
The Don's Regret: Losing His Life Saver
For three years, I was the one scrubbing the scent of blood from his hands and holding him while he screamed in pain. I was the one who taught Coleton Barron how to walk again after the car bomb nearly took his legs.
But the moment he reclaimed his seat as Don, I became invisible.
At his recovery gala, he draped his arm around Charly—the woman who fled when he was crippled—and laughed as he told his inner circle I was "just the hired help."
It didn't stop at insults. When Charly faked a fall, he shoved me aside with enough force to crack my skull against the pool edge.
When a bomb went off in a gallery, he looked me in the eye, saw me trapped under debris, and turned his back to carry her to safety instead.
He even held a gun to my head because she lied about me poisoning his soup.
His mother threw a check at me, telling me that tools go back in the box when the job is done. They thought I would beg to stay. They thought I was weak.
I took the five million and vanished without a word.
Three years later, I returned to New York. Not as his nurse, but as the fiancée of the only man Coleton fears.
And when he saw the diamond on my finger, the King of New York finally realized he had thrown away his only lifeline.
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Chapter 2
Arminda POV
The fluorescent hum of the emergency room didn’t just buzz; it drilled straight into the throbbing center of my concussion. I sat on the edge of the paper-covered exam table, my dress still damp and clinging to my skin, reeking of chlorine and humiliation.
The doctor—a man firmly on the Barron payroll—snipped the last thread on the back of my scalp.
“Six stitches,” he muttered, stripping off his latex gloves with a snap. “You have a mild concussion. No sleeping for the next four hours. And stay away from pools.”
He offered no sympathy. In our world, sympathy was a hemorrhage—a weakness to be cauterized.
I slid off the table, the room tilting on its axis. I walked out to the waiting area, clutching the envelope Esther had thrown at me like a severance package. I expected the room to be empty. I expected to be alone.
I wasn’t entirely wrong.
Through the glass doors of the private waiting room, I saw them.
Coleton sat in a plush leather chair, his head buried in his hands. For a fleeting second, a foolish, treacherous part of my heart whispered that he was worried about me. That he cared.
Then I saw Charly.
She was perched on his lap, sobbing into the crook of his neck. There wasn’t a scratch on her.
“It was so scary, Cole,” she whimpered, her voice pitched perfectly to carry through the cracked door. “She looked at me with such hatred. I think she tried to pull me in.”
Coleton stroked her hair, his jaw set in a hard line. “She knows her place now, Charly. Shh.”
“I just feel so unsafe with her in the penthouse,” she added, her voice dropping to a manipulative whisper that slithered through the glass.
I turned away. My stomach churned, not from the concussion, but from the sheer toxicity radiating from that room. It was suffocating.
I pushed through the back exit, stepping into the cold rain. It washed over my face, mingling with the phantom scent of pool water. I pulled my phone out and dialed a number I had saved three years ago. A clinic in Zurich.
“This is Arminda Morse,” I said, my voice steady despite the pounding in my skull. “Is the position still open?”
“Ms. Morse,” the voice answered, surprised. “We didn’t think you’d ever leave New York. Yes. When can you start?”
“Immediately.”
I hung up and hailed a cab. I had to pack. I had to erase myself before they erased me completely.
The penthouse was silent when I arrived. It was a fortress of glass and steel, a gilded cage I had called home for three years. I went straight to my small room off the kitchen. I didn’t take much. Just my clothes, my medical license, and the stethoscope Coleton had given me for Christmas that first year.
I picked up the framed photo on my nightstand. It was candid—Coleton in his wheelchair, me laughing as I pushed him through the garden. He was looking at me in the photo. He looked... human.
I slid the photo out of the frame and ripped it in half. Then I ripped it again.
“Arminda!”
His voice boomed from the main living area. It wasn’t a question. It was a summons.
I froze. I shoved my suitcase under the bed and walked out.
Coleton was on the sprawling leather sofa, clutching his stomach. His face was ashen, sweat beading on his forehead. Charly was in the kitchen, humming a light tune as she stirred a pot.
“My stomach,” Coleton groaned, looking up at me. The arrogance from the pool was gone, replaced by raw, unfiltered pain. “Fix it.”
I walked over, my clinical detachment engaging automatically. I scanned him. Distended abdomen. Pallor. Diaphoresis.
“What did you eat?” I asked.
“Charly made carbonara,” he gritted out.
I looked at Charly. She was pouring heavy cream into the pot, oblivious or uncaring.
“Rich cream, bacon, cheese,” she said proudly. “Comfort food.”
“He has half a stomach because of the surgeries, Charly,” I said, my voice freezing over. “He cannot process heavy dairy or grease. It causes dumping syndrome. It’s agony for him.”
Charly rolled her eyes, setting the spoon down with a clatter. “Oh, please. He’s a grown man, not an invalid. Stop babying him.”
Coleton doubled over, a guttural groan tearing from his throat.
“Coleton,” I said, focusing on him. “Don’t eat anymore. You need enzymes and an antiemetic. I’ll get them.”
“It tastes good,” Coleton gasped, glaring at me as if his pain was my doing. “Charly cooked for me. I’m eating it.”
“It is poison to your system,” I stated flatly.
“Just get the damn pills, Arminda!” he shouted. “Stop lecturing me and do your job.”
I stared at him. He wasn’t just choosing her food; he was choosing her reality. She treated him like a healthy man, and he was willing to suffer physical torture just to validate that fantasy.
“Fine,” I whispered.
I went to the med cabinet, grabbed the enzymes and the painkillers. I walked back and set them on the table. Charly brought a fresh bowl of pasta, placing it in front of him with a sweet, triumphant smile.
“She’s just jealous, baby,” Charly whispered, loud enough for me to hear. “She wants you to be sick so you need her.”
Coleton looked at the pills, then at the pasta. His hand trembled as he picked up the fork.
“Get out of my sight, Arminda,” he muttered, shoving a forkful of heavy cream sauce into his mouth.
I walked back to my room, listening to the sound of him swallowing the food that would hurt him, realizing with a final clarity: he had been poisoned long before tonight.
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What begins as tension and denial soon becomes a desire neither of them can control. But in a house full of secrets, lies, hidden agendas, and a father who will ruin anyone who threatens his legacy and reputation... falling for each other isn't just forbidden. It's dangerous. A love born in the dark may cost them everything, even their family, their future, and each other.

