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The Zillionaire's Obsession  Novel Cover

The Zillionaire's Obsession

⚠️Warning: Not suitable for young readers or sensitive minds. "Aria!" She flinched like the word was a weapon. "Get your useless ass out of bed. Now." Her heartbeat skittered. She forced her feet to the floor, the wood cold against her soles, and opened the door carefully and quietly, as if noise alone might trigger another blow. Gregory Morgan stood at the end of the hallway, shoulders slumped, beer bottle dangling from two fingers. His shirt was stained, his breath thick with the sour stench of cigarettes and last night's liquor. His hair stuck out at odd angles, and his eyes were two pits of resentment waiting for something to strike. He turned toward her and sneered. "Look at you," he said, gesturing with the bottle like she was some pathetic joke. "Barely awake, barely alive. I swear, every day with you feels like a punishment from God." Her throat tightened.
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Chapter 3

The city's pulse thundered like a war drum in Aria's ears, a savage beast that devoured the weak and spat out the bones. Skyscrapers clawed at the bruised sky, their jagged silhouettes casting long, predatory shadows over the cracked sidewalks. Neon signs flickered to life with a sinister glow, reds and blues bleeding into the dusk, while street vendors hawked their greasy wares, voices slicing through the chaos like knives.

Hot dogs sizzling on grills, pretzels steaming in the chill, all mingling with the acrid bite of exhaust that clawed at her throat. Pedestrians surged around her, a tidal wave of hurried suits and desperate eyes, elbows jabbing, briefcases swinging like blunt weapons. Aria ducked and weaved, her body a ghost in the storm, heart slamming against her ribs as if it might burst free and flee on its own.

It was 4:17 p.m., and the weight of the day pressed down like an iron fist. Her black polo shirt hung limp, soaked through with sweat and splattered with coffee stains from the endless rush at the café. Khakis sagged at her hips, frayed hems whispering against her scuffed sneakers.

She felt exposed out here, raw and vulnerable, the warm resentment of the café's interior a distant memory now replaced by the harsh slap of polluted wind. Every step was a battle, eyes darting to the shadows, instincts honed from too many close calls. One slip, and the city would claim her trample her underfoot, and leave her broken in the gutter.

Margaret Lee's restaurant loomed ahead, a frayed red awning flapping like a battle flag in the breeze. The scent hit her first: garlic and soy weaving through the urban filth, a siren's call promising temporary salvation.

Aria slipped inside, the door's bell jingling like a fragile warning. The kitchen erupted around her: woks hissing fury, knives chopping with rhythmic menace, steam billowing like battlefield fog thick with ginger and sesame oil. Cooks shouted orders in a frenzy, faces slick with sweat, bodies moving in a deadly dance.

Margaret stood at the heart of it, her wiry frame a pillar of quiet steel. Salt-and-pepper hair escaped her unraveling bun, her sharp brown eyes mapping every line of exhaustion on Aria's face. Worn hands, dusted with flour, wiped on a threadbare apron that had seen better days. No words at first just a subtle flick of her wrist, urgent and knowing, pulling Aria into the fray.

Their bond was unspoken fire, forged in the crucible of shared scars, a lifeline in the gathering storm.

"You look like hell's been dragging you," Margaret rasped, her voice gravelly from years of battling the din. She thrust an apron at Aria, steering her to the prep station with a grip that said, 'Hold on.'

Aria tied the strings with trembling fingers, the fabric heavy against her skin. "The city's a monster today. And... him. Always him."

Margaret's gaze darkened, flicking to the faint bruises peeking from Aria's sleeve. "Breathe, girl. This kitchen's your armor. Now move tables won't bus themselves."

The shift exploded into motion, a cinematic blur of heat and haste. Aria balanced trays laden with steaming dumplings, bowls of noodle soup sloshing like molten lava, and plates of fried rice piled high. Diners barked demands, impatient forks clinking, the air thick with urgency and unspoken hungers.

