The Master Of Deception's Richest Game

The Master Of Deception's Richest Game

The Edge

5.0
Comment(s)
1
View
150
Chapters

I spent three years playing the perfect "placeholder" boyfriend for a billionaire's rebellious daughter. I was the safety net, the companion, and the professional distraction paid to keep her out of trouble until she reached her "real" future. But the moment she turned twenty-one, her father slid a fifty-thousand-dollar check across a polished mahogany desk and told me I was a defective appliance being disposed of. He demanded I sign a non-disclosure agreement and disappear forever, treating my years of service like a common trash pickup. I walked out of the estate with a face full of tragic longing, making sure the security cameras caught my wet eyes. But the second the iron gates slammed shut, I wiped my face and opened "Proxy," a high-end app for the 1% who need hired bodies for their dirty emotional work. I didn't have the luxury of a broken heart; I had a foster home to roof and dialysis bills to pay. My next gig was a "hazard pay" nightmare with Antoinette Lowe, a cold-blooded professor who used me as a vessel for her grief. One hour I was wearing a five-thousand-dollar tuxedo while she hurled porcelain vases at my head, screaming about the man who left her at the altar. The next, she had me in a French maid outfit, scrubbing her kitchen floors on my hands and knees while she mocked my dignity. I became her ghost, her servant, and her scripted lover, whispering "you are breathtaking" for a five-hundred-dollar bonus while a silent timer vibrated on my wrist. I lived my life in fragments: a silent audience for a violent cellist by night, and a commanding voice on a headset for a girl who couldn't sleep. I was everyone's everything, yet I was becoming a man with no face of my own. I realized then that these people didn't want a human; they wanted a mirror that didn't bleed. Antoinette started believing the lies I sold her, convinced she was my muse instead of my paycheck. She didn't see the calculation in my eyes or the way I analyzed her every weakness just to stay in character. "I am whatever you need me to be, Ms. Lowe," I told her, my voice a perfect mask of devotion. The obsession is growing, the roles are bleeding together, and the danger is peaking. But as long as the deposit clears, I'll keep playing the game until there's nothing left of me to sell.

The Master Of Deception's Richest Game Chapter 1 1

Everett Parker slid the heavy, cream-colored envelope across the polished mahogany desk. The paper made a dry, rasping sound against the wood, stopping inches from Kellen Lawrence's hand. Kellen didn't reach for it immediately. He kept his hands folded in his lap, his knuckles pressing against each other just hard enough to turn white. He needed the physical sensation to ground himself, to keep the cold calculation from showing in his eyes.

Everett leaned back in his leather chair, the expensive hide creaking under his weight. The sound was loud in the silence of the study. Rain lashed against the floor-to-ceiling windows behind him, blurring the manicured grounds of the Parker estate into a gray, impressionistic smudge. The room smelled of old paper, expensive scotch, and the distinct, sterile chill of central air conditioning that ran too high.

"Open it," Everett said. His voice was bored. It was the tone of a man disposing of a defective appliance.

Kellen reached out. His fingers trembled slightly. It was a practiced tremor, one he had perfected over three years of service. He opened the flap and pulled out the check. He glanced at the number. Fifty thousand dollars. His heart rate didn't spike. It remained steady, a slow, rhythmic thud against his ribs. Internally, he did the math. This would cover the next six months of Grandpa Artie's dialysis and the new roof for the foster home.

Kellen looked up, forcing moisture into his eyes. He widened them, letting his lower lip slacken just a fraction.

"Mr. Parker," Kellen said, his voice cracking on the second syllable. "I don't understand. Have I done something wrong? Elyssa... Miss Parker and I..."

Everett held up a hand. The gesture was sharp, cutting off the air in the room.

"You have done exactly what you were paid to do," Everett said. "But Elyssa is turning twenty-one next month. She needs to focus on her future. Her real future. We both know you aren't part of that equation. You were a placeholder. A companion to keep her out of trouble during her rebellious phase."

