
She Left When I Was Broke, Regretted When I Was King.
Ethan loved her with empty pockets and a full heart.
He worked until his hands bled. Skipped meals. Gave her everything he had.
On Valentine's Day, he planned to give her the one gift he could never afford.
Instead, he caught her in another man's arms.
His brother's arms.
They laughed at him.
They told him love without money was worthless.
They threw him away like trash.
That same night, his phone rang.
And the world flipped.
One hundred million dollars appeared in his account.
A powerful family came looking for their lost heir.
And the poor boy nobody wanted became the man nobody could touch.
Now the woman who left him wants him back.
The family that crushed him wants forgiveness.
But Ethan is done begging.
Done loving with nothing.
This time, he decides who deserves him.
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Chapter 3
Ethan's POV
His fist never connected.
My body moved on instinct, jerking sideways just enough that his knuckles grazed my ear instead of my jaw. The momentum carried him forward, off balance, and I shoved him. Hard.
Michael stumbled backward, his expensive shoes sliding on the hardwood floor. His arms pinwheeled, grabbing at air, at nothing. The purse flew from his hand, hitting the wall with a dull thud. Then he went down, landing on his back with a grunt that knocked the wind from his lungs.
For a second, nobody moved.
I stood there, breathing hard, staring at my hands like they belonged to someone else. My brother, adoptive or not, lay on the floor. I'd put him there.
"You piece of shit." Michael's voice came out wheezy. He rolled onto his side, coughing. "You actually hit me."
"You swung first."
"I barely touched you."
"You tried." My hands were shaking again, but different this time. Not from fear or heartbreak. From something darker. Something that felt almost good. "You tried and you missed."
He pushed himself up on one elbow, touching his lip where it had split against his teeth. Blood, bright red, stained his fingers. He looked at it like he'd never seen his own blood before. Maybe he hadn't. Golden boy Michael, who'd never been in a real fight, who'd paid other kids to take his punches in middle school.
"Look what you did." He held up his hand, showing Lena. "Look at this."
"Oh my god." Lena rushed to him, dropping to her knees beside him. Her hands fluttered over his face, his shoulders, checking for damage like he'd been hit by a car instead of pushed by someone twenty pounds lighter. "Michael, are you okay? Can you breathe?"
"I'm fine." He batted her hands away, but gently. Always gentle with her. "But your psycho ex just assaulted me."
"I'm not a psycho."
"You attacked me in my girlfriend's apartment."
"Your girlfriend?" The words tasted like acid. "She was mine first."
"Was." Michael got to his feet, Lena supporting him even though he didn't need it. "Past tense. Get it through your thick skull, Ethan. She doesn't want you. She never really did."
I looked at Lena. She wouldn't meet my eyes.
"Tell me he's lying." My voice came out smaller than I wanted. "Tell me you loved me. Even if it's over, tell me it was real once."
She opened her mouth. Closed it. Opened it again.
"I cared about you," she said finally. "I did. But Ethan, you have to understand. I'm twenty-six years old. I can't keep living like we're broke college students forever. I need stability. Security. A future."
"I was building that. For us."
"On what? Walmart paychecks and tutoring gigs?" She shook her head. "That's not a future. That's barely surviving."
"So you picked him because he has money." The words felt heavy, final. "That's what this comes down to."
"It's not just the money." But her voice wavered. "Michael can give me things you can't. Nice dinners. Vacations. A life where I'm not worried about making rent every month."
"I helped you with rent."
"And I felt terrible about it every time." She finally looked at me, and her eyes were hard. "Don't you get it? I don't want to be someone's charity case. I don't want to date someone who makes me feel guilty for wanting nice things."
"I bought you a two-thousand-dollar purse."
"With money you couldn't afford to spend." She gestured at me, at my worn jeans and faded shirt. "Look at yourself, Ethan. You're falling apart trying to impress someone who never asked you to. That's not love. That's a form of obsession."
The room tilted. Or maybe I did. Everything felt wrong, like I'd woken up in someone else's nightmare.
"You're right," I said quietly. "I was obsessed. With someone who doesn't exist."
