knife to my throat. My fiancé's nephew, Preston, finally burst through the door, but he wasn't alone. He was clutching my stepsister, Felicia, both of them looking frantic.
The kidnapper gave Preston a brutal choice: the bomb was rigged to the door, and he could only take one woman with him. The other would stay behind to burn.
Without a single second of hesitation, Preston grabbed Felicia's hand and turned his back on me.
"I'm sorry, Annelise," he said, his voice flat and devoid of any real regret.
He slammed the heavy iron door shut, leaving me to scream in the darkness as the flames began to roar. He didn't just leave me to die; he did it to protect his inheritance, treating me like a piece of trash that was finally being cleared from his path.
Later, in the hospital, he didn't even offer an apology. Instead, he raised his hand to strike me, threatening to finish what the fire started if I dared to speak a word about his cowardice. His stepsister laughed, trying to pour scalding coffee on my face while calling me a pathetic loser who should have stayed in the warehouse.
I sat there, cowering and shaking like a broken girl, letting them believe they had won. I watched their cruelty with wide, watery eyes, wondering how they could be so blind to the monster they were provoking.
What Preston didn't know was that the entire kidnapping was a performance I had choreographed myself, and every second of his betrayal was recorded in 4K.
Now, I've successfully moved into the manor of the real king-his uncle, Francesco Lancaster. He thinks he's rescued a wounded bird, but he's actually invited a world-class predator into his home. The game is no longer about survival; it's about total destruction.