
The Jilted Heiress: Rising From Betrayal
I woke up in a sterile hospital bed with the smell of antiseptic burning my throat, having just had my stomach pumped six hours ago. Before the sedatives even wore off, my mother called, not to ask if I was alive, but to demand I show up at my sister’s birthday gala in two hours.
To her, I wasn't a daughter; I was a three-hundred-million-dollar signature needed for a corporate merger. She didn't care that I was suicidal, or that my fiancé, Franco, was currently at a luxury hotel with his "secretary" while I was hooked up to an IV.
At the gala, the humiliation only deepened. I watched my fiancé walk in with his mistress, the air thick with her cloying perfume. When my grandmother’s "lost" emeralds—my rightful inheritance—spilled out of the mistress’s purse, my mother didn't flinch. Instead, she hissed at me to give them back to avoid a scene.
My sister, the "perfect" golden child, took the stage and told the elite crowd that I was mentally unstable and "confused" due to my medication. I stood there, drenched in champagne and bleeding from a glass shard, while my own family gaslighted me in front of the world's press.
Franco didn't even look at me as he shielded his mistress from the cameras, leaving me to stand alone in the wreckage of a life they had dismantled. I realized then that my parents didn't want a daughter; they wanted a pawn who wouldn't talk back.
Why was my life worth less than a line item in a budget? How could a mother hand her daughter’s legacy to a mistress just to keep a contract intact?
As my sister lunged at me in a fit of rage, I kicked her into the infinity pool and watched the "perfect" family mask finally shatter. I didn't wait for them to pull me down; I let the weight of my gown drag me into the dark water myself.
Let them think the broken Kalea Alexander is gone. When I surface, I’m not coming back as a daughter—I’m coming back as their worst nightmare.
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Chapter 3
The climate control in the limousine was set to a temperature that felt arctic. Kalea suppressed a shiver, wrapping her arms around herself, trying to preserve what little body heat she had left.
Franco finally locked his phone and tossed it onto the leather seat between them. He turned to look at her, his eyes scanning her from head to toe with the critical detachment of an appraiser looking at a piece of furniture.
"That lipstick is too dark," he said. It wasn't a suggestion. "It makes you look severe."
Kalea's hand twitched toward her mouth, an instinctive reaction to apologize, to fix it. She stopped herself. "I'm pale," she said simply. "I needed the color."
"You look fine," Franco muttered, turning his gaze to the window. "Whatever. The hospital pickup was a detour I didn't need. Do you know how much the traffic sets us back?"
Kalea looked out the window. The city lights were blurring into streaks of neon as the car accelerated. The motion made her stomach churn again. She focused on the partition between them and the driver.
Franco reached for the crystal decanter in the built-in bar. As his cuff rode up, Kalea saw it.
On the inside of his wrist, just below the watch band, was a bruise. A small, purple-red mark. A hickey.
It was fresh.
Kalea stared at it. Her heart missed a beat, then slammed against her ribs. It wasn't heartbreak she felt. It was a wave of revulsion so strong she tasted bile. He hadn't even bothered to cover it. He didn't care enough to hide the evidence.
Franco caught her staring. He followed her gaze to his wrist. He didn't flinch. He didn't look guilty. He simply tugged his shirt cuff down, smoothing the expensive fabric over the mark.
He poured a glass of water from a plastic bottle and shoved it toward her. He poured himself a whiskey.
"Drink," he said. "You look dehydrated. I don't need you fainting on the red carpet."
Kalea took the glass. Her fingers brushed against his. His skin was warm, alive. Hers was cold as marble. She pulled her hand back as if she had been burned.
Franco let out a short, derisive laugh. "Still playing the shy virgin? It's a bit late for that act, isn't it?"
He took a sip of his whiskey, the amber liquid swirling in the glass. "The guest list is important tonight. The board members from the merger committee are all attending. I need you to be charming. Smile. Laugh at their boring jokes."
