
The Genius Doctor's Perfect Fake Death
To escape my psychopathic, controlling lover, I faked my death in a Syrian war zone.
Thirty-seven reconstructive surgeries later, the terrified girl he kept locked in a basement was gone. I returned to New York as an untouchable neurosurgeon, Dr. Alivia Clay.
I only came back to save his grandfather—the one man who helped me escape.
I thought my flawless new face was the perfect armor. But the moment Collis Duncan saw me, he cornered me against the hospital wall.
He didn't recognize my face, but he recognized my panic. He trapped me in his arms, inhaling the faint scent of vanilla and orange blossom on my skin.
"You smell exactly like a ghost I used to know," he whispered.
Worse, a traumatized, mute little boy with Collis's exact gray eyes stumbled into me in the hallway.
The boy clutched my white coat and handed me a flashcard with a crude drawing of a woman.
"Mama."
My blood turned to ice. Five years ago, I was told my newborn baby burned to ashes in that medical tent.
How could this boy be alive? Why did Collis have my son while I mourned a pile of dust?
Now, Collis is ordering a microscopic background check, desperate to tear my fake life to the ground and cage me again.
But I'm not running anymore. Once I finish this surgery, I'm taking my son back.
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Chapter 5
The deafening slam of the heavy oak door echoed in the room, cutting off Collis’s violent exit.
Alivia sat in the plastic chair for three seconds. She stared at the crescent-shaped bloody indentations her fingernails had left in her palms.
She uncurled her fingers. She forced her spine straight and stood up. Her face was a blank, emotionless mask. She reached into the pocket of her white coat and pulled out her stethoscope.
Eleanor rushed over. Her face was pale. She reached out and squeezed Alivia’s shoulder, mouthing the words, Are you okay?
Alivia didn’t speak. She gave a single, tight shake of her head. She leaned over the bed and began to meticulously check Theodore Duncan’s vital signs.
She looked down at the frail, skeletal old man hooked up to the machines. A complicated knot of emotion tightened in her chest.
Five years ago, when she was locked in that basement, it was this old man who had slipped a burner phone and a stack of cash through the crack in the door. Theodore Duncan had given her the means to escape his grandson’s madness.
She had risked everything to come back to New York for one reason: to use her hands to save his life. It was a debt of blood.
Alivia gently lifted Theodore’s eyelids, shining a penlight into his pupils. Her touch was incredibly soft, betraying a tenderness she couldn’t completely hide.
Outside the room, in the darkened hallway, Collis hadn’t left.
He stood perfectly still in front of the one-way observation glass built into the wall. The room was not fully soundproofed; through the glass, he could hear muffled, unintelligible murmurs—the beeping of monitors, the shuffle of feet—but not distinct words. Still, he watched.
He watched the way she moved. He watched the gentle, almost reverent way her fingers brushed against his grandfather’s cheek. That sickening, paralyzing sense of familiarity coiled around his heart again, squeezing tight.
Inside the room, Alivia reached down to adjust the IV line taped to Theodore’s bruised hand. Her knuckles accidentally brushed against his dry, papery skin.
Suddenly, Theodore’s index finger twitched.
It was a violent, spastic jerk.
Alivia froze. She instantly dropped the IV line and leaned down, bringing her face inches from the old man’s.
Theodore’s pale, cracked lips began to tremble. His jaw worked weakly. A faint, raspy sound rattled deep in his throat.
Alivia turned her head, pressing her ear right next to his mouth to catch the sound over the hiss of the ventilator.
Theodore pushed the air past his vocal cords with agonizing effort.
“Asha…”
The whisper was broken, barely a breath of air, but the two syllables hit Alivia’s eardrum like a gunshot.
Her eyes blew wide open. Her entire body went rigid. The breath was knocked completely out of her lungs.
Behind the one-way glass, Collis couldn’t hear the word—the sound was too faint, lost in the ventilator’s hiss. *But he saw Alivia lean in. He saw the exact millisecond her face contorted in absolute, naked horror. He saw her body freeze in a state of pure shock. And he saw the old man’s lips form a single, unmistakable shape: Ah‑sha. *
The suspicion in Collis’s brain instantly ignited into a raging inferno.
He didn’t hesitate. He shoved the heavy door open and stormed back into the room.
He moved with terrifying speed. He shoved Eleanor out of the way with his forearm, not even looking at her. He marched straight to the side of the bed and stopped inches from Alivia.
His eyes were wild, boring holes into her skull.
“What did he just say?” Collis demanded. His voice was a harsh, guttural bark.
Alivia’s heart was hammering so fast it felt like a hummingbird trapped in her ribcage. Her brain scrambled, desperately trying to calculate a way out of the trap.
She forced the shock off her face. She pulled the icy, clinical mask back on.
She stood up straight, meeting Collis’s furious glare without flinching.
“The patient is experiencing delirium,” Alivia said smoothly. Her voice didn’t waver. “He is vocalizing meaningless syllables as he drifts between states of consciousness.”
“Bullshit.”
Collis’s hand shot out. His large fingers wrapped around Alivia’s wrist. He squeezed. The grip was brutal, grinding her delicate bones together.
Alivia winced, a sharp hiss of pain escaping her lips.
Collis yanked her forward, pulling her face inches from his.
“I saw your face,” he snarled, his breath hot against her skin. “I saw the way you looked. He said a name. I saw his lips. He called for Asha. Didn’t he?”
The pain in her wrist was excruciating, but it cleared her mind.
Alivia glared at him. She let a look of utter disgust cross her features.
“Who is Asha?” Alivia asked, her tone dripping with condescension. “Your ex-wife? Your mistress? I don’t care. I am a dual‑board‑certified physician—critical care and neurosurgery. I care about his brainwave activity, not his hallucinations. ”
With a sudden, violent jerk, Alivia ripped her wrist out of his grip.
She snatched a thick manila folder from the end of the bed. She slammed it hard against the center of Collis’s chest.
“Look at the CT scan,” she snapped, her voice echoing loudly in the room. “Look at the swelling in the frontal lobe. It causes auditory and vocal hallucinations. Read the science before you assault my staff.”
Collis looked down at the folder pressed against his chest. He looked back at the heart monitor. The jagged green line was steady. Theodore’s lips were still.
Collis slowly took the folder. His dark eyes shifted back to Alivia. They were cold, calculating, and filled with a lethal promise.
He didn’t say a word. He just stared at her, letting her know this was far from over.
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9.1
My husband, Dante Moretti, the feared Underboss, signed the divorce papers I slipped him without a glance. Too busy texting his true love, Sofia, he was blind to the annulment decree ending everything. The Reaper couldn't see the death of his own marriage.
For three years, I was Elena, his silent wife, the "Caged Canary," cleaning his messes while meticulously planning my escape from our loveless world.
He dismissed me for Sofia's every whim, publicly shaming me after a past love letter was read, then abandoning me again for her fake crisis.
That night, he violently shoved me against a wall, leaving me bleeding and concussed, rushing instead to protect Sofia. Discarded and injured, my invisible love became a weapon against me.
His crushing blindness, the cold realization I was a mere placeholder, fueled a profound injustice. How could he be so lethal, yet oblivious to his wife, favoring the one who betrayed him?
With chilling resolve, I uploaded Sofia's confession, initiated a massive financial transfer dismantling his empire, and staged my own death. Under a new identity, I fled to San Francisco, ready to build my power, far from his bloody, deceitful world.

