
The Billionaire's Doll Walks Away Forever
I spent three years playing the role of the perfect, silent wife in Elek Hamilton’s penthouse, treated as little more than an expensive piece of furniture.
When I finally gathered the courage to ask for a divorce, he didn't even look at me, dismissing my request as a childish tantrum or a ploy for a new car.
He treated our marriage like a business contract, and my existence as a routine task to be checked off, all while he kept a secret life that shattered my world.
I discovered he wasn't just cold; he was obsessed with his ex-girlfriend, Carlee Kelley, and I was nothing but a living, breathing replica—a placeholder he kept to satisfy his own twisted nostalgia.
The final blow came when I saw the lipstick smudge on his collar and the text from her calling me his "little doll," confirming that every touch and every word of affection he’d ever given me was meant for someone else.
I was never his wife; I was a ghost haunting his home, a prop for his true love.
How could I have been so blind, letting my soul wither away for a man who didn't even see me as human?
I didn't want his money or his empire anymore; I just wanted to stop being a shadow.
I walked out of that penthouse with nothing but the clothes on my back, determined to reclaim the life I had buried, even if he tried to use my family to keep me trapped.
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Chapter 1
Elek rolled off her body. The heavy mattress shifted under his weight as he turned his back to her. His breathing was already slow and steady. He pulled the thick duvet over his shoulder, treating the last twenty minutes of physical exertion as nothing more than a routine task checked off his schedule.
Dayami stared at the ceiling. The massive crystal chandelier hung directly above the bed, catching the faint light from the city outside. She felt exactly like that chandelier. An expensive, cold decoration purchased to fill an empty space in this penthouse.
Her chest rose and fell, but she felt no urge to cry. Her tear ducts were completely dry. There was no humiliation left in her stomach, only a deep, bone-chilling exhaustion that settled into her joints.
She sat up. The cold air of the bedroom hit her bare skin, raising goosebumps along her arms. She moved slowly, her limbs feeling heavy and disconnected from her brain.
She reached the floor and picked up her silk robe. She slid her arms into the sleeves, tying the belt tightly around her waist in a mechanical motion.
"Stay in bed."
Elek's voice was low and raspy, thick with sleep. He did not turn around to look at her. It was a command, not a request.
Dayami ignored him. She walked away from the bed, her bare feet silent against the hardwood floor. She stopped in front of the floor-to-ceiling windows. The sleepless skyline of New York City stretched out below her, a sea of lights that offered no warmth.
Her reflection stared back at her from the thick glass. Her face was pale. Her eyes looked hollow. She did not recognize the woman in the window.
She took a slow breath, filling her lungs with the conditioned air.
"Elek, I want a divorce."
Her voice was incredibly calm. The words left her mouth without a single tremor.
The steady sound of Elek's breathing stopped. The mattress shifted violently. He sat up, the duvet falling to his waist. His broad chest and shoulders blocked out the light from the bedside lamp. His physical presence filled the room, heavy and suffocating.
He let out a short, harsh sound from the back of his throat. A scoff.
"Don't be ridiculous, Dayami."
He rubbed the back of his neck, his tone dripping with impatience.
"What is it this time? A new car? A charity gala you want to chair? Just tell my assistant tomorrow."
Dayami did not turn around. She kept her eyes on her own pale reflection.
"I am serious. I want out."
The silence in the room became thick. She heard the rustle of the sheets. Heavy footsteps crossed the floor.
Before she could brace herself, a large hand clamped down on her upper arm.
Elek spun her around. His grip was like a steel vise, his fingers digging into her skin through the thin silk of her robe.
"We have a contract." His voice was a low rumble in his chest, entirely devoid of warmth. "You seem to forget your place."
Dayami finally looked up at him. She stared directly into his dark eyes. There was no anger in her gaze. There was no affection. There was only a vast, empty desert.
"Your contract did not specify I had to be your living doll."
The muscle in Elek's jaw ticked. Her empty expression seemed to hit a nerve. His grip tightened, and he shoved her backward. Her shoulder blades hit the cold glass of the window with a hard thud.
He leaned in close, his face inches from hers.
"Do not test my patience. Go to sleep."
He released her arm abruptly. He turned on his heel and walked straight to the master bathroom. The heavy oak door slammed shut behind him. The sound echoed off the high ceiling.
Dayami's knees gave out. She slid down the cold glass until she hit the floor. Her hands shook slightly as the adrenaline left her bloodstream.
She pulled her knees to her chest. A small, dry laugh escaped her lips. This marriage was a joke.
The sound of running water came from the bathroom. He was taking a shower. He would not come back out to check on her.
She pushed herself off the floor. She smoothed the wrinkles out of her silk robe. She walked to the bedroom door, turned the handle, and stepped out into the hallway.
Mrs. Martha Higgins stood at the end of the hall. The head housekeeper wore her pristine uniform, her hands clasped in front of her. Her eyes slid over Dayami with complete indifference.
Mrs. Higgins only answered to Elek. To her, Dayami was just another piece of furniture.
Dayami walked past her without a word. She headed straight for the spiral staircase.
She needed to go to the art room on the first floor. It was a small space near the back of the apartment, the only room in this massive penthouse that actually belonged to her.
As she placed her foot on the first step, a sharp ringing sound came from the bedroom she had just left. It was Elek's private cell phone.
He did not answer it. The water kept running.
Dayami paused for a fraction of a second. Another call from that woman, perhaps. The thought crossed her mind, but her chest remained completely flat. She did not care anymore.
She continued down the stairs. She walked into the empty, dark living room. The shadows swallowed her, but her mind was clearer than it had ever been. She was going to leave him.
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7.1
I sat alone at my long marble dining table, staring at a plate of cold truffle risotto. My husband, Jere, was late again, claiming he was stuck in a "war zone" of a board meeting for a multi-billion dollar merger.
A single Instagram notification shattered the silence. It was a photo of a candlelit birthday dinner, featuring a man's hand resting on a white tablecloth. I recognized the slight veins, the jagged scar on the thumb, and the navy-faced Patek Philippe watch I had spent six months tracking down as a wedding gift. Jere wasn't in a boardroom; he was celebrating his ex-girlfriend Irina's birthday while texting me to "don't wait up."
The next morning, I followed him to a VIP hospital wing. I watched through a cracked door as my husband cuddled a five-year-old boy and whispered tender promises to Irina. When he came home, he tried to buy my silence with a rare pink diamond bracelet, but I found the receipt: he had bought two identical ones. He had branded his wife and his mistress with matching jewelry, using hidden trackers to keep us both on a leash. When I confronted him, he didn't flinch. He coldly reminded me that he owned my father's massive debts and could send him to prison for insolvency fraud with one phone call.
"Stop with the attitude, Deliah," he said.
I felt like a ghost haunting my own life, trapped in a gilded cage by the man who paid for my mother's heart surgery while keeping a secret family across town. The humiliation peaked at our rescheduled anniversary dinner when Jere received a text, threw a stack of hundreds at me like I was a stranger, and abandoned me in a crowded restaurant to rush back to her.
"Pay the bill," he commanded before walking out.
Standing in the wreckage of a shattered crystal vase back at the penthouse, I realized my silence was the only thing keeping his empire standing. I pulled the crumpled divorce papers from my purse and signed my name with a steady hand. I wasn't just walking away; I was calling his sister to help me burn his perfect world to the ground.

