
The Betrayed Princess's New Reign
I was the Chicago Outfit's princess, and Luca and Matteo were my sworn protectors. We had mixed our blood at ten years old, promising that nothing would ever touch me.
But that oath turned to ash the night Sofia Ricci aimed a Roman candle at my chest.
The firework slammed into my shoulder, igniting my silk dress instantly. As I rolled on the concrete, screaming while the flames ate into my skin, I waited for my boys to save me.
They didn't.
Instead, I watched through the smoke as they rushed to Sofia. They wrapped their jackets—the ones meant to shield me—around the girl who had just set me on fire, comforting her because the "kickback" had scared her.
They let me burn to keep her warm.
When I woke up in the hospital with permanent scars, they brought me a letter of apology from her and defended her "accident." They even cut their palms to pay her debt, ignoring the fact that I was the one in bandages.
That was the moment Elena Vitiello died.
I didn't scream. I didn't beg. I simply packed my bags and defected to the one place they couldn't follow: the arms of Dante Moretti, the lethal Capo of New York.
By the time they realized their mistake and came crawling back to beg in the rain, I was already wearing another man's ring.
"You want forgiveness?" I asked, looking down at them.
"Burn for it."
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Chapter 89
Elena Moretti POV:
I stood by the floor-to-ceiling windows of our Manhattan penthouse. The sprawling, glowing grid of the city stretched out beneath my feet. This was my empire.
I held an encrypted satellite phone to my ear.
"Do it," I ordered, my voice dead and completely devoid of hesitation.
"Yes, Ma'am," the demolition foreman replied.
A thousand miles away in Chicago, the foreman pressed the detonator.
I watched the live drone feed on the massive tablet resting on the glass table. A deafening series of explosions ripped through the Chicago night. Bright orange fireballs erupted from the foundation of the century-old Vitiello estate.
The walls that had housed decades of betrayal buckled. The roof caved in. The music room, where I had nearly burned to death, collapsed into a pile of smoking ash and twisted metal.
I let out a long, slow breath. The invisible, suffocating weight that had sat on my chest for ten years finally shattered. The ghosts were dead.
Dante walked up behind me. He handed me a crystal tumbler filled with amber bourbon. He tapped his glass against mine. The sharp clink rang through the penthouse. We drank to the absolute annihilation of the old world.
Six months later.
The blackened ruins in Chicago had been completely excavated. In their place stood a massive, modern building made of pristine white stone and floor-to-ceiling glass.
It was the Sunshine Orphanage. I had fully funded its construction. It was designed to take in the children left on the streets by the brutal mafia wars that had ravaged the city.
The day of the dedication ceremony, the sky over Chicago was a brilliant, cloudless blue. The sun poured over the white walls, bleaching away the darkness that used to stain this land.
I stepped out of the Moretti helicopter. I wore a tailored, beige Chanel suit. My five-year-old son, Leo, held my hand tightly.
Beyond the security barricades, hundreds of mainstream media reporters and charity organizers crushed forward. Camera flashes exploded like a storm of strobe lights, capturing the "philanthropist queen" of New York.
The Mayor of Chicago stood on the tarmac, sweating despite the breeze. He rushed forward, bowing his head in subservience. He didn't dare look me in the eye. He knew exactly whose blood had bought his office.
"Mrs. Moretti, this is a historic day," he stammered, offering his hand.
I smiled. It was a perfect, flawless social smile that completely masked the memory of being dragged through this exact property by my hair. I shook his hand briefly.
Leo and I walked toward the main entrance. The orphanage dean stood waiting with a line of fifty children, all wearing clean, pressed uniforms.
A tiny girl, no older than four, stepped out of the line. She was trembling slightly. She held a bouquet of white lilies in her small hands and offered them to me. Her big brown eyes were wide with awe.
