
The CEO's Runaway Pregnant Architect
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For five years, I was the invisible force behind my charismatic architect boyfriend's empire, painstakingly designing the dream home we built together.
But for the eighteenth time, Jayson canceled adding my name to the deed, rushing out on our candlelit dinner for yet another "critical emergency" with his young, attractive mentee, Ciera.
He left me alone at our custom dining table, blindly prioritizing her manufactured crises over our future. Hours later, Ciera posted a photo on Instagram. She was sitting in his executive chair, wearing his unbuttoned dress shirt, with two empty wine glasses on the desk. When I finally confronted him the next morning, he didn't apologize. Instead, he looked at me with arrogant amusement.
"Where are you going to go, Allison? Without me? Without this firm? Don't forget, I made you!"
My love didn't die in a sudden explosion; it bled out drop by drop over eighteen broken promises. I had poured my soul into his success, only to be treated like a disposable asset in my own home. To make the irony even more suffocating, a plastic stick in my bathroom soon revealed two stark red lines. I was pregnant with his child.
I didn't cry, and I certainly didn't use the baby to beg for his love. Instead, I packed a single suitcase, accepted a senior role at his biggest rival firm in London, and left a resignation letter on his desk. This time, I am building an empire of my own.
The CEO's Runaway Pregnant Architect Chapter 1
Allison Knapp POV
The eighteenth time Jayson postponed adding my name to the deed, citing a "critical emergency" with his mentee Ciera Mason, I felt a familiar numbness settle over me. It was not a sudden blow, but the dull ache of a wound that had never truly healed, merely deepened with each repeated incision.
Jayson, a senior partner and the charismatic face of our architecture firm, had been my partner in life for five years—not my husband, though everyone assumed otherwise. We never formalized it, a silence I once mistook for patience. Together we built what everyone saw as a perfect future in the house we designed together. That house, our dream home, was supposed to be the ultimate statement of our commitment, yet the legal security was always just out of reach, always derailed by Ciera's manufactured crises.
"Allison, look, I know this is the eighteenth time," Jayson started, his tone a practiced blend of apology and exasperation. He sat across from me at our custom-built dining table, the one we had spent weeks designing, sketching out every curve and angle. The candlelight flickered, casting his perfectly coiffed hair and expensive suit in a warm, deceptive glow. He didn't meet my eyes. Instead, he traced a pattern on the polished wood with his forefinger, a nervous habit I knew too well. "But Ciera's proposal for the Meridian Tower project hit a snag, a major one. The client meeting is first thing tomorrow, and she's completely overwhelmed. She called me in a panic."
He looked up then, his blue eyes wide and earnest, seeking my understanding. His voice was smooth, persuasive, the voice that charmed clients into signing multi-million dollar contracts and had once charmed me into believing in an unbreakable future. He used his "savior complex" tone, the one that made him feel indispensable, especially to Ciera. He always felt responsible for her, for her "success," as he put it. I had heard it all before, a dozen variations on the same theme. It was always Ciera, always a "snag," always a "panic."
I nodded slowly, my fork poised over the grilled salmon on my plate. The food tasted like ash in my mouth. My response was quiet, almost imperceptible. A simple, almost automatic acknowledgment of his words. There was no argument, no outburst, no tears. My emotional reserves had been depleted long ago, replaced by a profound, chilling emptiness. My hands did not tremble. My voice did not crack. I simply absorbed the latest broken promise, letting it settle into the vast, echoing space where my expectations used to reside.
Jayson watched me, a slight furrow appearing between his brows. He probably expected a reaction—a flicker of disappointment, perhaps even a quiet sigh. My absolute stillness, my lack of any visible emotion, seemed to perplex him more than any outburst ever could. He paused, his gaze lingering on my face, searching for something he couldn't quite name. He saw nothing but a calm, composed woman, meticulously cutting her food. This unnerved him.
He continued to watch me, his fork now resting idly on his plate. His eyes darted from my face to my hands, then back to my eyes. It was a repeated action, a subtle confirmation of his discomfort. He was looking for the cracks, the usual signs of my suppressed frustration. But there were no cracks. The surface was smooth, impenetrable, like a perfectly rendered architectural model. He shifted in his seat, a barely audible rustle of fabric. He didn't understand this new version of me, the one who no longer fought, no longer pleaded.
Finally, he broke the silence, his voice softer now, a hint of genuine concern creeping in, though it felt misplaced. "Are you okay, Allison? You seem… quiet tonight." He knew I was quiet. I was always quiet after these conversations. Yet he still asked, as if the answer might suddenly change. It was his way of acknowledging the discomfort without actually addressing the root cause. He wanted reassurance, not an honest disclosure of my pain.
"I'm fine, Jayson," I replied, my voice steady, devoid of any inflection that might betray the truth. I looked at him directly, a blank canvas reflecting his own unease. A lie, of course, but it was the simplest answer, the one that required the least effort, the one that kept the precarious peace between us. I had perfected this particular lie over the years, honing it into a shield against further emotional damage. It was easier to say "I'm fine" than to articulate the intricate layers of disappointment and weariness that had accumulated within me.
This was the eighteenth time. Eighteen times we had set a date, eighteen times the necessary paperwork had been prepared, and eighteen times Jayson had cancelled at the last minute. Each cancellation, without fail, involved Ciera Mason. Her "emergencies" were a consistent, predictable pattern in our lives, a cruel ritual that chipped away at my trust, promise by promise. The first time, I had been upset. The fifth time, I had been angry. The tenth time, I had felt profound sadness. By the fifteenth, I had started to feel numb. Now, at the eighteenth, there was simply nothing left.