7.5
I spent three weeks scrubbing carbonized grease off woks at the Jade Garden, hiding my elite tactical training behind raw knuckles and a practiced, submissive stutter. My mission was the only thing keeping me sane: finding my sister, Elena, who vanished into thin air after her phone last pinged near the city’s Restricted Sector.
The breakthrough came when my boss, a bully named Uncle Wong, forced me to take a delivery to 101 Blackwood Drive—a high-security fortress where the drivers whispered that people went in and never came back right. It was a geographic match for Elena's last known location, but as I rode my battered scooter toward the massive steel gates, I realized I wasn't just investigating a lead; I was walking into a spider's web.
The mansion was a monolith of cold concrete and military-grade surveillance, owned by Hugh Bradford, a billionaire who controlled the city’s elite like puppets. During my delivery, the magnetic locks hissed shut, the lights died, and I was plunged into absolute darkness with a predator who didn't want my money. Bradford pinned me against a stainless steel counter and did something unthinkable: he sank his teeth into my shoulder, using the rhythm of my frantic pulse to anchor his own fractured mind.
I escaped with a bruised neck and a thousand-dollar "tip," feeling the crushing weight of his violation and the terrifying realization that my "clumsy immigrant" act hadn't fooled him for a second. I didn't understand why a man of his power would treat a delivery girl like a biological drug, or what he had done to the other girls who had vanished behind those black glass walls.
My heart hammered against my ribs as I realized I was being hunted by a man who could buy and sell my life a thousand times over.
"You're terrified," he had whispered in the dark, and for the first time in years, I wasn't faking it.
Back in my apartment, I found a note tucked inside the cash that confirmed my worst fears:
"For the inconvenience. See you Tuesday."
He thinks he’s found a new toy to play with, but he just gave me the one thing I needed to find my sister—an invitation to go back inside and finish what I started.

