Follow
Chapters
Share
The Perfect Victim: Playing The Billionaire's Game Novel Cover

The Perfect Victim: Playing The Billionaire's Game

I was the crown jewel of the Harmon family until the trust fund froze and my world turned to ash. Now, I’m just a girl in a vintage dress I can’t afford, standing in a crowded club, waiting to destroy the man who thinks he owns me. Everything changed when my ex-fiancé, Carter Sterling, didn't just break our engagement, but blocked the money meant for my brother’s medical care. He wanted to see me crawl back to him, broken and desperate, so he could remind me that I was nothing without his name. I didn't crawl; I staged a masterpiece of a breakdown. I shattered glass, screamed about his cruelty, and cowered on the floor until the entire city saw him as the monster he truly was. Carter’s reputation was dead within minutes, but the victory felt hollow because I was still penniless and alone in the cold rain. I realized that in this world, being a victim is just a role you play until you’re strong enough to become the villain. I was tired of being hunted by dogs like Carter, and I knew the only way to survive was to walk straight into the lion’s den. I stood at the iron gates of the Grimes estate, soaked to the bone and clutching a secret that could bring the city to its knees. Isadore Grimes is a man who eats people like Carter for breakfast, and I didn't come to him for mercy. "I’m not here for your money," I told him as the security cameras zoomed in on my face. "I'm here to offer you a better deal than your fiancée ever could." I wasn't just planning to get my inheritance back. I was going to steal the life of the woman who tried to destroy me, one calculated move at a time.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The iron gates of the Grimes estate were twice the height of a man and black as pitch. Ashton stood before them, the wind whipping her loose hair across her face. She wore a grey hoodie and jeans, stripped of makeup, clutching the book to her chest like a shield.

She pressed the intercom button. The metal was cold under her finger.

"State your business," a voice crackled. It wasn't human; it was the flat, bored tone of private security.

"I have something for Mr. Grimes," Ashton said. "Regarding the 1920 Keynesian manuscript."

"Mr. Grimes is not accepting visitors. Leave it at the gate."

Ashton didn't move. She looked up at the camera mounted on the stone pillar. She held the book up, turning it so the spine was visible. A flicker of memory surfaced-her grandfather, smelling of pipe tobacco and old books, patiently explaining the theories scribbled in its margins. He had groomed her to take over a financial empire, not to be cast out of it. That knowledge was the one thing they couldn't freeze or foreclose on. Then, she looked directly into the lens and mouthed a single phrase: Liquidity Trap.

It was a gamble. A massive one. She was betting that Isadore, a known micromanager, monitored his own perimeter feeds when he was in the study.

Ten seconds passed. The silence stretched, heavy and suffocating.

Then, a heavy mechanical groan vibrated through the ground. The gates began to swing inward.

Ashton exhaled, a small puff of white in the chill air. She walked up the long, gravel driveway. The estate was immaculate-manicured hedges, sharp lines, a main house that looked more like a museum than a home. It was cold. It lacked life.

A butler met her at the heavy oak doors. He patted her down with professional detachment, checking her pockets, her waistband. He found nothing but a cheap lip balm.

"This way," he said.

He led her down a hallway lined with monochromatic art. He opened a set of double doors and stepped aside.

The study was cavernous. Floor-to-ceiling bookshelves lined every wall. In the center of the room, behind a desk that looked like a slab of obsidian, sat Isadore Grimes.

He didn't look up. He was signing documents, his pen moving with fluid, brutal efficiency.

Ashton walked to the center of the room and stopped. She didn't speak. She knew men like Isadore. They viewed silence as a power play. If she spoke first, she lost.

The grandfather clock in the corner ticked. One minute. Two. Five.

Ashton's legs began to ache, but she locked her knees and stared at a point on the wall behind him.

Finally, Isadore capped his pen. The click was loud in the quiet room. He looked up. His eyes were colder than the photos. They dissected her, layer by layer.

"Miss Harmon," he said. His voice was deep, devoid of warmth. "That notebook better be authentic."