"Is everyone going to be there?" Kalea asked, her voice tight.
"Yes. Everyone who matters."
"Is Jennie Spence going to be there?"
The air in the car seemed to freeze. Franco paused, the glass halfway to his mouth. He looked at her, his eyes narrowing slightly.
"Jennie is my Executive Secretary," he said slowly, enunciating each word as if speaking to a slow child. "She is essential for networking. She knows the details of the merger better than anyone."
Kalea gripped the water glass. The condensation was cold against her palm. "Since when does an Executive Secretary attend a family birthday party for your fiancée's sister?"
"Since I decided she needed to be there to manage the press," Franco snapped. "Don't start, Kalea. You know how hard she works."
Kalea looked into his eyes, searching for a shred of decency. She found only arrogance. He truly believed he was in the right. He believed he was entitled to everything-the wife with the pedigree and the mistress with the ambition.
His phone lit up on the seat. A message notification.
Sender: J
Message: Missing you already. The backseat feels empty without us.
Franco glanced at it. The corner of his mouth quirked up. It was a smile Kalea hadn't seen directed at her in years. A smile of intimacy.
Kalea felt the vomit rising in her throat. She fumbled for the window control, pressing the button. The glass slid down an inch, letting in a blast of exhaust-filled city air. She inhaled deeply, desperate for anything that didn't smell like Jennie's perfume.
"What are you doing?" Franco barked. "Close that. You're ruining the climate control."
Kalea closed her eyes. She started counting backward from ten in her head. Ten. Nine. Eight. She pressed the button, sealing the window.
"Sorry," she whispered.
Franco shook his head, looking at her with open disdain. He saw a broken doll. A boring, sickly woman who was nothing more than a signature on a contract. He thought of Jennie-vibrant, eager, willing to do anything to please him.
The car slowed, turning onto the long, winding driveway of the Alexander estate. Through the tinted windows, the flash of cameras was already visible, a strobe-light effect that cut through the darkness.
Franco set his glass down. He adjusted his tie in the reflection of the window. He transformed. The sneer vanished, replaced by the charming, confident smile of New York's most eligible bachelor.
He extended his arm toward her. "Let's go. And fix your face, Kalea. You look miserable."
Kalea opened her eyes. The emotion was gone from them. They were flat, dark pools. She reached out and looped her arm through his. Her grip was mechanical.
The door opened. The noise of the crowd rushed in.
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8.9
Adela stood outside the private room, holding the obsidian necklace she had spent three months hand-crafting for her boyfriend.
But through the cracked door, she heard Juston laughing with his friends, calling her a stupid, obedient pawn and her art "garbage."
After she shattered the necklace and walked out into the freezing rain, Juston texted her a far more horrifying truth.
Her own family didn't just hate her-they had actively tried to kill her.
Two years ago, her brother Kayden intentionally slipped deadly shellfish into her food at a gala, sending her into anaphylactic shock.
Worse, her parents had covered up the attempted murder as a simple kitchen mistake, all to protect the family name and elevate her adopted sister, Kara.
Adela collapsed on the wet pavement, suffocating under the weight of the ultimate betrayal.
She had spent her entire life begging for their love, secretly working as the anonymous designer keeping their failing company afloat, only to realize she was nothing but a disposable tool.
She had absolutely no one, and nowhere to go.
Just as the storm threatened to swallow her whole, a sleek black Maybach pulled up to the curb.
Harmon Holland, the ruthless Wall Street billionaire she was originally arranged to marry, stepped out into the rain.
He didn't offer her pity. Instead, he handed her a legal document.
"Marry me, Adela. For one year."
She took the pen. This time, she wouldn't be an obedient pawn; she would be their executioner.

