
The Truth He Never Knew
Corinna moved through a high-society gala, a powerful woman now commanding respect. Three years ago, the influential Rios family had cast her aside, viewing her as a liability. Now, after countless battles in a D.C. think tank, she wielded her newfound power with precision.
As her armored SUV navigated rain-slicked Manhattan, a convoy of black Navigators abruptly cut it off. Graham Rios, the man who’d abandoned her, emerged from the storm like a madman, his political mask gone. He marched toward her car, screaming her name against the thunder.
Corinna remained still, coolly sipping wine. She lowered her window just two inches, then slid a folder through, its sharp edge slicing his hand. The document revealed his business project was now controlled by his fiercest enemy, Lucian Lu. Later, she subtly revealed a brutal scar on her wrist, a wound Graham frantically tried to understand.
The scar haunted Graham. Driven by panic, he forced his aide to confess a secret detour from three years ago: Corinna had visited a private maternity hospital. The revelation sent a high-pitched ringing through his ears, as he struggled to comprehend her visit.
Consumed by guilt, Graham hacked the hospital's old files, finding a heavily encrypted medical record under Corinna's name. It stated: "Gestation: 12 weeks. Fetal heartbeat: critically weak. Recommendation: Immediate termination of pregnancy." The words crushed him. Corinna, watching him fall into her trap, knew he had swallowed the exact "truth" she needed.
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Chapter 4
Graham POV:
I pushed past the heavy oak doors of my Manhattan penthouse, my movements jerky and uncoordinated. I had bought this place three years ago, overlooking Central Park, designing every square inch to be our marital home. Now, the silence inside was a physical weight that threatened to crush my spine. Every piece of custom furniture, every velvet drape, felt like a needle dragging across my exposed nerves.
I barked an order at the security detail and the maids, telling them to get the hell out. The heavy front door clicked shut, the deadbolt engaging with a final, echoing snap. I was completely alone.
Outside, the sky cracked open. A violent thunderstorm rolled over the city, the wind howling as thick sheets of rain battered the massive floor-to-ceiling windows of the living room.
I stumbled to the crystal wet bar. I grabbed a heavy bottle of single malt whiskey, ignoring the glasses. I ripped the cork out with my teeth and tipped the bottle back, letting the raw, burning liquid pour down my throat. The alcohol scorched my esophagus, but it did nothing to stop the violent spasms twisting my stomach into tight knots. The nausea was overwhelming, a physical reaction to the rot eating my soul.
I wiped my mouth with the back of my hand and staggered toward the far wall. I grabbed the edge of a massive canvas drop cloth and yanked it down. Dust plumed into the air.
Beneath the cloth was a life-sized oil painting. It was Corinna. She was smiling, wearing a simple white dress, looking at me with eyes full of a soft, foolish trust. I dropped to my knees on the hardwood floor. My hand shook uncontrollably as I reached out, my fingertips tracing the flat, painted surface of her stomach.
The words from that medical file flashed behind my eyes like a strobe light. *Immediate termination of pregnancy.*
The guilt mutated into physical agony. It felt like someone was driving rusted nails through my ribs. I let out a raw, agonizing scream. I grabbed a solid bronze sculpture off the console table. The metal was heavy and cold in my grip.
I spun around and hurled the bronze statue with all my strength at the million-dollar bulletproof glass window.
The impact sounded like a bomb going off. The sculpture bounced off the reinforced pane, leaving a massive, spiderweb crack in the center of the glass. It did not shatter.
The resistance infuriated me. It mocked me. I charged at the window. I pulled my fist back and punched the cracked glass. The sharp edges sliced through my skin. I punched it again, and again. My knuckles split open, the flesh tearing as hot blood smeared across the cold, wet glass. I didn't feel the pain in my hands. All I could feel was the phantom pain of Corinna lying alone on a sterile operating table, bleeding out because I had abandoned her.
I threw my entire body weight against the weakened structure. With a final, deafening crack, the load-bearing frame gave way. The entire pane of bulletproof glass exploded outward.
The storm violently invaded the room. Freezing rain and howling wind blasted into the penthouse, instantly soaking the Persian rugs and ripping the canvas painting off the wall.
I collapsed backward onto the floor, landing in a pile of jagged glass shards. The sharp pieces sliced deep into my forearms and wrists, cutting down to the bone. Blood pooled beneath me, mixing with the cold rainwater. I lay there, staring up at the dark, weeping sky, and my lips curled into a pathetic, miserable smile. The physical pain was finally loud enough to drown out the screaming in my head.
The heavy front door splintered open. My security team rushed in, their boots crunching on the glass. One of them screamed for a medic.
***
Corinna POV:
The private high-speed train cut smoothly through the night, carrying me from Washington D.C. toward New York. I sat in the plush velvet seat of my private cabin, the reading light casting a warm glow over the thick stack of legal documents detailing the upcoming merger.
My personal phone vibrated silently on the mahogany table. I picked it up. It was a heavily encrypted message from the mole I had planted deep inside the Rios family security team.
I opened the file. It was a high-resolution photograph.
Graham was strapped to a white stretcher, his crisp white shirt completely soaked in blood. His arms were wrapped in makeshift tourniquets, his face deathly pale, his eyes closed. He looked like a corpse.
A text bubble popped up below the image: *Senator mentally collapsed, severe self-harm, sent to Mount Sinai Hospital for emergency surgery.*
My assistant, sitting across from me, caught a glimpse of the photo. She gasped loudly, her hand flying to her mouth. She looked at me, her eyes wide with shock, waiting for my reaction.
I stared at the blood on his hands. My heart did not skip a single beat. My breathing remained perfectly even. I did not feel a shred of pity. I did not feel anything at all.
I held the phone with one hand, my thumb hovering over the keyboard. I typed exactly two letters, my face an absolute mask of indifference. I hit send and placed the phone face down on the table.
"Read."
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9.4
My brother and his wife slapped the contract on the table, forcing me to marry Alpha Stone. He was a cruel monster known for breaking his mates' bones, and I was just the price for a new trade route.
Right before I surrendered, the legendary Blackwood Pack arrived. But they didn't offer a glorious rescue. They claimed I was the fated mate of Kaelan, a disgraced, wolfless Omega.
My family laughed in my face, eagerly taking the dowry and throwing me out like garbage. They mocked my miserable future, sending me off to a crumbling shack in the woods. When they later summoned us back to publicly demand a humiliating "tribute" to bleed us dry, they waited for me to break.
"Couldn't handle life in a shack with an Omega? Come crawling back already?" my sister-in-law sneered.
But I refused to let them shame him. I didn't understand why the Moon Goddess gave me an Omega, but Kaelan was kind, giving me the only bed while he slept on the cold floor. Why did my family value a cruel Alpha over a gentle soul? I declared to their faces that his loyal spirit was worth more than any title.
Then, a vicious rogue wolf threatened us at the local market.
My "wolfless" husband stepped in front of me and grabbed the rogue's wrist.
Suddenly, a suffocating, terrifying Alpha King's aura exploded from Kaelan, bringing the rogue to his knees in pure terror.
I stared at my quiet, supposedly weak mate in absolute shock. Who exactly did I marry?

