
The Runaway's Revenge
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Liana Az-Zahra, a 21-year-old aspiring artist, had to freeze her dreams to fulfill her late mother's dying wish: marrying Raka, the son of a family friend. Liana hoped for a protector, a man who would cherish her. Instead, less than a week into the marriage, her world shattered. She discovered Raka's long-standing affair with their own domestic helper-a betrayal that had been simmering long before their wedding day.
Walking away as a young divorcée, Liana thought her heart was permanently scarred. But fate had a different plan. She crosses paths with Adrian Dirgantara, a wealthy, high-powered widower and real estate mogul. Their lives collide because of Mika, Adrian's young daughter, who forms an instant, unbreakable bond with Liana.
To secure his daughter's happiness, Adrian proposes a marriage of convenience. He is a man of ice-cold, blunt, and seemingly incapable of love. Despite the emotional wall he has built around himself, Liana makes a silent vow: she will not just be a mother figure to Mika, but she will bring the arrogant, rigid Adrian Dirgantara to his knees in love.
But can Liana truly break through his frozen exterior, or is there a darker reason why Adrian refuses to let anyone into his heart?
The Runaway's Revenge Chapter 1
The smell of expensive jasmine lilies filled the room, a scent that was supposed to represent purity and new beginnings. But for Liana, it felt like the smell of a funeral. She sat in front of the vanity mirror, staring at her own reflection. The white lace of her wedding dress felt heavy, like a cage made of silk and beads. She was twenty-one, an age where her friends were busy chasing internships or traveling the world, yet here she was, wearing a ring that felt like a shackle.
"It's for Mom, Liana. Just for Mom," she whispered to herself. Her voice trembled, barely audible over the distant sound of the wedding reception music downstairs.
Her mother's dying wish had been simple yet suffocating: "Marry Raka, Liana. His family will protect you. I can't leave you alone in this world." Liana, ever the dutiful daughter, had swallowed her dreams of moving to Florence to study fine arts. She had traded her paintbrushes for a marriage certificate.
She thought Raka was a decent man. He was charming in a rehearsed way, always saying the right things when their parents were watching. She truly believed that even if love wasn't there yet, safety would be. She expected a protector. She expected a home.
The door clicked open. Liana turned, expecting a bridesmaid or her new mother-in-law. Instead, she saw Raka. He wasn't wearing his tuxedo jacket anymore. His tie was loosened, and his eyes looked glassy, bored.
"The guests are asking for the bride," he said, leaning against the doorframe. He didn't look at her with admiration. He looked at her like a piece of furniture he had just purchased and wasn't sure where to put.
"I just needed a moment, Raka. It's... it's a lot to take in," Liana replied, trying to offer a small smile.
Raka chuckled, a dry, mocking sound. "Don't get all dramatic on me, Liana. We did the ceremony, the papers are signed. Just come downstairs, smile for the cameras, and then you can go back to being the quiet little doll my mother wanted."
He didn't wait for her answer. He turned and walked away, leaving a cold draft in the room. Liana felt a shiver run down her spine. A week. She just had to get through the first week, and maybe they would find a rhythm.
But the rhythm she found was a nightmare.
Fast forward six days. The honeymoon phase didn't exist. Raka was barely home, claiming "work emergencies" at his father's firm. The sprawling house they lived in felt haunted. Liana spent her days wandering the cold hallways, her art supplies still packed in cardboard boxes in the corner of the guest room-the room she had been sleeping in because Raka claimed he "snored too loudly" and didn't want to disturb her.
It was a Tuesday afternoon. A heavy rain was drumming against the floor-to-ceiling windows of the mansion. Liana was heading to the kitchen to make some tea when she noticed something strange. The door to the laundry suite, usually tucked away near the back stairs, was slightly ajar.
She heard a giggle. It wasn't a sound of a worker doing chores. It was high-pitched, flirtatious. Then came a man's voice-a voice she recognized all too well.
"Careful, Maya. If the 'little princess' hears you, we're in trouble," Raka's voice drifted through the gap.
Liana's heart stopped. Her breath hitched in her throat, feeling like she had swallowed glass. She moved closer, her hand trembling as she pushed the door just an inch further.
