
The Discarded Heiress Returns
Three years. That's how long Evelyn Carter survived in the dark, sold to the highest bidder. But coming home wasn't a miracle-it was an execution. The world has already passed its verdict. The headlines call her a "Contaminated Ghost." Her family calls her a "Stain." To save their corporate empire, the Carters stripped Evelyn of her name, her bedroom, and her dignity, handing her fiancé to her sister like a consolation prize. They expected her to wither. They expected her to crawl into a corner and die. They didn't expect her to have a nine-figure fortune and a lethal appetite for retribution. Evelyn doesn't want an apology-she wants a throne. And she'll use the only man dangerous enough to help her build it: Dr. Lucien Hale. A surgical genius with ice in his veins and a reputation that keeps the city in a chokehold, Lucien is a man who doesn't believe in mercy-only results. He is untouchable, unpredictable, and entirely cold... until he marries the woman the world discarded. When the Carter empire finally begins to bleed, they come crawling to his door, begging for a cure. Lucien doesn't offer a scalpel. He pulls his wife onto his lap, his fingers tracing the scars her family tried so hard to bury. He presses a lingering kiss to Evelyn's hand and smiles at the people who broke her. "Tell me, Robert," Lucien says, his voice a low, terrifying vibration. "Where exactly do you think the stain is? Because from where I'm sitting, the only rot in this room... is you." The truth didn't set her free. It gave her the power to burn them all.
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Chapter 3
Evelyn knew the verdict before a single word was uttered. It was in the way her mother stood-spine rigid, chin tilted, a calculated three feet of distance maintained between them.
It wasn't the posture of a grieving mother. It was the posture of a woman managing a PR crisis.
"Evelyn," Eleanor Carter's voice was clipped, devoid of the warmth that usually flowed toward Iris. "It's just you. That space... the outbuilding... it's enough."
Evelyn didn't respond.
Three years in a locked shed. Sleeping on damp earth beside animals that were treated better than she was. She had hallucinated this homecoming a thousand times-the door swinging open, the smell of her mother's lavender perfume, the words you're safe now.
Instead, she had escaped one hell only to find herself in another. And this one had her family's name on the gate.
"This is wrong," Ethan snapped, his sudden outburst shattering the stifling silence. "Aunt Eleanor-she's your biological daughter. You can't put her in a kennel."
Iris's hand tightened on Ethan's sleeve. Her voice was a soft, jagged blade. "Why so emotional, Ethan? Is it because you still love her?"
The room turned to ice.
Ethan's gaze flicked to Evelyn. For a split second, he looked like the boy she had once loved-the one who had promised to protect her forever. But then his eyes took in her sallow skin, her ragged clothes, and the dark rumors that clung to her like a shroud.
The man who had once been her world looked away. "I don't," he said, his voice flat. "I just... I feel sorry for her."
"Pity is fine," Iris purred, leaning her head on his shoulder. "But pity doesn't make her healthy. Letting her stay at all is an act of charity, given the circumstances."
Charity. As if Evelyn hadn't once owned half the ground Iris was standing on.
"You can use the servant's bathroom downstairs," Eleanor added, her tone softening as if she were doing Evelyn a massive favor. "Stay in the back house for now. We'll... discuss a more permanent arrangement once things settle."
The downstairs bathroom. For staff and guests. The family lived on the second floor, behind reinforced doors.
Every word was a precision strike. Evelyn understood now. They had already mourned her-quietly, privately-and in the void she left behind, Iris had taken root.
Evelyn didn't argue. She walked to the velvet sofa, sat down, and faced them with a calm that made Iris's smile falter.
"The kennel is yours," Evelyn said evenly. "I'll take the couch."
"What are you doing?" Eleanor's voice rose an octave.
Evelyn didn't answer. She lay down, closed her eyes, and let the silence expose them. She wasn't a daughter; she was an inconvenience.
By evening, the house could no longer ignore the "stain" in the living room. Finally, Eleanor relented, tossing a stack of clothes onto the sofa. "Go shower. There's a maid's room downstairs. You'll stay there."
Evelyn opened her eyes. She sat up and looked at the silk fabric. "These aren't mine."
"They're Iris's," Eleanor said, refusing to meet her gaze. "Your room was... cleared during the renovations."
"Renovations?"