She darted between tables, muscles screaming, sweat tracing paths down her spine. In stolen moments, she scooped leftover rice into her mouth cold, sticky salvation tucking bills from tips deep into her apron pocket. Every cent a weapon, every bite a defiance.

Hours melted away in the inferno, laughter from the crew cutting through like rare sunlight—harsh, but alive. For a heartbeat, Aria could almost taste freedom, the dread in her gut dulled by the rhythm of survival. But closing time crashed in like a thunderclap. Margaret pressed a plain envelope into her palm, wages crisp and meager, her eyes heavy with worry.

"Watch your back out there. And those marks... you tell me if it gets worse."

Aria nodded, throat tight, and stepped back into the night. Rain slicked the streets now, turning the city into a gleaming, treacherous maze. Dim lamps cast halos on puddles, reflecting the neon bleed as she hurried past familiar ghosts boarded shops, flickering billboards, and the distant wail of sirens. Her apartment building rose like a forgotten ruin, graffiti scarring its facade like war wounds, windows boarded against the world's prying eyes.

The air inside reeked of decay and stale neglect, the faint rot of dreams long dead.

Creaking stairs groaned under her weight, each step echoing her ragged breaths. Third floor, door number 307. Keys fumbled in the lock, slick with rain, heart pounding a frantic tattoo. She pushed inside, the space closing around her like a trap: a dim bulb swinging overhead, casting jittery shadows on peeling wallpaper.

The stench hit hard alcohol hit sharp as a blade, mingled with unwashed clothes and the bitter tang of regret.

There he was. Gregory Morgan sprawled on the sagging couch like a king on his throne of filth. Empty bottles cluttered the floor, his frame hulking even in repose, face twisted in a perpetual sneer. Mutters slurred from his lips, incoherent venom bubbling up. Aria froze in the doorway, pulse roaring in her ears, willing him to stay lost in his drunken haze. Please, just this once...

But his eyes snapped open bloodshot, predatory slits locking onto her with unerring accuracy.

A low growl rumbled from his chest as she edged toward her room, whispering, "I'm just... going to bed. Long day."

He lurched up, the couch creaking in protest.

"Think you're slick, bitch?"

A bottle shattered against the wall, glass exploding like shrapnel, shards skittering across the floor. Aria bolted, slamming her bedroom door and twisting the lock with desperate fingers. She leaned against it, chest heaving, the wood vibrating with her terror. 

Safe. For now. Her hands flew to the loose floorboard, prying up her hidden stash, her ticket out. Empty. Gutted. Panic clawed up her throat.

"Looking for this?" Gregory's voice slithered through the door, oily and triumphant. His shadow loomed, massive and inescapable. The lock splintered under his boot, wood cracking like thunder as the door flew inward.

He lunged, fingers tangling in her hair, yanking her head back with brutal force. Pain lanced through her scalp as he dragged her across the room, her knees scraping raw against the threadbare carpet.

"This is mine," he snarled, palm cracking across her cheek in a blaze of fire.

Her vision swam, stars bursting like fireworks in the dim light. "Your money. Every goddamn thing."

Tears burned hot, but she choked them down, nails raking his arm in a feral swipe. Blood welled under her fingers, but he only laughed a dark, hollow sound that echoed in her soul. He slammed her against the wall, his body crushing hers, his breath reeking of whiskey and rage. His hands tore at her shirt, fabric ripping with vicious ease, exposing skin marked by old battles.

"Fight me," he hissed, lips grazing her ear in a twisted caress.

"Makes it sweeter when you break. Your useless mother did the same."

Aria twisted, knee snapping up, but he blocked it, driving his fist into her side. Air exploded from her lungs, the world tilting into a vortex of agony. She slid down the wall, gasping, his boot pinning her thigh. The room spun, shadows closing in like jaws.

In that crushing moment, as his fury rained down, Aria's mind screamed one truth: Not tonight. I won't shatter. But the darkness pressed closer, whispering of the breaking point just beyond reach. How long until the storm swallowed her whole?

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