The sight inside burned itself into her retina. Raka was there, his hands wrapped around Maya, the young maid who had been hired just two weeks before the wedding. They weren't just talking. The intimacy, the way they looked at each other-it wasn't new. It was practiced. It was old.
"She won't hear anything," Maya whispered, leaning into him. "She's too busy playing the mourning daughter in her room. Why did you even marry that boring girl, Raka? You promised me it would just be us."
Raka pulled her closer, kissing her neck with a passion he had never shown Liana. "You know why. My father's will was tied to that old woman's friendship. If I didn't marry Liana, I'd lose the CEO chair. It's just business, babe. She's just a placeholder. You're the one I actually want in my bed."
Liana felt the world tilt. The "protection" her mother promised was a lie. Her marriage was a business transaction for a man who disgusted her. She didn't cry-not yet. Instead, a cold, sharp clarity washed over her. She had sacrificed her entire life, her passion, and her future for a man who saw her as a "placeholder."
She stepped back, her heels clicking softly on the marble. She didn't hide. She pushed the door wide open.
The two of them jumped apart. Maya scrambled to straighten her uniform, her face turning pale. Raka, however, didn't look guilty. He looked annoyed. He straightened his shirt, staring at Liana with eyes that were as cold as stone.
"Liana. You should learn to knock," he said, his voice devoid of any apology.
"A placeholder?" Liana's voice was steady, surprisingly sharp. "Is that all I am? While you roll around with the help in the house my mother helped your father build?"
Raka rolled his eyes. "Oh, cut the melodrama. You have the house, you have the credit cards, and you have the family name. Just go back upstairs and pretend you didn't see anything. We can keep this civil as long as you stay out of my business."
"Civil?" Liana took a step forward. "There is nothing civil about this, Raka. This isn't a marriage. It's a joke."
"It's a contract," Raka snapped. "And you're not going anywhere. What are you going to do? Run away? You have no money, no parents left, and no career. You're a 21-year-old girl with a half-finished portfolio. You need me."
Liana looked at him-really looked at him-and realized she didn't recognize the man she had promised to spend her life with. Or maybe, she finally saw him for exactly who he was.
"I'd rather be a beggar on the street than your 'placeholder'," Liana said. She reached for her finger, tugging at the diamond ring that felt like a parasite. It was tight, stubborn, but she pulled until her skin was raw. She threw it on the floor. It made a pathetic clink sound as it rolled toward Maya's feet.
"Keep it," Liana said to the maid, who was trembling. "It's as fake as he is."
She turned on her heel and walked away. Raka shouted after her, his voice echoing in the hollow hallway, calling her ungrateful, calling her a fool. But Liana didn't stop. She went to the guest room, grabbed her backpack and the one box of paints she hadn't unpacked, and walked out into the pouring rain.
She had no plan. She had no home. She was a widow of a living marriage, a divorcée before she had even reached her first anniversary.
She walked for what felt like hours, her thin sweater soaked through. The neon lights of the city blurred into streaks of color. Eventually, her legs gave out near a high-end shopping plaza. She sat on a stone bench, shivering, her box of paints clutched to her chest like a shield.
"Mom... I tried," she sobbed into her knees. "I tried so hard."
"Excuse me?"
A small, soft voice broke through her crying. Liana looked up, wiping her eyes with the back of her hand. Standing in front of her was a little girl, maybe five or six years old. She had long, dark hair and was wearing a bright yellow raincoat. She was holding a stuffed rabbit that looked just as wet as Liana.
"Are you a princess?" the little girl asked, her eyes wide with curiosity. "You look like the sad princess in my book. The one who lost her castle."
Liana tried to choke back a laugh that sounded more like a sob. "I'm not a princess, sweetie. I think... I think I'm just lost."
"Mika! I told you not to run off!"
A deep, commanding voice boomed from behind the girl. Liana looked up and saw a man approaching. He was tall, dressed in a sharp charcoal suit that screamed power, even with a black umbrella held over his head. His face was chiseled, handsome in a way that felt intimidating, but his expression was as cold as a winter morning in the mountains.
This was Adrian Dirgantara. Even in her mess of a life, Liana recognized the face from business magazines. The man they called the "Ice Architect."
Adrian stopped in his tracks when he saw Liana sitting on the bench, soaked to the bone, looking like a drowned bird. His eyes flicked from Liana to his daughter, Mika, who was now standing right next to the stranger.
