
The CEO's Asset: Sold To My Enemy
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I spent two years trying to please Xander Yates, thinking he was the man who would help me save my family’s struggling manufacturing business. As a former senior legal counsel, I thought I knew how to handle sharks, but I never expected the man I loved to be the one who would try to skin me alive.
Everything shattered at a high-end gala when I felt a chemical fire start in my marrow. Xander had spiked my drink, chasing me through the hotel corridors with a predatory smile, ready to take by force what I wouldn't give him willingly.
I barely escaped into an elevator, stealing a key card from a man in a sharp grey suit and collapsing in room 8086. That stranger turned out to be Crockett Blackburn, the "Ice King of Wall Street" and a man my family had spent years avoiding. He didn't save me out of the goodness of his heart; he saved me because he saw a "messy variable" he could turn into a weapon. By morning, Xander was blackmailing me with a video of me drugged, and Crockett was offering me a deal that felt like a deal with the devil. He would save my factory, but only if I gave him 51% controlling interest and became his personal legal counsel.
The humiliation was total. Xander called me a junkie and a slut, while Crockett looked at the bruises on my neck with the cold, clinical assessment of a man checking a damaged piece of equipment. When a secret bid was leaked, Crockett didn't hesitate to pin the blame on me, accusing me of working with my ex to drive up the price.
I was a pawn in a game between two monsters, one who wanted to destroy my body and another who wanted to own my soul and my family’s legacy. I had lost my apartment, my reputation, and my safety in less than twenty-four hours.
"I don't like it when people break my things," Crockett told me as he applied ointment to the marks Xander left on my throat.
I realized then that if I wanted to survive, I had to stop being the victim and start being the predator. I signed the contract, moved into Blackburn’s penthouse, and prepared for a scorched-earth war against the Yates family. I don't care if Crockett Blackburn is using me as a leash—as long as he lets me be the one to bite.
The CEO's Asset: Sold To My Enemy Chapter 1
The heat started in the marrow of her bones. It wasn't a fever. It was a chemical fire, licking up her spine and settling heavy and throbbing in her lower belly.
Daniella Diaz shoved the heavy mahogany doors of the ballroom open. The rush of air from the hotel corridor hit her face, but it didn't cool her skin. It just made the sweat on her neck feel like ice against a furnace.
She stumbled. Her heels, usually an extension of her feet, felt like stilts on a rocking boat. The crystal chandeliers overhead smeared into long, glowing streaks of light.
She had to get out. This had Inga Andrews's fingerprints all over it. Xander wasn't smart enough for this level of malice.
Behind her, the heavy thud of footsteps echoed on the marble. They were leisurely, predatory.
"Daniella," Xander's voice called out. It was amused. "Don't be like that. We were just getting started."
The sound of his voice sent a spike of adrenaline through the haze in her brain. She dug her fingernails into her palm, hard. The sharp bite of pain cleared the fog for a split second.
He had spiked her drink.
The realization didn't bring panic. It brought a cold, hard clarity. Xander Yates, the man she had spent two years trying to please, had finally decided that if she wouldn't give him what he wanted, he would take it.
She reached the elevator bank. Her fingers shook so badly she missed the button twice before the light finally glowed.
"Come on," she whispered, her voice a dry rasp. "Come on."
The footsteps were getting closer. She could hear the jingle of his keys. He wasn't running. He knew she had nowhere to go.
The elevator chimed. The doors slid open.
A man in a severe grey suit was exiting, his attention fixed on a tablet in his hand. Daniella didn't hesitate. She turned her body sideways and squeezed through the gap, her shoulder colliding with his expensive suit.
As she stumbled into the car, the man grunted in surprise, dropping his tablet. His hand instinctively went to catch it, and something black and rectangular slipped from his jacket pocket, clattering onto the elevator floor. A key card.
She snatched it.
"Hey!" the man in the suit protested.
Daniella slammed her hand against the sensor inside the elevator.
Xander appeared around the corner. His smile was distorted, a funhouse mirror version of the charm that had fooled her for so long. He reached out, his hand aiming for the closing doors.
The metal panels slid shut just as his fingertips brushed the sensor.
Daniella collapsed against the back wall of the cab. Her heart was hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird. She looked at the panel. The numbers were racing upward, skipping everything between the lobby and the top.
Eighty.
The elevator stopped. The doors opened.
Silence.
It wasn't the silence of an empty room. It was the silence of money. The carpet was thick, deep grey wool that swallowed the sound of her erratic breathing. The walls were lined with abstract art that probably cost more than her father's life insurance policy.
She looked at the card in her hand. Gold embossed numbers: 8086.
She pushed off the wall. Her legs felt like they were made of cotton. Every step was a battle against gravity. The heat in her blood was becoming unbearable, a physical weight dragging her down.
She found the door at the end of the hall. 8086.
She swiped the card. The lock gave a heavy, mechanical click.
Daniella fell into the room. She turned and threw the deadbolt, her movements clumsy and desperate. Then she slid down the doorframe until she hit the cold marble of the foyer floor.
The room was dark. Floor-to-ceiling windows showcased the Manhattan skyline, a glittering grid of indifference.
She couldn't move. The drug had won.
From the darkness of the living area, a sound cut through the silence.
Click.
A flame erupted. It was blue at the base, orange at the tip. It illuminated a hand, large and steady, and the sharp angle of a jawline.
Daniella stopped breathing.
She wasn't alone.
The man snapped the lighter shut. The darkness rushed back in, but the afterimage of his eyes burned in her mind. They were cold. Assessing.
"I..." Daniella tried to speak. A broken moan was all that came out.
The man stood up. He was tall. Even in the shadows, his silhouette was imposing, blocking out the city lights. He walked toward her, not with the hurried concern of a savior, but with the measured pace of a man who owned the ground he walked on.
He smelled of cedar and expensive tobacco.
He crouched in front of her. Long fingers gripped her chin, tilting her face up. His touch was cool, clinical. He looked into her eyes, checking her pupils.
"The younger Diaz daughter," he said. His voice was a low rumble, vibrating in his chest. "The one who broke the NDA. I thought you'd disappeared." It wasn't a question.
Daniella nodded, then shook her head. The face. She knew this face. From a past she had tried to bury. In her drug-addled mind, he was the bigger monster, the original source of her downfall. Clinging to him was a desperate gamble, a way to get inside the fortress of her greatest enemy. She leaned into his hand, her cheek brushing against his palm. The heat inside her was screaming for contact.
The man's eyes darkened, but he didn't pull away.
"You've been dosed," he stated flatly.
Suddenly, a violent crash came from the door behind her.
"Daniella!" Xander's voice was muffled but furious. "I know you're in there! Open the damn door!"
Daniella flinched so hard her head cracked against the doorframe. The desire vanished, replaced by a terror so sharp it tasted like copper. She grabbed the stranger's sleeve, her knuckles white.
The man looked at the door. His expression didn't change, but the air around him seemed to drop ten degrees. He looked offended. Not on her behalf, but because someone dared to make noise at his door.
He stood up and scooped her into his arms effortlessly. He carried her to the sofa and deposited her there, then walked to a panel on the wall.
He pressed a button.
"Get lost, Yates," the man said. His voice was calm, lethal. "Or I'll have security break your legs."
The pounding stopped instantly.
Silence stretched. Then, the sound of retreating footsteps.
Daniella let out a breath she didn't know she was holding. But as the fear receded, the fire returned, hotter than before. She tugged at the neckline of her dress. The fabric felt like sandpaper.
She looked up. The man was standing with his back to the window, unbuttoning his cuffs.
"I am not a philanthropist, Miss Diaz," he said. "My hospitality comes at a price. If you stay, you become my problem. And I solve my problems. Permanently."
Daniella couldn't process the warning. She only knew he was cool, and she was burning. She reached for him.
He cursed softly, a low sound in his throat, and leaned down to seal her mouth with his.
Continue Reading
The CEO's Asset: Sold To My Enemy of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6Chapter 7 Ch. 7Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

