
She Found Freedom, Not His Love
Eda Roman clutched her father's diagnostic report, its sharp edge cutting her finger. His cancer had mutated, standard treatment failed, and a fifty thousand dollar deposit for experimental therapy was due by midnight. Fail to pay, and his hospital bed would be cleared.
Wife to Axel Foley, a multi-billion dollar CEO, Eda faced an impossible chasm. Her family trust, controlled by Keri Lane, offered a meager three hundred dollars.
An emergency fund request met a forty-eight-hour review—a death sentence. Keri's assistant denied expedite and blocked calls. Desperate, Eda called Axel, but his assistant dismissed her with lies, Axel's laughter echoing.
Humiliation and betrayal ignited cold fury. Wife to Seattle's wealthiest, yet begging on a hospital floor? Axel's indifference and Keri's games showed her: her father's life couldn't be left in their hands.
Wiping tears, the pleading girl vanished; her survival instinct roared. Red lipstick her war paint, Eda Roman marched to Foley Group Headquarters, ready to reclaim what was hers.
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Chapter 3
Eda Roman POV:
The phone rang for a full minute. Each long, monotonous tone scraped against my eardrums. Finally, the ringing stopped, replaced by the mechanical click of the automated voicemail system. Over the past three years, eighty percent of the calls I made to Axel ended exactly like this.
I pulled the phone away and hit the redial button. I pressed my thumb so hard against the glass screen that it left a damp, smeary print of sweat.
I called him five consecutive times. Five times, the call was brutally rejected, sent straight to voicemail after a single ring.
On the sixth attempt, the line suddenly connected. But the voice that answered didn't belong to my husband. It was Mark, Axel's Chief Assistant.
Mark used his flawless, professionally polite voice. He informed me that the CEO was in the middle of a critical investment portfolio review.
I cut him off mid-sentence. I talked fast, the words tumbling over each other. I told him there was a life-or-death emergency at home and I absolutely needed to speak to Axel, even just for ten seconds.
Mark paused. I heard the rapid, precise clacking of a keyboard on his end. He was checking the schedule, treating my father's life like a calendar conflict.
His voice returned, colder this time. He flatly refused. He stated that the meeting was classified as Level S, and strict company protocols forbade any personal interruptions.
I gripped the phone with both hands. I explained that my father's leukemia had mutated. My voice broke, a pathetic, desperate sob leaking out of my throat.
Mark didn't miss a beat. He offered a dismissive platitude, promising to leave a memo on Axel's desk, but added that based on the itinerary, Axel wouldn't see it until late afternoon.
Right as he spoke, the background noise on the call shifted. Through the speaker, I distinctly heard Axel's deep, resonant laugh, followed by the clinking of glassware. It wasn't a tense, closed-door financial review. They were socializing.
I snapped. I demanded to know if Axel was standing right next to him.
Mark's tone didn't change. He simply said the cellular reception in the boardroom was poor, and he abruptly terminated the call.
I stared at the black screen of my phone. A massive, suffocating wave of betrayal crashed over me, pulling me under.
I turned my head slowly. I looked through the rectangular glass window of the hospital door. I watched the steady, weak rise and fall of my father's chest.
I took a deep breath. I reached up and aggressively wiped the wetness from the corners of my eyes. The fragile, pleading girl vanished. My gaze turned hard and entirely cold. Softness had never bought me anything in the Foley empire but contempt. My survival instinct, buried deep in my bones, finally woke up.
I turned away from the glass. I walked toward the elevator bank. My first few steps were shaky, but by the time I hit the button, my stride was rigid and unyielding.
I walked out through the sliding glass doors of the hospital lobby. The biting Seattle wind hit my face like an open-handed slap, clearing the remaining fog from my brain.
I stepped up to the curb and threw my arm out. A yellow cab pulled over. I yanked the door open and slid onto the cracked vinyl seat.
The driver looked at me through the rearview mirror, asking for an address. I met my own reflection in his mirror. My face was the color of chalk.
I gave him the address of the Foley Group Headquarters. My voice was completely flat, stripped of all emotion.
The cab wove through the heavy downtown traffic. I stared out the window at the towering skyscrapers and the blur of pedestrians. I felt entirely detached from the world outside the glass, like a ghost haunting my own life.
I unclasped my cheap handbag and pulled out a tube of lipstick. I uncapped it, using the reflection of the tinted car window. I dragged the dark red color across my bloodless lips.
It was my war paint. It was the only armor I had left. I refused to walk into that hostile fortress looking like a victim.
The cab jerked to a halt in front of a massive, imposing glass tower. It was the absolute center of Axel's power.
I handed the driver a crumpled bill. I pushed the door open and stepped out onto the pavement. I tilted my head back, squinting against the harsh glare reflecting off the giant silver Foley logo above the entrance.
I pulled the lapels of my worn trench coat tighter across my chest. I took a breath and marched straight toward the revolving doors.
The moment I stepped into the sprawling, cavernous lobby, the blinding reflection of the polished marble floor made me dizzy.
Several receptionists at the massive front desk spotted me. Their hushed conversations stopped instantly. They exchanged knowing, judgmental glances.
I ignored them. I walked in a straight line toward the private executive elevators. Before I could reach the call button, two massive security guards stepped into my path, crossing their arms.
They looked down at me with blank, stony faces. They demanded I produce an appointment QR code, treating me exactly like a corporate spy or a random solicitor.
"I am Axel Foley's wife. Move."
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9.0
Ashlyn was supposed to be just a fragile college student, selling her rare blood to a vicious crime syndicate enforcer to keep his dying sister alive.
But the dynamic shattered when Alex returned from a two-month disappearance. He stepped into the penthouse covered in dirt and blood, sporting a horrific, jagged knife wound slashed completely across his face.
Knowing exactly how to exploit his insecurities, Ashlyn played the role of the terrified victim to perfection. She screamed, pushed against his chest, and called him a terrifying monster. Humiliated and enraged by her blatant disgust, Alex violently smashed a marble table and kicked her out. He forced her out into a freezing, torrential rainstorm without a coat, vowing to kill her if she ever showed her face again.
What the ruthless enforcer didn't know was that her pathetic, trembling tears were a flawless, calculated lie. She wasn't a helpless, greedy girl. She was a cold-blooded corporate mastermind hiding from a family of elite assassins. She desperately needed his impenetrable penthouse fortress to stay alive, and she knew the only way to secure her place wasn't to ask for it, but to make him beg for her return.
Three days later, his sister's organs began to fail, and the hospital's blood bank ran dry.
"I'll pay you whatever you want. Just get here."
Listening to the desperate, broken voice of the monster over her burner phone, Ashlyn smiled coldly in the dark. The trap had snapped shut, and he had just handed her all the power.

