
Reborn From Ashes: The Vengeful Heiress
I was the heiress to a real estate empire, celebrating my engagement to Douglas at our Manhattan penthouse.
But when I stepped into the master bedroom, I caught him sleeping with my best friend, Krystle.
Before I could even react, Douglas forced me to sign away my family's entire trust fund.
He held up a tablet and forced me to watch a live feed of my parents being burned alive in our Hamptons estate.
"The fire hasn't reached the main house yet, sign it and I'll call them off," he lied.
As soon as the ink dried, he beat me to the ground and locked me in the soundproof study.
He poured twenty-three-year-old whiskey on the carpet and dropped a lit cigar.
"You could have walked away with nothing, but alive," he sneered.
He left me to burn to death while he and Krystle went back to our engagement party to drink champagne.
As the flames melted my skin and my bones shattered against the bulletproof glass, I couldn't understand it.
How could the man who promised me forever brutally exterminate my entire family just for money?
But I didn't die in that fire.
Three years later, with a reconstructed face and a new identity as the mysterious global designer Alice Moreau, I returned to New York.
Watching Douglas and Krystle flaunt the wealth they stole from my family's ashes, I smiled behind my black veil.
It was time to make them pay with everything they had.
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Chapter 2
The first drop of ink hit the page and spread, feathering at the edges where her tears had already fallen. Karolyn watched it happen as if from a great distance, her body performing the motions of grief while her mind scrambled for purchase, for some ledge of logic to cling to.
Douglas's hand closed over hers, guiding the pen through the loops of her signature. The pressure was wrong-too hard, digging a furrow into the paper-but she couldn't make herself care. The tablet still glowed in his other hand, still showed the burning house, and she could hear herself making sounds, small wounded-animal noises that seemed to come from somewhere outside her body.
"Good girl," Douglas murmured. He released her hand, lifted the document to the light, examined the signature against the exemplar he'd kept from their joint lease application. His thumb smeared the wet ink. "See? That wasn't so difficult."
Karolyn lunged for the tablet.
He stepped back, casual, and her fingers closed on empty air. She stumbled, caught herself on the edge of the desk, and the movement sent fresh blood trickling into her eye from the cut on her forehead. She'd forgotten about the cut. The bookshelf. His hand. The memory surfaced and submerged, unimportant against the image seared into her retinas.
"Mom," she whispered. "Dad-"
"Are already dead." Douglas set the tablet face-down on the desk. "Or they will be. The response time for that zip code is twenty-three minutes, and my associates were very thorough with the accelerant." He reached into his breast pocket, withdrew a cigar, clipped the end with a silver cutter that had been her father's. "Would you like to watch the rest? I have the feed on loop."
Karolyn's hand found the desk's edge. Brass. Cold. Her fingers traced the familiar shape of the letter opener her father had used to open correspondence from the mayor, from senators, from the architects who had built half of Manhattan's skyline.
Douglas lit the cigar. The flame was orange and hypnotic. He drew in, exhaled a cloud of blue smoke directly into her face, and she smelled the tobacco and beneath it something else, something chemical and wrong.
"You're wondering why," he said. "Don't. It doesn't matter. What matters is that you understand the completeness of your defeat." He tapped ash onto the carpet-her mother's Kashan, imported from Tehran, worth more than most people's homes-and reached for the tablet again. "Let me show you something else."
His thumb moved across the screen. The burning house disappeared, replaced by a timestamped video file. 7:30 PM. Thirty minutes ago. While she'd been smiling at investors, while she'd been raising her glass to the future.
The video showed her parents' house from the outside. Three figures in dark clothing moved across the lawn, methodical and unhurried. She watched them secure the French doors with chains. Watched them pour liquid from unmarked cans across the back deck, the kitchen entrance, the garage where her father's vintage Mercedes collection sat under dust covers.
"Not an accident," Douglas said. "Not a tragedy. A liquidation. Your father should have accepted my offer last year. He should have recognized when he was outmatched."
Karolyn's fingers closed around the letter opener.
The brass was heavy in her palm, weighted for balance, the blade sharpened monthly by the building's maintenance staff. She'd watched her father use it a hundred times, the economical flick of his wrist, the precision of a man who had built an empire on the careful separation of desirable from undesirable.
She moved without thought.
Douglas saw her coming-she saw his eyes widen, saw the cigar fall from his fingers-but he was too slow, too confident in his victory. The blade caught the lapel of his Tom Ford tuxedo, sliced through wool and silk lining, and she felt the resistance of flesh beneath, the momentary catch of metal against bone.
He twisted. The blade skidded across his ribs, opened a six-inch gash in his side that bloomed black against the white shirt. Not deep enough. Not fatal.
"Krystle!" he roared.
Krystle had retreated to the corner, her hands pressed to her mouth, her eyes wide and blank with shock. At Douglas's voice, she moved-not toward him, toward the wall panel where the emergency controls were hidden. Her finger found the button. A high-pitched alarm began to sound, localized, internal, summoning the private security Douglas had installed six months ago.
Karolyn raised the letter opener again.
Douglas's backhand caught her across the face. The force of it snapped her head sideways, sent her stumbling into the bookshelf. Her temple connected with the edge of a leather-bound volume-The Wealth of Nations, her father's favorite, ironic now-and the world went white, then red, then narrow.