Jayson, in his self-centered way, had grown accustomed to this pattern. He expected my initial disappointment, perhaps a brief, quiet argument, then my eventual acceptance. He had adapted to my sadness, dismissing it as a temporary inconvenience. He believed his reassurances, however hollow, were enough to mend the damage. He saw my eventual silence as a sign of understanding, rather than the quiet surrender of a soul too exhausted to fight. He simply moved on, convinced he had handled the situation adequately.
I, too, had adapted. My adaptation, however, was a slow, internal calcification. I had learned to anticipate the postponements, to brace myself for the inevitable call or text that would declare Ciera's latest crisis. My excitement, once vibrant and hopeful, had long since faded into a weary resignation. The dream of our shared home, once a beacon of our future, had become a monument to Jayson's broken promises, a physical representation of the emotional neglect that permeated our relationship.
I continued to eat, deliberately, slowly, savoring the texture of the salmon even though the taste was absent. Each bite was a small act of reclaiming myself, of focusing on the tangible, the immediate, rather than the intangible, the perpetually deferred. The clinking of my fork against the ceramic plate was the only sound in the elegant dining room, a stark contrast to the usual lively discussions we once had over dinner. The silence felt heavy, pregnant with unspoken truths.
When I finished, I placed my fork and knife together on the plate, a small, decisive gesture. I pushed my chair back, the soft scrape against the floor echoing slightly. I stood up, gathered my plate, and walked towards the kitchen. It was my routine. I always cleared the table, always washed the dishes, always ensured our home was orderly, a stark contrast to the chaos of Jayson's professional life. My actions were deliberate, each step a testament to my self-reliance, my quiet independence.
Jayson, however, moved quickly, catching my arm gently before I reached the kitchen door. His touch was warm, familiar, but it no longer stirred any affection within me. It felt like a reflex, a desperate attempt to maintain a connection that had already frayed beyond repair. He pulled me closer, his eyes pleading, an unspoken plea for me to remain, to not walk away.
"Allison, please," he said, his voice low, urgent. "We'll get it done. I promise. This time, really. Next week. No matter what. I'll make sure Ciera has everything she needs by Wednesday, and then Thursday, we'll sign the papers. I'll block out my entire schedule." His words tumbled out, a cascade of reassurances that had lost all meaning. They were empty vessels, hollowed out by repeated use, devoid of genuine intent.
He pulled me closer, attempting to draw me into an embrace, but I remained rigid, unresponsive. His arms wrapped around me, but my body felt distant, a shell he could no longer penetrate. He continued to speak, pouring out excuses and justifications. "It's just… she's so young, Allison. And so much potential. This project is huge for her career. I can't just abandon her right now. It would crush her." He spoke of Ciera with a paternal concern, a protective instinct that he rarely extended to me in moments of my own professional vulnerability.
"I need to ensure she succeeds," he insisted, his voice gaining a determined edge. "It's part of my responsibility as a mentor, as a senior partner. You understand that, right? You're an architect too. You know how important these early breaks are." He tried to frame it as a professional obligation, but it was more than that. It was his savior complex in full swing, his need to be the hero, to be indispensable, especially to a young, attractive woman who constantly praised his brilliance.
"Next week, Allison," he repeated, his voice firmer now, as if reiterating it would make it true. "I swear. I'll tell my assistant to prioritize it. You're the most important person in my life. You know that, right?" He squeezed my hand, a performative gesture of affection that felt entirely disconnected from his actions. The words were there, the physical touch was there, but the emotional truth had long since evaporated.
I watched him, my expression unreadable. His face was a mixture of genuine concern and self-preservation, a complex tapestry of emotions I had learned to decipher with chilling accuracy. He believed his own excuses, truly. He had convinced himself that his neglect was simply a temporary necessity, a minor inconvenience in the grand scheme of our life together. He saw himself as noble, sacrificing his personal time for a worthy cause, rather than as a man who consistently prioritized others over his own partner. My gaze was detached, observing a stranger performing a familiar, painful play.
"Okay, Jayson," I said, my voice flat, devoid of emotion. I gently disengaged my arm from his grasp, turning and walking into the kitchen. The word "okay" hung in the air, a deceptive acceptance, a quiet lie that masked a profound, irreversible shift. He nodded, visibly relieved, mistaking my quietude for acquiescence. He didn't see the finality in my eyes, the steel that had replaced the former softness. He didn't hear the unspoken goodbye in my calm tone.
This was the eighteenth time. Eighteen broken promises. Each one was a tiny erosion, a silent landslide that slowly but surely collapsed the foundation of our relationship. The deed remained solely in his name, a legal document that mirrored the emotional reality: this house, this life, was his, not ours. The dream home we built together had become a symbol of his inability, or unwillingness, to truly commit, to truly make me an equal partner.
As I stood in the quiet kitchen, loading the dishwasher with mechanical precision, a profound realization washed over me. It wasn't a sudden epiphany, but the culmination of years of disappointment. I was done. Completely, utterly, unequivocally done. The emotional well was dry. The patience had run out. There would be no nineteenth postponement. Not for me. I would not wait. I would not ask again. My quiet acceptance tonight was not surrender, but a carefully constructed farewell. I was leaving. And he would be the last to know.
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The CEO's Runaway Pregnant Architect of Contents
New Release Novels

