
PRICED BY MY BILLIONAIRE NEMESIS
Eight years ago, Lena Hale was a second-year university student who trusted the wrong moment with her entire life.
Adrian Vale was in his final year-brilliant, disciplined, already learning how to rule rather than feel. To Lena, he was safety. To Adrian, she was the one weakness he allowed himself.
Until one night destroyed everything.
Adrian saw her in a position he could not forgive.
Something that looked deliberate.
Something that felt like betrayal carved into his bones.
He didn't ask for the truth.
She never got the chance to give it.
They separated broken, bleeding, and unfinished-and the damage followed them for eight years.
When they meet again, there is no tenderness left.
Lena is older now. Quieter. Cornered by debt that doesn't negotiate and men who collect pain instead of money. Survival forces her into one final humiliation-standing in for her best friend on a single escort assignment. One night. One paycheck. One way to keep breathing.
She never expects Adrian to be the man watching.
Adrian Vale is no longer capable of doubt. He is a billionaire built on precision, control, and a resentment he never questioned. Power has stripped him of mercy. When he sees Lena again-dressed for another man, standing exactly where he believes she chose to stand-his judgment finalizes.
She betrayed him once.
Now she's proving it.
He doesn't ask questions. He doesn't want explanations. He wants confirmation-and control.
Money becomes a weapon.
Silence becomes obedience.
And Lena learns just how expensive survival can be.
But Adrian's empire is cracking. His mother is dying, and her deal is brutal in its simplicity: marriage in echange for another round of chemo.
What begins as punishment becomes proximity. What begins as resentment mutates into obsession. And beneath Adrian's certainty lurks a truth so corrosive it could dismantle everything he built.
This is not a love story.
It is not forgiveness.
It is power colliding with memory.
Control strangling truth.
And two people bound together by a lie that refuses to stay buried.
Because some love stories don't burn slowly.
They detonate.
And when the truth comes out...
nothing survives intact.
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Chapter 3
I immediately regret exhaling, because the moment they vanish, the entire lobby shifts like someone flicked a switch.
It's too silent. Too empty. The hum of conversation that cushioned me all evening evaporates, leaving only the soft rustling of staff folding napkins and polishing silverware and pretending not to see the emotional car crash happening under the chandelier. The restaurant staff move around me with quiet efficiency, clearing plates, refreshing candles, resetting tables for tomorrow's tragedies. Without the buffer of Mr. Sutton's stories, the room feels bigger and colder, the marble louder under my heels, and every reflective surface suddenly looks like it's auditioning to be a mirror for my bad decisions.
And then I notice something else inside the envelope-a plastic rectangle, a room key, not the hotel's generic black stripe but a penthouse-floor key. My stomach plummets straight through the marble tiles, and I stare at the card like it might sprout teeth. Of course. Of course he is waiting for me. Of course this night wasn't finished just because the elderly client fell asleep and got rolled away like the last act of a tragic comedy.
There are monsters who snarl and show their teeth, monsters who lash out, monsters who devour. Then there are the quiet ones. The ones who wait. Adrian Vale waits. He's the kind of monster who doesn't slither away after delivering an insult-he waits for the encore, for the aftermath, for the part where the curtain falls and you think you're safe, and then he steps out from the shadows with an invoice. The insult. The judgment. The price he thinks I owe him. He's always been like that, even when we were young-never the boy who shouted in hallways or threw punches; he was the one who remembered every slight, every deviation, filed it all away, and then calmly dismantled you with it when you least expected it.
My pulse stumbles, skittering like a trapped insect in my ribs, bouncing off bone and panic in equal measure. I straighten my dress, smoothing satin that suddenly feels too tight, too revealing, too cheap for the room key burning holes into my fingers. I raise my chin, the gesture brittle but defiant, like I can paste a spine back onto myself with posture alone, and pretend I don't feel the humiliation scraping under my skin like broken glass, cutting every time I breathe.
