
Rising From Ashes: The CEO's Secret Queen
In my past life, I swallowed a handful of pills because my billionaire husband, Holt, treated me like invisible decoration, and my ex-lover, Cary, promised me a way out.
But as I lay choking on my own vomit in a burning Brooklyn warehouse, the brutal truth was finally revealed.
Cary was just using me to drain Holt's assets, and the mastermind behind my tragic downfall was my best friend of ten years, Lilith.
She had spent years feeding my insecurities, convincing me that suicide was my only escape, just so she could use my death to humiliate my husband and steal his empire.
When Holt rushed into the flames to save me, they shot him dead. His blood soaked my dress as Cary and Lilith walked away with everything we owned.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand it.
Why did my best friend want me dead? Who were the shadowy backers funding their betrayal, and why did they hate my husband so much?
Opening my eyes again, I was back in my bedroom, the lethal pills still sitting on my nightstand.
The pathetic, weeping socialite died in that fire.
I calmly flushed the pills down the toilet, opened my laptop to awaken my hidden intelligence network, and prepared to destroy them all.
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Chapter 1
The tires of the black Mercedes-Maybach bit into the gravel driveway of Blackwood Manor with a sound like crushed bone.
Holt Blanchard didn't wait for the driver to open his door. He shoved it open himself, the hinges groaning, and stepped out into the night air that smelled of cut grass and old money. The manor loomed above him, every window dark except for one on the second floor. Alexandra's bedroom. The light spilled out in a thin gold line across the manicured lawn.
He had spent the forty-minute drive from Manhattan replaying her voice in his head. That cold, precise articulation of "short squeeze." The way she had named Apex Technology's hidden liabilities as if reading from a confidential due diligence report. The silence on the line when he had asked about the third-party capital that had mirrored his own moves with surgical precision.
His thumb found the platinum Breguet on his left wrist and circled the bezel once, twice. A habit from childhood, from the years before he had learned to hide every tell behind a wall of composure.
The front door swung open before he reached it. Mrs. O'Connell stood there in her night robe, her face a mask of professional concern.
"Mr. Blanchard, I wasn't expecting-"
"Leave us."
He didn't break stride. His shoes clicked against the marble foyer, then muffled as he took the stairs two at a time, his hand sliding along the mahogany banister. The house smelled of her. That ridiculous rose perfume that had always made him think of funeral homes and deception.
The bedroom door was ajar. He pushed it open with his palm.
Alexandra sat cross-legged on the bed, exactly as she had been in his imagination during the drive. The silver MacBook glowed against her pale face, casting blue shadows beneath her eyes. She wore that same silk robe from the morning, the one she had deliberately disheveled for Cary's visit. Her left hand hovered over the keyboard, frozen mid-motion.
She looked up. Her eyes widened-not with guilt, he noted, but with something closer to calculation. A predator realizing it had been spotted.
"Holt." Her voice came out hoarse. She cleared her throat. "The stock closed at 847. Up fourteen percent."
"I know what it closed at." He stepped into the room and closed the door behind him. The latch clicked with finality. "I want to know how you knew about Apex's patent litigation. That information wasn't in any public filing. It wasn't in our preliminary due diligence. It wasn't anywhere a woman who spends her afternoons at Bergdorf's should have been able to find."
Alexandra's right hand moved to her left, fingers tracing the edge of the flesh-toned bandage on her hand. The gesture was small, automatic, like a child checking a scab.
"I told you. I had a dream." She closed the laptop with a soft snap. "A premonition. Like with Cary."
"Bullshit."
The word cracked between them like a gunshot. Holt strode to the foot of the bed, close enough to see the pulse fluttering in her throat, the way her chest hitched beneath the silk.
He reached into his breast pocket and withdrew the Montblanc pen. The same pen from two nights ago. The one that had almost signed away their marriage. He held it between two fingers like a cigarette, rolling it slowly.