8.1
Arnetta had been married to a wealthy man for three years, but she had never even seen his face.
After a wild night of drinking, she woke up in a hotel room next to a handsome, ruthless stranger.
He coldly kicked her out, mocking her as just another desperate woman trying to sleep her way to the top.
To her shock, she soon discovered the stranger was Brennan Kirkland—her firm's top-tier client and a legendary Wall Street billionaire.
Hiding her true identity as a corporate spy, she manipulated her way into becoming his executive assistant to steal his data.
During a business dinner, Arnetta received a humiliating text from her absent husband, demanding a divorce and calling her a greedy parasite.
"He is a deadbeat coward who thinks money solves everything," Arnetta spat in anger.
"A man who hides behind lawyers is weak," Brennan agreed coldly.
He had absolutely no idea he was insulting his own actions, nor did he realize the wild, gold-digging wife he despised was sitting right across from him.
The next day, her husband's legal team sent a brutal twenty-million-dollar settlement offer, threatening to ruin her if she didn't take the payoff and disappear.
Staring at the degrading ultimatum, Arnetta's hands shook with blinding rage.
She looked at Brennan, who was busy plotting to destroy his own wife, and a terrifyingly calm smile touched her lips.
She wasn't just going to take the money; she was going to completely destroy him.

9.5
Blaire's mother gave her a ruthless ultimatum: find a husband today, or never call her mother again.
Desperate to escape the suffocating control and disastrous blind dates, Blaire agreed to a fake marriage with a stranger she met through an old woman.
She thought she was marrying a dirt-poor salesman drowning in mortgage debt.
They lived in a rundown Queens apartment and split the living expenses fifty-fifty.
He drove a sputtering Toyota Camry, established extreme territorial rules, and treated her like a gold-digging biohazard.
When she accidentally tripped and spilled hot soup on him, he didn't help her up, instead accusing her of using pathetic tricks to seduce him.
Her own mother even crashed their apartment, ruthlessly mocking his pathetic financial state and calling him a total loser.
Blaire endured his coldness and extreme germaphobia, genuinely pitying him for his stressful, low-paying job.
She refunded his money and defended his dignity, refusing to take advantage of a struggling man.
But she couldn't understand why this supposedly broke guy possessed such a lethal, commanding aura, or why an incredibly expensive cashmere blanket mysteriously appeared on her when she was freezing on the couch.
Until her brother called with a shocking warning.
"Blaire, the name on your marriage certificate belongs to the notoriously secretive billionaire CEO of New York's top financial syndicate!"
Blaire laughed out loud, completely unaware that behind the bedroom door, her "broke" husband was frantically ordering his PR team to bury his true identity.

