
The CEO's Runaway Pregnant Architect
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.
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Chapter 2
Allison Knapp POV
My phone buzzed on the kitchen counter, a bright, insistent vibration that cut through the silence. I glanced at it, knowing instinctively it wasn't Jayson. He was already long gone, back to Ciera's "emergency." It was a message from Sarah, my best friend and colleague. I ignored it for a moment, finishing rinsing a plate, my movements slow and deliberate.
Jayson, however, had reappeared in the doorway, leaning against the frame. He watched me, his gaze still holding that same unreadable perplexity. He looked like a detective trying to solve a puzzle with half the pieces missing. My lack of emotional reaction to his latest broken promise was still bothering him, gnawing at the edges of his self-assured facade.
"Who's that?" he asked, his voice casual, but laced with a subtle probe. He gestured vaguely towards my phone. He knew I rarely got work calls this late. He was trying to figure out why I was so calm, so disconnected. His savior complex extended to every corner of his world, including trying to "fix" my perceived emotional distance.
I picked up my phone, my fingers steady. Sarah's text was short: "Did you see Ciera's latest post? That girl has no shame." I didn't open Instagram. I didn't need to. I already knew what I would find. Another photograph of Ciera, all wide eyes and performative gratitude, posing next to something Jayson had given her. Another small death.
"Work," I replied, my voice clipped, offering no further explanation. I put the phone back down, face-down. I didn't want him to see the notification, to start asking questions I wasn't ready to answer. My departure needed to be quiet, unremarked upon, until I was ready to pull the trigger.
Internally, I sighed. The exhausting dance of evasive answers and feigned normalcy had become second nature. It was easier to offer a vague response than to delve into the intricate web of my true feelings. He wouldn't understand anyway. He never truly understood. He saw the symptoms, but never the disease—the slow, insidious decay of trust and affection. He was blind to the deep-seated weariness that had settled in my bones.
This pattern of his, this consistent prioritization of Ciera over me, wasn't new. I remembered the first time, nearly three years ago, just after we'd decided to buy this house. We were supposed to go to a pre-approval meeting, a big step. He called from the office, voice tight with urgency, explaining that Ciera had made a critical error on a rendering, and he needed to stay late to fix it. I sat alone in the lender's office, feeling a cold dread creep in. I had to reschedule, making apologies for his absence, feeling deeply embarrassed.
Another time, it was our fifth anniversary. He had promised a romantic dinner, just the two of us, to celebrate. I had dressed carefully, a new dress, my favorite perfume. Then Ciera called, "distraught" over a client rejection. Jayson spent the entire evening on the phone with her, offering counsel, reassurances, and ultimately, agreeing to meet her at the office. I ate my expensive, cold meal alone, the candlelight a mocking glow against my solitude. He returned hours later, smelling faintly of coffee and Ciera's overly sweet perfume, offering a weak apology and a vague promise to make it up to me. These incidents weren't isolated; they were a recurring motif, a brutal symphony of neglect played out over and over, sometimes weekly, sometimes monthly, but always there, always with Ciera at its heart.
Jayson blinked, his mouth slightly agape at my curt response. He wasn't used to me being so unyielding, so opaque. His brow furrowed again, a more pronounced line now. My calm detachment confused him even more than my previous quiet sadness. He cleared his throat, a nervous habit. He was clearly out of his depth.
He tried to salvage the conversation, to steer it back to a place of manufactured normalcy. "Hey, you know, I was thinking," he began, trying a different tack. He walked further into the kitchen, his hands in his pockets, affecting a casual posture. "Remember that new Japanese restaurant that opened downtown? The one with the amazing sushi? You love sushi." He was trying to dangle a future treat, a distraction, a flimsy bandage over a gushing wound.
I looked at him, a faint, almost imperceptible smile playing on my lips. My smile did not reach my eyes. "Sushi is nice," I conceded, my voice still flat. I knew his game. He would suggest something, something he knew I liked, and then, inevitably, Ciera would have another "emergency," and the sushi would remain uneaten, another promise unfulfilled. He thought these small gestures, these verbal placeholders for affection, were enough. They were less than nothing.
"You know what?" I said, cutting off his next attempt to plan a hypothetical date. "Why don't we go right now? It's still early enough for a late dinner. We can celebrate the house, even if the deed isn't officially done yet." I watched him, a silent challenge in my eyes. It was a test, one he would undoubtedly fail. I already knew the outcome, but I needed to prove it to myself one last time.
Just then, my phone, which I had placed face down, began to ring, a piercing, insistent sound. The screen lit up, showing Ciera Mason's name. It was a cruel, perfectly timed interruption, a dramatic flourish from the universe itself, underlining the central conflict of my life.
Jayson's head snapped towards the phone, his eyes widening. He hesitated for a fraction of a second, his gaze flicking between my impassive face and the glowing screen. The decision, though, was already made. It always was. He reached for his own phone in his pocket, as if Ciera's call had somehow activated a sympathetic response in his device.
He pulled his phone out, already moving towards the kitchen door. "It's Ciera. She wouldn't call this late unless it was truly urgent. I have to take this," he explained, his voice already tinged with that familiar, self-important urgency. He didn't even wait for my response. He was already halfway out of the room, fumbling to answer the call.
"It always is, Jayson," I said, my voice cutting through his hurried explanation, stopping him in his tracks. My tone was cold, devoid of the usual understanding he expected. "And you always do." I gestured towards the door with a slight tilt of my head. "Go. She needs you."
He turned back, surprised by my sudden, direct words. His eyes narrowed, trying to read me, but my expression was carefully blank. He looked almost relieved that I wasn't fighting, wasn't crying. He mistook my calm for acceptance, my detachment for understanding. This was easier for him. This was the path of least resistance.
"Thanks, Allison. You're the best. I knew you'd understand," he said, already retreating. His voice was laced with a false gratitude, a casual dismissal of my feelings. He was eager to escape, to return to his role as Ciera's hero. "I'll make it up to you, I promise. Next week, everything. The deed, the sushi, everything." His words trailed off as he walked out, his footsteps echoing down the hallway, then the unmistakable click of the front door. He was gone. Again.
I stood there for a long moment, the silence rushing back in. Then I picked up my phone, opened Instagram, and saw it. Ciera's latest post. A photo of Jayson's hand resting on that Montblanc pen, with the caption: "Thank you, J, for this gorgeous pen! The perfect tool for sketching out our future designs! So grateful for your guidance and generosity! #BestMentorEver #DesignLife"
I stared at the screen. The pen he wouldn't even let me borrow to sign the house papers. Now it was hers.
I didn't cry. I didn't scream. I just closed the app, opened my email, and found the offer letter from Foster + Partners in London. My finger hovered over the "Accept" button.
Then I pressed it.
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8.0
I sat at a table for two in the center of Le Coucou, clutching a gift box that had cost me two months of savings. It was our three-year anniversary, and I was waiting for Gavin to finally ask the big question.
But when the heavy oak doors opened, Gavin didn't walk toward me with a ring. He walked in with a polished blonde heiress tucked under his arm, her hand resting protectively over a small baby bump.
"This is Tiffany Stone. My fiancée," he said, his voice devoid of any warmth. He didn't apologize for being late or for the three years we'd spent together. Instead, he pulled out a checkbook, scribbled a number, and slid a ten-thousand-dollar check across the white tablecloth.
"Consider it severance for your time," he added, as Tiffany mocked my cheap drugstore dress. "Don't contact me again. Tiffany doesn't need the stress." I was the entertainment for the entire restaurant—the pathetic girl dumped for a better model. By the time I walked out into the rain, I had lost my boyfriend, my home, and the funding for my secret medical research project.
I was an orphan with no safety net, facing an eviction notice and a ruined career. I had given Gavin everything, and he had discarded me like a broken tool. The injustice burned in my chest, a hot, sharp rage that replaced my tears.
Desperate and freezing, I ducked into a coffee shop where I met Colton Bentley, a reclusive billionaire in a wheelchair. After I defended him from a cruel date, he offered me a contract: a marriage of convenience and a seven-figure payment to act as his shield. I signed the papers that night, ready to use his wealth to rebuild my life. But as I watched my new husband navigate his penthouse, I noticed his "paralyzed" legs tense with a strength that shouldn't exist.

