
The Light They Couldn't Extinguish
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I was the architect of my husband's billion-dollar tech empire, but he repaid me by bringing his mistress to our son's funeral-the very woman whose negligence killed him.
To protect her, he had me committed, tortured, and then burned every last memory of our son, systematically erasing our past.
Then I discovered he'd secretly divorced me years ago, so I faked my own death and gave the source code to his rival, ready to watch his world burn to the ground.
The Light They Couldn't Extinguish Chapter 1
I was the architect of my husband's billion-dollar tech empire, but he repaid me by bringing his mistress to our son's funeral-the very woman whose negligence killed him.
To protect her, he had me committed, tortured, and then burned every last memory of our son, systematically erasing our past.
Then I discovered he'd secretly divorced me years ago, so I faked my own death and gave the source code to his rival, ready to watch his world burn to the ground.
Chapter 1
Aliana Gibson POV:
My husband, Dexter, taught me the true meaning of rock bottom the day we buried our son.
He did it by bringing his mistress to the funeral.
The air in the church was thick with the scent of white lilies and grief, so cloying it felt like I was breathing in sorrow itself. I stood woodenly beside the small, white casket, my hand resting on the polished wood, a barrier between my son, Leo, and the cold earth that waited. My mind was a blizzard of white noise, a merciful numbness until I saw her.
Bristol Schneider.
She slipped into a back pew, a vision in a tastefully somber black dress, her blonde hair pulled back in a sleek chignon. She looked like a grieving friend, a concerned colleague. But I knew what she was. She was the Head of PR for our company, the viper I'd warned Dexter about, and the last person to see our son alive.
A tremor started in my hand, traveling up my arm until my whole body shook. "What is she doing here?" The whisper was a raw tear in the fabric of the solemn quiet.
Dexter' s hand clamped down on my elbow, his grip painfully tight. "Aliana, don't," he hissed, his voice a low, dangerous command. "Not here. Not today."
His touch, once my comfort, now felt like a brand. I looked at him, at the chiseled jaw and the charismatic blue eyes that had once held a universe of love for me. The Dexter who had dropped to one knee in the middle of a torrential downpour, soaked to the skin, just because he couldn't wait another second to ask me to be his wife. The Dexter who, when a rival firm tried to poach me, bought their parent company and dismantled it just to make a point. That man was gone, replaced by this cold stranger whose only concern was public perception.
For six years, our marriage had been a whirlwind of creation. I was the architect, the one who built our company's revolutionary source code from scratch in the quiet hours of the night. He was the face, the brilliant CEO who sold my genius to the world. We were a perfect team. Then Leo was born, and the cracks began to show. My brilliant, beautiful boy, with his rare genetic condition that left him non-verbal, was a flaw in Dexter's perfect narrative.
"Get her out," I said, my voice rising, cracking. Heads were turning.
"She came to pay her respects," Dexter said, his jaw tight. He was pulling me back from the casket, away from our son. "You're making a scene, Aliana."
The injustice of it was a physical blow. I wrenched my arm free and stumbled toward the back of the church. My legs felt like they were moving through water. I stopped in front of Bristol' s pew. Up close, her performance was flawless. Her eyes were shimmering with unshed tears, her lower lip trembling.
"You have no right," I choked out.
She stood slowly, placing a gentle hand on my arm. "Aliana, I am so sorry. I can't imagine what you're going through."
Her touch was poison. I snatched my arm back as if burned. "He was in your care, Bristol. You were supposed to be watching him."
"It was an accident," she whispered, a tear finally escaping, tracing a perfect, shimmering path down her cheek.
"He had an allergy, a severe one. You knew that. It was on every medical form, every emergency contact sheet. But you gave him that snack anyway, didn't you?"
Dexter was there then, standing between us, a solid wall of protection. For her. "That's enough," he said, his voice like ice. "This is not the time or the place."
"I have the security footage from the house," I blurted out, my last desperate card to play. "It will show everything."
Dexter' s expression didn't flicker. "I've reviewed the footage, Aliana. The camera in the kitchen malfunctioned. There's nothing there."
The floor seemed to drop out from under me. Malfunctioned. Of course, it had. Just like the time Bristol "accidentally" deleted a multi-million-dollar presentation of mine, or "mistakenly" leaked a negative story about our company's reliance on a single "unseen" programmer to a tech blog. She was a master of plausible deniability, and Dexter always, always gave her the benefit of the doubt.