She was on the floor. The carpet pressed against her cheek, rough and familiar. She could smell the wool, the smoke from Douglas's fallen cigar, something else underneath. Whiskey. Douglas kept a bottle of Pappy Van Winkle in the bottom drawer, twenty-three years old, a gift from a senator.
The drawer opened. Liquid splashed. The smell intensified, sweet and burning.
"Stupid," Douglas said. His voice came from above her, strained with pain. "You could have lived. You could have walked away with nothing, but alive. Now-"
She tried to rise. Her arms wouldn't support her. The room spun, tilted, and she saw Krystle's face swim into view, saw her mouth moving-"Douglas, don't, not here, they'll investigate"-saw Douglas's hand, the hand that had held hers through a hundred dinners, a thousand promises, holding the lit cigar.
He dropped it.
The carpet ignited with a sound like breathing, like a sigh. Blue flame raced across the wool, found the whiskey-soaked patches, turned orange and hungry. Karolyn rolled, tried to stand, but the fire was between her and the door, between her and any hope of escape.
Douglas took Krystle's arm. They moved toward the side exit, the one that led to the service corridor, the private elevator that would take them down to the garage while the party continued seventy feet away, while three hundred guests drank champagne and celebrated a union that had never existed.
"Douglas." Her voice was barely audible, shredded by smoke and terror. "Please-"
He looked back once. She saw her own death in his eyes, and something else-relief, perhaps, that he wouldn't have to explain her, manage her, pretend anymore.
The door closed. The lock engaged.
Karolyn crawled toward the window. The flames followed, licking at her gown, finding the silk receptive and eager. She felt the heat on her legs first, then the pain, white and absolute. She beat at the flames with her hands, but her hands were burning too, and the smoke was filling her lungs, heavy and chemical and wrong.
She reached the window. Pressed her face against the glass. Seventy stories down, the city glittered, indifferent. She could see the river, the bridge, the endless stream of headlights on the FDR Drive. She could see her own reflection, ghost-pale against the dark, her hair singed, her face already blistering.
Her fist struck the glass. Once. Twice. The third time, she felt bones shift in her hand, felt the skin split, but the glass held. Of course it held. It was ballistic-grade, installed after 9/11, designed to withstand explosions.
The chandelier above her shattered.
Crystal rained down, sharp and beautiful, and she felt pieces find her back, her shoulders, embed themselves in the burning fabric of her gown. She curled into herself, made herself small, tried to find air below the smoke line.
There was none.
Her lungs convulsed. Her vision narrowed to a tunnel, then a point, then darkness. She thought of her mother in the garden, her father at his desk, the life she'd believed was hers dissolving like smoke.
Something crashed through the window.
Glass exploded inward, driven by wind and force and impossible momentum. She felt the pressure change, felt cool air rush past her face, and through the smoke and flame she saw a figure silhouetted against the night sky.
Tall. Broad. Encased in something that reflected the firelight like scales.
The figure moved toward her, boots crunching on broken crystal, and she tried to speak, tried to warn them away, but her throat was closed, burned, useless. Hands reached for her-gloved, impersonal-and lifted her as if she weighed nothing.
A blanket descended, heavy and chemical-smelling, smothering the flames on her gown. The pain didn't stop, but it changed, became distant, manageable.
She felt herself being carried. Felt the impossible sensation of falling, of weightlessness, and realized they were descending, rappelling down the building's exterior face. The wind tore at her hair, her ruined skin. She opened her eyes once, saw the city spread beneath her like a circuit board, and closed them again.
A voice spoke near her ear, filtered through something mechanical. Male. Flat. "Stay conscious. Medical team waiting. Don't sleep."
She tried to nod. Her body wouldn't respond.
The falling stopped. Hard surface beneath her. Hands everywhere, moving with practiced efficiency, and she felt something slide down her throat, felt her lungs expand with forced air, felt the blessed coolness of an IV finding her vein.
"Burns," someone said. "Third-degree, forty percent. Smoke inhalation. Get her intubated now."
"Sir-"
"Now."
The voice from the window. Closer now, stripped of its mechanical filter, but she couldn't turn her head to see. The darkness was pulling at her, patiently and absolutely.
"Karolyn Yates." The voice again, directly above her. "Listen to me. You're dead. Do you understand? The Yates family is dead. The only way you survive is if you let them stay dead."
She tried to speak. Managed a sound, a croak, nothing human.
"Nod if you understand."
She nodded. Or tried to. The darkness took her anyway.
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7.3
Julian Thorne is a man of absolute control. As the ruthless CEO of a global empire, he has built his life on power, wealth, and emotional distance. When he discovers that struggling artist Elara Vance's family gallery sits on valuable real estate, he sees an opportunity for revenge against a rival connected to his family's scandal. His proposition is simple: marry him for one year, and he will save her family from financial ruin.
Elara, desperate to save her father and their gallery, agrees to the contract, unaware of Julian's true motives. What begins as a cold, transactional arrangement becomes something neither of them expected, a passionate, intense connection that challenges everything they believe about love, trust, and vulnerability.
But when secrets are revealed and betrayal strikes at their hearts, Julian and Elara must navigate a journey of redemption and healing. Can a love born from deception survive the truth? Or will the chains of his empire prove too strong to break?

