
The Heart That Gave Up, Found Its Way
My husband stood me up on the biggest night of my career—my first solo art exhibition.
I found him on the news, shielding another woman from a storm of cameras while the entire gallery watched my world collapse.
His text was a final, cold slap in the face: "Kacie needs me. You'll be fine."
For years, he'd called my art a "hobby," forgetting it was the foundation of his billion-dollar company. He had made me invisible.
So I called my lawyer with a plan to use his arrogance against him.
"Make the divorce papers look like a boring IP release form," I told her. "He'll sign anything to get me out of his office."
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Chapter 5
Aryana Vance POV:
The Boeing 737 dropped violently in the thunderstorm, the sudden weightlessness tearing a gasp from my throat.
My fingers dug into the worn leather of the armrest, my knuckles turning a stark, bloodless white. For four years, every aspect of my life—from the people I spoke to down to the exact shade of silk I wore—had been strictly controlled by Cameron. This sudden physical loss of control in the turbulent air brought all of that suffocating panic rushing back to the surface. I couldn't breathe. I squeezed my eyes shut, waiting for the crash.
Then, the landing gear slammed heavily onto the tarmac.
A harsh, grating screech echoed through the cabin as the brakes engaged. The plane shuddered, slowed, and finally stabilized. The rigid tension in my spine snapped, leaving me limp against the seat.
"Welcome to Oregon," the captain's voice crackled over the intercom.
I opened my eyes and looked out the scratched oval window. Gray, diagonal streaks of rain lashed against the glass. The sky was the color of bruised iron. I stared at the bleak, wet tarmac, and for the first time in years, the corners of my mouth lifted into a genuine, unforced smile.
I followed the herd of exhausted passengers out of the cramped cabin. The moment I stepped onto the jet bridge, the cold, damp Pacific Northwest air filled my lungs. It didn't smell like the filtered, temperature-controlled oxygen of the penthouse. It smelled like wet asphalt and freedom. I took a deep, greedy breath.
At the baggage claim, I didn't stand off to the side waiting for an assistant to handle my luggage. I stood right against the metal edge of the carousel, my eyes tracking the black rubber belt.
When my bag appeared, I grabbed the handle and hauled it off. It was a faded, washed-out canvas duffel I had used in college. I had kept it hidden in the deepest, darkest corner of my walk-in closet for years, buried behind rows of thousands-dollar designer gowns. It was heavy, and the strap dug into my shoulder, but I didn't care.
I bypassed the luxury black-car pickup zone completely. I walked straight out into the terminal and found the cheapest rental car counter available.
Using the fake ID Isabella had procured for me, I rented a beat-up, gray Subaru. When I pulled the handle, the car door let out a teeth-setting squeak of rusted metal.
I slid into the driver's seat. There was a dark, crusty coffee stain on the passenger seat, and the floor mats smelled like old dog hair and damp earth. I ran my hands over the cracked plastic steering wheel. I didn't feel disgusted. I felt grounded. The roughness was real.
I twisted the key in the ignition. The engine coughed, sputtered, and finally roared to life. I slammed my foot on the gas pedal and merged into the heavy curtain of Portland rain.
Two hours later, the muddy, winding mountain roads led me deep into a forest of towering Douglas firs. The Subaru crunched to a halt in front of a cluster of wooden cabins.
I stepped out. My boots sank straight into the wet, dark mud, coating the soles instantly. I didn't wipe them off. I dragged my heavy canvas bag toward the small management office.
The resident manager, an older woman with a thick flannel shirt, handed me a rusted brass key. She pointed a calloused finger toward the very edge of the property, where a small cabin sat isolated in the shadows of the trees.
I pushed the wooden door open. The hinges groaned. A thick, musty smell of rotting wood and damp moss hit my face. The interior was brutally simple: a narrow single bed with a thin mattress, and a heavily scarred drafting table.