"Dreams don't produce encrypted audio files. Dreams don't know the exact leverage ratio Cary was using. Dreams don't-" He stopped. His thumb found his watch again, circling, circling. "There was another player today. Thirty billion in coordinated buy orders that weren't mine. Someone knew exactly when to move, exactly how to flank him. Someone with resources that make my public portfolio look like pocket change."
Alexandra's fingers stilled on her bandage. Her eyes locked on his, and for a moment he saw something there-not fear, but recognition. As if he had accidentally spoken a language she understood.
"You think I'm working with someone." It wasn't a question.
"I think you're either the most gifted actress on the Eastern Seaboard, or you're standing in the middle of something that will get you killed." He leaned forward, planting one hand on the bedpost. "Cary didn't operate alone. He had backers. Hedge funds. Family offices. If they think you turned on him-"
"Then they'll come after me." She finished for him. Her voice had gone flat, distant. "I know."
"Do you?" Holt straightened, the pen still turning in his fingers. "Because from where I'm standing, you don't seem to know anything. You don't know how you got that intelligence. You don't know who helped you execute. You're either lying to me, Alexandra, or you're being used by someone who finds you very, very expendable."
The words hung in the air between them. Alexandra stared at him, her face draining of color until she matched the sheets beneath her. Then something shifted. Her spine straightened. Her chin lifted. The transformation was instant and terrifying-the socialite mask cracking to reveal something harder, older, forged in a fire he couldn't imagine.
"Used." She laughed, but it came out broken, wet. "You think I'm someone's puppet. That I couldn't possibly have planned this myself. That everything I've done-the pills, the tears, the-" she gestured wildly at the space between them, at the memory of her mouth on his, her blood on his cuff, "-that all of it was scripted by a man."
"Wasn't it?" Holt heard the cruelty in his own voice and didn't temper it. "Wasn't this all for him? For Cary Castro? Three days ago you were ready to die for him. Now you've destroyed him. Is this some kind of twisted honey trap I haven't figured out yet? Are you trying to bleed me dry to save his skin? I don't gamble with stakes I can't calculate, Alexandra. And right now, you and your ex-lover are the biggest unknown on my board."
Alexandra's hand dropped from her bandage. Both hands found the edge of the duvet and gripped until her knuckles blanched white. She was shaking, he realized. Not from cold. From rage held so tightly it was vibrating her bones.
"Get out."
"What?"
"Get out." She didn't shout. The whisper was worse. "You want to know my secrets? You want to strip me down until you find the conspiracy you're so sure exists? Fine. But you don't get to stand there with your pen and your suspicion and pretend you're protecting me. You're protecting yourself. Your pride. Your precious control."
She swung her legs off the bed and stood, swaying slightly. The robe gaped at her throat, showing the hollow where a pill had nearly ended everything. She took two steps toward him, close enough that he could smell the hospital still on her skin, the antiseptic beneath the roses.
"You want to know who helped me today? No one. You want to know how I knew about Apex? I researched it. For months. While you were ignoring me, while you were sleeping in the guest wing, while you were counting down the days until you could finally be rid of me-I was learning. Reading. Watching." Her voice cracked on the last word, and tears spilled over, but she didn't wipe them. "Not because I wanted to steal from you. Because I wanted to understand you. Because I thought if I could just speak your language, maybe you'd finally see me."
Holt's hand stilled. The pen hung forgotten between his fingers.
Alexandra reached out and plucked it from his grasp. He let her. She held it up between them, the gold nib catching the chandelier light, and for a terrible moment he thought she would drive it into her own throat, finish what the pills had started.
Instead, she opened her fingers. The pen fell to the carpet with a soft thud.
"There's your conspiracy," she whispered. "A woman who loved her husband enough to become someone he might finally notice. How pathetic. How perfectly predictable."