Kellen lowered his head. He stared at the check, letting his shoulders slump. He needed to look like a kicked puppy. Rich men loved kicking puppies, but they loved paying them to go away even more.

"I care about her, sir," Kellen whispered. "It's not about the money."

Everett scoffed. He pushed a second document across the desk. It was thick, stapled at the corner.

"It is always about the money, son. This is a Non-Disclosure Agreement. Standard termination protocol. You will not speak of Elyssa, you will not speak of this family, and you will certainly not speak of the arrangement. You sign, the check clears. You don't sign, I bury you in legal fees until you starve."

Kellen picked up the pen. It was a Montblanc, heavy and cold. He hesitated, the tip of the pen hovering over the signature line. He scanned the clauses upside down. Perpetual silence. No social media contact. A five-hundred-yard restraining order. It was airtight.

He signed. His hand shook on the paper, creating a jagged, pathetic scrawl. He capped the pen and set it down softly.

The heavy oak door to the study clicked open.

Kellen didn't turn around, but he felt the change in air pressure. The scent of lilies drifted into the room-cold, funereal lilies. Elyssa Parker walked in. She moved silently, her feet making no sound on the Persian rug. She was wearing a white dress that looked too thin for the weather.

Everett stiffened. He looked at Kellen, his eyes warning him to stay in character.

"Elyssa," Everett said. "I'm in a meeting."

Elyssa didn't look at her father. She didn't look at Kellen. She walked to the window and stared out at the rain. Her reflection in the glass was blank. Her face was a porcelain mask, devoid of blood or twitch.

Kellen stood up slowly. He turned toward her. He reached out a hand, letting it hover in the air between them, trembling.

"Miss Parker," Kellen said softly.

Elyssa didn't blink. She didn't seem to breathe. She was a statue. She acted as if Kellen had already ceased to exist.

Everett cleared his throat. A harsh, guttural sound.

"Goodbye, Mr. Lawrence."

Kellen dropped his hand. He looked at Elyssa's back one last time, memorizing the rigid line of her spine, not for sentiment, but to gauge if she was going to break. She didn't.

"Take care, Elyssa," he whispered.

He picked up the envelope and the few personal items he had placed on the corner of the desk. He walked to the door, his steps heavy and slow. He paused at the threshold, looking back with a face full of tragic longing, making sure the security camera in the corner caught the angle of his wet eyes.

The door clicked shut behind him.

Kellen walked down the grand staircase. The portraits of the Parker ancestors stared down at him with oil-painted disdain. The butler, a man named Henderson who had once given Kellen a sandwich when he was starving, handed him his coat. Henderson's eyes were kind, filled with pity.

"Good luck, son," Henderson murmured.

"Thank you," Kellen said, his voice still thick with fake emotion.

He stepped out of the main entrance. The rain hit him instantly, soaking through his cheap suit jacket. The cold water ran down his neck. He walked down the long gravel driveway. The stones crunched loudly under his worn dress shoes.

He reached the massive iron gates. They buzzed, a mechanical hum, and slowly swung open. Kellen stepped through. The gates clanged shut behind him, the lock engaging with a heavy thud that echoed in his chest.

Kellen walked fifty yards down the public road, until the high hedges of the estate blocked the view of the security cameras.

He stopped.

He rolled his shoulders back, shaking off the slump. The tragic expression vanished from his face, replaced by a flat, bored neutrality. He wiped the rain from his forehead. He reached into his inside pocket and pulled out his phone. He opened his banking app and snapped a photo of the check.

Deposit pending. Available balance: $50,412.00.

A smirk tugged at the corner of his mouth. It wasn't a happy smile. It was the sharp, jagged grin of a survivor who had just stolen meat from a lion's den.

"Easy money," he muttered.

He scrolled to the 'Jobs' tab on a high-end service app called "Proxy," a TaskRabbit for the 1%. He needed the next gig lined up before the adrenaline faded. His thumb hovered over a new listing.

