
Sweet Revenge Of The Stolen Heiress
I was only three and a half years old, living in a damp basement and beaten daily by Enoch Pruitt with a heavy leather whip.
"Get up, you useless waste of space!"
He always told me I was a stray he had picked out of the garbage.
But during one brutal beating that nearly stopped my heart, time froze, and a glowing figure called The Chronicler appeared.
"You are not an abandoned orphan, Clare. You carry the blood of the highest gods."
He revealed that I was the stolen daughter of the ultra-wealthy Barrett family.
Then, he showed me the horrific ending of my previous life.
I had died right here on this bloody dirt floor.
My real parents and three brothers went completely insane with grief, turning into ruthless monsters who destroyed themselves and the entire world to avenge me.
Meanwhile, the Pruitt family kept torturing me, locking me in a woodshed and feeding me moldy bread.
The memory of my bones breaking and my real mother's agonizing screams crushed my chest.
Why did I have to suffer like an animal while my true family tore the world apart looking for me?
This time, I refused to die in the mud.
I accepted my divine blood, my eyes glowing gold as I summoned a bolt of purple lightning to strike my abuser.
I just needed to survive the night.
Because my real father's heavily armed convoy was already tearing up the mountain, ready to burn this hell to the ground.
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Chapter 1
Clare huddled in the corner of the basement.
Darkness was the only thing she knew. The damp dirt floor, the concrete walls, the bare lightbulb overhead that threatened to go out at any moment — this basement was the place she had known longest in all her memory. Her small body carried the weight of a childhood no child should bear. She was only three and a half years old, and she had already learned the one rule that mattered most: she could not cry out loud.
Enoch Pruitt stood before her, his expression cold and threatening.
Clare shut her eyes.
She bit down on her lower lip. Her heart trembled inside her chest, its rhythm stuttering — one beat, another, and then a pause so long it terrified her.
In that pause, the basement disappeared.
A flood of memories surged into her mind. Not memories from this life — images from another timeline altogether. She saw this same corner, dark and cold. Then the image lurched violently sideways: a man and a woman, kneeling in a vast and sterile room. The woman was tearing at her own hair, releasing a sound Clare had never heard before, a sound that hollowed her out from the inside. The man only stared at the wall, his face as empty as carved wood.
She knew them. Not from this life — but she knew them.
Silas and Genevieve Barrett. Her real parents.
The images kept moving. She watched three young men, once full of bright futures, slowly destroy themselves and the entire Barrett family, consumed by a dark and single-minded obsession.
Clare's throat tightened. The regret pressed down on her chest, heavier than anything she had ever felt.
Then the world went still.
The dust motes floating in the damp air froze in place. Time itself seemed to hold its breath. The sound of Enoch's heavy breathing vanished completely.
A figure formed in the center of the basement. He wore a simple white suit, and a soft, pale light surrounded him entirely.
"Clare, you are not an abandoned orphan." His voice did not come from his mouth. It resonated directly inside her skull. "I am The Chronicler. And your bloodline carries the power of the oldest gods."
Clare stared at him, unable to move, but her mind was racing.
"Your early death in the previous timeline broke everything," The Chronicler continued. He stepped closer. The air around him smelled of ozone and rain-soaked earth. "Your brothers strayed from their fates. They fell into darkness. You must change this."
Clare looked at the shattered images still playing in her mind. She did not want to die here. She did not want her mother to make that sound ever again.
She reached out her small hand and took hold of The Chronicler's glowing fingers.
The Chronicler spoke a string of words that sounded like grinding stone.
A surge of warmth expanded inside Clare's chest. Golden energy poured through her veins, driving out the cold. Her body steadied, her breathing deepened, and the persistent ache that had lived inside her bones began, quietly, to ease. Her lungs expanded, drawing in a vast breath of air.
The world snapped back into motion.
Enoch's arm swung upward —
The bare bulb overhead exploded into violent flickering, letting out a high, sharp whine, blue sparks crackling from the socket. The temperature in the basement plummeted. Enoch exhaled, and white mist curled from his lips. His arm froze in midair, suspended and immovable.
He looked down toward the corner.
Clare stood up.
She was no longer biting her lip. She was no longer curled inward or trembling. She stood perfectly straight, and she lifted her eyes to look at him with a calm that had no business existing in a child her age.
Her eyes, ordinarily a plain, dull brown, now burned with a faint ring of gold around their edges.
A strangled sound caught in Enoch's throat. He tried to step forward, but his legs were nailed to the floor, utterly unresponsive. Cold sweat broke out along the back of his neck, and his heart slammed wildly against his ribs. He felt like a mouse pinned under the gaze of some vast, invisible predator.
"What —" he tried to speak, but his mouth had gone completely dry. He lurched backward, his boot catching the edge of a metal water bucket in the corner. It clattered across the concrete and rolled away noisily.
Clare only watched him. She felt the heavy, thrumming power moving through her blood. She looked at this large, frightened man, and for the first time she found that there was no rage inside her, no fear — only a quiet and far-reaching pity.
Outside the basement's small ground-level window, the clear afternoon sky began to change. Thick black clouds rolled in at an unnatural speed, swallowing the sunlight whole. A low rumble of thunder rose from somewhere beneath the earth, and it moved through every inch of ground beneath their feet.
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9.2
She loved him until she lost herself.
Now, behind locked doors and shattered glass, she must learn to breathe again.
When she first met Lloyd, he was magnetic and intoxicating. The kind of man who turned every head when he entered a room, who spoke in promises sweet enough to taste. With him, she felt chosen, cherished, and safe.
But safety was an illusion, and love became a weapon.
And slowly, piece by piece, he dismantled her until nothing of the woman she once was remained.
Now institutionalized after a breakdown, she begins to piece together the brutal truth of what really happened in the shadows of their love story. Memories sting like open wounds: the manipulation disguised as tenderness, the apologies that blurred into threats, the desperate hope that tomorrow he'd be the man she fell for again.
Yet beneath the grief and the shame, a quiet rebellion stirs, a vow to reclaim her voice, her freedom, and her life. Because this is not just a story of how she fell apart. It is a story of how she rises.
Haunting, raw, and achingly intimate, Boys like him peels back the glittering mask of a toxic love affair to reveal the kind of darkness that hides in plain sight, and the unbreakable strength it takes to escape it.