I dropped the canvas bag onto the floorboards. It landed with a heavy thud. I collapsed onto the edge of the rock-hard bed and let out a long, shuddering breath.
This poverty, this utter lack of luxury, gave me a profound sense of safety. There were no hidden cameras here. No silent housekeepers reporting my every move. No monogrammed towels bearing the Aether Group logo.
My thumb instinctively drifted to my left ring finger. I rubbed the bare skin. It felt incredibly light. The heavy, five-carat custom pink diamond that had weighed my hand down for years was sitting on a walnut table in San Francisco.
I dug into my coat pocket and pulled out my custom-made, encrypted smartphone. The screen lit up, flashing a weather notification for San Francisco. Sunny. Seventy-two degrees.
I didn't hesitate. I powered the device off. I took the back off one of my earrings and used the sharp metal post to pop the SIM card tray open.
I walked over to the small window, forced the swollen wooden frame up, and stared down at the muddy drainage ditch below. I pinched the tiny piece of plastic—the chip that connected me to the identity of "Cameron Vance's wife"—and flicked it into the rushing, dirty water.
From my bag, I pulled out an untraceable prepaid SIM card I had bought with cash at a convenience store. I slid it into a cheap, secondhand phone.
I turned it on. The screen flickered to life, showing a weak, single bar of signal. Staring at that faint connection, a sharp, violent thrill of relief washed over me. I had severed the rotting limb. I was finally free.
***
Cameron Vance POV:
The massive crystal chandelier above me fractured the light into blinding, sharp prisms across the Geneva ballroom.
I stood by the floor-to-ceiling windows, one hand shoved into the pocket of my bespoke Savile Row suit. Below me, the city lights of Geneva glittered like scattered diamonds. I looked down at them with cold satisfaction.
I had just ruthlessly absorbed the largest AI competitor in Europe. The ink on the merger was dry. The market would open tomorrow to the news of my absolute monopoly.
A wave of heavy, sweet perfume cut through the crisp air. Kacie walked up beside me, her hips swaying deliberately in a tight, fire-engine red dress that left very little to the imagination.
She held out a crystal flute of Dom Pérignon. As she passed it to me, her manicured fingers intentionally brushed against the back of my hand, lingering for a fraction of a second.
I didn't pull away. I took the glass, my eyes never leaving the city below. I allowed her proximity. I allowed her obvious, desperate attempts to please me. It had nothing to do with desire, and everything to do with power. I enjoyed the absolute submission, the way she, and everyone else in this room, looked up to me as if I were a god.
"Congratulations, Cam," Kacie laughed softly, her voice dripping with calculated sweetness. "You've expanded the empire again. Nobody can touch you."
I raised the champagne to my lips and tilted my head back. The cold, expensive liquid burned down my throat. My Adam's apple bobbed. A cold, arrogant smirk pulled at the corner of my mouth.
I swirled the remaining gold liquid in the glass, lowering my voice to a pitch only I could hear.
"To my perfect world."
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9.5
My boyfriend, Jefferson, convinced me to give up my Yale scholarship for him. He was my secret, my escape from the shame of my mother's past, and I threw away my future for our love.
Then, at a gala, he publicly announced his engagement to Aubrey Carroll-the girl who made my high school years a living hell.
He trapped me in his mansion, forcing me to become her personal servant. She tortured me daily, culminating in her brutally killing our dog, Charlie, with a garden trowel.
When her friends arrived, they joined in, stripping me half-naked and live-streaming my panic attack for the world to see.
The man who once promised to protect me watched as they destroyed me.
But as I lay bleeding out on the floor, it wasn't an ambulance that arrived. It was the private security of Alexzander Stevens-my estranged, billionaire grandfather.
He revealed I was his sole heiress, and now, we were going to make them pay for every last tear.

