
The Unwanted Healer's Thirty-Day Fake Marriage
Cynthia saved a dying billionaire on a train with a single silver needle, accidentally leaving her broken bracelet behind.
Her greedy cousin claimed the bracelet and the credit. Cynthia didn't care. To stop her cruel aunt from pulling the plug on her uncle's life support, she cornered the paranoid billionaire, Dominic Church, into a thirty-day fake engagement.
But Dominic was convinced she was a manipulative gold-digger.
When his own grandmother secretly laced his mansion with aphrodisiacs to force them together, Dominic's paranoia snapped.
He pinned Cynthia against the wall, his eyes filled with absolute disgust.
"If you were the last woman on earth, I would cut off my own hands before I touched you."
Ignoring her desperate explanations, he coldly ordered his massive bodyguard to throw her into the freezing outdoor pool.
The icy water instantly triggered Cynthia's horrific childhood trauma of a deadly plane crash.
Her lungs seized. As she sank into the dark depths, thrashing and suffocating, she couldn't understand why the man whose life she had saved was now ruthlessly taking hers.
It wasn't until Dominic saw the security footage proving her absolute innocence that his paranoid delusions shattered.
Trembling, he dropped to his knees beside her lifeless, blue body.
But when Cynthia finally opened her eyes, the thirty-day contract was dead, and she was ready to make him pay.
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Chapter 6
The heavy wooden door creaked open on its ancient hinges.
The instant Cynthia stepped over the threshold into the hallway, her cold, hardened expression vanished like smoke. The muscles in her face shifted with practiced precision—her mouth curving into a soft, demure smile, her eyes warming just enough to look convincing. It didn't reach her eyes. Not even close. But it was flawless.
Dominic stepped out directly behind her. The murderous, vein-popping rage that had contorted his features thirty seconds ago was buried under an equally flawless mask of calm, composed, almost tender composure. The rigid tension in his jaw melted away. His shoulders relaxed. His eyes softened.
To sell the lie—to make it stick—Dominic reached out and placed his large, warm hand firmly on the curve of Cynthia's waist.
Cynthia's breath caught in her throat. Her entire body went rigid as a steel beam at the sudden, unexpected contact, every muscle locking tight. Her stomach clenched involuntarily, a visceral, physical rejection of his touch. But she forced herself to exhale, forced the tension out of her spine, and leaned her weight ever so slightly against his solid side. Her hip pressed against his. They must have looked like a picture-perfect couple.
They walked back into the grand living room in perfect, sickening, synchronized harmony.
Eleonora saw them—the hand on the waist, the leaning bodies, the soft smiles—and clapped her thin, delicate hands together with a sound like breaking twigs. Tears of pure, uncomplicated joy welled in her ancient eyes, spilling over and tracking down the deep wrinkles of her cheeks. Every line on her face seemed to smooth out in radiant delight.
On the velvet sofa, Inger gripped her silk handkerchief so tightly her knuckles cracked audibly. Her eyes burned with a jealousy so toxic, so corrosive, it practically smoked off her skin. The orphan. The charity case. The girl she had tried to sell to a mentally disabled man for a payout. And now she was ascending to the Church family throne while Inger's own daughter stood empty-handed.
Dominic addressed the room, his voice smooth as polished marble, utterly stripped of the venom he had spat at Cynthia five minutes ago. "Cynthia and I have reached an understanding. We are officially engaged."
He looked down at Cynthia, his dark eyes dead and cold as a frozen lake, but his smile was perfect—warm, adoring, the smile of a man who had just found his soulmate. "My legal team will deliver the formal gifts and the ring by tomorrow morning."
Cynthia lowered her eyelashes, playing the demure, overwhelmed bride with Oscar-worthy conviction. Meanwhile, her stomach churned with nausea so violent she was afraid she might be sick on his polished oxfords.
Dominic checked his platinum Patek Philippe watch with a casual flick of his wrist. "Unfortunately, I have an urgent cross-border conference call I cannot postpone. I must return to the city immediately."
Eleonora waved him off with both hands, beaming like the sun. "Go, go, my boy! Work is important! Cynthia, darling, walk your fiancé to his car. It's only proper."
Cynthia had no choice. She walked beside Dominic through the massive front doors, down the sweeping stone steps, and across the crunching gravel driveway to where the black Maybach idled like a crouching panther, its tinted windows reflecting the pale morning sky.
The second they were out of sight of the windows—the instant the massive oak doors swung shut behind them—Dominic's hand snapped back from her waist as if he had pressed his palm against a red-hot stove coil. He aggressively, furiously brushed the fabric of his suit jacket where his arm had rested against her body, swatting at invisible contamination.
Cynthia didn't miss a beat. She vigorously, exaggeratedly brushed the wool of her sweater with her own hand where his palm had pressed, slapping the fabric over and over again with sharp, stinging strikes, acting as if she were dusting off something utterly repulsive and possibly diseased.
Dominic sneered down at her, his lip curling. "Don't get too deep into the role, sweetheart. You aren't Mrs. Church, and you never will be." He ducked into the luxurious leather backseat without a backward glance.
Cynthia slammed the heavy car door shut directly in his face, missing his nose by inches. "Have a terrible trip," she mouthed through the dark tinted glass, her smile wide and venomous.
The Maybach crunched over the gravel, tires spitting small stones, and glided down the long, tree-lined driveway until it disappeared around the bend. Cynthia let out a long, exhausting, bone-deep breath. Her facial muscles ached from the effort of fake smiling. Her shoulders sagged.
She turned and trudged back into the house, heading straight for the stairs. She needed the sanctuary of her tiny bedroom, the locked door, the silence.
As she climbed the thickly carpeted steps to the second floor, she paused mid-stride. Near the shadowed corner of the hallway, half-hidden behind a massive marble Roman pillar and a lush, overgrown potted fern, she heard hushed, conspiratorial voices buzzing with excitement.
Cynthia pressed her back flat against the cold wall, holding her breath until her lungs burned.
It was Eleonora and Celia.
"Did you hear them in that drawing room?" Eleonora was whisper-shouting, her voice practically vibrating with manic glee. "A thirty-day contract! A contract, Celia! My idiot grandson thinks he can outsmart me with a piece of paper!"
Celia giggled, a high, giddy sound. "They looked so good together, though! Did you see the way he touched her waist? The tension was absolutely insane. They're going to combust."
"We cannot let them simply wait out the clock," Eleonora declared, her voice dropping to a conspiratorial, calculating register. "We need to force their hands. Accelerate the timeline. Throw them into the fire together and see what emerges from the flames. I want a great-grandchild, and I want it now. I'm not getting any younger."
"I'm in," Celia promised eagerly, her voice breathless with excitement. "I'll tell you their schedules. I know this house inside and out. Whatever you need, Mrs. Church. I'm your soldier."
A crisp, sharp sound echoed in the hallway. The two women had just high-fived behind the pillar.
A cold sweat broke out on the back of Cynthia's neck, trickling down her spine. A secret alliance between a billionaire matriarch with unlimited resources and no boundaries, and her gossip-hungry, romance-obsessed cousin. This was a disaster waiting to detonate.
She shook her head slowly, praying she was just being paranoid, and hurried quietly down the hall to her room. The lock clicked behind her with a sound like a closing cell door.
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9.2
Jacqueline Blackburn, a desperate Ivy League tutor, walked into the sleazy Veridian VIP club just to save her job.
But her billionaire client, the ruthless Christian Montgomery, mistook her for a cheap escort, blowing cigar smoke in her face and treating her like trash.
When she furiously turned to leave, a drunk former client attacked her in the hallway, tearing her white dress open and pinning her by the throat.
She fought back, stabbing the man's hand with a pen, only for Christian to emerge from the shadows and brutally crush the attacker's bleeding hand under his heel.
Instead of letting her go, Christian draped his heavy suit jacket over her exposed skin, trapped her in his dark suite, and forced her to sign a suffocating contract.
"You have exactly ninety days, or I will personally ensure you cease to exist in my city."
She thought she could just keep her head down, teach his nephew, and survive.
But she didn't understand why this terrifying underground tyrant was suddenly so fixated on her.
Why did he use his immense power to isolate her, publicly claim her at a billionaire gala, and track her every move?
When she received a chilling midnight text demanding she pack her bags and move into his sprawling estate by 8:00 AM, the terrifying reality set in.
She hadn't escaped the wolf. She had just walked directly into his cage.