"Mika, come here. Now," Adrian said, his voice like a whip.
"But Daddy, she's crying! And she has paints! Look!" Mika pointed at Liana's box.
Adrian looked at Liana again. There was no pity in his eyes, only a cold, analytical gaze. He looked at her wet clothes, her messy hair, and the way she held onto her art supplies like they were worth more than gold. To him, she looked like trouble. She looked like a distraction.
"I'm sorry if she bothered you," Adrian said to Liana, his tone incredibly stiff and formal. He didn't ask if she was okay. He didn't offer his umbrella. He simply grabbed Mika's hand. "Let's go, Mika. We're late."
"No! I want to stay with the paint lady!" Mika protested, her little shoes splashing in the puddles. She suddenly broke free from her father's grip and hugged Liana's leg. "Don't be sad, paint lady. My Daddy is rich, he can buy you a new castle!"
Adrian's face darkened. He looked at Liana with a mix of annoyance and something else-a flash of frustration. "I apologize for my daughter's behavior. She's... overly imaginative."
Liana looked up at the man, her own eyes red and swollen, but her spirit wasn't entirely broken. "She's just being kind," Liana said, her voice shaking from the cold. "Maybe you should try it sometime."
Adrian froze. Nobody spoke to him like that. Not his employees, not his rivals, and certainly not a girl who looked like she had just crawled out of a river. He stared at her for a long moment, his jaw tightening.
"Kindness doesn't get you far in this city," Adrian snapped. He pulled Mika back, more firmly this time. "Come. Now."
As they walked away toward a waiting black limousine, Mika kept looking back, waving her hand. Liana watched them go, feeling the cold seep into her bones. She didn't know then that this wasn't the last she'd see of the man with the frozen heart.
She didn't know that the little girl in the yellow raincoat had just decided who her new mother was going to be.
Liana stood up, her muscles aching. She looked at the limousine disappearing into the traffic. She had lost everything today-her mother's house, her husband, her reputation. But as she looked at her paint box, she realized she still had the one thing Raka couldn't take. She had her name. And she had her pride.
The rain started to thin out, but the air remained freezing. Liana began to walk again, not toward the past, but toward a future she couldn't yet see. A future where she would have to face a man even more difficult than the one she had left-a man who didn't believe in love, and a man she was determined to change.
But first, she had to survive the night.
Continue Reading
The Runaway's Revenge of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 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

8.3
I was the long-lost Donovan heiress, finally brought home after a childhood in foster care. My parents adored me, my husband cherished me, and the woman who tried to ruin my life, Kiera Reese, was locked away in a mental facility. I was safe. I was loved.
On my birthday, I decided to surprise my husband, Ivan, at his office. But he wasn't there.
I found him at a private art gallery across town. He was with Kiera.
She wasn't in a facility. She was radiant, laughing as she stood beside my husband and their five-year-old son. I watched through the glass as Ivan kissed her, a familiar, loving gesture he’d used with me just that morning.
I crept closer and overheard them. My birthday wish to go to the amusement park had been denied because he’d already promised the entire park to their son—whose birthday was the same day as mine.
"She’s so grateful to have a family, she’d believe anything we tell her," Ivan said, his voice laced with a cruelty that stole my breath. "It's almost sad."
My entire reality—my loving parents who funded this secret life, my devoted husband—was a five-year lie. I was just the fool they kept on stage.
My phone buzzed. It was a text from Ivan, sent while he stood with his real family.
"Just got out of the meeting. So exhausting. I miss you."
The casual lie was the final blow. They thought I was a pathetic, grateful orphan they could control.
They were about to find out just how wrong they were.

7.4
Briony was devastated when her boyfriend proposed to her best friend in front of her. Not only was she betrayed, but she was also publicly humiliated.
Five years later, she became popular after writing her heartbreaking love story into a novel. Her ex-boyfriend was offended. When he condemned her, she swore she would have nothing to do with him anymore.
Unfortunately, fate had other plans. Briony accidentally hit a child with her car, who turned out to be the son of Alexander, her ex-boyfriend! As punishment, she was forced to be his nanny until his cast arm healed.
What would happen next? Could she endure the torture from the ex who secretly still wanted her?

7.7
Deidre went to the clinic and learned she was finally pregnant, but her failing heart meant carrying the baby would kill her.