"Finally, he gets it." Michael draped his arm over Lena's shoulders, pulling her close. The gesture was possessive, deliberate. "You know what your problem is, little bro? You think being poor makes you noble. Like suffering somehow makes you better than everyone else. But it doesn't. It just makes you poor."
"And you think being rich makes you a man." I bent down, picking up the purse from where it had fallen. The leather was soft against my raw palms. "But it doesn't. It just makes you rich."
"Rich is better." He smiled, blood still on his teeth. "Ask anyone. Ask Lena."
I did. I looked at her, really looked, giving her one last chance to prove me wrong.
"I choose Michael," she said. Simple. Clean. Final.
"Then I hope you're happy together." I tucked the purse under my arm. "I hope his money keeps you warm at night. I hope it fills whatever hole you have inside that my love wasn't enough to fill."
"Don't be dramatic," she said. "This is exactly why we didn't work. You're always so intense about everything."
"Get out." Michael pointed at the door. "You're not welcome here anymore."
"It's her apartment."
"And she wants you gone." He looked at Lena. "Right, babe?"
She hesitated. For half a second, she hesitated.
"Leave, Ethan." Her voice was tired. "Please just leave. You're embarrassing yourself."
"Embarrassing?" The word hit like a punch. "I'm embarrassing?"
"Yes." She wrapped both arms around Michael's waist. "This whole thing. Showing up unannounced. Fighting. Making a scene. It's childish."
"I caught you cheating on me."
"We were taking a break."
"Since when? Since when were we on a break, Lena?"
She didn't answer.
"That's what I thought." I headed for the door, each step feeling like walking through concrete. "You know what's really embarrassing? I actually thought you were different. I thought you saw past the money, the clothes, the car. I thought you saw me."
"I did see you," she said. "That's the problem."
The words followed me into the hallway. I didn't look back. Couldn't. If I looked back, I might do something stupid. Cry. Beg. Break.
The door slammed behind me. I heard the deadbolt click. Then voices, muffled. Then laughter.
They were laughing.
The elevator took forever. I stood there, staring at my reflection in the polished doors. Sunken eyes. Hollow cheeks. When had I become this person? This ghost wearing Ethan's face?
The purse felt heavier with each floor. By the time I reached the lobby, it weighed a thousand pounds.
"Have a good night, Ethan," Leonard called.
I didn't respond. Couldn't. If I opened my mouth, I'd scream.
Outside, the February air hit like a wall. Freezing. Biting. The kind of cold that found every gap in your clothes and crawled inside. I had no coat. I'd forgotten it in my rush to get here, to surprise the woman I loved.
Loved. Past tense.
For the first time in my life, love turned into something else. Something darker. Not sadness. Not heartbreak.
Hatred.
Pure, clean, burning hatred.
I hated Michael for being born into wealth. I hated Lena for choosing it. I hated myself for being stupid enough to believe I could compete.
My phone rang.
I almost didn't answer. Almost threw it in the gutter and kept walking into the night until I disappeared. But habit made me pull it from my pocket, check the screen.
Unknown number.
Scam, probably. Some robot trying to sell me car insurance or tell me my social security number had been compromised. I answered anyway. Why not? The night couldn't get worse.
"Hello?"
"Is this Ethan?" The voice was elderly, male, cultured. Like someone from an old movie. "Ethan Cross?"
"Who's asking?"
"My name is Winston, young master. I've been searching for you for quite some time."
Young master. Right. Definitely a scam.
"Look, I'm not interested in whatever you're selling. And I don't have any money, so if this is about a debt, you're wasting your time."
"On the contrary." Papers rustled on his end. "You have quite a lot of money. You simply don't know it yet."
I laughed. Actually laughed. It came out bitter, broken. "Sure. I'm secretly rich. And I'm also the king of England. Listen, old man, I've had the worst night of my life. I'm not in the mood for games."
"This is no game, young master. Your grandfather has been looking for you since you were five years old. We've finally found you."
"My grandfather is dead." I started walking, no destination in mind. Just away. Away from that building. Away from her. "Both of them. Nice try."