8.9
This is my story of how to lose a mob boss in ten days.
I have a
I've been arranged to marry a monster.
Run away? Good idea. Tried that. Didn't work.
Because in my family, my father makes the rules.
And he says this wedding is happening .
But he still has a soft spot for me, his last remaining daughter.
So he offers me a deal.
Take ten days.
Get to know Sasha.
See if you change your mind.
Yeah, right.
Sasha Ozerov is a beast in Brioni.
He's ruthless, flawless, utterly unconcerned with mortals like me.
All he wants is what our marriage would bring
My family's power and the city in the palm of his hand.
But maybe, if I can make him back out of the deal...
I'll keep my freedom.
So I set out to do everything I can to drive him crazy.
I have ten days to make my husband hate me.
What happens if I start to love him instead?

7.7
Not only was I drugged, blinded and assaulted. I was deceived into carrying a baby by a stranger I never knew. Then he appeared and took my child away.
I was sent to a militia by the father of my child. I thought I was rescued but I was recruited to be a weapon for killing. Who was manipulating me, I didn't know. The answers were far from what I knew.
Forced to blend into the world that I could never believe I would be to, a place where brutality reigned, kill or be killed was the only language. I have survived but he has to pay for everything he did to me, because I believed every phase of my life was set by him and him alone. Have I really survived?
Who would have thought, he existed twice in the same world? Do I really know who I should take revenge on? Him or the person I would sacrifice everything for?
Was my mother the one who orchestrated everything? What kind of pawn am I?