7.2
Lauren Sterling gave up her career to support her boyfriend, Julian Drake, believing his words that he and his family lived for privacy.
But it was nothing but a lie. He had only replaced her with her best friend.
On the day they were supposed to get married, he left her waiting. Out of desperation, Lauren Sterling married a stranger!
Alexander Ashford.
The man who gave her three months to take her revenge.
In a dangerous game where revenge collides with betrayal, dangers and secrets. Will Lauren Sterling survive?

8.4
I signed a prenuptial agreement with a cold-blooded Wall Street predator just to unlock my trust fund and fight my greedy stepmother.
We were nothing more than legal roommates bound by a strict three-year contract.
But to survive the corporate war at my family's company, I skipped my mandatory university finance class and paid a guy to answer the roll call for me.
The stand-in was immediately caught and kicked out by the notoriously ruthless new professor.
That night at dinner, I complained to my contract husband about the professor.
"He's an unreasonable, arrogant dictator who gets off on torturing his students," I complained bitterly.
My husband just calmly cut my steak and listened as I bragged about how I was going to fake-cry and manipulate the professor the next morning.
I even rushed to the faculty office the next day and performed a desperate, tearful apology to an elderly man I assumed was the tyrant.
I thought I had perfectly balanced my corporate war and my academic life. I thought I had fooled everyone.
But when I confidently sat in the front row of the massive lecture hall, the heavy wooden doors pushed open.
The terrifying new professor walked onto the podium and aggressively wrote his name on the chalkboard: Elliot Dillard.
It was my contract husband.
He looked down at me with cold, merciless authority, knowing every single lie I had told, and slowly called my name.

8.8
Mate's VENGEANCE
8.8
To destroy him, I've traded my pride for a maid's uniform.
My plan is simple: infiltrate his estate, seduce him into breaking his royal engagement, and lead his enemies to his doorstep. I want to see his pack burn. I want to see the light leave those storm-grey eyes as how he did to my mate

7.4
Becoming a bride to settle a debt was never part of my dreams.
Yet, my stepbrother's betrayal and a trap party turned my life upside down, shattering my illusions of a joyful marriage. Now, I'm faced with the harsh reality of being married to a ruthless Mafia boss, Alessio Marino.
Can I trust his promises, or will my situation be worse than the abuse I endured from my stepbrother?
With love stripped from my wedding vows, all I can do is cling to hope for God's mercy and summon the strength to navigate this perilous new life.

9.2
I died as the "Queen," an elite assassin who leveled criminal syndicates, only to wake up in a damp trailer smelling of rot and stale tobacco. My new body belonged to Arleen Brewer, a malnourished teenager with a failing heart and a life defined by systemic poverty.
A flickering blue light in my mind identified itself as a System, offering a devil's bargain: survive this life, and I could resurrect my dead brother, Dusty. To earn his return, I had to endure my alcoholic stepfather’s rage and a body so weak it struggled to even stand.
At my elite prep school, the rich kids treated me like a walking corpse, covering my desk in trash and mocking my heart condition. Even my fiancé, Shen Wenyu, publicly branded me as "unstable" and stood by while the school's golden boy tried to humiliate me.
They expected me to wither away, but they didn't realize a wolf was now wearing the sheep's skin. I shattered the bully’s nose with a metal tray and tore up my engagement contract in front of a stunned auditorium, only to be met with immediate threats of lawsuits and expulsion.
I didn't understand how the original Arleen survived this suffocating injustice without breaking, but as the Queen, I was ready to turn this school into a war zone.
Then Hale Clemons, the most dangerous man in the city, cornered me outside the principal's office. He saw through my mask, realizing his very presence was the only thing keeping my failing heart from stopping.
"I’m not buying your loyalty," he said, handing me a gold-embossed card. "I’m investing in a weapon."
I took the deal, ready to use his power to bring my brother back and bury everyone who ever looked down on Arleen Brewer.