
The Pregnant Heiress: Rising From The Grave
I was kneeling on a Persian rug in my custom Vera Wang, staring at the headline that ended my life: my father had been arrested for a massive Ponzi scheme.
I reached for my phone to call my groom, Claudius, but he disconnected the line. Then I heard the sound that stopped my heart—the deadbolt sliding home from the outside.
Two floors down, my mother-in-law was already calculating the cost of my survival. To save the family’s stock prices, they decided a "grieving widower" was better than a disgraced bride. Claudius didn't even flinch. He downed a whiskey and gave the order to the staff.
"Do it."
The door swung open, but it wasn't my husband. It was the housekeeper and a maid wearing medical gloves. They pinned me down, ignoring my screams, and plunged a syringe of potassium chloride into my neck. They scattered pills across the floor, staging a perfect suicide while I felt my heart rhythm fail.
"I'm pregnant. Please."
I sobbed into the silk cushions, but they didn't pause. As the darkness swallowed the room, I realized my entire marriage had been a transaction, and I was now a liability to be liquidated. How could the man I loved sign my death warrant? Why was my best friend already wearing my engagement ring before my body was even cold?
But they forgot one thing: I was an Elliott, and we always have a contingency plan. The poison didn't kill me; it only woke me up. When I stood up from that chaise lounge, the bride was gone. I was holding the secret ledger that would burn their empire to the ground.
"Have a lovely audit."
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Chapter 2
Olga bent down to pick up a large shard of the champagne flute near the torn train of the gown. She grunted, the tight bodice of her uniform digging into her ribs.
Behind her, on the chaise lounge, Callie’s index finger twitched.
Inside her body, the brain fought back. Adrenaline surged, countering the paralytic. The pre-administered beta-blockers had bought her precious seconds, a buffer against the chemical onslaught. The strategist—the side of her honed in the cutthroat world of Wall Street law—assessed the paralysis receding from her limbs. The dose had been calculated for a woman of a hundred and ten pounds. Callie’s lean, wiry physique, forged by years of punishing discipline, was a variable they hadn’t anticipated.
Danvers stood by the door, her back turned, phone pressed to her ear. “Yes, madam. It’s done. She looks… peaceful.”
Olga felt a change in the air pressure behind her. A subtle displacement. She frowned and turned her head.
The chaise lounge was empty.
Olga’s eyes widened. Her mouth opened to scream, a primal animal instinct.
But before a sound could escape, a cold, wet hand shot out from the shadows of the heavy velvet curtains. It clamped over Olga’s mouth, sealing the cry inside. Another hand pressed something hard and sharp—the stem of the broken champagne flute—against the soft skin just below her jaw.
Callie wasn’t using strength she didn’t have. She used leverage and fear. She leaned close, her whisper a rasping blade: “The carotid artery is two millimeters away. Make a sound, and you’ll bleed out on this carpet before she even turns around.”
Olga froze, the whites of her eyes stark against her flushed skin. She was an obstacle, not a person. An obstacle to be removed.
Callie looked over Olga’s terrified face, her gaze locking on the syringe Danvers had left on the side table. She stretched out her free hand and closed her fingers around it.
Thud.
She slammed the base of a heavy silver picture frame into Olga’s temple. Just enough force. Efficient. Brutal.
Olga went limp, collapsing to the floor like a sack of potatoes.
Danvers heard the noise. She spun around, a flicker of annoyance crossing her face. “Olga, you clumsy fool, if you’ve broken something else—”
The words died in her throat. Her phone slipped from her fingers and landed silently on the plush carpet.
Callie stood in the center of the room. She had torn away the remaining shreds of lace from her gown, leaving only a short, jagged slip. Bruises were already blooming on her pale legs.
“Attempted murder,” Danvers stammered, backing up until her spine hit the doorframe.
Callie tilted her head. When she spoke, her voice was no longer Callie Elliott’s breathy soprano. It was an octave lower, hoarse from the poison.
“Mrs. Danvers, that’s life in prison,” she said, her voice cold and precise. “Aiding and abetting, twenty years. Is the money Victoria Morton paying you worth that?”
Danvers scrambled for the doorknob, her nails scraping against the wood.
Callie moved with fluid economy. She kicked a pouf into Danvers’ path. The older woman tripped and fell with a yelp. Before she could inhale to scream, Callie was on her. She didn’t strike. She simply pressed the tip of the retrieved syringe against Danvers’ throat.
With her other hand, Callie reached into Danvers’ apron pocket and pulled out the master key card.
“Tell Victoria,” Callie whispered into the terrified woman’s ear, “that her stop-loss just failed.”
She slammed Danvers’ head against the wall. The housekeeper went limp, unconscious.
Callie didn’t pause. She grabbed the unconscious Olga by the ankles and dragged her into the walk-in closet, then returned for Danvers, hauling her inside as well. She closed the closet door, hiding the evidence. She stood up, swaying slightly as the room spun. She walked into the bathroom, turned on the cold tap, and plunged her face into the icy water. She held it there for ten seconds, counting her heartbeats.
She lifted her head, water dripping from her chin. She looked at the stranger in the mirror. Those eyes were dark, hollow, filled with lethal intent. The corner of her mouth lifted in a smile. It wasn’t a happy smile. It was the smile of a wolf finding an open gate.
She walked back into the bedroom and found a bottle of Claudius’s thirty-year-old single malt scotch, pulling the stopper. She poured the amber liquid over the deep scratches on her arms. She didn’t hiss. She didn’t blink.
Outside, the heavy footsteps of security echoed. Claudius was coming to check on the “job.”
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7.6
The heavy prison gates clanged shut, ending three years. I scanned the empty lot for Julian, my fiancé. Deserted.
Biting December wind my only welcome. Calls to Julian, father, mother: unanswered/disconnected.
Shivering, Julian's tracker showed an unfamiliar Long Island estate. A freezing cab left me penniless; I walked through the blizzard. Through a mansion window, I saw Julian, my stepsister Clara, a small boy—a perfect family. Julian, who hated children, doted on him, and Clara wore *my* engagement ring.
I overheard Julian's call: he, my father, conspired to frame me for Clara’s medical error, saving their company and future. My family hadn't just abandoned me; they plotted my destruction.
A delayed text from Julian popped up, lying about a "cross-border meeting," promising to pick me up tomorrow. Despair vanished, replaced by a cold, terrifying smile. Typing "Understood," I turned from their stolen life, walking into the blizzard, fueled by burning rage.