Proxy Groom Needed. Urgent. Hazard Pay.

He tapped 'Accept'.

Continue Reading

Other books by The Edge

More
The Mute Bride's Secret Billionaire Contract

The Mute Bride's Secret Billionaire Contract

Billionaires

5.0

I woke up with a throbbing pressure behind my eyes and the taste of metallic champagne in my throat. Instead of my cramped apartment, I was draped in expensive silk under a ceiling the color of a storm cloud. A pear-shaped black diamond sat heavy on my finger, and a document on the nightstand confirmed my worst fear. I was married to Arnulfo Bond, the shipping magnate whose previous eight fiancées had all vanished or died in "accidents." My sister, Verity, had drugged me at the Met Gala and sold me to cover our father’s fifty-million-dollar debt. "You do this, or I pull the plug on Aunt Meredith," she warned me over a burner phone. Arnulfo didn’t look at me with lust; he looked at me like an auditor checking a spreadsheet for defects. He sealed the estate with titanium shutters, turning the mansion into a high-tech fortress. When a doctor saw the whip scars and cigarette burns on my back—reminders of the childhood abuse Verity never faced—Arnulfo realized I wasn't the pampered socialite he’d bought. I was a line item, a transaction, a mute girl trapped between a husband who treated me like property and a family that wanted me dead. I didn't understand how my own sister could be so heartless, or why Arnulfo was suddenly looking at my broken skin with a terrifying, possessive interest. But they all made a fatal mistake. They thought I was just a helpless victim. They didn't know I was "The Ghost," a forensic accountant for the SEC who lived on the dark web. As Arnulfo walked away, I opened a hidden terminal on my phone. I wasn't running anymore; I was infiltrating. I was going to find every cent of his blood money and use it to buy my freedom.

A Mother's Strength, A Wife's Fall

A Mother's Strength, A Wife's Fall

Romance

5.0

The first thing I noticed was the ultrasound picture on my kitchen island, a grainy image signaling a future I never saw coming. My husband, David, looked pale, and beside him, his intern, Lily, barely legal and with a hand protectively over her flat stomach, smiled triumphantly. "I' m pregnant," Lily announced, "It' s David' s." The words shattered 15 years of my life. David, the man I' d sacrificed everything for, couldn' t meet my eyes. He mumbled about it "just happening." Then my fifteen-year-old adopted son, Alex, walked past me and handed Lily a glass of water, telling her, "You should sit down." He looked at me, his young face hard. "Mom, just listen. Dad made a mistake. Lily is scared. We need to be adults about this." The shock was a physical blow. Not just my husband, but my son, my Alex, was against me. Lily, seeing her advantage, spoke with false sincerity. "Sarah, I don' t want to break up your family. We can make this work. I can live here. You can help me with the baby." The audacity left me breathless. She wanted me to raise my husband' s illegitimate child in my home. My perfectly curated world dissolved into chaos. David, Lily, and Alex stood there, a new family, and I was the inconvenient, old piece. A profound cold dread spread through me. This wasn' t a crack; it was a demolition. Seven years ago, I had taken the fall for David' s career-ending mistake, losing my architectural license and, due to the stress, an ectopic pregnancy that left me unable to have children naturally. David had promised, "You are all the family I will ever need." Now, he fawned over Lily. My sacrifices, my body, my love-none of it was enough. Alex admitted he' d been covering for David and Lily for months, helping them meet. "Maybe if you were a better wife, none of this would have happened," Alex declared, his eyes full of contempt. "Maybe if you paid more attention to Dad instead of your work, he wouldn't have needed someone else." That was the final blow. I looked at their united faces. My heart didn' t just break, it turned to dust. "Get out of my house," I said, my voice dead. "All of you. I want nothing to do with you, or with it." David was speechless. I calmly opened the bottom drawer of my desk and pulled out a manila envelope. "I want a divorce," I stated, placing the papers on the coffee table. The words were final. Alex scoffed, "You have nothing without him. Where would you even go?" David tried to placate me, then offered me the house, asking me not to fight for the rest of the assets-for the baby' s sake. Then came the ultimate insult. "I think it would be best if you found somewhere else to stay," he said. "Lily' s pregnancy… all this stress isn' t good for her. Or the baby." He was kicking me out of my own home, the sanctuary I had built, to make room for his mistress. A bone-deep sadness settled over me. It wasn' t my home anymore; it was a house full of strangers. "Fine," I whispered. "I' ll be gone by the end of the week." My choice was made.