She turned away, walking to the window, her back a rigid line of silk and fury. Holt stood frozen, his hand empty, his chest constricted in a way that had nothing to do with the tightness of his collar. The watch on his wrist felt suddenly heavy, absurd. A child's comfort object.
He looked down at the pen on the floor. The same pen that had almost ended them. The same pen that had hovered over signatures that would have set her free to die in a Brooklyn warehouse, screaming his name.
"Alexandra."
She didn't turn. Her reflection in the glass was a ghost, pale and blurred.
"I don't believe you." He said it quietly. "But I'm going to find out what you're hiding. And when I do-" He stopped. He didn't know how to finish. The threat felt hollow, automatic, a reflex from years of treating everyone as an adversary.
He bent and retrieved the pen. Slipped it back into his pocket. The metal was warm from her hand.
The door closed behind him with a sound like a period at the end of a sentence.
Alexandra didn't move until she heard the Mercedes engine fade down the driveway. Then her knees buckled and she slid to the floor, her back against the window glass, her forehead pressed to her knees. Her breath came in jagged bursts, each one tearing at her raw throat.
He knew. Not everything-never everything-but he knew enough. The third-party capital. The timing. The precision.
She crawled to the bed and hauled herself up, her fingers finding the laptop. The screen woke to a black terminal, the cursor blinking like a heartbeat.
QUEEN > _
Her fingers hovered. She could wipe it all now. Burn Starlight's servers, scatter the assets across a thousand shell companies, become untraceable. She had done it before, in another life, when the fire had taught her that attachment was weakness and love was a liability.
But her eyes drifted to the door. To the space where he had stood, empty-handed, his voice stripped of its usual armor.
A woman who loved her husband enough to become someone he might finally notice.
The lie had tasted like truth when she spoke it. That was the danger. That was how she had died before-confusing performance with feeling, strategy with surrender.
She closed the laptop and walked to the mirror. The woman staring back at her was twenty-two years old and a hundred years dead. Her eyes were red-rimmed, her lips bitten raw, but there was something new in the set of her jaw. A hardness that hadn't been there three days ago.
"You're not Alexandra Lucas anymore," she told her reflection. "And he's not Holt Blanchard. Not really. Not yet."
She touched the glass, her fingertip meeting her twin's. Cold. Separate. Alone.
The game had changed. He was hunting her now, not just waiting for her to leave. The distance between suspicion and discovery was measured in days, maybe hours. She needed to move faster. Deeper. Before he unearthed Starlight, before he traced Queen back to this bedroom, before he realized that the woman sleeping beside him had built an empire in the shadows of his own.
Alexandra turned away from the mirror and began to dress. Black. Simple. Invisible.
The night was still young. And Cary's backers-the ones Holt had warned her about-would be waking up to margin calls and ruined balance sheets. They would be looking for someone to blame.
She had a meeting to arrange. A death to prevent. A debt to collect.
The pen lay forgotten on the carpet where she had dropped it, its gold nib catching the light like a wink, like a promise, like a blade waiting to be picked up.
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7.1
I was living as a ghost in a run-down trailer park, trying to outrun a past that would kill me if it ever caught up. Then the storm hit, and a dying monster collapsed through my door, bringing the smell of copper and the promise of a very different kind of death.
I tried to defend myself with a cheap butcher knife, but Darius didn't just disarm me—he acquired me. Before the rain even stopped, I was drugged and whisked away on a private jet, waking up in a luxury penthouse that was nothing more than a high-tech cage overlooking the city skyline.
He didn't just want my silence; he wanted total control. When I begged to check on my sick grandmother, he threw a manila envelope on the table filled with surveillance photos of her at her nursing home.
"I own the board of that facility," he said, his voice cold as ice. "One call from me, and she dies alone on the street."
He vetted my life in that trailer park down to my medical records and childhood diaries, convinced he had every lever of power needed to keep me obedient. He forced me into silk dresses and expected me to be his domestic pet, a quiet girl waiting for him to return from his world of shadows and blood.