He destroyed it. The one piece of proof I had.
"Leo," I whispered, turning my gaze back to the small casket at the front of the church. "Dexter, please. Think about Leo. Our son is dead because of her negligence."
Bristol let out a soft sob. "I just wanted to help," she whimpered, leaning into Dexter's side. "I thought you could use a break. I never would have… if I had known…"
I saw red. I lunged, my hands outstretched, my nails meant for her duplicitous face. But Dexter caught me, spinning me around and shoving me back. It wasn't a hard shove, but it was enough to make me stumble.
Bristol, ever the actress, gasped and staggered backward, tripping over her own feet. She hit the stone floor with a pained cry, clutching her stomach.
"Bristol!" Dexter's concern was immediate, visceral. He was at her side in an instant, dropping to his knees, his hands hovering over her as if she were made of glass. "Are you alright? The baby…"
The baby.
The words hung in the air, sucking all the oxygen from the church.
"I'll go to the police," she sobbed, clutching Dexter's lapel. "I'll confess. Maybe… maybe then Aliana will feel better. It's all my fault."
"No," Dexter said, his voice firm. He helped her to her feet, his arm securely around her waist. He looked at me, and the cold fury in his eyes was something I had never seen before. "You will do no such thing. You did nothing wrong." He then turned his full attention to me. "But you, Aliana. You are out of control."
He scooped Bristol into his arms, cradling her as if she were the most precious thing in the world, and carried her out of the church, leaving me alone with the ghost of our son and the ruins of our life.
I don' t remember how I got home. The next thing I knew, I was standing in the cavernous, silent foyer of the house I had once loved. My phone buzzed on the hall table, a notification from a news site. A photo of Dexter, his face etched with concern, carrying a distraught Bristol Schneider from the church. The headline read: "Tech CEO Dexter Wolfe Consoles Colleague at Son's Tragic Funeral as Grieving Wife Lashes Out."
They were already spinning the narrative. I was the unstable, hysterical widow. She was the innocent victim.
A delivery person rang the doorbell. Numbly, I signed for a large, unmarked cardboard box. Inside, nestled in a bed of tissue paper, was a doll.
A life-sized, hyper-realistic doll, with Leo' s soft brown hair, his button nose, and the same impossibly blue eyes that were a perfect mix of mine and Dexter's. It was wearing a replica of the little sailor suit we had planned to bury him in. A cold, dead effigy of my son.
A wave of nausea washed over me. I stumbled back, my hand flying to my mouth.
"Do you like it?"
I spun around. Bristol was standing in the doorway, a triumphant smirk playing on her lips. She sauntered into the room, her hand resting protectively on her still-flat stomach.
"I thought you might be lonely," she said, her voice dripping with mock sympathy. "Dexter is so worried about you."
"Get out of my house," I hissed.
"Our house, soon," she corrected smoothly. "He's just waiting for the right time. He doesn't want a messy divorce to complicate the IPO. And this," she gestured to her stomach, "this baby is everything he ever wanted. A healthy heir. Not… defective."
The world went red. This time, there was no thought, only a primal scream of rage. I flew at her. She didn't even try to fake a fall this time. She simply sidestepped my attack, and as I crashed into the wall, she let out a piercing shriek.
Dexter burst through the door, his face a mask of fury. He saw me, wild and disheveled, and Bristol cowering by the doorway.
He didn't hesitate.
His hand connected with my cheek. The force of the blow sent me sprawling to the floor. My head hit the marble with a sickening crack.
"You're insane," he snarled, standing over me. "You're a danger to yourself and others." He pulled out his phone. "I'm calling Dr. Evans. He's had a room waiting for you at the psychiatric clinic. I was hoping it wouldn't come to this."
Through the ringing in my ears, I saw two men in white coats enter the house. They moved toward me with a calm, practiced efficiency.
Dexter knelt, not to help me, but to bring his face close to mine. His voice was a venomous whisper. "You will go to the clinic, Aliana. You will get 'help.' And you will not say another word about Bristol or what happened to Leo. Do you understand me?"
I looked into the eyes of the man I had loved, the father of my dead child, and saw nothing but a void.
He wasn't sending me to get help. He was erasing me.
Continue Reading
The Light They Couldn't Extinguish of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5
Chapter 6 Ch. 6
Chapter 7 Ch. 7
Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

