The Man I Made, The Debt He Owes Novel Cover

The Man I Made, The Debt He Owes

8.6 / 10.0
Sloane Voss thought she was building a life with Marcus Hale—funding his ambitions, believing his promises, quietly holding everything together while he climbed toward a future he had no intention of sharing with her. When she discovers he's been courting a senator's daughter while still cashing her checks, Sloane doesn't crumble. She activates the one weapon Marcus forgot he handed her: a legally binding contract she funded his entire career with. But taking down Marcus will require more than legal leverage. It will require an ally as ruthless as her plan—and the only person in Austin powerful enough to help her is Ryker Voss, the estranged older brother she barely knows. Cold, calculating, and utterly unreadable, Ryker has his own reasons for wanting Marcus's firm dismantled. Their arrangement should be simple: mutual destruction, professional distance. It should be. But nothing between Sloane and Ryker is simple—or safe. A scorching enemies-to-reluctant-allies romance about betrayal, power, and the most dangerous kind of chemistry: the kind you're not supposed to feel at all.

The Man I Made, The Debt He Owes Chapter 1

The oat milk hit the marble floor with a sound like breaking promises.

I stood frozen in my Austin apartment kitchen, phone screen blazing with a Threads notification that might as well have been a death certificate. My best friend had forwarded a BeReal screenshot—Marcus, my Marcus, with his arm wrapped around some woman I'd never seen before. The location tag read Hamptons. The timestamp: 11:42 PM last night.

Three hours ago, he'd been on FaceTime with me, tie loosened, claiming he was "stuck at the office with quarterly reports."

The white liquid spread across the floor in abstract patterns while Sabrina Carpenter's "Espresso" continued its sixth consecutive loop in my AirPods. The irony wasn't lost on me—I'd been playing that song all morning because it reminded me of summer plans Marcus and I had been making. Now it sounded like mockery.

I zoomed in on the photo with trembling fingers. There it was—the Cartier Santos on his wrist, brown leather strap I'd personally selected at the boutique for his birthday last year. The woman's hand rested on his chest, her cream-colored manicure catching the light. That same manicured hand I'd glimpsed in the background of his "boring business dinner" photos last week.

The milk puddle reached my bare feet, cold and accusatory.

Instead of calling him—instead of screaming or crying or demanding explanations—I opened my Notes app. The folder I'd been maintaining for three years without really thinking about it: "M-Expenses."

My thumb scrolled through entries I'd logged methodically, almost unconsciously. Plane tickets to visit me in Austin. His apartment security deposit when he moved to New York. His mother's knee surgery when his insurance fell short. The second semester business school tuition I'd covered when his student loans got delayed.

The numbers blurred together as my music shuffled to The Weeknd's "Save Your Tears"—some BookTok recommendation that had somehow infiltrated my carefully curated playlists. The universe's sense of humor was particularly cruel today.

I kept scrolling. Dinners at restaurants he'd chosen. Weekend trips he'd planned but somehow never paid for. The engagement ring consultation fee at Tiffany—because he'd wanted to "get it right" but needed me to cover the initial appointment.

My finger stopped on the final sum: $2,147,000.

Two point one million dollars. Three years. I'd never added it up before, never wanted to reduce our relationship to a spreadsheet. Love wasn't supposed to come with receipts.

The AirPods shifted to another song, but I barely heard it. I was remembering that night three years ago—the first time I'd transferred fifty thousand to Marcus's account for what he'd called a "temporary cash flow issue." How my father's lawyer had insisted on paperwork, how I'd rolled my eyes at the formality of it all.

"Love doesn't need contracts, Dad," I'd said.

"Smart women do," he'd replied.

I stepped over the milk puddle and walked to my bedroom, my feet leaving sticky prints on the hardwood. The bottom drawer of my closet held things I never looked at—tax documents, insurance papers, and one brown manila envelope I'd shoved away and tried to forget.

My hands shook as I pulled it out. The envelope was heavier than I remembered, weighted with the kind of legal precision my twenty-two-year-old self had found insulting. Back then, I'd believed love was about trust, not terms and conditions.

I sat on my unmade bed—the sheets still smelled like his cologne from his last visit—and opened the envelope. The pages were crisp, formal, dense with legal language that had seemed so unnecessary when I was drunk on new love and endless possibility.

Private Loan Agreement. Borrower: Marcus Chen. Lender: Sloane Voss.

I flipped through pages of clauses I'd barely read the first time, my father's lawyer's voice echoing in my memory: "Just a formality, Sloane. Hope you never need it."

Page four. Section seven. Subsection three.

The words were printed in bold black ink, as if the lawyer had known exactly which clause would matter most:

"Should the Borrower fail to meet repayment obligations within the agreed timeframe, or should the Borrower engage in material fraud, deception, or concealment of assets or relationships, the Lender reserves the right to demand immediate full repayment of all outstanding amounts, plus compound interest at eighteen percent annually."

My finger traced the words. Material fraud. Deception. Concealment of relationships.

The BeReal photo was still open on my phone screen beside me. Marcus's smile looked different now—not the private smile he'd always claimed was just for me, but the practiced one he wore in his LinkedIn headshots.

I could hear my heartbeat in the silence between songs. Slow. Steady. Strangely calm.

Three years of believing I was investing in our future. Three years of thinking love meant never keeping score. Three years of being the kind of woman who paid for everything and called it partnership.

