
Silent Escape: The Runaway Heiress's Refuge
I was summoned home from boarding school for a funeral, thinking my family finally wanted me back. I stood in the pouring rain, watching a mahogany casket disappear into the mud, while the silence in my head felt like it was drowning me.
That night, I hid behind a tapestry and listened through a vent to my father’s study. He wasn't talking about grief. He was talking about "tissue compatibility" and "near-perfect matches" with the family lawyer.
They didn't want a daughter; they wanted a donor. My father’s voice was devoid of emotion as he discussed "the harvest." My half-sister was dying, and I was the spare part they had been growing for years. They had even removed the lock from my bedroom door so I could never truly shut them out.
The realization shattered me. I was just a biological backup plan, a life deemed less valuable than the one they preferred. How could a father look at his own child and see nothing but a heart to be cut out and transplanted?
I didn't wait for them to come for me. I stuffed a backpack, flushed my SIM card, and climbed out the window into a thunderstorm. I caught a bus to the middle of nowhere, ending up in a seat next to a massive, predatory man named Hoyt who looked like he’d killed people for less than a seat preference.
He pinned my wrist with a grip like iron and growled, "Who sent you?"
I couldn't speak to defend myself, but as we rolled into a dying town called Blackwood Creek, I knew one thing for certain. I would rather take my chances with a stranger with a gun than stay another night with the family that wanted me dead.
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Chapter 1
Rain mixed with the sweat on her face. She pulled her hood up and started walking, her limp becoming more pronounced with every step. She reached the main road just as a yellow taxi turned the corner, its "Vacant" light glowing like a beacon in the dark.
She raised her hand. The car slowed and pulled over.
Eva opened the door and slid inside. The interior smelled of stale smoke and pine air freshener.
"Where to?" the driver asked, eyeing her soaking wet clothes in the rearview mirror.
Eva pulled a notepad from her pocket and wrote two words: Bus Station.
She showed it to him.
The driver shrugged and hit the meter. "You got it."
As the taxi pulled away, Eva looked back through the rain-streaked window. The Wells estate was a dark silhouette against the sky. She wasn't just running away from home. She was running for her life.
Earlier, the rain had fallen in sheets, turning the world into a blurred watercolor of gray and black. It soaked through the thin fabric of Eva Wells's dress, chilling her skin, but the cold was nothing compared to the numbness spreading through her chest. She stood at the edge of the open grave, her eyes fixed on the mahogany casket being lowered into the wet earth.
The priest's voice was a low drone, a meaningless hum that barely registered over the sound of the rain hitting the umbrellas. Eva didn't hear the prayers. Her ears were ringing with a high-pitched silence that had become her constant companion. She felt like she was underwater, the pressure building against her eardrums, threatening to crush her. It was a psychological deafness, a shield her mind threw up against a world that was too loud, too cruel. But some things always broke through.
A heavy hand landed on her shoulder.
Eva flinched. Her body reacted before her mind did, muscles seizing up, breath hitching in her throat. She knew that touch. It was heavy, possessive, and entirely devoid of warmth. The shield of silence shattered, and the world rushed in with terrifying clarity.
"Steady, Eva," Kingsley Wells murmured.
He stood beside her, his custom-made suit dry under the massive black umbrella held by a bodyguard. He didn't look at her. He looked at the grave with a practiced expression of solemnity, the grieving father playing his part for the cameras that were undoubtedly zooming in from the cemetery gates.
"It's time to go home," he whispered. "Family duty."
Eva looked up at him. His jaw was set, his eyes cold behind his designer glasses. There was no grief there. Only calculation. She looked past him to the waiting limousine. Corie, his wife, sat in the back seat, her face a mask of porcelain indifference. Beside her, Juliana, Eva's half-sister, was a pale ghost, coughing weakly into a handkerchief.
Eva felt the trap closing. She had been summoned from her boarding school for the funeral of a distant uncle, but she knew, deep in the hollow of her stomach, that she wouldn't be going back.
The bodyguard ushered her into the black SUV. The door slammed shut with a finality that made her jump. The lock engaged with a heavy thud. It sounded like a prison cell closing.
The drive to the Wells estate was silent. The only sound was Juliana's ragged breathing and the rhythmic swoosh of the windshield wipers. Eva pressed herself against the door, trying to make herself as small as possible. She stared out the window, watching the city fade into the manicured isolation of the wealthy suburbs.
When they arrived, the iron gates swung open and then closed behind them. The house loomed ahead, a sprawling mansion that looked more like a fortress than a home.
"Go to your room, Eva," Kingsley said as they entered the foyer. "We have matters to discuss later."
Eva nodded, keeping her eyes on the floor. She climbed the grand staircase, her legs feeling heavy, like she was wading through molasses. She went to her old room at the end of the hall. She reached for the door handle and paused. The lock had been removed. There was just a hole in the wood where the mechanism used to be.