Ashton stepped forward and placed the book on the edge of his desk. She kept her hand on the cover. "It is. But I'm not here to sell it."

Isadore leaned back, the leather of his chair creaking. "You want an invite to the gala? Or are you here to beg for your ex-boyfriend?"

"I don't care about Carter," Ashton said, her voice steady. "And I don't want your money. I need access to your library. Two hours. That's the price."

Isadore blinked. It was the only sign of surprise he gave. "You want to read?"

"I'm writing a thesis on market volatility. This book," she tapped the cover, "is the only source material I can't find digitally. I know you have the rest of the collection."

Isadore stood up. He was tall, imposing, wearing a white shirt with the sleeves rolled up, revealing forearms that were unexpectedly muscular for a man who pushed paper. He walked around the desk and picked up the notebook.

He flipped through the pages, his eyes scanning the handwritten notes. He nodded, once.

"If you make a sound," he said, not looking at her, "or if you touch anything other than the books in section C, I will have you removed."

"Understood, Mr. Grimes."

He went back to his chair and ignored her completely.

Ashton took a seat in the corner armchair. She opened a random book, but her eyes weren't on the text. She watched him in the reflection of the window glass.

He worked like a machine. Every thirty minutes, he drank water. Every time his phone buzzed with a specific ringtone-Charity's-he let it ring three times before answering.

"What?" he answered one call. His tone was clipped. "No, I don't care about the flower arrangements. Do whatever you want."

He hung up without saying goodbye.

Ashton turned a page, her heart beating a little faster. He didn't love Charity. He barely tolerated her.

Outside, the sky turned a bruised purple. Thunder rumbled, low and menacing. A storm was coming.

Ashton looked at the rain starting to lash against the glass. A plan formed in her mind. It was dangerous, but she was already in the lion's den. She might as well see if she could stay for dinner.