8.2
To save my brother's life, I married a dead billionaire.
My new home was a freezing, high-tech mausoleum where I was ordered to hold a year-long vigil beside Byron Hyde's cryogenic pod.
But I wasn't alone in the dark.
Every night, a terrifying shadow smelling of whiskey and sandalwood pinned me to my narrow bed.
It tore my clothes and brutally claimed my body, leaving me bruised and trembling until dawn.
When I begged the housekeeper for help, showing her my torn skin, she just smiled cruelly.
"It seems the master's spirit has accepted you."
I thought I was being haunted by a vengeful ghost, until Byron's arrogant nephew broke into the tomb to assault me.
His tampering triggered the life-support system, and the heavy lid of the pod hissed open.
Byron Hyde sat up, his eyes lethal and his skin shockingly warm.
He was alive.
Looking at his broad shoulders, I caught the faint scent of whiskey and sandalwood.
The horrific truth hit me like a physical blow.
My nightly tormentor wasn't a ghost. It was my living, breathing husband.
When I confronted him, his eyes were cold and clinical.
"That was a necessary test. I had to know if my wife would break."
A white-hot rage choked me, but I didn't scream or run.
He slipped the priceless, heavy sapphire of the family matriarch onto my finger, offering me absolute power over the treacherous relatives who wanted us both dead.
To fight a monster, you can't be a victim.
I looked into his deep, dangerous eyes and accepted the ring.
If this was a cage, allying with the keeper was the only way to find the key.

9.7
Some chains are forged in iron.
Others in desire.
Sebastian Kol has existed for six centuries. Cursed to burn alive in his own skin every night he transforms into a beast even he cannot control. He wants one thing. Freedom. And after five centuries of searching, a prophecy finally gives it a name.
Leilani Ravenwood.
She carries the mark of the moon goddess on her skin and a prophecy that brands her as his salvation. Her blood silences his beast, and her touch sets him on fire.
In the worst possible way. And in the best possible way.
Furious at the hold she has over him, Sebastian takes her, strips her of everything, and bends her world until it breaks, determined to own what the goddess dared to use against him. What follows is dark and consuming. A monster who has never met his match, and a woman who proves to be it.
But Leilani Ravenwood does not break easily. And somewhere between the hatred and the hunger, the punishment and the pull, the ancient beast begins to suspect the terrible truth.
The woman born to be his salvation may already be his undoing, his poison and cure wearing the same skin.
And he is running out of reasons to care.