8.6
I was the untouchable Mafia Queen, but my reign ended in the blood-soaked depths of a damp dungeon.
My half-sister, Kelsey, drove a rusted, sharpened spoon into my chest, screaming about the unfairness of fate.
In my past life, my father sold me to the ruthless Don Dante Blackwell as collateral to pay off his debts.
To survive, I took a black-market fertility drug, birthed his heir, and clawed my way to the throne through sheer ruthlessness.
But in the mafia world, a pregnant woman isn't a queen; she's a walking target.
I survived countless bombings and poisonings, only to be betrayed and slaughtered by my own family.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand. I had sacrificed everything to secure our survival in the empire. Why did my blood and tears only earn me a rusted spoon to the heart?
Opening my eyes again, I am seventeen, sitting in my father's drawing room.
Two black velvet boxes sit on the mahogany table.
Kelsey greedily snatches the box containing the fertility drug, her eyes gleaming with feverish triumph.
"I'll take this one, Papa."
She thinks she is stealing my golden ticket to the crown, completely unaware that she just chose a death sentence.
I lower my gaze, letting my eyelashes mask the cold, lethal amusement pooling in my eyes as I take the remaining box.
Inside is the detailed psychological profile of the Don's dead fiancée.
This time, I won't be a breeding mare fighting off assassins. I will dissect the devil himself.