"Your adoptive grandparents, yes. I'm speaking of your biological grandfather. Mr. Sterling Cross. He's quite eager to meet you."
Sterling Cross. The name meant nothing. Some made-up rich person's name. These scammers were getting creative.
"I'm hanging up now."
"Please, just check your bank account. You'll see I'm quite serious."
"Yeah, okay." I pulled the phone from my ear. "Have a nice life, Winston."
I hung up.
Stood there on the freezing sidewalk, breath making clouds in the air.
Checked my bank account because why not? Might as well see how broke I really was after buying that stupid purse.
The app loaded slowly. My phone was old, the screen cracked, the processor struggling.
Then the numbers appeared.
I blinked.
Blinked again.
The numbers didn't change.
My bank account, which had contained exactly two hundred and thirty-seven dollars this morning, now showed a balance of one hundred million dollars.
And four cents.
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7.1
Aria comes home expecting to make things right with her longtime boyfriend but instead she gets into the wedding arrangements of her stepsister- the groom being her ex. A single agonizing night brings her into the hands of a stranger and she wakes up hoping that she will forget all.
Until she goes to a job interview and discovers that the CEO is the man she slept with. Damon. Her uncle, an older and powerful person and the ex of her boyfriend.
He hires her.
He wants her.
And he will not allow her to walk away.
Their clandestine office affair becomes a scandal that everybody is talking about. Aria attempts to be tough, yet her family is attempting to manipulate her, Damon does not want to give up, and her past is ready to destroy everything.
She begins to trust him just in time to be betrayed by the missing ex of Damon which also happens to look like Aria. The truth breaks her. The pregnancy, the heartbreak, the loss, the sickness... she believes that her story is finished.
Until Damon returns to her life in a manner that she could never imagine- taking everything to rescue her.
Now Aria has to choose whether she can love the man who replaced her once... or leave before she is hurt again.
A Christmas wedding.
A stolen company.
The second opportunity that she did not expect.
And one last turn that alters all.

7.1
For seven years, I hid my identity as a wealthy heiress to be with my boyfriend, Ewing. I followed him across the country and made myself small so he could feel big.
On Thanksgiving, he ditched our celebration for his first love, Bree, who supposedly had a "burst pipe."
Later, she posted an intimate selfie with him, calling him her "hero."
Then she sent me a video of him at a bar, laughing with his friends.
"She's just being dramatic," he slurred, smirking at the camera. "A new necklace and she'll forget all about it. She's easy."
Easy. Seven years of my life, my love, my sacrifice-all reduced to that one word. I realized I was never his partner. I was just a placeholder.
I didn't cry. I packed my bags, booked a one-way flight to New York, and sent him one final text before blocking his number.
"Don't bother coming home. I'm getting married."

7.4
Helena woke up in a sheer silk slip, trapped inside the romance novel she had read the night before.
She was the doomed villainess.
And she had just executed the most pathetic plot in the book: hiding in the closet to seduce her cold, ruthless legal guardian, Hayward.
It was the exact move that got the original Helena thrown out on the street to die.
"Helena, your time is up. Get out."
Hayward's freezing voice came from the other side of the door.
He didn't just reject her. He threatened to strip her of her trust fund and permanently lock her in a psychiatric ward.
Everyone in the massive estate despised her, treating her like trash.
To force her to break, Hayward exiled her to the company's worst design department, a graveyard for corporate failures.
At the same time, her innocent step-sister, the novel's female lead, was being cornered and harassed by a predatory manager.
Helena was suffocating under the original owner's ruined reputation.
She was surrounded by hostile eyes, everyone just waiting for her to throw a tantrum and completely self-destruct.
Why should she be forced to pay the ultimate price for the original villain's deadly mistakes?
Instead of screaming or begging, Helena wrapped herself in an oversized coat and played the perfect, submissive lunatic to survive.
She completely flipped the script and took the terrified female lead under her wing.
When that manager tried to lay a hand on her new sister, Helena didn't hesitate to crush his foot with her stiletto.

9.3
I lay on the wet asphalt, the cold rain mixing with the metallic taste of blood pooling in my mouth. My lungs were heavy, filling with fluid as my life ebbed away. Through swollen eyelids, I saw my lover, Clovis, and my stepsister, Alanna, standing over me with looks of pure triumph.