7.3
Eloise was the untouchable Brandt family heiress, just one audition away from landing a lead movie role and escaping her golden cage.
But overnight, her family's empire completely collapsed.
With her father dying of heart failure, her mother forced her to beg the only man who could save them: Christian Clarke.
Christian was the ruthless billionaire who had publicly humiliated Eloise in college, ripping up her love letter in front of a laughing crowd.
Now, he tossed a fifty-million-dollar acquisition contract on the table.
"What exactly is the Brandt heiress putting up for sale today?"
To secure her father's medical care, Eloise was forced to sign a suffocating marriage contract, selling herself as a corporate tax shield.
He moved her into his freezing penthouse and treated her like a purchased asset. He mocked her attempts to cook him dinner, yet pinned her against the wall with punishing, possessive kisses whenever she tried to pull away.
Eloise's pride was entirely shattered.
She didn't understand why he was doing this. If he hated her so much and only wanted revenge, why did his touch carry such an agonizing, desperate heat?
Determined to survive, she went to her final audition and miraculously won the lead role, crying tears of joy because she had finally earned something on her own.
She had no idea that the cold-blooded monster sleeping beside her had just secretly threatened to destroy all of Hollywood to give it to her.

8.3
He laid me on the sheets, climbed over me, caged me with his arms. "Last chance to run," he said, voice low."I need the money," I whispered, feeling so tiny in his arms."You're soaking," he muttered. "Virgin or not, your pussy wants this."I moaned, looking away, couldn't help it,"Eyes on me, sweetheart," he pushed his tip in slowly."Fuck," he groaned. "So tight."He fucked me like he was claiming something. "Come for me," he whispered in my ears, moving faster."Damien," I cried out his name as I came."That's it," he growled. After a long minute he pulled out slowly. "One night," he said again, almost like a reminder....weeks later, I walked through the quiet hall of my school. A massive portrait stared back at me.Damien BlackwoodPrincipal Benefactor and OwnerColumbia University.Same man who'd just taken my virginity for money. My stomach dropped. "Oh fuck... what have I done?"

7.3
Lukas Reiner built his life based off a promise 9 years ago with Viktor Volkov... the only person who actually saw him and knew him for what he actually was. They dreamed of the same future, the same ice, the same victory together. Until Viktor disappeared without a word, leaving Lukas behind with nothing but silence, rain... and feelings he never got to confess.
Now, Lukas is at the top of college... Captain, prodigy and untouchable on ice until Viktor comes back.
Colder and older, acting like the past never existed.
Their reunion explodes into violence, but being forced to work together drags them into something far more dangerous than hate.
The tension turns into stolen moments and those moments turn into a habit but before either of them can stop it, the line between resentment and desire begins to blur.
Lukas never let go of the past.
Viktor never planned to face it.
But on the ice, there's nowhere left to run.

9.2
When Alma's father stood in front of the bulldozers to protest, the energy company's thugs beat him half to death in the mud.
Instead of arresting the attackers, the police handcuffed her bleeding father and threw him into a cruiser.
"Stay back, kid," the officer barked, shoving Alma away.
Her father was denied bail and framed for assaulting an officer. The corrupt mayor just smiled and told her not to cause a scene. Meanwhile, the company mailed her weeping mother a severance check that barely covered a month of groceries.
Alma was forced to watch her family be completely destroyed by men with money and power.
Kneeling in the cold dirt where her father's blood had spilled, she didn't shed a single tear. The panic in her chest died, replaced by a cold, absolute hatred.
She realized that crying wouldn't do anything. In this world, justice didn't exist for the weak.
Years later, Alma stepped onto a prestigious Ivy League campus, her cheap backpack slung over her shoulder.
She was surrounded by the arrogant children of the very executives who ruined her life.
She lowered her head, hiding her dead eyes, and put on the perfect mask of a timid, helpless charity case.
Undergrad was just a training ground, and these elite kids were just her practice dummies. The hunt was officially on.

9.3
After eight years in captivity, I was finally rescued. I thought it was the beginning of a new life with my mother.
But she didn't even look at me. She ran into the arms of a handsome stranger, her real husband, and I was treated like a dirty secret from her past.
They called me a contamination, a reminder of their trauma. My new stepsister set their Doberman on me, and as the dog's teeth sank into my arm, I looked up and saw my mother watching from the window.
She met my eyes for a second, then slowly closed the curtains.
In that moment, the last bit of hope I had died. The shallow bond of family was completely gone, and I finally gave up.
But they made one mistake. The family patriarch, suspicious after a car accident, ordered a secret DNA test.
The results came back on the day of my stepsister's birthday party, revealing a truth that would burn their perfect world to the ground.