"We combined your old suite with Iris's. She needed a larger walk-in closet for the wedding prep."
Evelyn let out a short, dry laugh. It wasn't humor; it was the sound of a final tie snapping. "So you assumed I was dead, and within a year, you turned my life into a shoe rack."
Eleanor didn't flinch. She returned a moment later with a jewelry case. Iris followed, her eyes bright and predatory.
"I kept these for you," Iris said sweetly, holding out a diamond bracelet. "Now that you're back... consider them a gift."
Charity again.
Evelyn didn't touch the jewels. She didn't see memories; she saw liquid assets.
"Thank you," Evelyn said lightly. "Does it hurt? Giving back things you got used to wearing?"
Iris's smile didn't reach her eyes. She touched the ruby pendant at her own throat-the one Ethan had given Evelyn for her twentieth birthday. "Which one do you like? I can help you put it on."
"That one," Evelyn pointed at the ruby. "I like that one."
Iris went still. Her fingers flew to the necklace. "Ethan gave this to me. It's... special."
"Evelyn," Eleanor warned. "Don't be unreasonable."
"And she wasn't?" Evelyn's voice dropped. "When she took what was mine?"
No one spoke. Evelyn gathered the jewelry case and walked away. She didn't fight for a seat at their table. She didn't need their bread. She just needed their gold.
The next morning, the Carter house felt lighter. The "problem" was gone.
"Where is she?" Iris asked over breakfast, her voice laced with fake concern. "She has nothing. What if she gets into trouble?"
"Probably gone to beg some old friends for help," Robert said, not looking up from his paper. "Once the rumors reach them, she'll be back with her tail between her legs."
But Evelyn was miles away.
She spent the morning at a high-end pawn shop. No negotiation. No sentiment. She sold every diamond, every gold link, every scrap of the Carter name.
She wasn't selling ornaments. She was funding a war.
She changed into a sharp, understated suit, cut her hair into a blunt, lethal bob, and bought a burner phone. Then, she logged into her hidden investment account-a legacy from her grandmother that her parents hadn't known about.
The balance had grown. Seven figures.
Money didn't judge. Money didn't care if you'd slept in a shed.
At the private hospital, she booked a full forensic medical exam. Not for her family, but for herself. She needed to know exactly what the three years had taken.
She stepped into a crowded elevator.
In the corner stood a man in a pristine white coat.
Lucien Hale.
His gaze flicked to her, and for the first time, a shadow of surprise crossed his unreadable features. She didn't greet him. She didn't owe him politeness.
The elevator surged. A nurse pushed from behind, and Evelyn stumbled, her shoulder brushing Lucien's chest. She felt the hard muscle beneath the lab coat-a wall of cold, clinical power.
"Sorry," she said curtly, regaining her balance.
Lucien's eyes dropped to the lab forms in her hand. "Still checking for ghosts?"
"Unlike your performance yesterday," Evelyn replied, her eyes meeting his with a defiance that would have withered any other man, "I prefer certainty over a 'professional opinion'."
Lucien's gaze sharpened. "You have a dangerous talent for making enemies out of your only allies."
"Then stop giving me reasons to doubt you," she countered.
The elevator climbed in a thick, vibrating silence.
As the doors opened, Lucien leaned in, his voice a low vibration near her ear. "Now I understand why your family doesn't believe you. You're far too sharp to be a victim, Evelyn. And people hate being reminded that they failed to kill you."
The air between them turned sharp enough to cut. Evelyn stepped out without looking back, but she could feel his eyes on her spine all the way down the hall.
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8.6
Seven nights with the devil to pay a debt. One truth that will burn the world down.
Sienna Blackwood was never part of the deal until her step-brother gambled with her life to save his own.
Now, she is collateral in a brutal game of revenge. The collector is Dante Moretti, a billionaire with a fifteen-year grudge and a thirst for Blackwood blood.
He doesn't want her money; he demands seven nights of her total surrender.
But in the shadows of a Manhattan penthouse, hatred turns into a lethal obsession. When a syndicate ambush forces them to flee, the contract becomes a race for survival across the Atlantic.
Hunted for the three-year-old secret heir in their arms, Sienna and Dante must navigate a world of blood oaths and forced alliances.
In a game where every kiss is a tactical error, Sienna must decide: is her step-brother's rival the monster who shattered her life, or the only man who can save it?