7.3
I found out my husband of three years had cheated on me and his mistress is the one who told me-because he didn't have the balls to do it himself.
I move out and get a new apartment, a job as a bartender, and try to move on with a broken heart. I wonder where it all went wrong, if I hadn't been enough for him, if I'd been stupid for marrying him in the first place.
I'm at work one night when he walks inside-the most beautiful man I've ever seen. He sits at the bar and a forest fire burns between us. I was depressed the moment before he entered, but the second I look at his blue eyes, I forget the dumpster fire that my life has become. I invite him back to my place and it's the most passionate night of my life. I expect to never see him again.
I just want him as an anti-depressant-but he wants me all to himself. I just got my heart ripped out of my chest so I want something easy and no-strings-attached, but he wants all the strings because he's hooked.
I don't get much of a say in the matter, and that's not surprising when I learn why-because he's the Butcher. The crime lord of all crime lords, the boss that overshadows all of Paris, that makes everyone abide by his rules-or pay.
And now I'm his.

8.0
Finley's stepfather gave her a sickening ultimatum: marry her predatory stepbrother Shane tonight, or he would throw her fragile mother out on the street.
To escape this hell, she used a matchmaking agency and hastily married a complete stranger. Garrison Strickland claimed to be an ordinary data analyst making $95,000 a year, driving a beat-up Honda Civic, and needing a wife in name only. They got their marriage license at City Hall that very afternoon.
But when Finley returned home to pack her bags and threw the certificate on the table, her family just laughed. Dozier ordered Shane to drag her into the bedroom to "teach her a lesson" and trap her forever.
"Come on, little sister," Shane crooned, lunging at her. "Don't fight it."
Finley's own mother just stared at the floor, blaming Finley for ruining the family, watching blindly as Shane cornered her.
Terrified and desperate, Finley smashed an ashtray over Shane's head and frantically dialed her new husband's number. Shane snatched the phone, mocking the "imaginary husband" before the line went dead. Finley felt a bottomless despair. Garrison was just a normal guy; he would never risk his life against her violent family. She was completely on her own, waiting for the end.
Suddenly, deafening bangs echoed through the house, and Garrison stepped into the living room radiating a cold, terrifying fury. This supposedly "frugal data analyst" effortlessly snapped Shane's wrist, leveled a ruthless death threat that made Dozier tremble, and whisked Finley away in a waiting Bentley. Looking at the powerful man beside her, Finley's heart raced: just who exactly had she married today?