7.8
Elie Joyce’s entire life was controlled by Ebert Ewing, a ruthless billionaire who held her sick grandmother's survival and her family's freedom in his hands.
But on a freezing, stormy night, he forced her into a scandalous scrap of red silk and handed her over to a notorious, disgusting predator.
"You aren't an escort. You're just a free gift."
Ebert mocked her, using her as a disposable bargaining chip to secure a corporate funding round.
When the predator humiliated her, forced high-proof vodka down her throat, and violently pinned her to the floor, Ebert simply watched with dead eyes.
And when Ebert finally intervened to brutally beat the man, it wasn't out of mercy.
"She is my property. Even if she is trash that I threw away, a filthy pig like you doesn't get to touch her."
Afterward, he dragged her battered, barefoot body into his car, only to kick her out into the torrential rain, leaving her on the dark streets to die.
Standing in the storm, shivering and bleeding from broken glass, the last shred of Elie's hope shattered.
She had sacrificed her dignity and soul, enduring his violent bites and cruel control, just to keep her family alive.
Why did she have to suffer this endless, twisted humiliation for a psychopath who only saw her as trash?
But she didn't break.
Tearing a strip of his expensive shirt to bandage her bleeding foot, Elie gripped her broken stiletto like a knife.
With her eyes turning cold and calculating, she limped out of the shadows.
She was going to survive, and Ebert Ewing would soon realize she was no longer his obedient prey.