7.5
Five years of a fake marriage to a billionaire.
Christi thought she was a wealthy wife-until City Hall told her the truth.
No marriage license. No legal rights. Nothing but a lie.
Her husband cheated on her for four years.
His entire family mocked her, used her, and planned to trap her with a baby.
She was ready to ruin them all.
Then a secret changed everything:
Her late parents were DARPA elites. She is the sole heir to $50 billion.
There's only one catch-marry Cornelius Gregory, Wall Street's ruthless paralyzed tycoon.
She signs the contract in an instant.
Freeze their accounts. Destroy the Rivera family.
The game is over for them.
And the queen has just arrived.

9.2
After his father passes away, Darnell becomes the new heir to King Hotels. But his grandfather-who owns shares of the hotels-wants Darnell to marry to earn his (Grandfather's) shares before his death.
After her father's death, Sasha and her family are left to deal with the burden he leaves behind-a huge debt owed to loan sharks.
Darnell approaches Sasha with a two-month marriage contract for five million dollars-enough to pay off her father's debt and be free from her traditional mother. She accepts.
Things are complicated when grandfather doesn't die after two months, and Sasha is being extorted by loan sharks. She and Darnell must stay married for their benefit, despite their lack of affection for each other. Eventually, they fall in love.
But drama unfolds when family secrets are exposed, old lovers resurface, and unknown families appear. Darnell and Sasha must decide if their love is worth it all.

9.3
Adrian Blackwood , billionaire CEO of Blackwood Holdings, Alpha of the Blackwood Pack... Mated to a weak, broken and wolfless female?!! No way! This is impossible, this must a sick prank by the moon goddess and fate.

7.1
"You're mine now, Brittany." He whispered in my ears. I froze. I don't remember telling him my name.
Zayne...Zayne...oh God. Now, I remember why his name sounded so familiar...but it was too late, I thought as I lost consciousness.
__
Brittany's life has been full of heartbreaks and pain, from her father's death to her mother's manipulation and abuse, while using religion as a weapon.
She grews up with fear, guarding her virginity like a cloak because of her mother's constant words in her ears.
Until she meets Zayne, known throughout New York as the CEO for his ruthlessness, he turns out to be Mafia too.
Zayne claims her as his refusing to let her go. Will Brittany grow to love him and give him a chance after what he did to her?
What happens when she's the only one who can save him from enemies flocking around him?
__
"I'm letting you go, doll." He mumbled as he held on to me, his eyes growing weak.
My heart twisted in my chest as tears fell down my cheeks.
No... "I don't regret a thing. You taking me was the best thing that ever happened to me."

9.4
For three years, I was nothing but a ghost in my marriage, a pathetic stand-in forced to dress exactly like my billionaire husband's dead fiancée.
On our third anniversary, he left me to face armed intruders in our remote estate alone.
When I called him begging for help, he mocked me for faking a home invasion for attention and hung up to comfort his mistress.
The nightmare only got worse. The next night, my stepmother and half-sister drugged me at a family gala, trying to ruin me by handing me over to a sleazy producer.
I escaped into a pitch-black hotel suite, only to be overpowered by a drugged stranger in the dark.
Traumatized and covered in bruises, I secretly took an emergency contraceptive pill.
When my husband found the crumpled receipt on the floor, he didn't ask if I was hurt or where the violent marks on my neck came from.
"You cheap whore. You broke the loyalty contract."
He drafted the divorce papers immediately, stripping me of every penny, and ordered me thrown onto the street.
He thought without his wealth, I wouldn't survive a day in New York and would come crawling back to him like a dog.
I didn't shed a single tear. I calmly signed the papers, dropped my diamond ring on his glass table, and walked out.
What my arrogant ex-husband didn't know was that before I became his obedient shadow, I was "Lan"—the legendary, anonymous fashion designer the entire world was desperately looking for.
Now, I was taking back my empire.