
The Disguised Girl: Captivating The Billionaire King
Dasia's twin brother, Gerald, was an e-sports prodigy, the rising star of the Glory team.
But during a crucial moment, he was framed by his own teammates. They orchestrated a trap that completely destroyed his reputation and left his right hand brutally crushed.
Instead of getting him medical help, the club threw him out into the freezing rain, bleeding and disgraced. The manager labeled him useless trash and slapped him with a five-million-dollar termination fee to bleed him dry. Stripped of his pro status, the wealthy bullies at his prep school relentlessly targeted him, mocking his crippled hand and beating him down.
Dasia watched her twin brother cry in his room, his life and dreams shattered by the people he trusted. A violent, suffocating rage boiled in her chest. How could they smile while crushing his hand? Why should the victim be treated like a rotting piece of garbage while the perpetrators get rich and celebrated?
She didn't shed a single tear. She stood in front of the mirror, took a pair of scissors, and ruthlessly hacked off her waist-length hair. She wrapped her chest in coarse medical bandages until her ribs screamed, and pulled on his oversized black hoodie.
"Everything you took from him, I am going to take back with interest."
The girl in the mirror was gone. She was Gerald now. She secretly passed the brutal online tryouts for Glory's biggest rival, the elite Blackflame team, and signed their official contract. The revenge had officially begun.
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Chapter 4
The afternoon sun baked the classroom, casting long shadows across Dasia's desk.
She rested her chin on her hand, spinning a yellow pencil between her fingers. The history teacher droned on about the Industrial Revolution.
Cody sat at the next desk, sweating. He slid a crumpled piece of paper onto Dasia's notebook. It was a crude drawing of the parking lot with stick figures showing their "strategy."
Dasia glanced at the childish scribbles. She picked up the paper, crumpled it into a tight ball, and flicked it with her thumb. It bounced off the wall and landed perfectly in the trash can in the corner.
Cody panicked. He leaned over, his voice a frantic hiss. "Dude, the guys we're fighting are from the vocational school. They bring weapons. They fight dirty."
Dasia let out a slow, bored yawn.
Cody sank back into his chair, groaning. He thought his friend had lost his mind.
The shrill scream of the final bell pierced the air.
Dasia dropped the pencil into her bag. She slung the strap over her shoulder and stood up. Her movements were fluid and completely relaxed.
She walked down the hallway with Cody trailing behind her. Girls whispered as she passed, and boys glared, but no one stepped in her way.
They pushed through the heavy metal fire doors at the back of the school.
The cold wind hit her face, carrying the smell of exhaust fumes and old asphalt. In the far corner of the parking lot, ten guys in leather jackets and ripped jeans were waiting.
The leader, a massive guy with a shaved head, slapped an aluminum baseball bat against his palm. When he saw Cody and Dasia, he threw his head back and laughed.
Cody swallowed hard. His knees shook, but he stepped in front of Dasia, raising his hands to talk them down.
The leader pointed the tip of the bat right at Dasia's face.
"Well, look who it is," the leader sneered. "The trash that got kicked out of Glory. What's wrong, Gerald? Your right hand is crippled, so now your brain is broken too?"
The air around Dasia dropped ten degrees.
The mention of her brother's ruined hand triggered something dark inside her. A physical, suffocating pressure radiated from her body.
She reached out her left hand and pushed Cody aside. She dropped her heavy bag onto the concrete. It hit with a loud thud.
"Who did you call trash?" Dasia asked. Her voice was a whisper, but it carried a terrifying, icy weight.
The leader's face flushed with anger. He gripped the bat with both hands, raised it high, and swung it directly at Dasia's skull. The metal whistled through the air.
Cody squeezed his eyes shut and screamed.
Dasia didn't blink. She tilted her head a fraction of an inch. The bat sliced through the empty air, ruffling the edge of her hood.
Before the leader could pull the bat back, Dasia exploded forward.
Her left hand shot out like a viper. She clamped her fingers around the leader's wrist and twisted violently.
A sickening crack echoed across the lot. The leader dropped the bat and let out a high-pitched shriek of agony.
Dasia caught the bat with her left hand before it hit the ground. In the same fluid motion, she pivoted on her left foot and drove her right heel into the man's stomach.
The impact lifted the two-hundred-pound guy off his feet. He flew backward and crashed onto the hood of a sedan.
The remaining nine guys froze in shock. Then, they roared and rushed her all at once.
Dasia moved like a ghost. She vaulted onto the hood of a Ford pickup truck, using the high ground.
As two guys lunged at her legs, she didn't jump. The tight bandages binding her chest restricted her breathing and core flexibility, making flashy aerial moves impossible. Instead, she dropped her center of gravity, planting her hands on the hood, and swept her right leg in a brutal, grounded arc that shattered their kneecaps. They collapsed, gasping for air.
She landed lightly on the concrete. A guy swung a pipe at her back. She ducked, spun, and drove her left elbow straight into his solar plexus. He dropped like a stone, vomiting onto the asphalt.
It took exactly three minutes.
Ten bodies littered the parking lot, groaning and writhing in pain.
Dasia stood in the center of the carnage. Her breathing was perfectly even. She tossed the aluminum bat. It clattered loudly against the pavement near the leader's face.
Cody was pressed against a car door, his jaw hanging open. He stared at her like she was an alien.
Dasia bent down and picked up her bag. She brushed a speck of dirt off her sleeve.
She looked at the bleeding guys on the ground.
"Scram," she commanded.
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7.2
Betrayed by her sister. Killed by her husband.
Reborn, Sarah returns with one goal-revenge.
This time, she won't be the fool.
And with the Knox, the most dangerous man by her side...
she'll ruin them all, and take back everything that belongs to her.
Promotional line: They killed me once. This time, I'll destroy them first.