7.5
I was tied to a concrete pillar in an abandoned warehouse, the heavy stench of gasoline suffocating me.
Ten steps away, a masked kidnapper slammed a loaded Glock onto a metal barrel and forced my husband, Alvie, to make a sick choice.
"The wife or the mistress. You only get to walk out of here with one."
Alvie didn't even blink.
He walked straight toward the dark corner where his mistress, Gail, was crying. He wrapped his arms tightly around her, shielding her, and guided her toward the exit.
He never looked back. He didn't cast a single glance over his shoulder. To him, I was already a corpse, just trash left on the pavement.
The kidnapper laughed and tossed a lighter onto the soaked concrete floor.
A wall of ghostly blue fire erupted instantly, swallowing me whole. The absolute agony of my skin blistering and melting shattered my sanity.
In my last moments, consumed by the inferno, I couldn't understand how the man I had loved and served so submissively could leave me to burn alive. My heartbreak quickly morphed into a hatred far deeper than the flames.
Then, I violently jerked awake.
I shot up from the bed, gasping for cold air, my hands frantically checking my perfectly smooth, unburned skin.
I looked at the desk clock. I had returned to exactly four years ago, the morning of the annual Gallagher family gathering.
The fragile, naive wife died in that warehouse. This time, I am going to destroy them both.