I stopped. I let go of Leo's hand and squatted down until I was eye-level with her.
For a second, the media noise faded. I looked into her terrified, hopeful eyes and saw the ghost of myself—the lonely, unwanted girl who used to hide in the dark corners of the old estate, praying for someone to save her.
My expression softened. A rare, genuine warmth filled my chest. I reached out and gently took the flowers.
I lifted my hand and softly stroked her hair. "Thank you," I whispered.
Leo reached into the pocket of his miniature suit jacket. He pulled out a gold-wrapped, premium Swiss chocolate and handed it to the little girl. His posture was perfectly straight, displaying the flawless, aristocratic manners Dante had drilled into him.
The ribbon-cutting ceremony began. I took the golden scissors from the mayor. The cameras flashed wildly. I snipped the red silk ribbon.
The crowd erupted into applause. Confetti cannons fired. The journalists frantically typed up their stories about my boundless generosity.
None of them knew that buried deep beneath the fresh green lawn were the headless skeletons of the men who had dared to cross me.
After the ceremony, the mayor begged me to attend a private dinner. I ignored him.
Instead, I took Leo's hand and walked to the back garden of the orphanage. This specific patch of dirt was planted directly over the old underground water dungeon where I had been starved and tortured.
Now, it was a massive field of bright yellow sunflowers, their faces turned toward the light.
A monarch butterfly fluttered past and landed on one of the petals. Leo gasped. He tugged violently on my hand, his face lighting up with innocent excitement.
"Look, Mama!" he cheered.
I looked at my son's bright, unburdened smile. The last knot in my soul untied itself. I had taken the darkest, most traumatic place in my life and buried it under a mountain of light and life. I was finally free.
The heavy thwack-thwack of helicopter blades cut through the air. Dante's chopper touched down on the grass.
Dante stepped out. He wore a sharp black suit. He walked straight toward us, scooped Leo up by the waist, and threw him over his broad shoulder.
Leo giggled hysterically, grabbing fistfuls of Dante's styled hair. Dante didn't flinch. He just patted Leo's back, his eyes soft.
Dante wrapped his free arm around my waist. He kissed my temple. "The New York board is waiting for you to call the meeting to order," he murmured.
We walked to the helicopter. The doors closed, sealing us inside. The chopper lifted off, the backdraft making the field of sunflowers dance wildly below us.
As the city of Chicago shrank into a meaningless speck on the map, I knew it would never touch me again.
I leaned back in the leather seat, flipping open a thick prospectus: "Let's go. It's time to ring the bell at NASDAQ."
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8.6
"What do you think people would say if they found out you don't have a dick?" Christian asked, his voice low and dripping with seduction. His hand pressed firmly against my crotch, fingers exploring the flat, unfamiliar emptiness there. A devilish smirk curved his lips. "Or if they discovered these voluptuous breasts you've been hiding so well?"
A strangled moan slipped from my throat as his hand slid under my shirt, his fingers brushing over my hardened nipples, teasing them with slow, deliberate strokes.
"Which do you think they'd call you?" he murmured, eyes gleaming. "A boy with tits... or a dickless little fraud?"
I stared into his hungry blue eyes, words failing me.
"The term you're looking for is 'girl,'" came Xavier's smooth voice from the bathroom doorway. He stepped inside, closing the door behind him with a soft click, his gaze raking over me with open interest. "So tell me, little girl... what the hell is someone like you doing in an all-boys dorm?"
Christian's smirk widened. "She wants to be devoured by boys like us." His fingers gave my nipple one last firm pinch before he leaned in closer, breath hot against my ear. "And I'll be more than happy to give her a taste."