7.9
After her twin brother's unexplained death at Alpha Academy, Alexandria Hyde takes his place and his name to uncover the truth. Now living as "Alex," she's thrown into a world of hot, testosterone-fueled Alphas who fight to the brink of death... and she has to survive it while hiding who she really is.
But staying hidden isn't easy–
Not when the Alphas start noticing her.
Not when the truth she's chasing might destroy her first.
And definitely not when they start fighting for her instead.

8.9
Seventeen-year-old Nina Storm has spent her life running from her tragic past, her dormant wolf, and the dreams of a mysterious man she can't escape.
Raised by her protective father after her mother's death, she has never stayed in one place long enough to call it home. But everything changed when they return to their home, the Moonlight Pack.
Nina discovers that her mate is Zane, the pack's Alpha... a bond that defies werewolf laws and the pack's expectations. Their undeniable attraction is dangerous, and their bond threatens to disrupt the fragile balance of power within the pack.
When an attack on the pack shatters her world, Nina loses everything, including her life. But death isn't the end.
Reborn, her dormant wolf awakens giving her a newfound strength and powers, Nina must navigate a world of betrayal, love, and vengeance as she unravels the truth about her family, her mate bond, and the danger threatening to destroy everything she holds dear.

8.3
My husband watched as my skin melted, scalded by boiling soup, yet his hands were busy comforting my attacker. Five years of marriage, built on a foundation of my family's power, crumbled with a single, brutal act of betrayal. He bought me off with a penthouse and a trust fund, but I tore out my IV and threw his charity back in his face.
It was our fifth anniversary, but my husband, Ethan, remained distant, avoiding any talk of Chicago or the mafia protection my family once offered him. He then pushed a black velvet box across the table.
Inside was a Separation and Property Division Agreement, not a diamond. He told me to sign for Ilene's security, offering millions. When I refused, Ilene hurled boiling soup. Ethan shielded her, not me, as the scalding liquid melted my dress.
With second-degree burns, he blamed me, ordering me from our home for Ilene’s comfort. My family saved him, yet he sacrificed my body and marriage for another woman.
The love I felt turned to ash. What kind of debt demanded my flesh and marriage?
I ripped the IV from my arm, hurling his "charity" keys back. My diamond ring placed on the agreement, I walked away. From today on, Ethan, you and I are dead to each other.

9.2
Clara was drowning in student debt and barely making rent when she downloaded a fantasy mobile game to escape reality.
Inside the game, an exiled prince named Alex was freezing to death. Pitying him, she spent her last few dollars on microtransactions to fix his shelter and cure his poison.
But the game was far too real.
Every time she paid, the prince reacted. When she complained aloud about going broke, the in-game army suddenly halted, as if the prince had heard her voice.
Then, the terrifying real-world consequences hit.
Clara woke up to find her water glass and a box of Kleenex had vanished from her locked bedroom overnight.
She frantically searched the tiny apartment, her heart pounding in her chest.
She thought she was losing her mind. Had she thrown them out in her sleep? Was there a stalker hiding in her home?
How could physical objects just disappear into thin air behind a deadbolted door?
Until she looked at her nightstand.
Sitting exactly where her missing items used to be was a glowing, weightless crystal cup that defied all logic.
And on her laptop screen, the exiled prince was carefully holding her Kleenex box, offering a mountain of real gold on an altar.
She hadn't just downloaded a mobile game; she had opened a cross-dimensional trade route with a desperate future king.

9.1
He postponed putting my name on the deed 18 times.
Each time, his mentee Ciera had an “emergency.” Each time, he ran to her.
I watched him give her his prized Montblanc pen—the one he wouldn’t even let me borrow. I saw her post their late nights on Instagram. I ate anniversary dinners alone while he “mentored” her.
Then he bought me a necklace—identical to the one she just flaunted online.
That was when I stopped feeling anything.
I didn’t cry. I didn’t fight. I simply packed two suitcases, resigned from our firm, and booked a one-way ticket to London.
He thinks I’m coming back in a week.
He has no idea I’m gone for good.
Nineteen broken promises. One silent goodbye. And a new life waiting across the ocean.