I pretend I don't feel the weight of every assumption he made tonight, each one another stone added to the pile he plans to bury me under. I pretend I don't feel the ghost of his accusation echoing in my skull-you left me for money-like it's been etched on the inside of my bones for eight years and tonight is just the encore performance. I pretend I don't feel like walking into the nearest ocean and letting the tide sort out which parts of me are worth keeping. I pretend I'm not already halfway to believing his version of me, because it's easier to be the villain in his story than to reopen the chapter where he was the love of my life.
"Good night, Miss Hale," the maître d' says, his smile polished and professional, the exact kind of gentle neutrality that makes it clear he has seen much worse than me and my unraveling mascara.
I manage a smile-a professional, well-practiced, dead-behind-the-eyes smile. "Good night." The words scrape on the way out, but they come, and that's all that matters. I tuck the envelope and the key into my purse like they're not radioactive and turn toward the elevators, my heels clicking a steady rhythm that sounds a lot like a countdown.
But as I walk toward the elevators-toward him-my stomach cramps painfully, twisting tighter with every step. Because no matter how aggressively I lie to myself, I know exactly what's waiting upstairs: a man who hates me with the kind of precision only wealth and old wounds can sharpen, a man who thinks he's confirmed every rotten suspicion he ever had, neatly labeled and filed under "Lena: Predictable Disappointment," a man who believes I sold myself tonight for a stack of anonymous bills and a thousand-dollar tip I didn't even ask for.
A man determined to collect his answer, who is not coming to ask for clarification or hear my side of the story, but to render a verdict he wrote years ago and stamp it tonight with a seal. He has twenty thousand dollars' worth of justification burning a hole in his conscience and a lifetime's worth of resentment to spend it on. I breathe once. Twice. The elevator dings, a soft, civilized sound completely at odds with the chaos inside my chest. The doors slide open with smooth, mechanical grace, revealing a gleaming box of mirrored walls and brushed metal that looks suspiciously like the inside of a trap, and I step toward the monster waiting for me on the top floor, clutching a plastic key and a crumpled thousand dollars like they're armor instead of the chains he's already wrapped around my throat.
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9.4
I stood in the center of my Manhattan penthouse, staring at the empty satin hanger where my custom Vera Wang gown should have been. It was a masterpiece of silk and pearls that had taken six months to perfect for my wedding to the billionaire heir, Boston Travis.
Then my phone buzzed. Boston’s voice was a flat line, devoid of the love he’d promised me for four years.
"The wedding is off, Florrie. I’m marrying your sister, Asia."
He told me Asia was dying of Stage 4 cancer and her "final wish" was to be a bride—wearing my dress. He had sent his security team to my home with a spare key to steal the gown, claiming it was Travis property since his family accounts paid the bill. My stepmother texted me minutes later, demanding I vacate my own beach house so the "dying" girl could have a honeymoon.
When I tried to protest, Boston snapped at me.
"How could you be so heartless? She’s your sister. Have some compassion."
They expected me to play the part of the discarded woman while they paraded my life around as a PR stunt. I realized then that Asia hadn't just taken my dress; she had spent her entire life stealing my father's love and my peace, always playing the fragile angel while I was cast as the villain.
I didn't cry. I sat at my desk, opened my contacts, and relabeled Boston Travis as "TARGET."
If they wanted a tragic story, I would give them a massacre. I reclaimed my mother’s multi-million dollar trust, seized the deed to the beach house, and walked into Asia’s hospital room with a lit sparkler to expose the truth behind her "terminal" illness.
As I slapped Boston in the hospital lobby in front of a dozen recording iPhones, I realized I didn't need a husband. I needed a clean slate—and I was going to burn their empire to get it.