9.4
I thought the Burch family gave me a loving home when they took me out of the orphanage.
But when the global deep freeze apocalypse hit, my adoptive parents mercilessly kicked me out of the bunker to freeze to death.
As I lay dying in the snow, covered in horrific purple frostbite, my adoptive sister Kendal walked past me in a pristine designer jacket.
Around her neck was my only childhood possession—an antique gold necklace my adoptive mother had ripped off my neck to give to her.
Kendal gloated, bragging that my pendant held a magical space with infinite supplies and fresh food while the rest of the world starved.
I realized I had spent years emptying my life savings to fund their luxury cars and fake medical emergencies.
They had drained my bank accounts, stolen my bloodline's heirloom, and used my magical lifeline to live like royalty while leaving me to die.
I took my last ragged breath in that blinding blizzard, consumed by a toxic hatred.
Why was I so hopelessly weak? Why did I let them take everything from me?
Opening my eyes again, the painful frostbite scars were gone. My skin was warm.
I grabbed my phone. The screen lit up: November 12.
It was exactly three days before the world ended.
When my adoptive mother called, faking a tearful emergency to demand another thirty thousand dollars, I smiled coldly.
"Just tell me where to send the money, Mom."
This time, I'm taking my space back, and I'm going to drain them dry.

9.1
Waking up with a cold, scaly hand wrapped around my throat wasn't the worst part.
The worst part was realizing I'd transmigrated into the body of Terra Mason—the most despised woman in the entire Enclave. She drugged high-level beast-men and forced them into life-binding bio-contracts. She locked an aquatic warrior in a dry basement until his organs failed. She treated the most lethal males in the city like broken toys.
Zev, the Level 6 serpent who's currently choking me, would rather blow up his own heart than spend another day as my slave. His affection metric? Negative ninety. His trust? Zero.
Then my system activates: the Kore AI. It gives me exactly 500 credits, a medical nano-gel, and a recipe for neutralizing the radioactive poison in mutant meat. Real food. In this world, that's worth more than gold.
I save Rhys, the dying aquatic male everyone left for dead. I season a slab of purple mutant steak until Sam, a battle-scarred grizzly shifter, groans at the taste—and his trust points finally tick above zero. When my backstabbing ex-best friend tries to steal my males and destroy me, I don't scream or throw a tantrum like the old Terra. I dismantle her with the truth.
But earning their trust means more than grilling meat. A scorpion swarm ambushes us at midnight. Sam throws himself between me and a stinger the size of my arm. As he stands over the corpse, fur receding from his claws, he stares at me and whispers, "You were testing me."
Yes. I was. Because in this world, the weak don't survive. And I refuse to be weak again.
Four beast-men. Four contracts. One system. And a whole lot of steak. Let this dystopian wasteland know—I'm not the monster they remember. I'm worse. I'm the one who's going to feed them until they'd kill for me.

8.7
For seven years, I was Alpha Zane’s Chosen Mate, suppressing my warrior instincts to be the docile, supportive partner he demanded.
On our seventh anniversary, while I waited by a candlelit table, I accidentally overheard his mind-link with another woman.
"Seven years is a habit, my dear, not love. She's docile, she'll understand."
He told Seraphina, his new political ally, laughing as he dismissed my entire existence.
I didn't scream or cry. I scraped the anniversary cake into the trash, drafted a formal rejection letter, and walked out of the packhouse.
But Zane didn't even notice my departure. He was so consumed by his new lover that my rejection letter was treated as garbage and tossed into the incinerator.
He paraded Seraphina around the pack, even handing my hard-earned strategic command over to her—a woman who knew absolutely nothing about war.
When my loyal subordinates protested, he violently suppressed them, declaring my absence a "childish tantrum" and framing me as the bitter obstacle to his destined romance.
He honestly thought I was just hiding in my room, waiting to beg for his charity and accept a humiliating demotion.
He had no idea that I had already crossed the border into enemy territory.
Tonight, I am attending his grand celebration.
Not as the heartbroken mate he discarded, but as the newly appointed Gamma of his deadliest rival, the Sterling Pack.