9.4
Michael Carter is an undercover FBI agent on a mission to take down ruthless mafia king Fernando Ramírez-the man he believes killed his sister. But getting close to Fernando means playing a dangerous game, one where seduction and power blur the lines between enemy and lover.
When Michael uncovers a shocking truth, his thirst for revenge turns into a fight for something far more dangerous-his own heart. Now, torn between duty and desire, he must decide: destroy the man he swore to take down or surrender to the one thing he never saw coming.
Love has never been more lethal.

9.1
My husband, Dante Moretti, the feared Underboss, signed the divorce papers I slipped him without a glance. Too busy texting his true love, Sofia, he was blind to the annulment decree ending everything. The Reaper couldn't see the death of his own marriage.
For three years, I was Elena, his silent wife, the "Caged Canary," cleaning his messes while meticulously planning my escape from our loveless world.
He dismissed me for Sofia's every whim, publicly shaming me after a past love letter was read, then abandoning me again for her fake crisis.
That night, he violently shoved me against a wall, leaving me bleeding and concussed, rushing instead to protect Sofia. Discarded and injured, my invisible love became a weapon against me.
His crushing blindness, the cold realization I was a mere placeholder, fueled a profound injustice. How could he be so lethal, yet oblivious to his wife, favoring the one who betrayed him?
With chilling resolve, I uploaded Sofia's confession, initiated a massive financial transfer dismantling his empire, and staged my own death. Under a new identity, I fled to San Francisco, ready to build my power, far from his bloody, deceitful world.

9.2
Clara was drowning in student debt and barely making rent when she downloaded a fantasy mobile game to escape reality.
Inside the game, an exiled prince named Alex was freezing to death. Pitying him, she spent her last few dollars on microtransactions to fix his shelter and cure his poison.
But the game was far too real.
Every time she paid, the prince reacted. When she complained aloud about going broke, the in-game army suddenly halted, as if the prince had heard her voice.
Then, the terrifying real-world consequences hit.
Clara woke up to find her water glass and a box of Kleenex had vanished from her locked bedroom overnight.
She frantically searched the tiny apartment, her heart pounding in her chest.
She thought she was losing her mind. Had she thrown them out in her sleep? Was there a stalker hiding in her home?
How could physical objects just disappear into thin air behind a deadbolted door?
Until she looked at her nightstand.
Sitting exactly where her missing items used to be was a glowing, weightless crystal cup that defied all logic.
And on her laptop screen, the exiled prince was carefully holding her Kleenex box, offering a mountain of real gold on an altar.
She hadn't just downloaded a mobile game; she had opened a cross-dimensional trade route with a desperate future king.

9.0
The biopsy report slid across the cold metal desk, stamped with a brutal death sentence: advanced gastric cancer. Aretha had exactly ninety days left to live.
It was her twenty-sixth birthday, but her phone only rang with a furious call from her husband, Anders.
"Do you have any idea how much of a joke you made this family look like today? Post a public apology to Kelli right now."
He had completely forgotten her birthday, only caring that she skipped her adopted sister's yacht party.
When Aretha dragged her failing body back to the family estate, her biological mother slapped her across the face just for looking pale and embarrassing them in front of guests.
Seeing Aretha wasn't submitting to the usual abuse, Kelli deliberately threw herself down the stairs, playing the innocent, depressed victim.
Anders rushed in and shoved Aretha brutally against the wall to protect Kelli, while her biological father delivered his ultimate threat.
"I am freezing your trust fund. Get on your knees and apologize to Kelli right now, or you won't see another dime."
A massive, suffocating sense of absurdity washed over Aretha. She had spent six years lowering her head and begging for their approval, only to be treated like a disposable placeholder. Why should she spend her final days enduring this agonizing torture for people who didn't even care if she breathed?
Aretha wiped the blood from her chin and laughed. She publicly severed all ties with her family, whipped the signed divorce papers directly at Anders's face, and walked out into the freezing storm—ready to fight for her own life.