9.5
My husband, Colton, the Wall Street mogul, slid annulment papers across the table, coldly discarding me and our unborn child. He thought he was getting rid of a useless wife, but he was actually throwing away the secret architect of his entire empire. Now, I'm ready to make him pay for every insult, every lie, and every single secret I've kept.
For three years, eight months pregnant, I secretly saved Colton's ten-billion-dollar company from collapse, enduring a cold, transactional marriage.
One night, he shattered that illusion, serving annulment papers and callously discarding me and our unborn child.
I signed, leaving luxury behind. Exposing his butler's fraud, I escaped. Colton later found his wedding ring gone and, on his desk, my SEC compliance fixes—proof I was his hidden genius.
Blindsided, he realized he’d destroyed his own empire. His mother then called, gloating. The injustice ignited a fierce resolve within me.
The next morning, I launched Kidd Legal Consulting. I'd use forty-seven folders of Farmer Capital's un-patched loopholes to force a fair settlement, securing my daughter's future.

8.4
Elia was an orphan from the rust belt, taken in by the wealthy Chapman family in New York.
To them, she was just a shameful charity case.
The parents shoved her into a dusty storage closet, treating their other daughter Geri like a delicate princess, and mocked Elia as uneducated trash.
When Elia secured her own admission to Manhattan Elite Prep, Geri's jealousy turned vicious.
Geri orchestrated a massive smear campaign, posting anonymously on the school forum that Elia was a violent dropout who sold her body to a sugar daddy to pay tuition.
In the cafeteria, the school's elite dumped dirty milk on Elia's food.
They called her a whore and told her to go back to the streets, while Geri watched from afar with a victorious, innocent smile.
They thought she was just a helpless stray dog who would easily break under their high-society cruelty.
They had no idea she was actually "L", the dark web's most feared hacker, and "The Surgeon", a genius medical anomaly.
They also didn't know she was currently tracking a dying Wall Street billionaire who had stolen her only necklace in a dark alley.
What made these arrogant rich kids think they could destroy a girl who played with international firewalls for fun?
Instead of crying, Elia calmly pulled out her phone.
Within seconds, she breached the school's server, locking every screen in the building onto a blood-red skull.
As Geri's own recorded voice plotting the fake rumors blasted through the PA system, Elia grabbed her bag, stepping back into the shadows to reclaim what was hers.

9.3
For five years, I was Ashton Miller's invisible partner, his loyal fiancée, pouring my life into building his empire from the shadows. Tonight, the Bronze Deer exhibition, my masterpiece, was finally opening at the Met, a testament to our shared future.
Then, Bianca, a third-tier actress, stepped into the spotlight in *my* custom Vera Wang wedding dress. My blood ran cold as Ashton's arm circled her waist, his whispered words promising to make her the "new queen of the city."
Five years of trust and sacrifice crumbled. I was a blood bag, drained and discarded. When I publicly exposed their lies, Ashton cornered me backstage, his face twisted in fury, threatening to ruin me, to blacklist me forever. I ripped off his engagement ring, tossing it at his chest. "We're done," I said, walking out as his enraged screams echoed.
The man whose empire I secretly built called me a parasite, his mistress feigning tears, painting me as delusional. My guilt vanished, replaced by freezing, absolute hatred for the man who twisted reality to erase my existence.
Standing in the New York rain, I finally pulled out the military-grade encrypted phone hidden for five years. The line clicked open instantly, a low, gravelly voice asking, "Is it you?" Before I could answer, Archer's voice hardened: "Give me the location. I'll be there in ten minutes. Who touched you? I want his life."

7.5
To survive a lethal genetic breakdown, Holden, a legendary mercenary known as "Ghost," was forced into an arranged marriage with the wealthy heiress Julia Ramsey.
But the moment he stepped into the lavish estate wearing an oil-stained jacket, he was treated like absolute garbage.
Julia accused him of being a perverted stalker, pulling a gun on him and demanding he be thrown out. Even after Holden used a forbidden kinetic strike to save her grandfather from a fatal heart attack, the family still looked at him with pure disgust. Julia confined him to a cramped guest room, warning him to stay out of her life. To make matters worse, his other estranged fiancée, an elite military commander, barged into the penthouse just to throw an annulment in his face.
"You are a pathetic, bottom-feeding parasite! You have no ambition. You hide in this woman's apartment like a stray dog. You are entirely beneath me."
She mocked him in front of Julia, completely blind to the fact that Holden had just effortlessly incapacitated her Tier-1 operative with a single strike. They all thought he was just a greedy, low-class thug clinging to their wealth. They had no idea they were mocking an apex predator who commanded the city's underground and hunted mutant monsters for sport.
When Julia forced him to attend a high-society yacht party as part of a trap to publicly humiliate him, Holden just smirked and took a sip of his cheap beer.
He was more than happy to play along, already calculating exactly how he was going to tear their arrogant little world apart.