
The Billionaire's $500,000 baby
The Billionaire's $500,000 Baby
"Sign the contract. Give me an heir. Then, disappear."
Liora Hayes has sixty minutes.
$500,000 or her mother dies.
No money. No hope. No way out.
Then Darian Volkov walks in.
The ruthless "Ice King" of Luminaire Corp doesn't want her heart. He wants an heir.
The deal is simple:
1. Carry his child.
2. Get the money.
3. Never return.
But the Volkov mansion is a gilded cage. Inside, Liora finds a lethal secret: Darian didn't choose her by chance. He is the son of the man who destroyed her father.
Now, she is carrying the baby of her greatest enemy.
The debt was paid in blood. The contract was signed in lies.
What happens when the Ice King refuses to let his "asset" go?
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Chapter 7
Liora’s POV
The black car moved through the streets like a silent shark… Inside, it was so quiet I could hear the blood rushing in my ears. I sat as far away from Xavier as possible, my wet uniform sticking to the expensive leather. I felt like a stain…A dirty, wet stain in a world made of polished things.
"We’re here," Xavier said
I looked out the window. My apartment building looked worse than usual in the rain. The brick was dark and slimy, and the streetlights were flickering. This was the place I’d called home for three years. It wasn't much, but it was mine. Or I thought it was.
The car didn't pull into the small parking lot. It just stopped at the curb, right in front of the main entrance. The rain was a dull roar against the roof. It sounded like a drumbeat, steady and heavy.
"I need to go up," I said. My voice was raspy. "I need to get my things. I have some books... my mom’s stuff."
Xavier didn't move. He didn't even look at me. He was looking at a tablet in his hand. "I don't think that will be necessary, Liora."
"What do you mean? I can't just leave with nothing. I need my clothes."
"Look out the window," he said.
I leaned closer to the glass. At first, I didn't see it. Then, the light from the lobby caught something on the sidewalk. Black plastic.
There were three trash bags sitting by the door. They were slumped over like dead bodies. Water was pooling around them. Next to the bags stood Mr. Henderson, the landlord. He was holding a large black umbrella, looking at his watch. He looked annoyed.
I felt a cold spike of panic. I pushed the door handle, but it didn't budge. "Let me out. Xavier, let me out!"
He tapped a button on the armrest, and the locks clicked. I didn't wait. I threw the door open and ran into the rain.
The cold hit me like a physical punch. I stumbled across the sidewalk, my shoes splashing in the deep puddles. I reached the bags first. One was ripped at the top. I saw the corner of my favorite sweater…the blue one with the hole in the sleeve. It was soaking wet.
"Mr. Henderson!" I shouted. "What is this? What are you doing?"
The landlord looked at me. He didn't look sorry. He looked like he was looking at a cockroach. "I told you last week, Hayes. No pay, no stay. I’ve got a couple moving into 3B tomorrow morning. I needed the place cleared tonight."
"But my deposit—"
"Your deposit didn't even cover the back rent and the cleaning fee," he snapped. He reached down and picked up one small, heavy black bag that wasn't like the others. It was tied tight. He shoved it toward my chest.
"Here. I found this under the bed.i put in some clothes and stuff in their too,The rest of the junk goes to the dump in an hour."
I clutched the bag. It was my father’s old satchel. I could feel the hard edges of his notebook inside. My heart hammered against my ribs. "You can't do this. I’ve been here three years! I always paid! I just had a bad month because of the hospital—"
"Everyone has a bad month," Henderson said. He looked past me at the massive black car idling at the curb. I saw his eyes widen. He saw the tinted windows. He saw the sheer wealth of the thing. "Looks like you found a new way to pay your bills, anyway. You’re moving up. Don't come back here."
"I need to go inside," I whispered. I tried to push past him toward the door. I felt my dads notebook to the bag “Can’t I just pack a few more things” I pleaded
"I told you, I cleared it out!" He stepped in my way, his face turning red. "The locks are changed, Liora. Move on. You're a week late. You're trespassing now."
"Please," I begged. I felt small. I felt like the rain was washing me away. I looked at the trash bags on the ground.
My mother’s jazz records were in there. Her old teacher’s manuals. My childhood photos. They were sitting in the gutter, getting ruined.