9.0
Allegra woke up in a sterile alien hospital with no memory, no ID chip, and a terrifying snow leopard General claiming responsibility for her crash.
But a routine ID scan at a local boutique shattered her fragile cover.
The machine shrieked, flashing a fatal red warning: NO NEURAL LINK DETECTED.
She was a "Ghost"—an illegal, unregistered biological entity in a ruthless Hybrid Empire.
The boutique locked down instantly. Heavily armed police swarmed the plaza, laser sights painting her chest red.
She was dragged into a subterranean military black site, where a manic geneticist tested her blood and discovered the impossible truth.
She wasn't a Hybrid. She was a pure Homo Sapiens—an extinct race whose mere presence could cure the Hybrids' fatal Psyche collapse.
To keep her all to himself, the scientist lied to the General, branding her a toxic, mutating bio-weapon.
Forced by Imperial law, the General abandoned her to the scientist's cruel custody.
Allegra was locked inside a reinforced glass cage in the deepest isolation ward, waiting to be dissected.
She huddled on the floor, trembling in absolute despair.
She didn't belong in this nightmare world. Why was she being treated like a monster? Why did this madman look at her like a prize to be torn apart?
Watching the scientist's fox ears twitch in manic stress outside the glass, her human empathy momentarily overrode her terror.
She stood up and pressed her palm against the glass, perfectly aligning it with his.
"Don't be so nervous, Mr. Fox."
Instantly, an invisible wave of human resonance flooded his core, shattering his genetic madness.
The terrifying predator was reduced to a whimpering, devoted puppy, pressing himself against the window in absolute submission.
Allegra slowly pulled her hand back, her heart skipping a beat.
Well, she thought, that changes things.

9.7
Eighteen months ago, the man I loved shattered my heart, claiming everything between us was a mistake. Now, he's back, a ghost of his former self, a rookie tryout in my pro esports team. And I will make him regret crawling back.
Clifton, captain of a legendary esports team, was secretly battling a severe wrist injury that threatened his career, every match a fight against his own body. He pushed through the pain, ignoring doctors' warnings, desperate to maintain his god-like status.
His world was already on the edge, but nothing prepared him for seeing Justice Terry again in the team basement. Justice, pale and trembling, his eyes wide with naked terror, was now a rookie tryout.
Clifton had spent a year and a half trying to forget that rainy Chicago alley, the raw revulsion in Justice's eyes, the whispered "it wasn't real" that had left him heartbroken. Justice had vanished, and Clifton had erased every trace. Now, the boy who once looked at him like he was the sun was back, flinching at his touch, displaying a deep, primal fear. Amidst sponsor pressure and whispers of being "washed," Clifton saw Justice's return as a chance for vengeance. He publicly humiliated Justice on a live stream, forcing him into a suicide mission, then coldly benched him.
Yet, the satisfaction never came. Instead, a hollow emptiness and a torrent of questions: What had truly happened in the past? Why was Justice here, and what trauma had carved such fear into his bones?
Clifton, unwilling to be fooled again, swore to uncover every secret and every lie. He would force Justice to explain why he had returned, even if it meant tearing down everything they both had left.

8.8
On the anniversary of my mother's death, my father, the Alpha, threw a lavish wedding to marry a woman only four years older than me.
My new stepmother publicly humiliated me, stomped on my hand, and shattered the only necklace my mother left me.
When I confronted her, my father slapped me across the face and ordered me to respect my new Luna.
Heartbroken and furious, I publicly disowned them all.
In retaliation, my father sentenced me to death the very next morning.
He offered me as a tribute to the cursed Lycan King—a monster whose beast savagely tore apart every she-wolf sent to his bed.
My family watched with smug satisfaction as I was locked in an iron cage and dragged away, discarded like defective trash simply because I was born wolfless.
I was supposed to be ripped to shreds on my first night in the pitch-black castle.
But as I stood in the King's dark chamber, bracing for the bloody end, nothing happened.
The terrifying beast just sat in the shadows, staring at me in absolute confusion.
That was when the horrifying truth of his curse clicked in my mind.
His madness was triggered by the spiritual scent of an inner wolf. And I was completely wolfless.
The very defect that made my family throw me away was my ultimate, impenetrable shield.
I wasn't going to die here.
I was going to survive, use this terrifying King, and make my family regret the day they ever cast me out.