The contract sat in my lap like evidence of my own naivety, every clause a small prophecy I'd been too in love to heed. My father's lawyer hadn't been protecting a loan—he'd been protecting me from exactly this moment.

I picked up my phone and scrolled to my contacts, finding the number I'd hoped never to call: Voss Family Attorney.

But before I could dial, something made me pause. Something about the weight of the contract in my hands, the finality of the legal language, the way the afternoon light was hitting the pages just right.

For the first time in three years, I wasn't thinking about Marcus's feelings. I wasn't worried about seeming petty or vindictive or unforgiving. I was thinking about compound interest, and material fraud, and the sound two point one million dollars would make when it came home to roost.

The Cartier Santos in that BeReal photo had been a gift. But the consequences of wearing it with another woman? Those were going to be a bill.

Continue Reading

The Man I Made, The Debt He Owes of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3 Ch. 4 Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10
Ch. 11
all

You may also like

New Release Novels

Alpha's Affair, Luna's Wrath Novel Cover
8.4
I tapped my pencil against the edge of my sketchpad, staring at the half-finished design for the ceremonial necklace I planned to surprise Marcus with for our fifth anniversary. The silver and moonstone piece would symbolize our enduring bond—five perfect years as Alpha and Luna of the Silverstone Pack. "What do you think, Lyra?" I whispered to my wolf, who purred contentedly in my mind. *Beautiful, like all your creations, Victoria.* My inner wolf had always been my greatest supporter, even before Marcus. I smiled, setting down my pencil and stretching my arms above my head. The afternoon sun streamed through the windows of our shared study, casting a warm glow over the polished oak desk. Marcus had left his tablet behind this morning in his rush to handle what he'd called an "urgent pack matter." I reached for it, thinking I could review some of the anniversary celebration plans we'd been discussing. We'd granted each other access to our devices years ago—a symbol of trust between mates. The screen lit up at my touch, revealing a messaging app I rarely used. A notification blinked insistently in the corner—from Amber Rodriguez, our new pack coordinator.
 Losing Memory & Hearing, Only to Uncover Husband's Sinister Secret Novel Cover
7.3
I lost my hearing three years ago due to an accident. Over these three years, my husband has taken meticulous care of me, and my best friend has been extremely considerate. She often comes to my place to help me deal with work. I often think that having such a wonderful husband and a caring best friend is the greatest happiness in my life. However, one day, I was shocked to find them passionately kissing behind my back! I've made up my mind. They will surely pay for what they've done!
Let's Divorce, Mr. CEO! Novel Cover
8.7
"You will regret all of this, Vick. You will see the true form of the woman you have humiliated. I will not remain silent!" Ten years of Amora Cassidy Shane's devotion collapsed in an instant when the plump woman discovered her husband, Vicktor Caldwell, having an affair with her own longtime friend. To make matters even more cruel, Vicktor brought that woman and the child born of their affair into the house, then cast Amora out after seizing the entire Shane family fortune. With a shattered heart but a blazing determination, Amora accepted the divorce. Yet behind her downfall, a vow was born: this vengeance must be fulfilled.
My Alpha Saved His Mistress Instead of Me Novel Cover
9.0
The pack run had been Marcelo's idea. He'd announced it three days prior at the weekly council meeting, his Alpha tone leaving no room for debate. A show of unity, he'd called it. A reminder that the Black Moon Pack moved as one body, one purpose. I'd watched him from my seat at the far end of the table—the Luna's chair, though I'd stopped feeling like a Luna months ago—and said nothing. Petra Voss had nodded approvingly. The other council members had murmured their agreement. Rosalina, seated closer to Marcelo than protocol allowed, had smiled that soft, adoring smile she always wore around him. I should have known then. The territory's northern river was swollen from early spring melt, the current fast and mean.
My Husband Chose His Pregnant Mistress Over Me Novel Cover
9.4
It had been nine years of being tangled up with Max. On my birthday, his girlfriend crashed the party, declaring they were meant to be together and that I should consent to a divorce for their happiness. Max watched indifferently, expecting me to handle the situation as I always had with his difficult partners. But that day, a sudden wave of exhaustion washed over me. I stood up, gave him a smile, and said, "I'm going to get some fresh air in the garden." Max barely noticed, likely thinking I was off to cry in solitude. But an hour passed, then two, then three, and I didn’t return. He came looking for me. All he found was a burnt cigarette and a ring in the garden. That's when he knew. I wasn't coming back.
My Husband Stole My Life's Work Novel Cover
7.4
My husband stole my life. He took my groundbreaking dessert concept, the one we were supposed to build an empire on, and left me with nothing but dust. Then, he served me divorce papers through a stranger and plastered his new relationship with my intern, Celina, all over the internet. They built a culinary empire on my stolen recipes, their sickeningly bright smiles a public declaration of my replacement. I became a cautionary tale, the talented chef who couldn't keep her husband or her ideas safe. My reputation was shattered, and I was forced to disappear. For six years, I rebuilt from the ashes, running my own small bakery, finding peace in my quiet, fiercely independent life. I thought that chapter was closed. But then they stormed into my shop, ready to destroy me all over again. They came to shatter my new life, but they made one critical mistake. They had no idea who my new husband was.
Chapters
Read now
Share