Henderson didn't even look me in the eye. He just turned around and walked back into the lobby, letting the heavy glass door slam shut. I heard the lock click.
I stood there. The rain was coming down so hard I could barely see. I looked at the black bag in my arms. It was all I had left. Everything else…every memory, every comfort…was in a trash bag on a wet sidewalk.
I felt a weird urge to laugh. It was a messy even ugly thought. I’m a Volkov asset now, I thought. And I don't even have a toothbrush. I looked at the trash bags again. I wanted to rip them open. I wanted to scream at the windows. I wanted to be the girl I was four hours ago, even if that girl was broke and tired. At least that girl had a room. At least that girl had a name that wasn't followed by a dollar sign.
I looked at the car.
The headlights were bright, cutting through the dark. It looked like a monster waiting to eat me. Xavier was in there. He was probably watching the clock. He didn't care about my mom’s books. He didn't care about my blue sweater. To him, I was just a delivery that was running late.
I looked at the satchel in my hands. I’d almost lost the notebook.
If Henderson hadn't been so lazy, he would have thrown this out, too. My father’s notes. The only thing that made me feel like I belonged to someone.
I walked back to the car. My legs felt like they were made of lead. Every step was a struggle. I reached the door, and it opened automatically. The warmth from the interior hit me, but it didn't feel good. It felt like a trap.
I got in. I clutched the black bag to my chest like a shield.
"Did you get what you needed?" Xavier asked. His voice was casual. Like we’d just stopped for coffee.
"He threw my life in the trash," I said. I was shivering so hard my teeth were clicking.
"Most of it was junk, Liora. You won't need it where you're going. Mr. Volkov provides everything."
"It wasn't junk to me."
Xavier didn't answer. He just tapped the partition. "Let’s go. We’re behind schedule."
The car pulled away from the curb. I looked out the back window. I saw the black trash bags getting smaller and smaller. I saw the puddle of dirty water soaking into my mother’s things.
I realized then that I was truly homeless. I had no keys in my pocket. I had no address. I was just a girl in a wet uniform, sitting in a car that cost more than I’d ever earn.
I looked at Xavier. He was back on his tablet. He looked so bored.
"Where are we going?" I asked. My voice sounded dead. Even to me.
"The Luminaire building," he said. "Darian is waiting. And Liora?"
I looked at him.
"Don't mention the apartment. He doesn't like hearing about slums.It puts him in a bad mood."
I didn't say anything. I just turned my head and looked at the dark city.
I felt a contradiction in my chest. I was relieved my mom was safe, but I hated that I was here. I hated Darian Volkov. I hadn't even met him properly yet, and I hated him for being the only thing left in the world that would take me in.
I thought about the hospital. I thought about the lady at the billing desk. Your poverty is killing her, she’d said.
Well, my poverty was dead now. It was sitting in a trash bag on a curb.
The car turned onto the main highway. The skyscrapers of the city center started to loom over us. They were made of glass and light, looking down at the rest of us like we didn't matter.
I gripped my father’s satchel tighter.
I was going into the lion’s den. I had no armor. I had no weapons. I just had a wet uniform and a broken heart.
I wondered if Darian Volkov knew what he was buying. He thought he was buying a ghost. He thought he was buying someone who would just stay quiet and do what she was told.
He was wrong.
I looked at my reflection in the tinted glass. My eyes were red, but they were sharp. I wasn't just going to survive this.
I was going to make him regret the day he ever looked at my file.
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7.2
After a one night stand with the woman whose house Jason broke into, his life has never been the same. Like a siren's call, he can't get the nymphomaniac woman off his mind. Weeks later, while getting intel for the crew's next heist, Jason lays eyes upon the woman and follows her into a secret strip club. She appears to lead a double life. One where she's the CEO of a multimillion company and her father's golden child. The other side of her life is that she owns a strip club and is extremely erotic. Can Jason learn to live with her as she is? Will he put his pride aside to be with the woman? ... especially when his crew is hired to kidnap a woman who turns out to be the love of his life.