9.7
Twenty three years Lisa, has it all brains, beauty and a thriving career as an interior designer.
What she doesn't have is any interest in marriage, especially not to Thomas Nicklson, Her family's arrogant business partner's son. She would rather stay single forever than be shackled to him.
To escape the unwanted marriage, Lisa
takes her best friend's advice and hires James, a charming stranger she meets in a gay bar, to pose as her fiancé. The deal is simple: pretend to be in love for a year, keep her parents at pay, and then walk away. Easy
Until the line between real and fake begins to blur.
What Lisa doesn't know is that James is hiding a secret big enough to change everything, and falling for her fake fiancé might be the riskiest move of all.

9.8
"I didn't marry you for love, Elara. I married you for the land."
Five years ago, Elara Sterling wore a gold mask and shared a night of forbidden passion with Silas Vane, the "Ice King" of Seattle. Then, she vanished.
Now, she's back-not as a socialite, but as a struggling mother desperate to save her son. But Silas isn't the man she remembers. He's cold, powerful, and he just bought her father's debt.
The terms of the "Sterling Clause" are simple: Marry him for one year, and her debts are erased. But there's a catch. Silas doesn't just want the Sterling Port; he wants the son he never knew he had.
As Elara steps into a world of vipers and corporate sabotage, she must decide: Is she a wife, a prisoner, or the only woman powerful enough to melt the Ice King's heart?
In the game of power, love is the ultimate hostile takeover.

8.9
Dylan Fontanilla had everything...money, fame, a future, and the woman he loved more than life itself. He thought his world was complete.
Until the morning, he learned she was marrying another man.
Her betrayal cost him everything. In a single moment, the woman he believed was his forever was gone and forced into a marriage she could no longer escape.
Then came one reckless, drunken night.
That was when Dylan met Kaia Clemente, the best friend and secret love of the man who stole his girlfriend. Two strangers, bound by the same betrayal, collided in the worst possible way.
From that night, a dangerous idea took shape.
If he couldn't have the woman he loved, he would take the woman meant for his enemy.
What started as revenge became desire.
Love was never part of the plan.
But fate had other intentions.
Their game ended at the altar, bound by vows neither of them meant to make.
And now, only one question remains...
Was their marriage built on revenge or was it always meant to become real?

8.5
As Aurora lay dying of organ failure in the freezing ICU, she used her last ounce of strength to call her husband on their son's fifth birthday.
Instead of his voice, she heard the pop of champagne and the sweet laugh of his mistress, Jessica.
Conrad snatched the phone, impatiently ordering Aurora not to "ruin the mood" with her irrelevant calls.
But what truly pushed her into cardiac arrest was her five-year-old son's excited voice ringing through the speakerphone.
"I wish for Auntie Jessica to be my new mommy!"
"As long as you like it, Daddy will give you anything," Conrad promised without a second of hesitation.
Aurora gagged on her own blood and flatlined, the heart monitor erupting into a piercing red alarm.
She had swallowed her pride and wasted five years playing the perfect, submissive housewife, only to be thrown away like garbage by the two people she loved most.
She couldn't understand why her absolute devotion ended with her dying completely alone on a sterile mattress.
But she didn't die. Snatched from the jaws of death by a mysterious billionaire from her past, she woke up in a luxury suite, fully healed.
Looking at her pale, cold reflection in the window, the pathetic old Aurora died.
She packed her battered suitcase, signed a brutal postnuptial agreement waiving every single cent of her husband's wealth, and dropped the divorce papers on the table.
This time, she was leaving for good.

8.5
I was engaged to Gorden Barron, fully believing I was about to marry the love of my life.
Then his secret lover, Bettye, was diagnosed with aplastic anemia. Gorden fell to his knees and begged me to be her bone marrow donor.
"Angie, I know I messed up, but she's dying. You're the only match."
I agreed, wanting to be the bigger person. But the moment the harvest was over, the nightmare began. A severe infection set in, and my fever wouldn't break. Gorden's visits became shorter, then stopped entirely.
As I lay in the sterile hospital room, my bones aching and my body failing, I scrolled through my phone and saw his latest post.
Gorden and Bettye were tanned and healthy, sipping cocktails on a yacht in the Mediterranean.
The caption read: "Grateful for second chances. My true love."
I threw my phone across the room and screamed until my throat bled. I was nothing but a human blood bag to them, completely discarded the moment I was empty. I nearly died in that cold room, saved only by a top-tier specialist someone secretly paid millions to fly in.
Five years later, I've finally returned to New York.
I didn't come back to get revenge on Gorden. He isn't worth my time.
I came back for the man who secretly held my hand and wept by my deathbed—Gorden's cold, untouchable older brother, Dalton.
This time, I'm going to make him mine.