
The Billionaire Ex Came Back for My Heart
"Touch me again, Daniel, and I'll break your jaw."Jane Riley spent eight years trying to forget the man who broke her heart. Daniel Logan was her first love, her only love-until he chose ambition over her and walked away without a single goodbye.
She rebuilt herself from the pieces he left behind. A nonprofit for underprivileged children. A life of purpose. A heart locked tight where he could never reach it again.
Then he walked back into her world.
Older. Richer. More dangerous than she remembered. And offering to save the organization she poured her soul into-the one thing standing between her and complete ruin.
Jane wants to hate him. She should hate him. But every time he steps closer, every time his voice drops low and his eyes darken with something she can't name, the walls she built start to crack.
He says he's here to protect her. But secrets surround him. Her father's near-fatal accident. The threats appearing from nowhere. Daniel is hiding something that could shatter her all over again. Now she has to decide-can she survive trusting him again?
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Chapter 2
The eviction notice didn’t leave my mind the next morning.
It followed me everywhere. In the shower. On the subway. While I stirred cheap coffee that tasted burnt no matter how much cream I added. Seventy-two hours. The words replayed like a warning siren I couldn’t shut off.
I sat at my desk, staring at the same spreadsheet I’d been pretending to study for twenty minutes. Numbers blurred together. Rent overdue. Utilities behind. Program costs unpaid. The nonprofit wasn’t just struggling. It was collapsing.
I pressed my palms flat against the desk and took a slow breath.
Panicking wouldn’t save anyone.
Action might.
Before I made the next call, I stopped by the hospital. I needed air. I needed comfort. I needed to see Dad.
The automatic doors slid open with a soft hiss, and the smell hit me instantly. It clung to my clothes as I stepped inside, as if the building itself wanted to mark me.
The hospital corridor was too bright for how tired I felt.
Fluorescent lights buzzed overhead, reflecting off white floors that smelled of disinfectant and something bitter underneath. I slowed my steps as I approached Dad’s room, already bracing myself for the sight of him. Every visit felt like preparing for a small loss.
Halfway down the corridor, a nurse hurried past me, her expression tight, her shoes squeaking against the floor. A gurney followed, curtains drawn, wheels rattling softly. My heart stuttered. For one awful second, I wondered if it was him.
I stopped walking. My fingers curled into my coat sleeves, nails digging into fabric as I forced myself to breathe. Not him. Please, not him.
A monitor beeped somewhere nearby, sharp and insistent. The sound drilled into my skull. I stood there longer than I should have, caught between fear and denial, before finally moving again.
Dad’s door was slightly open. I hesitated, my hand hovering near the frame. I listened first. The soft rhythm of machines. Slow. Measured. Still there.
Dad was awake when I walked in, his eyes half-open, his breathing shallow but steady. The room smelled like disinfectant and something faintly metallic. Machines beeped softly beside him, keeping time like a clock I didn’t want to hear.
Relief washed through me so fast it left me dizzy.
I pulled a chair closer and sat, wrapping both hands around his. His skin felt thinner than it used to, fragile, like it might tear if I held on too tightly.
For a moment, he didn’t speak. His gaze stayed fixed on the ceiling, as if he were counting something only he could see. I wondered how many moments like this he had left. The thought made my chest ache.
“You look tired,” he said.
“I’m fine,” I lied.
He turned his head slightly then, his eyes finding mine. They were duller than before, ringed with exhaustion, but still sharp enough to see through me.
“You don’t have to be strong with me, Jane.”
My chest tightened. “I know.”
Silence settled between us, filled only by the steady beeping of machines. I watched his breathing, counting each rise and fall like it was something I could control.
The machine beside him hiccupped once, the sound uneven. I froze, my heart leaping into my throat. A nurse passed by the open door, glanced inside, and kept walking. The rhythm returned to normal. I released a breath I hadn’t realized I was holding.
“How’s the center?” he asked quietly.
I swallowed. “It’s… struggling. But I’m working on it.”
The words felt thin. Incomplete. Lies wrapped in hope.
He squeezed my fingers weakly. “You always do.”
His grip faltered for a second, and fear flared again, sharp and sudden. I leaned forward instinctively, as if my closeness could anchor him here.
I leaned forward, resting my forehead against his hand. “I wish Mom were here.”
“So do I,” he murmured. “She’d tell you to stop carrying the world alone.”
I smiled sadly. “She always said that.”
“Listen to her,” he said. “And listen to me. Whatever happens, I’m proud of you.”
Whatever happens.
When I finally stood to leave, my legs felt weak. I paused at the door, turning back once more, afraid of what I might see. He was asleep now, his face calm, unaware of how close I felt to breaking.
When I finally left, his words followed me down the hall like a quiet blessing I wasn’t sure I deserved.
By noon, I swallowed my pride and called a consultant a volunteer once recommended. His office was small and smelled faintly of lemon cleaner. He listened while I explained everything, nodding slowly, and fingers steepled under his chin.
“You need an investor,” he said finally. “Not a loan. A sponsor.”
I let out a shaky laugh. “I run a nonprofit, not a tech startup.”
“Doesn’t matter,” he replied. “You have impact. That’s valuable.”
Hope stirred, fragile and cautious.
We talked numbers. Potential donors. Emergency funding. I told him about the man who scammed us, my voice tightening as I admitted how desperate I’d been. He didn’t judge. That alone felt like mercy.
“I’ll make some calls,” he said. “No promises.”
I thanked him and left, clutching my bag like a lifeline.
The afternoon dragged. I reorganized files that didn’t need organizing. I wiped down shelves already clean. Every time the phone rang, my heart jumped, then fell when it wasn’t news.
By evening, my head ached and my hope felt thinner than paper.
I was locking up when my phone finally rang again.
“Jane Riley?” a woman asked, her voice crisp and confident.
“Yes.”
“I’m calling on behalf of a private sponsor interested in supporting your nonprofit.”
My breath caught. “Interested how?”
“He’s prepared to invest substantially,” she said. “Enough to stabilize your organization and expand its reach nationwide.”
My knees nearly buckled.
“This… this could save us,” I whispered.
“It could do more than that,” she replied. “He’d like to meet you tomorrow.”
Tomorrow.
“Yes,” I said quickly. “Of course. Anytime.”
She gave me a time and ended the call.
I stood there long after the screen went dark, my heart pounding so hard it hurt.
That night, I barely slept. My mind raced with possibilities. Rent paid. Programs saved. Kids safe. The nonprofit thriving instead of barely surviving.
Maybe this was the second chance life owed me.
The next morning, I arrived early. I straightened chairs, wiped the desk, replaced the dying plant with a borrowed one from Sophia’s apartment. I even wore my good blazer, the one that made me feel like I knew what I was doing.
Sophia stopped by with coffee and nervous smiles.
“This could change everything,” she said.
“I know,” I replied. “I’m scared to believe it.”
She squeezed my hand. “You’ve earned something good.”
At ten sharp, footsteps echoed outside the office. I smoothed my blazer and stood, rehearsing my greeting in my head.
The door opened. For one breathless second, I didn’t understand what I was seeing. Then my heart stopped.
Daniel Logan stood in my doorway. Something in the air changed.
I sucked in a breath before I could stop it. My body reacted first, like it recognized him before my mind had the chance to catch up. Eight years… and still, my chest tightened just from seeing him. I hated that. Hated that he could show up like this, out of nowhere, and still feel so familiar.
And just like that, the past walked back into my life.
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9.2
"Isabella this is the right time for you to choose between me or Hector, because any one you choose now will be your husband till the contract end."
"Think well Isabella don't make mistake."
She spilled coffee on the wrong man.
Isabella Ramirez is drowning in debt, exhaustion, and fear-working double shifts to keep her dying mother alive. One mistake in a crowded café brings her face-to-face with Alejandro De La Vega, a billionaire feared for his cold heart and ruthless power.
His punishment is cruel.
His offer is worse.
One year as his wife in exchange for her family's freedom.
But inside his mansion, Isabella learns that marriage without love is a cage. Betrayal hides behind charming smiles.
A former wife returns with secrets. A cousin watches from the shadows. And the contract that binds her may destroy her heart.
When lies explode and power turns brutal, Isabella must choose between survival and love-before she loses herself completely.
Tropes
Contract Marriage
Poor Girl × Billionaire CEO
Forced Proximity
Inheritance Deadline
Emotional Abuse & Redemption
Love vs Power
Public Scandal
Love Triangle
One True Love