9.0
Once a pampered princess, Alaina now clutched a deactivated American Express card, staring out at Central Park. Her family’s fortune was gone, her life, over.
Her family's Hamptons estate, a four-generation legacy, was seized by Dyer Capital. The name hit her: Hardin Dyer, the poor boy she’d once scorned, had returned.
Hardin marched in, serving a divorce agreement. He'd orchestrated her family's downfall for revenge, giving her 24 hours to vacate his property. Penniless, her father faced prison, needing $50 million. Her mother forced her to beg Hardin, who sneered, offering the money for her body. Alaina ripped up the contract.
Hours later, her father had a heart attack. Desperate, she became "Lexi," a club girl enduring humiliation. In the Viper Room, Hardin's lackeys demanded she lick whiskey off his shoe for $10,000. Hardin watched. Outside, her brother Ashton's hand was threatened for a $3 million debt. Spirit shattered, Alaina returned, knelt on broken glass, offering to sign. But Hardin declared her family "dead," offering $10 million for her body, commanding her to use her mouth.
In a furious act of defiance, Alaina threw whiskey in his face, snatched the check, and fled. Yet, when he finally took her, a searing, foreign pain and blood on the sheets revealed a shocking truth: he had never touched her three years ago. Why had he let her believe such a monstrous lie?

8.7
Emerson worked grueling twelve-hour shifts just to keep her five-year-old son, Leo, alive. Her only lifeline was her partner Alden, who was willing to give up his wealthy family to protect them.
But when Leo's bone marrow completely failed, the doctor delivered a death sentence. The only way to save him was a two-million-dollar treatment, or having another child with his biological father.
That father was Finnegan Mcconnell, the ruthless billionaire who had accused Emerson of faking her pregnancy and abandoned her five years ago.
Desperate for the medical fees, Emerson submitted her designs to Finnegan's company.
Instead of advancing the money, Finnegan tore her portfolio to shreds and trapped her as a prisoner in his estate.
To force her complete submission, he systematically destroyed her reality. He framed Alden with federal charges, leaving him facing twenty years in prison.
Alden's mother stormed into the pediatric ICU, violently strangling Emerson against the wall.
"Beg Finnegan to let my son go! You are a curse!"
Even Emerson's own adoptive mother showed up at the hospital, just to publicly mock her dying child.
Emerson was suffocating in despair. Finnegan already had a beautiful new wife and a five-year-old daughter—absolute proof he had been cheating while she was pregnant and alone.
He had his perfect family. Why did he have to hunt her down and sever every lifeline she had left, just to watch her drown?
With her son's heart monitor fading and Alden locked in a cell, her pride finally shattered.
Emerson walked into the top-floor executive office and dropped to her knees at the devil's feet, but the desperate mother looking up at him was preparing for a devastating revenge.

9.3
To escape my abusive adoptive mother selling me to a loan shark for $50,000, I rushed to City Hall to marry a blind date.
In a blind panic, I grabbed the wrong man.
He was Julian Cardenas IV, a billionaire CEO who desperately needed a fake wife to dodge a corporate arranged marriage. We signed the papers on the spot.
He became my legal shield. He moved me into his pristine penthouse and secretly protected me from my family's violent threats. When I broke down crying in the freezing cold, he quietly left me hot cocoa. For the first time in my life, I felt safe.
But then, Julian overheard me complaining to my sister about my constantly breaking-down car, groaning that I had to "get rid of this baby four times."
He thought I meant abortions.
The man who was slowly melting my frozen heart instantly turned to ice. He threw away the dinner he had specially bought for me, his eyes filled with absolute disgust and blinding rage.
I was left entirely confused and terrified. Why did my savior suddenly look at me like I was the most repulsive thing in the world? What had I done to deserve this sudden cruelty?
I thought this fake marriage was my ticket out of hell. I didn't realize I had just locked myself in a cage with a furious, ruthless CEO who now wanted to destroy me.