You may also like

After Funding My Fiancé’s Lies, I Took Back Everything Novel Cover
9.5
The day I received the $1.8 billion reimbursement, I promptly quit my job. I poured a billion into my fiancé's project and assembled a first-rate medical team for my supposedly paralyzed brother-in-law. On my way home, I called Dakota Snyder, joking that I was now jobless and planning to become a stay-at-home spouse. He hung up without a word. Concerned something might be wrong at home, I rushed back, feeling anxious. As soon as I walked into the yard, I overheard my brother-in-law grumbling that I was a liability. "She still thinks she can remain my sister-in-law? If it weren't for her money, I wouldn't have pretended to be paralyzed!" "And besides, my brother has already landed a rich heiress. That useless woman can wait to be shown the door!" I stood there, shocked. Faking paralysis?
Divorce After Wedding Fiasco Novel Cover
8.8
My husband, Clark, usually has a quiet demeanor and isn't fond of lively gatherings. Yet, this time, he insisted on being the best man at a friend's wedding. When we arrived, I noticed the bridesmaid was his first love, Raven. Not only did he link arms with her for a toast, but during the ceremony, he also caught the bouquet and pretended to propose to her on one knee. I felt a wave of bitterness, tears welling up as I sought an explanation. His response was dismissive: "It's just a bit of fun between the best man and bridesmaid at weddings. Don't take it so seriously." "We just wanted to make up for missed chances, and you're overreacting?" He was quick to address old regrets with Raven, yet conveniently forgot the wedding ceremony he owed me for seven years. In the past, I might have let it go, but this time, I felt utterly drained. "You've never held a wedding, so you might not get it," Clark remarked, glancing at me in the rearview mirror. "It's just normal for the best man and bridesmaid to have fun at a wedding.
I Lost Our Child the Day He Chose Her Novel Cover
9.0
On the third day after my husband lost his memory, I asked him for a divorce. He agreed without hesitation. His amnesia meant he'd forgotten me, but somehow he remembered the woman he was obsessed with, who’d just finalized her own divorce. By asking for a divorce, I was inadvertently paving the way for their union. A month later, he showed up at my door with hospital records in hand. "We have a kid together," he said. I nodded. "Yes, we do." His eyes turned red. "Where's the kid?" I couldn't help but laugh. "I've already let go of you, so why would I keep the child?
Immune To The Billionaire's Toxic Regret Novel Cover
7.2
Elmore Thomas rushed into the emergency room, clutching his feverish seven-year-old son, Buddy, tightly to his chest. When the privacy curtain was pulled back, the air in Elmore's lungs vanished. The attending physician standing under the harsh lights was his wife, Kendal—the woman everyone believed had burned to death eight years ago. But there was no tearful reunion. Kendal looked at him, and her eyes froze into impenetrable ice. She treated him like a biohazard, strictly referring to him as the family member. Worse, she didn't recognize Buddy. She comforted their crying son with the same gentle warmth she used to reserve for Elmore, completely unaware she was soothing the baby she thought had died. Days later, Elmore watched from the shadows as she picked up another boy outside a prep school, her left hand flashing a massive diamond engagement ring. When his butler accidentally recognized her, Kendal shielded her new stepson with pure disgust in her eyes. "Tell that psychopath to sign the divorce papers immediately. I have a new family now." The words 'new family' echoed in Elmore's skull, tearing him apart. For eight years, he had lived in a hell of guilt and madness, raising their son in the shadow of her ghost. How could she just erase their past? How could she give her tender smiles to a stranger and look at him with absolute revulsion? Standing in a luxury ballroom, Elmore squeezed his hand until his crystal champagne flute shattered, thick blood dripping onto the rug. The murderous obsession in his dark eyes returned as he called his lawyer. "Freeze her divorce application. Use every dirty trick in the book. She isn't leaving."
My Husband Forced Me to Carry His Mistress’s Child Novel Cover
9.7
The steady beep of the heart monitor was the only sound in my mother's hospital room. I clutched her frail hand, watching her chest rise and fall with each labored breath. The kidney disease had ravaged her once-vibrant body, leaving behind this hollow shell connected to machines that cost more than our monthly mortgage. "Mrs. Miller needs the transplant soon," Dr. Chen had told me yesterday. "Her body is rejecting the dialysis now." I squeezed her hand tighter. "Hang in there, Mom. The donor match is coming soon." My phone buzzed against my hip. I almost ignored it—another call from the search team looking for Nikolai would only bring more disappointment—but something made me glance at the screen.
Rejected Omega, Secret Bride of the Billionaire Lycan Novel Cover
9.4
I was the Thornton Pack's brilliant but "wolfless" assistant, a defect they treated like a charity case. After years of letting the Alpha, Caleb, control me to prove my worth, he publicly humiliated and discarded me for a pure-blooded pack princess. Heartbroken and drunk at a bar, I accidentally bit and marked a terrifying stranger who saved me from two creeps. I woke up to find out I had drunkenly claimed Damien Blackwood—a ruthless billionaire and the apex Lycan King of the werewolf world. To prevent a pack war over the claiming mark, Damien trapped me in a two-year contract marriage, treating me like a convenient political tool. Right after we signed the papers, I got a call from the police. My little brother, Jamison, had been arrested for punching Caleb, who was bragging about ruining my dignity. At the precinct, Caleb sneered at my misery, threatening to destroy my brother's future. Seeing the fresh bite mark on my neck, Jamison exploded in handcuffs, screaming that Damien had blackmailed me into his bed to get him out of jail. I begged Damien to step outside so I could explain this horrific misunderstanding, feeling like I had sold my soul to a cold-blooded predator. But Damien ignored my pleas. He pulled me behind him, his suffocating Lycan aura crushing everyone in the room. "Yes, she was with me last night, because she is my wife." Before anyone could process the shock, his eyes darkened with a terrifying, unhinged possessiveness. "And I didn't marry her to solve a problem. I married her because I've been in love with her for ten years." I stared at his broad back, my blood running cold as I realized I had no idea what kind of monster I had just bound my life to.