9.8
Ina Holman, heiress to a failing real estate empire, was forced to attend a high-stakes matchmaking meeting to secure a financial lifeline for her family.
But the drink she was handed was secretly spiked. Desperate to avoid a public scandal that would ruin her father, she fled into a VIP elevator, only to fall directly into the arms of Buren Warner—the most ruthless billionaire predator on Wall Street.
After a blurred, chaotic night, the nightmare truly began.
A fabricated scandal of her hotel rendezvous hit the front pages. Her father slapped her across the face, using the disgrace as an excuse to freeze her accounts and kick her out onto the streets, legally severing her from the family trust before declaring bankruptcy.
Even worse, her twin sister was killed in a sudden estate explosion.
And the final, crushing blow? Ina discovered that her ex-boyfriend, Faron, the man supposed to save her family, was secretly gay. He and her best friend had orchestrated the drugging to destroy Ina's reputation, allowing Faron to break their alliance and keep his inheritance without suspicion.
Stripped of her home, her family, and her dignity, Ina screamed in agony on the freezing streets.
Her own father had murdered her sister for a fifty-million-dollar insurance payout and sacrificed Ina to hide his assets. The people she trusted most had conspired to ruin her life just for their own selfish greed.
Driven into a corner with absolutely nothing left to lose, Ina stared at the cold, calculating billionaire who had tracked her down to an abandoned cliffside estate.
"Marry me, and I will give you the power to destroy them all."
To avenge her sister and crush the people who betrayed her, Ina signed her soul to the devil.