"Thanks for the trust fund, sister," Alanna whispered, shoving a phone screen in front of my dying eyes. The headline was a jagged blade to my soul: Caesar Williamson, the "tyrant" husband I had fled from, was dead in a multi-car collision. He had died trying to rescue me, thinking I was in danger.
The realization shattered what was left of my heart. The man I had spent years painting as a monster had driven into hell to save me, while the man I thought was my safety was the one who had just crushed my ribs with an iron bar. I had played right into their hands, ruining my reputation and my marriage for a lie. I watched them walk away, leaving me to choke on my own blood in the dark, discarded like a bag of trash.
I wanted to scream, to beg the universe for a rewind button, to tell Caesar I was sorry. The darkness pressed down on me, heavier than the betrayal, as my world finally went black.
Then, I was screaming.
I shot up in bed, gasping for air like a drowning woman breaking the surface. I scrambled at my abdomen—smooth skin, no blood, no tear. I grabbed my phone and saw the date: it was three years ago, the morning of my wedding to the Williamson estate.
I didn't waste a second. I scrubbed the "unstable" makeup from my face, threw on a white silk dress, and blocked the man who would eventually kill me. This time, I wasn't running away from the manor. I was going back to the husband I had once feared, ready to save the only man who had ever truly loved me.

7.9
Karley thought marrying billionaire architect Kevon Mcconnell was a fairy tale come true.
But at their wedding reception, a heavy crystal chandelier collapsed. Kevon abandoned her in the falling glass to shield his sister, Devora.
At the hospital, he dropped to his knees, begging Karley to save Devora's life with a direct blood transfusion.
That was when Karley discovered the horrifying truth.
Kevon hadn't married her for love. He had meticulously selected her because she possessed the exact same rare Rh-null golden blood as his chronically ill sister.
Drained and feverish from the massive transfusion, Karley was locked inside his remote, high-tech mansion.
Kevon's mother slapped her and forced foul medicine down her throat to replenish her blood supply.
Even Devora called to mock her.
"You're just a temporary solution. A medical resource until something better comes along."
Karley lay bruised and infected on the floor of her gilded cage.
The realization crushed her: the whirlwind romance, the pre-marital medical checks, even the secret GPS tracker he used to stop her from running away—it was all a calculated trap.
She had lost her job, her friends, and her freedom to a man who only saw her as a walking blood bank.
When Kevon finally returned, he cut off her contact with the outside world and locked the bedroom door with a cold, perfect smile.
"Don't try to leave. You're my wife, and I always know where you are."
But as the smart home dimmed the lights to keep her docile, Karley closed her eyes in the dark and began to plan her escape.

8.9
Brooke was supposed to marry her fiancé, Gaven, in less than twenty-four hours to secure her sick mother's corporate legacy.
But the night before the wedding, she followed a mysterious text to a hotel suite, only to find Gaven pressing her half-sister against a sofa.
Through the crack in the door, she recorded their sickening moans and their cold conspiracy to drain her mother's company the moment the marriage papers were signed.
At the altar the next day, Brooke didn't say "I do."
Instead, she hijacked the church's projector, broadcasting their sex tape and offshore fraud documents to hundreds of wealthy guests.
But instead of supporting her, her own father stormed the altar and slapped her across the face with brutal force.
He cared more about the corporate merger than his daughter, threatening to blacklist her from the industry, while Gaven vowed to completely destroy her.
Bleeding and stripped of her family ties, Brooke walked out into a freezing downpour, completely isolated against a powerful family ready to ruin her sick mother's life's work.
She had no money, no allies, and nowhere to go.
Just as a furious Gaven chased her into the street, a massive black Maybach sliced through the rain and pulled up in front of her.
Inside sat Foster Pruitt, the ruthless, terrifying billionaire whose life she had accidentally saved from a car wreck the night before.
Knowing he desperately needed a wife to secure his own empire, Brooke climbed into his car and looked at the most dangerous man in the city.
"Marry me."