A Wife's Cold Smile of Revenge

A Wife's Cold Smile of Revenge

Billionaires

5.0

My life was a monument, built brick by brick on my mother' s legacy, dedicated to a name that meant integrity, quality, and family. Then, in a sterile hospital room, it all ended. The man I married, Mark, took everything: my company, my home, my inheritance, and the future of my unborn child. I had saved him from ruin, pulling him from the wreckage of his own failed ventures, using my funds and company resources to clear his name. In return, he promised me the world, and like a fool, I believed him. I invested my expertise, my connections, my family' s capital into him, helping him climb the corporate ladder, all while he climbed on my back. At my most vulnerable, six months pregnant, he stole my designs and sold them to our biggest rival. When I confronted him, he stood with Emily, the woman from that rival firm, sneering, "Even if Emily is ruthless, she loves me and would never betray me!" He twisted the knife, "You\'re just a pawn, Sarah. Bound by our family\'s contract. A tool. If it weren\'t for avenging what your family did to Emily\'s years ago, I wouldn\'t have even bothered with you!" He unraveled everything, funding Emily\'s projects with my firm\'s assets, selling off my child' s future. The hatred consumed me, a fire that burned away every last ounce of love. Then, the world went dark. I woke up, not in that hospital, but in my own bed, two years earlier. My stomach was flat, no baby, no pain. The digital clock showed the exact day Mark first brought Emily home. I heard his voice downstairs, her laugh. He knew. He had come back too. A cold smile spread across my face. "Grandfather," I said, my voice clear and steady as I joined them. "Since Mark likes this woman so much, let\'s welcome her into the family." He had expected tears, not this. My hatred, reborn, was a razor\'s edge. He had just welcomed a viper into his home, a corporate raider I knew would drain him dry in less than ten days.

You'll also like

The Surgeon's Vow: Healing My Billionaire Husband

The Surgeon's Vow: Healing My Billionaire Husband

Qing Shui
4.3

I sat in the gray, airless room of the New York State Department of Corrections, my knuckles white as the Warden delivered the news. "Parole denied." My father, Howard Sterling, had forged new evidence of financial crimes to keep me behind bars. He walked into the room, smelling of expensive cologne, and tossed a black folder onto the steel table. It was a marriage contract for Lucas Kensington, a billionaire currently lying in a vegetative state in the ICU. "Sign it. You walk out today." I laughed at the idea of being sold to a "corpse" until Howard slid a grainy photo toward me. It showed a toddler with a crescent-moon birthmark—the son Howard told me had died in an incubator five years ago. He smiled and told me the boy's safety depended entirely on my cooperation. I was thrust into the Kensington estate, where the family treated me like a "drowned rat." They dressed me in mothball-scented rags and mocked my status, unaware that I was monitoring their every move. I watched the cousin, Julian, openly waiting for Lucas to die to inherit the empire, while the doctors prepared to sign the death certificate. I didn't understand why my father would lie about my son’s death for years, or what kind of monsters would use a child as a bargaining chip. The injustice of it burned in my chest as I realized I was just a pawn in a game of old money and blood. As the monitors began to flatline and the family started to celebrate their inheritance, I locked the door and reached into the hem of my dress. I pulled out the sharpened silver wires I’d fashioned in the prison workshop. They thought they bought a submissive convict, but they actually invited "The Saint"—the world’s most dangerous underground surgeon—into their home. "Wake up, Lucas. You owe me a life." I wasn't there to be a bride; I was there to wake the dead and burn their empire to the ground.