Before she could process the grief, she received an anonymous photo of her husband, Danial, tenderly escorting a heavily pregnant woman into a VIP hospital.
The woman was his cousin, Daria.
Following them, Deidre overheard Danial call her a "sterile decoration," promising to get rid of her while securing a Cayman trust fund for his illegitimate child.
The nightmare only worsened when Daria gloatingly confessed to a horrifying truth.
Daria had stolen the credit for saving Danial in a fire—a heroic act that had actually destroyed Deidre's heart.
Even more sickening, Daria had bribed a doctor two years ago to fake Deidre's ectopic pregnancy, tricking Danial into authorizing the surgery that murdered their perfectly healthy baby daughter.
When a grief-stricken Deidre attacked the murderer, Danial furiously shoved his wife to the ground.
Ignoring her heart spasms and gasps for air, he threw her out into a freezing New York blizzard to die.
Lying in the snow, Deidre's love turned to pure ash as she realized she had sacrificed her body and her child for a blind monster.
But she didn't die that night.
Rescued by Danial's biggest Wall Street rival, Deidre marched into her husband's office the next morning alongside New York's most ruthless divorce lawyer.
"Sign it, or I'll freeze your offshore trust and burn your empire to the ground."

8.9
He made one mistake-he chose revenge instead of mercy.
Luna's sharp tongue and careless drunken words should have been harmless. Instead, they mark her as a target for Daimen Blackwell, a billionaire who doesn't forgive and never forgets.
What begins as punishment turns into possession when he forces her into a contract that binds her to him as his mistress-his rules, his house, his bed.
Luna is naïve in love but not in spirit, and her defiance slowly becomes the one thing Daimen can't control. Somewhere between power plays and stolen moments, he wins her heart-only to destroy it.
When Daimen betrays her, Luna leaves with nothing but shattered trust. And that's when he discovers the truth: she is the woman he has been searching for all his life.
This time, the billionaire has nothing left to bargain with.
Only regret. Only groveling. And the hope that love might survive the damage he caused.

9.1
Eight years ago, Lena Hale was a second-year university student who trusted the wrong moment with her entire life.
Adrian Vale was in his final year-brilliant, disciplined, already learning how to rule rather than feel. To Lena, he was safety. To Adrian, she was the one weakness he allowed himself.
Until one night destroyed everything.
Adrian saw her in a position he could not forgive.
Something that looked deliberate.
Something that felt like betrayal carved into his bones.
He didn't ask for the truth.
She never got the chance to give it.
They separated broken, bleeding, and unfinished-and the damage followed them for eight years.
When they meet again, there is no tenderness left.
Lena is older now. Quieter. Cornered by debt that doesn't negotiate and men who collect pain instead of money. Survival forces her into one final humiliation-standing in for her best friend on a single escort assignment. One night. One paycheck. One way to keep breathing.
She never expects Adrian to be the man watching.
Adrian Vale is no longer capable of doubt. He is a billionaire built on precision, control, and a resentment he never questioned. Power has stripped him of mercy. When he sees Lena again-dressed for another man, standing exactly where he believes she chose to stand-his judgment finalizes.
She betrayed him once.
Now she's proving it.
He doesn't ask questions. He doesn't want explanations. He wants confirmation-and control.
Money becomes a weapon.
Silence becomes obedience.
And Lena learns just how expensive survival can be.
But Adrian's empire is cracking. His mother is dying, and her deal is brutal in its simplicity: marriage in echange for another round of chemo.
What begins as punishment becomes proximity. What begins as resentment mutates into obsession. And beneath Adrian's certainty lurks a truth so corrosive it could dismantle everything he built.
This is not a love story.
It is not forgiveness.
It is power colliding with memory.
Control strangling truth.
And two people bound together by a lie that refuses to stay buried.
Because some love stories don't burn slowly.
They detonate.
And when the truth comes out...
nothing survives intact.

9.0
"Seraphina, you are destined to be my Luna, and no one will ever replace you."
Alpha Alexander has been searching on Earth for his missing Luna, who was taken by a cunning rival, for decades. When he finally finds her, it's not a happily ever after reunion. In a world where loyalty is tested and love is a weapon, Seraphina must choose-before the war for her soul consumes them all.