7.1
I was the Architect who built the digital fortress for the most feared Don in New York.
To the world, I was Brendan Wiggins’s silent, elegant Queen.
But then my burner phone buzzed under the dinner table.
It was a photo from his mistress: a positive pregnancy test.
"Your husband is celebrating right now," the caption read. "You are just the furniture."
I looked across the table at Brendan. He smiled and held my hand, lying to my face without blinking.
He thought he owned me because he saved my life ten years ago.
He told her I was just "functional." That I was a barren asset he kept around to look respectable, while she carried his legacy.
He thought I would accept the disrespect because I had nowhere else to go.
He was wrong.
I didn't want to divorce him—you don't divorce a Don.
And I didn't want to kill him. That was too easy.
I wanted to erase him.
I liquidated fifty million dollars from the offshore accounts only I could access. I destroyed the servers I had built.
Then, I contacted a black-market chemist for a procedure called "Tabula Rasa."
It doesn't kill the body. It wipes the mind clean. A total hard reset of the soul.
On his birthday, while he was out celebrating his bastard son, I drank the vial.
When he finally came home to find the empty house and the melted wedding ring, he realized the truth.
He could burn the world down looking for me, but he would never find his wife.
Because the woman who loved him no longer existed.

7.5
On the morning of our twenty-fifth wedding anniversary, I found a cream-colored document tucked inside my husband's suit pocket.
It was a twenty-million-dollar asset transfer for his former receptionist, Carmen. But what made my blood run cold was the contingent beneficiary: Leo, my newborn son who the hospital claimed was kidnapped twenty-three years ago.
When I confronted Devonte, he didn't even try to explain. He handed me a fake Cartier watch, canceled all my credit cards, and publicly called me delusional.
The next day, he moved Carmen into our mansion and emptied all our joint accounts into offshore trusts.
"If you don't sign these papers and walk away, I will have you committed," he threatened, his mother nodding in agreement.
They had orchestrated the kidnapping of my baby, hiding him with the mistress while I spent half my life sedated and screaming in grief. Now, to keep his secret, Devonte was going to lock me in a psychiatric ward and bury me in debt.
I didn't understand how the man I loved could be such a monster. Why did he steal my child? What else was hidden in that confidential adoption file?
Pushed to the absolute brink, I refused to be his victim.
When his goons came to my temporary apartment to drag me away, I turned to the rugged union electrician who had just fixed my lights.
"If you need a husband to keep you out of a psych ward, I'll marry you," he said, offering himself as my legal shield.
I took his hand. It was time to tear my husband's perfect life apart.

8.4
I worked three double shifts at the garage just to buy a velvet-boxed cake for my wealthy girlfriend, Arleen.
But when I pushed open the VIP room door, I saw her lover kissing her bare leg.
She didn't push him away. Instead, she laughed and swirled her martini.
"I only forgot Finn because I knew he would stay. He is a poor boy from Queens who follows me around like a loyal dog."
Later that night, her lover intentionally crashed a Porsche to scare me, sending a piece of jagged metal into my skull.
Lying in a growing pool of my own blood, I watched Arleen crawl out of the wreckage.
She didn't even look at me. She threw herself at her uninjured lover, screaming for a medic.
"He just got scraped by a piece of plastic. He is faking it. Deal with Jaquez first!"
When I woke up, I wasn't free. Arleen had locked me in a private hospital wing with 24-hour security, planning to isolate me and keep me as her broken, captive toy forever.
My blind, pathetic devotion finally froze into absolute disgust.
I looked at the heart monitor next to my bed and grabbed an IV needle.
I severed the sensor wire to trigger a flatline, slipped out the fire stairs while the nurses panicked, and burned my identity to ashes.
This time, I was going to disappear to London, build my own empire, and watch hers burn.

7.9
Elena Crane wakes up in a hospital bed after barely surviving a resort fire, only to discover the devastating truth. The kidney she donated to her husband Leo three days ago wasn't for him. It was for his mistress, Lydia. Worse, she overhears Leo instructing a doctor to kill her within five days and make it look like surgical complications so he can collect two hundred million dollars in life insurance. Their entire five year marriage was an elaborate scheme to steal her organs and murder her for money.
What Leo and Lydia don't know is that Elena is actually Roberta Alfred, the legendary jewelry designer and billionaire heiress who abandoned her empire for love. After enduring multiple murder attempts, including being locked in a morgue and losing her uterus to forced hysterectomy, Elena escapes. She divorces Leo, claims the insurance money herself, and returns home to reclaim her identity and her family's billion dollar empire.