7.8
I was Grayson Warren’s "broken doll," a disgraced socialite kept on a short leash to pay off my family’s debts. To the world, I was a fragile liability; to Grayson, I was a pet he could humiliate for sport, forcing me to play the role of a mentally unstable girl while I secretly gathered evidence against his empire.
The cruelty peaked when Grayson forced me to break three years of sobriety in front of his investors, mocking my struggle before making me kneel on a golf course to scrub his shoes. He treated my life like a game, literally betting my sanity against a corporate board seat while he soft-launched a new relationship with a high-profile PR queen.
When the pressure triggered a massive panic attack, Grayson abandoned me in a private clinic just so he wouldn't miss a dinner reservation. Even my own mother turned against me, threatening to leak my psychiatric records and brand me a "violent delusional" if I didn't beg for Grayson’s forgiveness. I was trapped between a man who owned my debt and a mother who valued her estate over my daughter’s life.
I realized then that they would never let me go; they would only break me until there was nothing left. They thought they had erased my soul, but they forgot I was the only witness to the night my true love, Felix, was murdered. I was done being the victim.
I faked a suicide jump off the Queensboro Bridge to go off the grid, then crashed Grayson’s elite gala in a dress that signaled his downfall. Just as Grayson tried to physically crush me one last time, the room went silent. Felix Law, the man the world thought was dead for three years, walked out of the shadows with a federal warrant in his hand.
"Take your hands off her, Warren."
The game didn't just change; it ended. Felix was back from the dead, and this time, we were burning the empire to the ground together.