7.4
Tonight was supposed to be Cordelia's grand engagement party, the night she finally secured her future.
But an hour before the banquet, she received an anonymous video. Her fiancé was in the hotel's penthouse, tangled in the sheets with her stepsister. They had even paid off her trusted staff to keep her isolated.
Cordelia didn't shed a single tear. She walked onto the grand stage, hijacked the screens, and broadcasted their betrayal to hundreds of New York's elite. She tore up the multimillion-dollar prenup and threw the pieces in his face.
"The engagement is canceled. My legal team will seize your family's assets by tomorrow morning."
But instead of support, her own father violently grabbed her wrist, furious that she ruined their reputation. Her stepmother tried to slap her for the cameras, and her ex-fiancé threatened to completely destroy her career. Surrounded by the people who were supposed to be her family, she was treated like the villain.
Just as she was cornered, Justice Duncan, the most ruthless billionaire on Wall Street, stepped out of the shadows.
He offered her absolute protection and capital, but only if she signed a five-year contract marriage to mother his four-year-old heir.
But when Cordelia finally met the little boy, her blood ran completely cold.
The boy was the exact baby she was told she had miscarried four years ago. And the billionaire handing her the marriage contract was the same stranger who had taken him.

8.1
Iverson played the role of a rebellious, useless loser to survive in his mother's new wealthy family. He deliberately tanked his grades and hid his genius so his perfect stepbrother wouldn't feel threatened.
But when a violent gang extorted Brenda, the only woman who actually acted like a real mother to him, Iverson dropped the act. He brutally dismantled four armed thugs with a broken aluminum pole to save her life.
At the police station, he faked being a terrified victim to avoid jail. But when his biological mother arrived, she didn't even ask if he was hurt. Instead, she glared at him with pure disgust.
"How much more humiliation are you going to put me through?"
She threw a tutoring folder at his chest, praising his stepbrother's Ivy League prospects while threatening to cut off Iverson's trust fund for fighting over slum trash.
Iverson clenched his fists in silence. He had deliberately played the idiot and ruined his own reputation just to keep her safe in that toxic mansion. Yet, she looked at him like he was absolute garbage. She truly believed he was just a brainless thug holding her back.
Back in his room, Iverson locked the heavy oak door and booted up his highly encrypted laptop. The screen loaded into the world's most elite underground academic network.
"Welcome back, Rank 1."
He stared at the glowing screen with a cold, dangerous smile. He was done playing the fool.

9.4
On our wedding anniversary, I came home to find my husband, Jace, celebrating with another woman in our living room.
She was wearing my mother's necklace-the only thing recovered from the explosion that killed my parents. Jace laughed, calling it a "cheap piece of junk," and tried to write me a check to buy a new one.
His family called my parents' ashes "garbage" and "unsanitary." When I confronted them, Jace sided with his mother, ordering me out of the penthouse I secretly owned. He let his friends publicly humiliate me, calling me a gold-digging leech with no background.
But that wasn't the worst of it. When a gunman stormed the restaurant we were in, Jace shoved me directly into the line of fire to shield his mistress.
The shotgun blast tore through my arm. As I lay bleeding on the marble floor, I stared at the man who had just used me as a human shield, his face pale with terror as he protected her.
In that instant, every ounce of love I ever had for him died. The pain in my arm was nothing compared to the cold, hollow void that consumed my heart.
He thought he was sacrificing a quiet, useless wife to secure his future. He had no idea he had just declared war on Captain Cilla Henson, West Point valedictorian and the most lethal operator of the Eagle Task Force.

9.8
Ever since Ryan took her in, Kailey had tried to be sensible and pleasing, shaping herself around his moods.
He'd raised her, but she never saw him as family; she'd been sure they'd end up together.
On the day she turned twenty, ready to confess her feelings again, his beloved woman came back.
Kailey overheard, "Kailey is just a kid to me; I could never look at her that way. The only person I love is Olivia."
She walked away, and Ryan fell apart.
Later, at her wedding, Kailey smiled in white. Ryan pleaded, "I regret it, Kailey. Please don't marry him."
Calmly, she said, "Can you let go? My groom won't appreciate it."