8.4
For twenty years, I lived as the adopted daughter of the wealthy Hill family.
But today, they forced me to sign a severance agreement and kicked me out so their precious biological daughter, Malia, could marry my fiancé.
To ruin me completely, they framed me for stealing Malia's engagement bracelet, threatening me with prison.
I calmly exposed the "sapphire" as cheap glass, then rolled up my sleeves to show the reporters my scarred, punctured arms.
For two decades, I wasn't a daughter. I was Malia's living blood and bone marrow bank.
They drained my health to keep her alive, even ordering doctors to ignore my failing organs just so she could attend a gala.
"Take this million dollars and shut your mouth," my adoptive father sneered, throwing a check at my feet.
My ex-fiancé looked at me with disgust, and Malia screamed that I was a crazy, vindictive liar.
They had stolen my life and my health, yet they still looked down on me like I was garbage.
I ripped the check into pieces and threw it in their faces.
Just as they ordered the butler to drag me out, a group of men in black suits shattered the chaos.
The heir of the untouchable Montgomery dynasty stepped through the door, ignoring the Hills' fawning, and handed me a DNA report.
I wasn't a disposable blood bag. I was the long-lost true heiress of old New York money.
And now, I was going to take back everything they stole from me.

8.5
Synopsis
It still feels so unreal being dumped by my boyfriend at the courtyard on the day of our wedding.
David didn't show up and when I called him to know the reason why.
He told me right to my face that he had found love with another woman who happened to be my best friend.
My heart was shattered into a million tiny pieces.
I was wallowing in self-pity when I overheard Lucas talking on the phone about needing a replacement for the woman who has collected a part-payment to be his wife.
I agreed to be his wife without thinking twice wanting to get back at my Ex.
What would happen when two strangers' hearts intertwined?
And what started as an arrangement became a bedrock for something real?
Read to find out.

7.1
For ten years, my family kept me locked away, forcing me to play the part of a broken, mentally unstable girl. They controlled me with sedatives and treated me like a ghost in my own home, a prisoner in a gilded cage.
But I had a secret. I was a world-famous anonymous artist with a hidden fortune, and I had an escape plan. On the day of my cousin's wedding, my rebellion was accidentally witnessed by a dangerous stranger who saw the predator beneath my fragile mask.
To silence him, I dragged him into a dark closet. The encounter turned raw and reckless, a violent collision I used as the perfect cover for my escape. I vanished with a new name and a one-way ticket to a new life, leaving him with nothing but a bloodstain and the bitter taste of betrayal.
I thought I was free, that I had successfully buried the girl I was forced to be and the man I was forced to use.
Three months later, on a superyacht in Monaco, he found me. He wasn't just some wealthy guest; he was the ruthless head of a powerful crime syndicate, and I was trapped in his private penthouse. He locked the door, his eyes black with possessive rage.
"The game is over," he whispered. "This time, you're not running."

7.2
Elmore Thomas rushed into the emergency room, clutching his feverish seven-year-old son, Buddy, tightly to his chest.
When the privacy curtain was pulled back, the air in Elmore's lungs vanished. The attending physician standing under the harsh lights was his wife, Kendal—the woman everyone believed had burned to death eight years ago.
But there was no tearful reunion. Kendal looked at him, and her eyes froze into impenetrable ice. She treated him like a biohazard, strictly referring to him as the family member.
Worse, she didn't recognize Buddy. She comforted their crying son with the same gentle warmth she used to reserve for Elmore, completely unaware she was soothing the baby she thought had died.
Days later, Elmore watched from the shadows as she picked up another boy outside a prep school, her left hand flashing a massive diamond engagement ring.
When his butler accidentally recognized her, Kendal shielded her new stepson with pure disgust in her eyes.
"Tell that psychopath to sign the divorce papers immediately. I have a new family now."
The words 'new family' echoed in Elmore's skull, tearing him apart. For eight years, he had lived in a hell of guilt and madness, raising their son in the shadow of her ghost. How could she just erase their past? How could she give her tender smiles to a stranger and look at him with absolute revulsion?
Standing in a luxury ballroom, Elmore squeezed his hand until his crystal champagne flute shattered, thick blood dripping onto the rug. The murderous obsession in his dark eyes returned as he called his lawyer.
"Freeze her divorce application. Use every dirty trick in the book. She isn't leaving."

8.2
My son Leo had just died, and the silence in our cramped apartment felt like a physical weight crushing my chest.
Before I could even process the grief, my husband, Preston, kicked the door open and threw divorce papers onto the table.
Behind him stood Gloria, wearing a pristine cashmere coat and the diamond pendant Preston swore he had pawned to pay for Leo's hospital bills.
"Sign it," Preston said coldly. "You get nothing."
Gloria smirked, mocking me for failing to keep my sick child alive. When I tore up the papers in a blinding rage, Preston slapped me to the floor.
Then, my biological mother, Jerilyn, walked in. Instead of helping me, she pulled a serrated kitchen knife from her bag and plunged it deep into my stomach.
As I lay dying in a pool of my own blood, Jerilyn leaned in and whispered the devastating truth.
"I swapped you in the nursery. Gloria is my blood, and you belong in a Manhattan mansion. I can't let you ruin her life."
Until my lungs stopped working, I was consumed by a roaring, violent hatred. My own mother had traded my life of privilege for poverty, let my son die, and then murdered me to protect the fake.
Opening my eyes again, the dingy ceiling and the agonizing pain were gone.
I was sitting at a wooden desk, surrounded by the chatter of teenagers.
I was back in high school. And this time, I was going to make them pay.