9.0
My fiancé, Connor, and I had a one-year pact. I'd work undercover as a junior developer in the company we co-founded, while he, the CEO, built our empire.
The pact ended the day he ordered me to apologize to the woman who was systematically destroying my life.
It happened during his most important investor pitch. He was on video call when he demanded I publicly humiliate myself for his "special guest," Jaden. This was after she'd already scalded my hand with hot coffee and faced zero consequences.
He chose her. In front of everyone, he chose a manipulative bully over our company's integrity, our employees' dignity, and me, his fiancée.
His eyes on the screen demanded my submission.
"Apologize to Jaden. Now."
I took a step forward, held up my burned hand for the camera, and made a call of my own.
"Dad," I said, my voice dangerously quiet. "It's time to dissolve the partnership."

9.8
Blurb (Synopsis)
Outspoken florist Elara Vance thought she was storming a billionaire's empire to reclaim her mother's stolen legacy. Instead, she walked into a trap-and walked out bound by a marriage contract.
As Elara and the cold, calculated Julian Vane clash in a world of opulence and deceit, a dangerous attraction ignites. But in the Vane family, secrets are deadlier than scandals. When the price of honor becomes their very survival, Elara must decide if the man she's forced to marry is her greatest enemy-or her only hope.

8.8
After years trapped under the cruelty of her stepfather's control, Isabella knew the rules of surviving in a world ruled by men like Marco Deluca - never be noticed, never be wanted. But when she becomes a witness to something she was never meant to see, Vincenzo spares her life for reasons he doesn't understand.
Drawn to her quiet strength and fearless gaze, he finds himself willing to burn his empire to keep her safe. But loving him means stepping into a world that destroys everything it touches... and she might be the only thing he can't afford to lose.

7.9
The rain was a solid sheet of gray as the black SUV rammed into my car, sending me spiraling over the guardrail. As the glass shattered and the world turned upside down, a searing pain ripped through my chest before everything went cold and dark.
I didn’t stay in the darkness. My spirit hovered ten feet in the air, watching the steam hiss from my mangled sedan.
I followed the magnetic pull of my soul back to my family estate, expecting to find them devastated. Instead, I found my stepmother, Florene, and my sister, Kassidy, pouring vintage champagne and laughing in the drawing room.
"To the end of the nuisance," Florene said, her eyes gleaming with greed. "The trust fund unlocks at midnight. We're finally rich."
The betrayal cut deeper than the metal that killed me, but the real shock came at my funeral. Hiram Tyson—the cold, masked husband I’d spent three years fearing—collapsed over my closed casket. He unbuckled his silver mask, revealing a face ruined by scars, and sobbed a name I hadn't heard since childhood.
"I'm sorry, Angel. I thought keeping you at arm's length would keep the darkness away."
He wasn't the monster I thought he was. He was the boy I had saved at the orphanage years ago, and he had been protecting me in silence while my own family plotted my murder.
I reached out to touch him, but the world exploded into a blinding white light.
When I opened my eyes, I wasn't in a casket. I was back in our bedroom, feeling the heavy weight of Hiram’s arm across my waist. The calendar on the nightstand read September 14, 2023—exactly one year before the crash.
I looked at the silver mask resting on the table and felt a cold, hard determination settle in my chest. This time, I wasn't going to be the victim. I was going to be the villain in their story and burn their world to the ground.