9.6
HIS Minnie Mouse
9.6
When Claire agrees to play her cold-hearted boss's girlfriend for a weekend, she never expects a fake romance to turn into a nine-month marriage contract worth millions. She becomes trapped in the world of the ultra wealthy and her abusive ex resurfaces to blackmail her with millions. She also falls in love with her cold-hearted boss, leading to an affair that gets her pregnant. But the reason for the contract marriage is no longer necessary. What happens now that Claire has no reason to stay married to her cold boss?

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.

8.1
Trigger Warning: This book is extremely dark, containing themes of obsession, strong sexual content, abuse, and psychological manipulation. Read at your own risk.
"I'll delete the pictures depending on how obedient you are. You have to do everything I say. If I want you to become a dog, you get on your knees and bark. Do we have a deal?"
Pierce leans down to Malakai's height, his lips brushing the shell of his ear, close enough to taste his fear.
"You don't want her to know what a dirty little creep you are, do you?"
Malakai Kreston is the preacher's perfect son. Quiet. Obedient. The kind of boy no one looks at twice.
But Malakai has a filthy secret. And he'll do anything-anything-to keep it buried.
Enter Pierce Masterson.
Wealthy. Attractive. Pierce doesn't just want Malakai's secret. He wants Malakai. All of him. His fear. His obedience. His body. His mind.
Pierce wants to own it, and lock it away where no one else can ever touch it.
Kai has always been the hunter-watching from the shadows, obsessing in silence, taking what doesn't belong to him.
Now someone is hunting him.
And Pierce doesn't play fair. He plays dirty.
How far can you run when the devil already knows every dark corner of your soul?
In a game of predator and prey, the lines blur. The roles reverse. And the most dangerous thing isn't the boy who holds the blackmail-
It's the moment Malakai stops wanting to be free.

7.0
Erika was a disgraced ex-wife, struggling to survive in a freezing Brooklyn slum to raise her five-year-old son.
But her billionaire ex-husband, Doyle Morgan, wasn't done destroying her. He orchestrated a cruel trap, forcing her to deliver a custom sapphire brooch to his new mistress, just to watch her get humiliated and severely burned by scalding coffee.
When Erika fought back and refused to beg, Doyle's punishment was swift. He demoted her to scrubbing executive toilets with raw, bleeding hands. Starved, exhausted, and pushed to the absolute brink of organ failure, she finally collapsed lifelessly in front of him in Central Park.
For five years, she had endured his relentless torment and the world's mockery just to keep her child safe. Doyle despised her, convinced her son was the filthy proof of her cheating with another man.
He didn't know the boy was actually the child of his deceased older brother, conceived in a dark, drugged hotel room. Why couldn't he just leave them alone to suffer in peace?
But when Erika woke up in the VIP hospital ward, the nightmare took a terrifying turn. Doyle pinned her weak wrists to the mattress, his eyes burning with a dark, possessive obsession. He had figured out the truth about the boy's bloodline.
"He's a Morgan. He has my family's blood in his veins, and I will not allow my nephew to be raised in a slum. If you can't care for him, I will. From this moment on, you and that boy belong to me. And you are never leaving my sight again."

8.8
After eleven years in a maximum-security black site, ex-Delta Force operator Alton Combs was paroled and exiled to a toxic Appalachian wasteland.
The corrupt town mayor thought he was bullying a broken man, tricking Alton into trading his family's prime estate for a poisoned, worthless shale field.
The locals treated Alton like a rabid beast, spitting on his shoes and waiting for him to rot in a collapsed cabin. But they had no idea the "worthless" land hid a billion-dollar rare-earth mineral vein. While surviving the town's hostility, Alton found a freezing baby girl dumped in a biohazard bin with needle marks on her tiny arm.
He took her in, named her Eden, and built an electrified fortress guarded by a tamed mountain lion and a rattlesnake. He spent the next seven years quietly extracting the minerals to build a massive mining empire, raising the girl not as a victim, but as a ruthless apex predator.
Hundreds of miles away in Washington D.C., a high-ranking Pentagon official wept over an empty grave, completely unaware that his evil second wife had ordered his infant daughter thrown to the wolves. He also didn't know the baby had been rescued by the most dangerous killing machine alive.
Now, his parole was officially over.
Alton handed his seven-year-old daughter an elite academy acceptance letter.
"If the dogs try to bite you, you tear their throats out. I will handle the bodies."
Stepping into a bulletproof Hummer, the undisputed king of the valley prepared to unleash his little wolf into the human world.