She walked inside and sat on the edge of the bed. Her hands were shaking. She clasped them together, squeezing until her knuckles turned white, trying to stop the tremors.
Hours passed. The house grew quiet. The rain continued to batter the windows, a relentless drumbeat against the glass. Thirst clawed at her throat. She hadn't drunk anything since morning.
She opened her door and crept into the hallway. The carpet swallowed the sound of her footsteps. She moved like a shadow, a skill she had perfected over years of trying to be invisible.
Light spilled from the crack under the study door. Instead of pressing her ear to the wood, Eva moved past it, her heart pounding a frantic rhythm against her ribs. She knew this house's secrets better than anyone. At the end of the hall, hidden behind a tapestry, was a small, brass grate-a relic from the old heating system. She knelt, her fingers finding the familiar cold metal. The shaft connected directly to the one in the study below. Kingsley's voice drifted up, low and serious.
Eva froze. She pressed her ear against the grate, holding her breath.
"...latest tests are conclusive," Kingsley was saying. "Dr. Aris confirmed the tissue compatibility is a near-perfect match. We got lucky."
"Is she healthy enough?" another voice asked. It sounded like their family lawyer. "She looks... fragile."
"The heart is strong," Kingsley replied. His voice was devoid of emotion, like he was discussing a car part. "That's all that matters. Juliana doesn't have much time left. We need to schedule the harvest as soon as the legal guardianship paperwork is finalized next week."
The harvest.
The word hung in the air, sharp and deadly.
Eva's hand flew to her mouth to stifle a scream that wouldn't have come out anyway. Her heart slammed against her ribs, a frantic bird trying to escape a cage. They weren't bringing her home to be a daughter. They were bringing her home to be a donor. A spare part for Juliana.
She was going to die.
Adrenaline flooded her system, washing away the numbness. She turned and sprinted back to her room, her bare feet silent on the floor. She closed the door and leaned against it, gasping for air.
She couldn't stay. If she stayed, she was dead.
She dropped to her knees and dragged her old, battered backpack from under the bed. Her hands were shaking so badly she could barely work the zipper. She stuffed a change of clothes inside-jeans, a hoodie, thick socks. She grabbed her sketchbook, the only thing that truly belonged to her.
She went to the bookshelf and pulled out a hollowed-out dictionary. Inside was a stash of cash she had been saving for years, stealing twenty-dollar bills from Kingsley's wallet whenever she had the chance. It wasn't a fortune, but it was enough to get away.
She took the small, framed photo of her mother, Amirah, from the nightstand. In the photo, her mother was laughing, standing in front of a rustic wooden sign that read 'Mrs. Rose's Fresh Produce.' Eva tucked it into the front pocket of the bag. It was her only map.
Then she took out her phone. Kingsley could track it. She grabbed a paperclip from the desk drawer, straightened it, and pushed the thin metal into the tiny hole on the side of the phone. The SIM card tray popped out. She removed the SIM card, snapped the thin plastic in half, and walked to the bathroom, flushing the pieces down the toilet. The phone was now a ghost, but it still held the offline maps she'd downloaded months ago, a contingency plan for a day she prayed would never come.
She went to the window and pushed it open. The wind and rain lashed at her face. Below, a wooden trellis covered in ivy ran down the side of the house. It was slick with rain.
Eva didn't hesitate. She threw her backpack out first, watching it land in a soft bush. Then she swung her legs over the sill.
The wood was slippery. Her foot slipped on the first step, and her knee scraped violently against the rough bark. Pain flared, hot and sharp, but she bit her lip and kept moving. She climbed down, hand over hand, her muscles screaming.
Her feet hit the wet grass. She grabbed her bag and ran. It wasn't a sprint; it was a desperate, limping gait, each step sending a jolt of agony up her leg. Adrenaline was the only thing keeping her upright.
She knew where the security cameras were. She had spent her childhood mapping the blind spots. She wove through the garden, sticking to the shadows of the hedges, avoiding the sweeping arcs of the motion sensors.
She reached the perimeter wall. There was a loose stone near the old oak tree. She used it as a foothold and hauled herself up and over.
She landed hard on the sidewalk outside the estate, the impact jarring her bad knee. She stumbled but forced herself upright. The half-mile walk to the main road felt like a marathon. Every shadow seemed to hold a threat, every rustle of leaves sounded like the footsteps of a bodyguard.
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8.2
After years of marriage, Adrian Foster still only spoke to me in bed.
The moment he got out of it, the warmth vanished, replaced by cold indifference.
I, Nora Bennett, had endured it all in silence, hoping that if I stayed obedient, he might show our daughter, Nina Foster, a little more care.
Yet in his eyes, Sophia Graham was his one and only-the woman he put on a pedestal, shielding and indulging her at every turn.
For her child, he had even taken my daughter's bone marrow.
In that moment, I finally understood. I was nothing more than a pawn in his battle with the woman he truly loved.
So I stopped holding on. I took my daughter and left without hesitation.