8.3
EDEN
8.3
Elianila, an AI Architect, is part of an elite team tasked with designing a global system meant to prevent threats, manage disasters, and distribute resources to vulnerable regions. After five years of tireless work with her colleagues, she uncovers disturbing anomalies, code-named, X-variables, that flag individuals according to criteria she never programmed.
As Elianila digs deeper to understand what the X-variables measure and where their origin, she finds herself in direct conflict with the authorities. Soon, the System marks her and her daughter as threats - targets to be eliminated.
With a small band of colleagues and dissidents, Elianila goes on the run, hiding in places beyond the Systems reach. As they evade surveillance, they race against time to warn others, expose the truth, and fight back against the omnipresent authority of the System.

8.0
Scarlett Hayes thought marrying James Whitmore would finally make her family see her as more than a burden.
Instead, it destroyed her life.
Framed for crimes she didn't commit, betrayed by the people she trusted most, and sentenced to prison while pregnant, Scarlett lost everything in a single night.
Then came the cruelest blow of all.
After giving birth in chains, she was told her baby had died.
The people responsible believed she would spend the rest of her life rotting behind bars.
They were wrong.
Five years later, Scarlett returns.
No longer the discarded daughter of the Hayes family. No longer the broken woman they left behind.
Now she is Commander Scarlett Hayes-a decorated war hero, the unseen force behind a global intelligence empire, and a woman powerful enough to make governments tremble.
She comes back for one reason only: revenge.
Her ex-husband, the stepsister who stole her life, and the family who buried her alive are about to learn exactly what happens when a woman with nothing left to lose takes back everything they stole.
But as Scarlett tears through the secrets of her past, one truth threatens to change everything-
the child she mourned for years may not be dead.
And the mysterious man connected to the night that changed her life has been watching from the shadows all along.