9.3
She sells flowers. He spills blood. And he will stop at nothing to make her his. Elena Rossi has always lived quietly among roses and lilies, dreaming of love as gentle as the petals she arranges. She thought she found it in Daniel, the man she planned to marry. Until her wedding day when a dangerous stranger walked into the church and shattered everything. Adrian Volkov is a king in the underworld, a man feared for his ruthlessness and power. But to him, Elena is not just a prize. She is an obsession. A storm he cannot live without. And he will burn the world and anyone in it, to claim her. Torn from the life she knew, Elena resists him, manipulates him, and even runs from him. But Adrian is relentless. His love is dark, his touch both punishing and tender, and his obsession inescapable. When betrayal and bloodshed close in, Elena must face the truth: She doesn't just fear him. She doesn't just hate him. She loves him. Petals and Blood is a haunting, passionate tale of obsession, betrayal, and the dangerous kind of love that blooms in shadows.

8.0
"IS IT TRUE?" Grayson's voice thundered through the room.
"Yes!" Tessa said softly. "Yes it is!"
"So you've been cheating on me, haven't you?" He spat.
Her hands trembled. "No, I swear, it's not like that."
He grabbed her arm, his grip bruising her wrist as she squealed in pain.
"Then whose baby are you carrying, huh?" His voice was ice cold.
Tessa shivered, tears blurring her vision.
"I don't know."
**********
Pregnant with the powerful Roman Blackwood's child, while engaged to his unstable stepbrother - Tessa Quinn becomes the key to a ruthless inheritance war where love has no place.
As secrets unravel and danger closes in, Tessa must protect her unborn child while trapped between love, vengeance, and men who want to own her fate.

9.4
My retirement was finally approved, and I was supposed to be sipping drinks on a sunny beach.
Instead, a cold system voice forced me into a nightmare scenario: "Cursed Mates Who Want Me Dead." I woke up in a stinking cave, trapped in the body of a psychopathic tribal princess.
The memories that flooded my brain made me sick. The original owner of this body had forcibly marked seven of the continent's most powerful beast-men and reduced them to tortured pets. She had ripped the shimmering scales off Jordi the Merfolk prince, gouged out a proud wolf-man's power crystal, and snapped an eagle-man's magnificent wings.
Now, Jordi was a mutilated, terrified mess hiding in a corner. He was so traumatized that he tried to slit his own throat just to escape me. His sister was actively trying to assassinate me.
To make matters worse, the system warned me that if I didn't heal these seven ticking time bombs, my soul would be erased. Yet the future timeline clearly showed that these men would eventually unite, burn my tribe to the ground, and dismember me alive.
I was paying for a monster's sins. Every time I tried to show mercy, they thought it was a sick new torture method. Words were useless, and my very presence was a trigger.
But I am a Tier-S operative, and I don't play the victim. I forced the system to unlock my powers and strapped on my tactical gear.
"Stay here and don't starve."
I left the trembling Merfolk behind and walked into the deadly primitive forest, heading straight for the powerful Oasis Tribe to take back his stolen scales by force.

8.0
For six years, I played the perfect, submissive wife to Wall Street titan Francis Castro. I suffocated my own ambitions to fit into his conservative world.
But while I waited alone at a Michelin restaurant, a news alert popped up. My husband had just dropped millions on an aquamarine diamond necklace for his "muse," Chanelle.
The real nightmare began when I rushed home to find our five-year-old son in severe anaphylactic shock. I frantically called Francis from the ambulance, but he manually rejected my calls. He couldn't leave the bidding war for Chanelle's PR launch.
When he finally arrived at the ER, Chanelle was right beside him, wearing that blinding multi-million-dollar necklace. He didn't ask about our dying son.
"Why weren't you watching him?" he demanded, his voice hard and accusing.
And when my son woke up, hazy from the drugs, he rejected my touch and reached for Chanelle instead. Francis just stood there, praising Chanelle for knowing exactly how to calm him down.
I stared at the three of them looking like a perfect, happy family. Six years of swallowing my pride, only to realize my husband would let our son choke to death just to buy another woman's smile.
The last thread of my heart snapped. I handed him the divorce papers, demanding zero alimony. Then, I drove to a hidden Brooklyn loft, cut off my hair, and unlocked my safe.
It was time to resurrect my true identity—the legendary fashion designer, Ember.J. I am going to burn her empire to the ground.

9.0
My father was dying in the ICU, and our family company, the Martin Group, was on the verge of total collapse.
While I was desperately trying to sign the consent form for his life-saving surgery, my fiancé, Eston, sent me a text.
"I told you not to be stubborn. The company is mine by Friday. Beg me, and I might pay for the funeral."
He had been secretly looting my family's assets from the inside, waiting for me to break so he could steal everything. He thought I would crawl back to him in absolute despair, surrendering my father's legacy just to survive. The sheer weight of my helplessness crushed my chest as the heart monitor next to my father's bed let out a frantic, high-pitched scream.
The betrayal tore through me, but the despair quickly hardened into a cold, sharp stone.
Why should I let the man who ruined me dance on my family's grave? Why should I let him walk away with everything while I lost the only family I had left?
I wiped away my tears and blocked his number permanently.
Then, I stepped out into the freezing Manhattan rain and went straight to the top floor of the Maxwell building.
I threw my remaining shares onto the desk of Ellwood Maxwell—the apex predator of Wall Street, and Eston's untouchable, ruthless uncle.
"I want you to marry me," Ellwood said, pushing a marriage contract toward me. "That is the only way your company survives."
I picked up the pen. If Eston wanted to destroy my life, I would become his aunt and make him bow.