7.1
I was living as a ghost in a run-down trailer park, trying to outrun a past that would kill me if it ever caught up. Then the storm hit, and a dying monster collapsed through my door, bringing the smell of copper and the promise of a very different kind of death.
I tried to defend myself with a cheap butcher knife, but Darius didn't just disarm me—he acquired me. Before the rain even stopped, I was drugged and whisked away on a private jet, waking up in a luxury penthouse that was nothing more than a high-tech cage overlooking the city skyline.
He didn't just want my silence; he wanted total control. When I begged to check on my sick grandmother, he threw a manila envelope on the table filled with surveillance photos of her at her nursing home.
"I own the board of that facility," he said, his voice cold as ice. "One call from me, and she dies alone on the street."
He vetted my life in that trailer park down to my medical records and childhood diaries, convinced he had every lever of power needed to keep me obedient. He forced me into silk dresses and expected me to be his domestic pet, a quiet girl waiting for him to return from his world of shadows and blood.
I played the part, letting him pull me into his lap and bury his face in my neck, pretending to be the broken girl he thought he’d bought. I watched his security cameras, calculated his blind spots, and waited for the moment his exhaustion outweighed his instinct.
Darius thinks he knows me because he saw where I lived, but he’s never been more wrong. His investigators found the pauper, but they completely missed the princess with an Ivy League degree and a family name that carries more weight than his illegal empire.
He thinks he’s the one holding the leash, but he has no idea who he’s actually brought into his home. The game has just begun, and this time, the "asset" is going to be the one who burns the house down.

7.7
She only wanted a chance at love. She never expected that the one man who truly saw her, challenged her and lifted her higher would be the person she was never meant to meet.
Twenty-four-year-old Janyia Hefling enters Peryn City's most competitive career program hoping to escape the weight of being the eldest of six, the expectations of her quietly struggling family, and the constant pressure to prove she's more than her circumstances.
She wasn't expecting him.
Eric Dusine-calm, brilliant, effortlessly playful, a tech CEO who neither looks nor acts the part. A man who notices things he shouldn't: her humor, her fire, her ambition... her.
Their connection is instant. Their chemistry is sharp enough to cut.
But neither of them knows the secret powerful enough to unravel everything they're building-before it even begins.
When a long-buried truth surfaces, it doesn't just endanger their growing bond, it shakes the foundation of who they believe they are.
Heartbreaking yet meaningful. Emotional with threads of humor. Intense enough to ache.
This is the story of two souls drawn together by fate only to discover that fate came with a warning label.

7.8
For five years, I was the secret weapon behind A-list actor Johan Lee. As his top agent and devoted girlfriend, I cleaned up his scandals, secured his contracts, and deliberately dressed down so I would never outshine him. Tonight was his birthday, and I was waiting in his penthouse in black lace, ready to surprise him.
The only surprise was the one I got when he walked in with a 22-year-old actress. From inside his walk-in closet, my romantic evening turned into a nightmare as I listened to them fall into his bed.
But the cheating wasn't the worst part. It was hearing his cruel, dismissive laugh as he explained why he kept me around.
"She's safe," he told the other woman. "She dresses like a depressed librarian. I don't need a queen trying to steal my spotlight. I need an assistant."
An assistant. Five years of my life, my love, and my career-building genius, all reduced to a convenience. The grief in my chest instantly hardened into ice. The mousy girlfriend he took for granted was gone forever.
I walked out of that closet, ended his career with a single video, and thought I was finally free. But then my aunt called, screaming. My family's company was mysteriously facing bankruptcy, and their only way out was to enforce an old family contract. I was to be sold in marriage to the ruthless billionaire who engineered their downfall: the infamous Colvin Sykes.

8.7
I was trapped in a greasy diner by my own mother.
She was forcing me to marry my abusive cousin because he had paid her twenty thousand dollars.
To escape, I used a contract marriage app and begged a complete stranger to marry me at City Hall that very day.
Ethan drove a cheap Ford and wore a plain suit. I thought he was just an ordinary guy needing a fake wife.
When my mother found out, she brought thugs to destroy my flower shop—my only home and livelihood.
To protect Ethan from her endless extortion, I shielded him and screamed that he was bankrupt and drowning in credit card debt.
My mother fled in disgust, and Ethan took me into his apartment for the night.
But out of trauma and habit, I locked my bedroom door, muttering that he must be old and desperate.
He stormed out into the freezing night, leaving me terrified that I had ruined my only lifeline.
I didn't understand why he was so furiously offended, completely unaware that my "broke" husband was actually the most ruthless billionaire in New York, and I had just trampled his massive ego.
The next morning, his face was a mask of ice as he dragged me back to City Hall to annul the marriage and get rid of me.
"Annulment. Now," he demanded.
But the clerk just popped her gum and slid a pink paper across the counter.
"State law changed. Mandatory thirty-day cooling-off period."