I played the part, letting him pull me into his lap and bury his face in my neck, pretending to be the broken girl he thought he’d bought. I watched his security cameras, calculated his blind spots, and waited for the moment his exhaustion outweighed his instinct.
Darius thinks he knows me because he saw where I lived, but he’s never been more wrong. His investigators found the pauper, but they completely missed the princess with an Ivy League degree and a family name that carries more weight than his illegal empire.
He thinks he’s the one holding the leash, but he has no idea who he’s actually brought into his home. The game has just begun, and this time, the "asset" is going to be the one who burns the house down.

8.6
It was my birthday, but instead of celebrating, I was bleeding on the floor of my own bedroom. My sister Serena had just smashed a champagne bottle over my legs, her eyes filled with a dark madness because our father allowed me to wear the family diamonds.
To escape her, I bolted into a pitch-black guest suite, only to be grabbed by a man who felt like a wall of solid muscle. He was drugged, unstable, and pinned me against the wall, his teeth sinking into my neck in a primal claim that left a permanent mark.
I managed to flee, but the nightmare was just beginning. My father didn't care about my injuries; he only cared that I had "insulted" the man in that room—Delos French, the most powerful CEO in New York. He threatened to stop paying for my mother’s critical care facility unless I went to Delos and begged for his forgiveness.
My brother Julian was even worse, intentionally pouring scalding coffee over my bandaged wounds just to see me flinch. They forced me into a revealing gold dress, treating me like a high-priced commodity to be sold to the highest bidder to save their failing company.
I didn't understand how the people who were supposed to love me could be more predatory than the monster in the dark. I had spent my life fixing their scandals, yet they were ready to throw me to the wolves the moment I became useful as a pawn.
But when I stood before Delos French at his gala, he didn't see a trophy. He recognized my scent, my touch, and the fire in my eyes. He trapped me in his private lounge, kneeling to clean the blood from my injured feet.
"Marry me," he whispered, his voice a low, terrifying growl. "And I will give you the power to burn your family to the ground."
I looked into the eyes of the man who had hunted me and realized he was the only one offering me a weapon to destroy the people who had broken me.
"Okay," I whispered.

7.9
The rain was a solid sheet of gray as the black SUV rammed into my car, sending me spiraling over the guardrail. As the glass shattered and the world turned upside down, a searing pain ripped through my chest before everything went cold and dark.
I didn’t stay in the darkness. My spirit hovered ten feet in the air, watching the steam hiss from my mangled sedan.
I followed the magnetic pull of my soul back to my family estate, expecting to find them devastated. Instead, I found my stepmother, Florene, and my sister, Kassidy, pouring vintage champagne and laughing in the drawing room.
"To the end of the nuisance," Florene said, her eyes gleaming with greed. "The trust fund unlocks at midnight. We're finally rich."
The betrayal cut deeper than the metal that killed me, but the real shock came at my funeral. Hiram Tyson—the cold, masked husband I’d spent three years fearing—collapsed over my closed casket. He unbuckled his silver mask, revealing a face ruined by scars, and sobbed a name I hadn't heard since childhood.
"I'm sorry, Angel. I thought keeping you at arm's length would keep the darkness away."
He wasn't the monster I thought he was. He was the boy I had saved at the orphanage years ago, and he had been protecting me in silence while my own family plotted my murder.
I reached out to touch him, but the world exploded into a blinding white light.
When I opened my eyes, I wasn't in a casket. I was back in our bedroom, feeling the heavy weight of Hiram’s arm across my waist. The calendar on the nightstand read September 14, 2023—exactly one year before the crash.
I looked at the silver mask resting on the table and felt a cold, hard determination settle in my chest. This time, I wasn't going to be the victim. I was going to be the villain in their story and burn their world to the ground.

9.4
I walked into the master suite clutching a positive pregnancy test, convinced this tiny plastic stick would finally mend the cracks in my relationship with Braeden Randall. I was ready to tell him we were starting a family, that our future was finally secure.