8.3
On the night of my career-defining art exhibition, I stood completely alone. My husband, Dante Sovrano, the most feared man in Chicago, had promised he wouldn’t miss it for the world. Instead, he was on the evening news.
He was shielding another woman—his ruthless business partner—from a downpour, letting his own thousand-dollar suit get soaked just to protect her. The headline flashed below them, calling their new alliance a "power move" that would reshape the city.
The guests at my gallery immediately began to whisper. Their pitying looks turned my greatest triumph into a public spectacle of humiliation. Then his text arrived, a cold, final confirmation of my place in his life: “Something came up. Isabella needed me. You understand. Business.”
For four years, I had been his possession. A quiet, artistic wife kept in a gilded cage on the top floor of his skyscraper. I poured all my loneliness and heartbreak onto my canvases, but he never truly saw my art. He never truly saw me. He just saw another one of his assets.
My heart didn't break that night. It turned to ice. He hadn't just neglected me; he had erased me.
So the next morning, I walked into his office and handed him a stack of gallery contracts.
He barely glanced up, annoyed at the interruption to his empire-building. He snatched the pen and signed on the line I’d marked.
He didn’t know the page tucked directly underneath was our divorce decree.
He had just signed away his wife like she was nothing more than an invoice for art supplies.

8.3
Half a month into our cold war, I, Claire Parker, found an abortion procedure slip tucked inside Daniel Carter's suit pocket.
The patient's name belonged to the fragile little childhood sweetheart he had always protected so fiercely-Sophie Bennett.
I folded the paper calmly and slipped it back where I had found it.
Daniel noticed the movement immediately. His eyes flicked toward me through the rearview mirror, resignation coloring his voice.
"What are you overthinking now? Sophie was just keeping a friend company at the hospital. She accidentally left it there."
I turned toward the window and said nothing.
This was Sophie declaring war on me, yet the man who could crush competitors without mercy in the business world believed her completely.
The silence inside the car grew suffocating until Daniel finally stopped outside an upscale jewelry boutique.
He reached over and ruffled my hair with easy familiarity, his tone indulgent and affectionate.
"Come on. Pick out a ring. Your birthday's next month anyway, so we might as well register our marriage too."
I bit down hard on my lip as tears fell soundlessly onto the back of my hand.
What he still didn't know was that I wouldn't live long enough to see next month.

8.9
Ava Kidd just wanted to escape her abusive stepmother when she got drunk at a high-end club and stumbled into the wrong hotel room.
She woke up the next morning in a luxury penthouse, lying naked next to a terrifyingly handsome man covered in her scratch marks.
Recalling rumors of the hotel's secret underground concierge, she immediately assumed she had accidentally slept with an elite male escort.
Desperate to settle the bill, she offered him her only debit card with a pathetic $1,800.
But the man, who was actually Garrison Terry, the ruthless billionaire CEO, was deeply insulted by the cheap plastic.
He trapped her against the bed, coldly demanding a half-million-dollar service fee.
When Ava frantically offered her dead mother's tarnished locket as collateral, he cruelly dismissed it as worthless junk.
Ava was humiliated, her heart pounding with absolute terror.
She didn't understand why this arrogant gigolo was acting like a deranged extortionist, demanding a fortune from a broke girl who had clearly made a mistake.
Furious and refusing to cower, she sneaked out, put on his oversized designer shirt, and aggressively ate his $800 truffle breakfast.
Having no money left, she grabbed her cheap red lipstick, wrote a defiant IOU on his expensive linen napkin, and fled the hotel.
She thought she had escaped a criminal, but upstairs, the billionaire traced her lipstick-stained name with a predatory smile.
"Ava Kidd, I will absolutely find you."







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