7.4
Forced into an unwanted marriage, quiet schoolteacher Delina Brooks is bound to Andrew Kingsley.He is a ruthless billionaire musician, cold and arrogant, and he hates Delina from the moment they wed.
But Andrew's world is not just his own. His glamorous ex-girlfriend, Camilla Laurent, and his manipulative sister, Veronica, are determined to destroy Delina-and reclaim Andrew for themselves. Surrounded by lies, secrets, and relentless enemies, Delina must fight for her dignity, her family, and her future.
As fate twists and turns, one question remains: Will the woman he despised become the only one he can't live without?

8.6
Amara's life has always been predictable-until the shadows start watching her. Footsteps follow her on empty streets, strange chills scrape down her spine, and something ancient tracks her every move from the dark.
Everything changes the night a terrifying wolf-like creature lunges out of the darkness and leaves her fighting for her life. Just when all hope slips away, a mysterious man steps in-sleek, powerful, and gone before she can speak his name.
Haunted by the memory of his golden eyes, Amara begins to unravel a truth she never imagined. A creature in the night. A man in the shadows. A bond that defies logic. Her search for answers leads her to a hidden library and a forgotten article that exposes a world she was never meant to discover, one of magic, danger, and beings who walk between realms.
From the veil of the other world, Kael watches her. Her guardian. Her burden. The one fate bound to her long before she was born. And every day, the pull between them grows stronger... and harder for him to fight.
As enemies gather in both realms, Amara must face the darkness hunting her and the bond tying her to Kael. Because when shadow meets destiny, survival demands trust, courage,
and a heart willing to walk into the dark.

9.2
After catching my fiancé cheating with my adoptive sister, I broke off our engagement on the spot.
In retaliation, my abusive adoptive parents sold me to Kaelen Knight, the Lycan King, to clear our pack's debts.
He was rumored to be a ruthless, reclusive monster who had been horribly crippled in a fire centuries ago.
To ensure my absolute ruin, my sister planted fake love letters to my ex in my luggage and anonymously destroyed my university scholarship, cutting off my only escape route to the human world.
"A wolfless whore. You planned to drug me," Kaelen sneered, looking at the fake evidence with absolute disgust.
Believing I was a spy, my new husband had his guards throw me into the freezing woods with the Dire Wolves, leaving me to survive the night alone.
I was just a broken, wolfless Omega, entirely at the mercy of a cruel, powerless Lycan and a family that wanted me dead.
But I was wrong about him being powerless.
One night, I accidentally saw him rise from his wheelchair, his tall frame radiating an overwhelming, lethal aura.
He wasn't crippled at all.
The secret I thought was my shield was actually a loaded gun pointed at my head. Trapped with a terrifying predator, I had to stop playing the victim and fight for my life.

9.0
My ex-husband returned after a three-year bet, ready to reclaim me and the son he thought was his. He had no idea that I'd secretly aborted his child, divorced him, and remarried the day he left. His world was about to come crashing down.
His delusion turned deadly when he and his manipulative best friend, Haylee, kidnapped my son, Leo.
I found them at his family's mansion, with Leo suffocating from a severe allergic reaction to a dog they were forcing him to play with. Elliot physically restrained me, scolding me for overreacting while Haylee giggled as my son turned blue.
At the hospital, as Leo fought for his life, Elliot grabbed my arm, demanding to know who the man standing beside me was. He was convinced this was all a game to make him jealous.
That's when my real husband, billionaire Gregory Morton, stepped forward.
"Since when is this child yours, Elliot?"

7.4
My fiancé Javen sent me to a yacht in the middle of a New York storm to finalize a high-stakes merger with Alfonse Wolfe, a billionaire rumored to have ice water in his veins. I did it for "us," shivering in a soaked evening gown and cutting my hand on broken glass just to get the signature that would save Javen’s company.
But when I rushed back to the Doyle estate, the manor was blazing with lights for an unannounced engagement party. Javen wasn't waiting for me with open arms; he was standing on the dance floor with Blossom Vega, the daughter of his biggest competitor, announcing their union to the elite of New York.
When I stepped forward, dripping blood and water onto the marble floor, Javen didn't try to protect me. He looked at me with pure disgust and told the gathered press that I was a "charity case" suffering from mental delusions. His mother laughed while calling me a cockroach, and his father claimed my family’s lost fortune was a hallucination. To ensure my silence, Javen leaned in and whispered that he would pull the plug on my disabled brother’s life-saving medical care if I didn't disappear.
I was hauled away by security and locked in a dark storage room like a stain on his perfect evening. I lay there in the dust, unable to process how twelve years of love could be a calculated lie. How could the man I was supposed to marry use my brother’s breath as a bargaining chip after I had just sacrificed everything to save him?
I escaped through a second-story window and went straight to the only predator powerful enough to tear the Doyles apart: Alfonse Wolfe. I didn't just ask for sanctuary; I demanded a marriage license to unlock my mother’s secret trust and protect my brother. Standing in a high-security vault as the new Mrs. Wolfe, I discovered a truth that changed the game. I didn’t just have the money to ruin Javen; the deed in my hand proved I now owned the very land beneath Alfonse’s mansion.
"I’m not the prey anymore," I whispered, watching the Doyle stock plummet on my phone. "I'm the hunter."