Instead of a celebration, a heavy manila envelope struck me in the chest, slicing my lip open. Photos scattered at my feet—grainy images of a woman who looked exactly like me entering a seedy motel with a stranger. Before I could speak, Braeden’s face twisted with a hatred so pure it stole my breath.
"I’m pregnant, Braeden! It’s yours!" I sobbed, shielding my stomach.
He didn’t hesitate. He called my baby "evidence of my filth" and delivered a kick so brutal it sent me crashing through a glass coffee table. As I lay amidst the shards, watching the white carpet turn crimson with the blood of my lost child, he simply adjusted his cufflinks and told me to "clean up the mess" before walking out.
Hours later, I was bound in ropes on a yacht during a violent storm. My stepmother, Brittny, leaned in and whispered the ultimate betrayal: she had murdered my mother, and now she was finishing me off. They threw me into the black, churning ocean like garbage, expecting the waves to swallow my secrets forever.
I sank into the freezing depths, fueled by the memory of that final, desperate flutter in my womb and the cold realization that my life had been stolen by a calculated frame-up. How could the man I loved turn into a monster in a single afternoon, and what else were they hiding?
Now, four years later, I’ve returned to Cloud City with a heart forged in ice and a genius son who looks exactly like the man who tried to kill me. I’m no longer the victim who begged for mercy; I’m a rising star auditioning for the lead in Braeden’s new production. The games are just beginning, and I won't stop until I've dismantled the Randall empire piece by piece.

7.7
The Billionaire's $500,000 Baby
"Sign the contract. Give me an heir. Then, disappear."
Liora Hayes has sixty minutes.
$500,000 or her mother dies.
No money. No hope. No way out.
Then Darian Volkov walks in.
The ruthless "Ice King" of Luminaire Corp doesn't want her heart. He wants an heir.
The deal is simple:
1. Carry his child.
2. Get the money.
3. Never return.
But the Volkov mansion is a gilded cage. Inside, Liora finds a lethal secret: Darian didn't choose her by chance. He is the son of the man who destroyed her father.
Now, she is carrying the baby of her greatest enemy.
The debt was paid in blood. The contract was signed in lies.
What happens when the Ice King refuses to let his "asset" go?

8.3
My five-year-old daughter was turning blue in my arms, her body rigid with a 104-degree fever. I called my billionaire husband, Clifton, dozens of times as I rushed to the hospital, but he declined every single call.
While I was screaming at doctors and fighting to save our child’s life, a news alert flashed on my phone. Clifton was at the Met Gala, looking devastatingly handsome as he intimately draped his tuxedo jacket over the shoulders of his mistress, Eleanora.
The nightmare didn't end at the hospital. Clifton used a secret clause in our prenup to snatch Lily from her bed and move her to a private facility without my consent. When I finally found her, my own daughter shrank away from me in terror. "Go away, bad Mommy!" she sobbed, while the mistress fed her oatmeal and whispered that I was the one who made the doctors hurt her.
Clifton stood by and watched, telling me I was too "hysterical" to be a mother. But then I discovered the real reason they were hiding her. My husband was illegally using my late mother’s rare bone marrow samples to treat Eleanora’s secret blood disorder. Now that those samples are failing, he is taking Lily to a secluded castle in Germany to harvest our daughter’s marrow for his mistress.
I sat in the dark, watching them play happy family with the child they plan to sacrifice. I realized then that my marriage wasn't just a lie—it was a biological harvest. They think I’m just a broken trophy wife who doesn't understand the science they are using to destroy me.
They have no idea that I am "Ghost," the anonymous medical genius behind the very research they are trying to steal. As we board the private jet to Germany, I’ve stopped crying and started calculating. If they want to play with life and death, I’ll show them exactly what happens when a mother stops being a victim and starts being a predator.