9.1
He was a ruthless CEO who always got what he wanted until he noticed her, a homeless girl surviving outside his office building. Quietly proud, clever, and impossible to read, she became the one woman who refused to fall at his feet, forcing him to chase for the first time in his life.
As she steps into his workplace, she faces ridicule, betrayal, and a wealthy woman determined to erase her from his world. While his family pushes him toward an arranged marriage with an entitled heiress, his heart is already bound to the girl everyone underestimates.
In a world ruled by power and status, she must prove her worth through strength and integrity, while he learns that love cannot be bought, controlled, or inherited.

7.4
Avery thought she'd found her happily ever after with Ethan, the charming billionaire who swept her off her feet in Willow Creek. But after one night of passion, he vanished, leaving her heartbroken and alone. She returned home to find her grandmother, her only family, had passed away.
Devastated, Avery discovered a shocking truth: she was the daughter of a millionaire who'd left her a vast fortune. Relocated to New York, she met Ethan again, but this time, he was determined to win her back. Unbeknownst to him, Avery had been hiding a life-changing secret: she's the mother of his twin babies.
As Avery navigates her complicated past and the wicked family members who despise her, Ethan's pursuit becomes relentless. He'll stop at nothing to reclaim the love they shared, but Avery's secrets threaten to tear them apart. Can she trust him with her heart and the truth about their children, or will it drive them further apart?
Ethan's words echoed in her mind: "I've been searching for you for six years, Avery. I won't let you go again." But Avery's secrets were only the beginning. Little did Ethan know, their love story was only just beginning...

7.4
Evelina Barrett was the legitimate daughter, yet she was framed for a disgusting sex scandal, expelled from the Ivy League, and locked out of her late mother's massive trust fund.
While she was thrown out to rot on the streets with a jagged, hideous red scar covering half her face, her father and step-family were throwing a lavish charity gala to celebrate her total ruin.
They laughed as they officially published her disownment notice in the Times to cut her off forever.
"Without the school halo, that ugly freak will be begging on the streets by tomorrow," her sister Aspen sneered.
Her stepmother Annabella toasted to taking out the trash, perfectly happy to steal Evelina's inheritance while ignoring the fact that Evelina knew exactly how they had murdered her mother.
For years, Evelina had been locked in a dark basement, abused by bodyguards, and treated worse than a stray dog.
Why should she, the true heir, suffer in the gutter while the leeches who destroyed her life enjoyed the wealth that rightfully belonged to her?
She refused to be their victim anymore.
Washing away her fake scar to reveal her true, breathtaking face, Evelina blackmailed New York's most lethal billionaire into marriage to secure the ultimate shield.
Then, she put on a black mourning dress, ordered a dark web ghost crew, and climbed into a heavy semi-truck.
At exactly 6:00 PM, she smashed through the iron gates of her family's elegant gala, delivering three pure black coffins directly to the lawn.

7.3
Love and hatred are two sides of the same coin but at the end of the battle it is always LOVE that wins. Yet when there is faint peek of revenge added, would there still be a victory of passion in the tussle?
Augustus Martin - a billionaire heartthrob, cold hearted business tycoon, CEO of Sunrise Industries
A teasing snicker on my lips. Angelica Evans, I give you two days of time to hammer out the deal and save your neck from further destruction. Else you know I play the game of destruction quite well
A shadow of the past.....If only you knew 'My Angel', you are always the only person reigning my heart – Augustus Martin
Angelica Evans - A simple and a sweet girl who believes in herself and works hard to attain her goals.
Love to hate you Augustus Martin. I may be the person falling on my knees at the moment but in the peroration you will pray God in begging me for a withdrawal. Welcome to the world of hell.
A glimpse in the gleam....No matter how many times I say I hate you. You are the only person who holds me together - Angelica Evans
Welcome to the game of love and war.

9.0
Framed for corporate spying, Liana Bennett was arrested and murdered in a prison cell.
Now she wakes in her old life, exactly one month before the set up.
She has one month to identify the traitor inside her company who orchestrated her death before they do it again. The enemy is already watching, already moving.
Every change she makes to rewrite comes at a price: a core memory erased. One wrong step, and she loses the very truth she needs to survive.
Then there's Raphael Blackthorne, The ruthless CEO of her rival company, the man she spent a reckless night with, and now the person offering her flowers, dinners, and sincerity.
Liana has a plan.
She can't afford the distraction.
But as her memories unravel and the enemy closes in, she faces the truth she can't outrun: to survive, she may have to become someone who no longer remembers why she fought at all.