7.1
For six years, I played the pathetic, wolfless Omega to honor the dying wish of the late Alpha who protected me.
But on our sixth anniversary, my fated mate, Alpha Kian, was photographed looking tenderly at his mistress.
When he finally stormed into our penthouse, he didn't apologize. Instead, he threw a fifty-million-dollar check onto the bed.
"Take the money and accept my rejection obediently, or I'll show you what happens when you defy an Alpha."
To force my compliance, he terminated all trade agreements with my best friend's pack, pushing them to the brink of bankruptcy. He accused me of blackmailing his grandfather into our marriage, entirely blind to the fact that his beloved mistress was actually a banished, feral Rogue.
I had spent six years swallowing my pride, drinking toxic herbs to suppress my true White Wolf scent, and enduring his absolute disgust just to keep his pack safe.
Why did I bleed for a man who despised my very existence?
I looked at the blood money, and the suffocating sorrow in my chest was instantly replaced by white-hot fury.
I didn't take a single cent. Instead, I submitted the rejection papers myself, dropped my pathetic disguise, and walked out into the freezing rain.
A towering warrior with a black umbrella dropped to one knee before me in the mud.
It was time to stop hiding and return home as the billionaire heir of the legendary Silvermoon Pack.

8.9
Seraphina, a broke single mother of triplets, snuck into a billionaire's charity gala just for the free food, desperate to fund her daughter's urgent heart surgery.
But her genius five-year-old son secretly hacked the gala's raffle system, thrusting them directly under the spotlight. The untouchable billionaire host, Donovan Vance, froze when he saw the star-shaped birthmark on her wrist—the exact same mark from a dark hotel room five years ago.
Cornered, Seraphina was forced into a five-million-dollar marriage contract to appease Donovan's dying father and secure his corporate empire. She swallowed her pride, took the money to save her daughter, and moved into the penthouse. But Donovan's obsessive childhood friend, Gwendolyn, immediately targeted her. She humiliated Seraphina for her poverty and violently grabbed her in the foyer.
"I dare you to get a DNA test. When the world finds out they're not his, he'll throw you into the street himself!"
Gwendolyn's vicious threat made Seraphina's blood run cold. She was suffocating in sheer panic. She didn't even know if Donovan was actually the father. If a test proved he wasn't, she would be destroyed, and her daughter would lose her only lifeline.
But to her absolute horror, Donovan's father overheard the threat and ordered a legally binding paternity test that very day to permanently silence all doubts. With the medical team arriving and nowhere left to run, the terrifying secret Seraphina had buried for five years was about to be dragged into the light.

8.0
Arletta Lee was dragged out of rural Pennsylvania to be a sacrificial bride for the comatose billionaire heir, Josue Mcconnell.
The moment she stepped into the massive estate, she became the prime target of a vicious, greedy family.
Josue's stepmother and half-brother viewed her as cheap trash. They didn't just want her gone; they wanted Josue dead.
Kyler broke into her room at night reeking of bourbon, and later sneaked into the medical wing with a lethal synthetic neurotoxin aimed right at Josue's IV line.
His jealous cousin even tried to permanently disfigure her face with a thermos of boiling water.
"She's just a cheap good-luck charm the old man bought. We can throw her out with the trash whenever we want."
They relentlessly bullied her, thinking she was just a helpless, terrified country girl who would quietly take the blame for their murder plot.
But what the arrogant Mcconnell family didn't know was that her pathetic, trembling demeanor was entirely manufactured.
They thought they had trapped a frightened rabbit in a den of wolves.
In reality, Arletta was a brilliant underground surgeon.
Using ancient neural acupuncture hidden in a simple wooden hairpin, she flawlessly turned their traps against them, locking Kyler away and winning the ruthless patriarch's absolute protection.
As the supposedly brain-dead billionaire finally twitched and locked his fingers in an iron grip around her hand, Arletta smiled coldly.
It was time to wake him up and let him tear this rotten family apart.

9.1
On our fourth wedding anniversary, I prepared a perfect home-cooked dinner for my husband, Carlisle.
But the moment he walked in, he threw a marital settlement agreement right onto the table.
"Sign it. Celine is back. There's no place for you here anymore."
His mother and sister immediately marched in to supervise my packing, calling me a barren gold-digger and trying to smash my late mother's only keepsake.
I signed the papers and walked out into the freezing night, thinking the nightmare was finally over.
But the next day, a heavily edited video of a childhood friend helping me into his car went viral online.
Carlisle's PR team released a public statement branding me a cheating wife, completely destroying my reputation.
He let the world tear me apart, using my ruined name to play the victim and justify bringing his first love home.
I had sacrificed my own dreams and endured his family's endless abuse for four years, only to be discarded like trash and framed for the exact emotional cheating he had been doing all along.
Watching the vile comments flood my screen, my heartbreak hardened into pure, unbreakable ice.
I calmly picked up my phone and dialed my father's number.
"Dad, it's time. I want to come home and take over Mcneil Industries."