9.7
Giana woke up drugged and burning with fever in a luxurious hotel suite. Standing before her was Cornel Stark, the most ruthless billionaire in New York.
Memories of her past life stabbed into her brain. In that life, her adoptive family and her fiancé Gary had stolen her inheritance and left her to die a brutal, agonizing death.
She also remembered how fighting Cornel only made him more violent. So this time, she didn't scream.
She endured his brutal punishment, escaped the moment he let his guard down, and swallowed a Plan B pill on the freezing streets.
Returning to her adoptive family's mansion, she faced the people who had destroyed her. Her fiancé and her stepsister put on masks of fake concern, secretly mocking her.
Instead of throwing a useless tantrum like before, Giana deliberately threw herself down the steep wooden stairs.
She smashed her head against the marble floor, using her own blood to shatter their plans and win back her mother's trust.
She thought she had finally taken control. She was ready to crush the people who had betrayed her and live for herself.
But she didn't understand why the billionaire she had just escaped was suddenly turning her life upside down.
When she woke up in the hospital, her room wasn't filled with her family's fake tears, but an ocean of blood-red roses.
The heavy door swung open, and Cornel Stark walked in, his gray eyes locking onto her with a dark, predatory hunger.
"Remember this feeling, Giana. Every breath you take belongs to me now."

9.8
Three women, three brothers, a single, crumpled dollar bill.
Alina's world shatters the moment she's auctioned off-and claimed by the powerful Hawthorne brothers.
Thrown into Adrian Hawthorne's cold, dangerous world, she becomes his to control... his to protect... and, terrifyingly, his to desire. He's ruthless, possessive, and hiding secrets that could destroy them both. But the deeper she falls into his world, the harder it becomes to tell if she's his prisoner-or something far more dangerous.
Because the Hawthorne brothers don't just take.
They keep.
Viviane has spent her life surviving, so when Julian Hawthorne "buys" her freedom, she knows better than to trust it. Men like him don't save people-they collect them. But Julian isn't as simple as he pretends to be, and the deeper she's pulled into his world, the more dangerous it becomes to walk away.
Especially when she realizes she might be the only thing he's ever been willing to fight for.
Lena doesn't belong to anyone-and she intends to keep it that way. Brilliant, guarded, and hiding more than anyone suspects, she enters Lucien Hawthorne's world on her own terms. But Lucien doesn't play fair, and he doesn't let go.
When her past comes crashing back, Lena is forced to face the one thing she's been running from: trusting someone who could destroy her... or save her.
Three women. Three choices.Stay. Fight.
Or burn it all down.
Because being sold was only the beginning.

9.4
My Alpha mate abandoned me three years ago, leaving me as a disgraced Omega to raise our two children in a freezing, ruined hovel.
To keep them from starving, I was forced into a humiliating deal with a rogue wolf named Jax, who stole our pack rations and demanded my young son as payment.
The entire pack shunned me, my mother-in-law treated me like dirt, and my children lived in constant fear.
When I finally awakened my ancient Luna bloodline to fight off Jax and feed my kids, Ryker suddenly returned.
But he didn't come to save us. He blasted our door off its hinges, his eyes burning with a murderous rage.
He ignored our starving reality and accused me of selling our bloodline to the rogue.
"Where is the rogue? Who did you trade my bloodline to?!"
I had endured beatings, starvation, and utter humiliation just to keep his children breathing.
I had bled to protect our family. Yet, the moment he returned, he believed the lies of our tormentor and looked at me with the intent to kill.
Why was I the villain in the story of my own survival?
As his powerful inner wolf suddenly whined in submission for the magical food I had cooked, his Alpha command faltered into deep confusion.
He ordered me not to leave his sight until I explained everything.
But looking at the mate who had abandoned us, my mind was crystal clear.
The real question wasn't whether I would leave, but whether he was still worthy of letting me stay.