7.6
To pay for her father's life support, Haleigh sold herself into a marriage with Fabian Blackburn, a ruthless billionaire in a deep coma.
But on her wedding day, she caught her boyfriend cheating with her stepsister, laughing about how they would steal the inheritance the second Fabian stopped breathing. Cornered and desperate, Haleigh secretly underwent IVF using her comatose husband's frozen sperm to secure the family trust.
Weeks later, a miracle happened. Fabian woke up.
But instead of gratitude, he treated her like trash. He threw annulment papers at her face, completely disgusted by the arranged marriage.
"If you try any dirty tricks to get pregnant, I will personally drag you to a clinic and have that bastard scraped out of you."
Terrified, Haleigh hid her positive pregnancy test and desperately tried to hack her way to enough cash to escape. But while using his computer, she accidentally opened a highly classified folder.
Inside was a medical file and a photo of a severely disabled girl who looked exactly like Fabian.
Before she could process it, Fabian walked in. Seeing the screen, his cold mask shattered into pure, unhinged madness. He lunged across the room, lifting her off the floor by her throat, completely ignoring her desperate gasps for air.
"Lock her in the basement," he roared to his guards. "No food. No water."
Curled on the freezing concrete, clutching her newly pregnant belly, Haleigh didn't understand what she had just seen that turned him into a murderous monster.
But she knew one thing: if she didn't escape this terrifying estate, both she and his unborn heir would die in the dark.

8.8
Clara supported her boyfriend Leo for four years, paying his rent and buying his headshots while working dead-end extra gigs.
On his twenty-sixth birthday, she caught him in their bed with Veronica, a wealthy producer's daughter who constantly stole Clara's roles.
Leo mocked Clara as a "pathetic, poor stepping stone" who was just there until he got his foot in the door.
Veronica threatened to ruin Clara's career forever.
Clara dumped him, packed her bags, and impulsively entered a contract marriage with a cold stranger she met at City Hall.
But her nightmare wasn't over.
When her mother suddenly needed a $200,000 emergency brain surgery, Clara was forced to take a demeaning extra gig to survive.
There, Veronica and her starlet friend cornered Clara.
They mocked her cheap clothes, ridiculed her new wedding ring as fake glass, and intentionally poured scalding coffee on her feet.
"Well, maid, you better clean that up."
Veronica laughed, forcing Clara to her knees to wipe up the burning liquid while snapping photos.
Clara swallowed her burning humiliation, secretly recording their abuse on her phone.
She endured the pain, desperate for the $300 day rate to save her mother's life, feeling entirely crushed by their overwhelming wealth and power.
What she didn't know was that outside the soundstage, her new contract husband—the man she thought was just a struggling, broke tech worker—was sitting in a sleek black Maybach.
He watched his wife kneeling on the floor, and his dark eyes filled with a lethal, terrifying rage.

9.0
Eileen woke up in a trashed hotel room, her head pounding with the pathetic memories of a despised Hollywood actress.
Outside the window, paparazzi were already screaming about her manufactured cheating scandal, but the real nightmare was waiting at her door.
Her paralyzed, billionaire husband, Carlisle Vinson, looked at her with pure disgust while his butler shoved a divorce settlement at her chest.
"Mr. Vinson is offering a severance package of fifty million dollars, provided you sign immediately and vacate the premises."
The original owner had left her an absolute mess.
Her trusted assistant had sold her room number to the press to frame her, and a playboy had scammed her out of her entire two million dollar life savings.
If she signed those papers and lost the Vinson family's protection, the breach of contract fees and her enemies in the industry would swallow her alive in days.
Eileen felt a cold fury override the original owner's lingering panic.
Why should she take the fall and be thrown out on the streets while the parasites who set her up lived out their wealthy fantasies?
She had died once, and she wasn't about to waste her second chance playing the victim.
Eileen slammed the heavy divorce folder shut right against the butler's chest.
"I'm not signing," she said with a terrifying, absolute calm.
She stepped behind her husband's wheelchair, ready to shield him from the cameras, secretly cure his dead legs, and make everyone who betrayed her bleed.

8.8
On the anniversary of my mother's death, my father, the Alpha, threw a lavish wedding to marry a woman only four years older than me.
My new stepmother publicly humiliated me, stomped on my hand, and shattered the only necklace my mother left me.
When I confronted her, my father slapped me across the face and ordered me to respect my new Luna.
Heartbroken and furious, I publicly disowned them all.
In retaliation, my father sentenced me to death the very next morning.
He offered me as a tribute to the cursed Lycan King—a monster whose beast savagely tore apart every she-wolf sent to his bed.
My family watched with smug satisfaction as I was locked in an iron cage and dragged away, discarded like defective trash simply because I was born wolfless.
I was supposed to be ripped to shreds on my first night in the pitch-black castle.
But as I stood in the King's dark chamber, bracing for the bloody end, nothing happened.
The terrifying beast just sat in the shadows, staring at me in absolute confusion.
That was when the horrifying truth of his curse clicked in my mind.
His madness was triggered by the spiritual scent of an inner wolf. And I was completely wolfless.
The very defect that made my family throw me away was my ultimate, impenetrable shield.
I wasn't going to die here.
I was going to survive, use this terrifying King, and make my family regret the day they ever cast me out.








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