Rising From Wreckage: Starfall's Epic Comeback

Rising From Wreckage: Starfall's Epic Comeback

Huo Wuer
4.5

Rain hammered against the asphalt as my sedan spun violently into the guardrail on the I-95. Blood trickled down my temple, stinging my eyes, while the rhythmic slap of the windshield wipers mocked my panic. Trembling, I dialed my husband, Clive. His executive assistant answered instead, his voice professional and utterly cold. "Mr. Wilson says to stop the theatrics. He said, and I quote, 'Hang up. Tell her I don’t have time for her emotional blackmail tonight.'" The line went dead while I was still trapped in the wreckage. At the hospital, I watched the news footage of Clive wrapping his jacket around his "fragile" ex-girlfriend, Angelena, shielding her from the storm I was currently bleeding in. When I returned to our penthouse, I found a prenatal ultrasound in his suit pocket, dated the day he claimed to be on a business trip. Instead of an apology, Clive met me with a sneer. He told me I was nothing but an "expensive decoration" his father bought to make him look stable. He froze my bank accounts and cut off my cards, waiting for the hunger to drive me back to his feet. I stared at the man I had loved for four years, realizing he didn't just want a wife; he wanted a prop he could switch off. He thought he could starve me into submission while he played father to another woman's child. But Clive forgot one thing. Before I was his trophy wife, I was Starfall—the legendary voice actress who vanished at the height of her fame. "I'm not jealous, Clive. I'm done." I grabbed my old microphone and walked out. I’m not just leaving him; I’m taking the lead role in the biggest saga in Hollywood—the one Angelena is desperate for. This time, the "decoration" is going to burn his world down.

He Thought I Was A Doormat, Until I Ruined Him

He Thought I Was A Doormat, Until I Ruined Him

SHANA GRAY
4.5

The sterile white of the operating room blurred, then sharpened, as Skye Sterling felt the cold clawing its way up her body. The heart monitor flatlined, a steady, high-pitched whine announcing her end. Her uterus had been removed, a desperate attempt to stop the bleeding, but the blood wouldn't clot. It just kept flowing, warm and sticky, pooling beneath her. Through heavy eyes, she saw a trembling nurse holding a phone on speaker. "Mr. Kensington," the nurse's voice cracked, "your wife... she's critical." A pause, then a sweet, poisonous giggle. Seraphina Miller. "Liam is in the shower," Seraphina's voice purred. "Stop calling, Skye. It's pathetic. Faking a medical emergency on our anniversary? Even for you, that's low." Then, Liam's bored voice: "If she dies, call the funeral home. I have a meeting in the morning." Click. The line went dead. A second later, so did Skye. The darkness that followed was absolute, suffocating, a black ocean crushing her lungs. She screamed into the void, a silent, agonizing wail of regret for loving a man who saw her as a nuisance, for dying without ever truly living. Until she died, she didn't understand. Why was her life so tragically wasted? Why did her husband, the man she loved, abandon her so cruelly? The injustice of it all burned hotter than the fever in her body. Then, the air rushed back in. Skye gasped, her body convulsing violently on the mattress. Her eyes flew open, wide and terrified, staring blindly into the darkness. Her trembling hand reached for her phone. May 12th. Five years ago. She was back.

Chapters
Read Now
Download Book
The Master Of Deception's Richest Game The Master Of Deception's Richest Game The Edge Modern
“I spent three years playing the perfect "placeholder" boyfriend for a billionaire's rebellious daughter. I was the safety net, the companion, and the professional distraction paid to keep her out of trouble until she reached her "real" future. But the moment she turned twenty-one, her father slid a fifty-thousand-dollar check across a polished mahogany desk and told me I was a defective appliance being disposed of. He demanded I sign a non-disclosure agreement and disappear forever, treating my years of service like a common trash pickup. I walked out of the estate with a face full of tragic longing, making sure the security cameras caught my wet eyes. But the second the iron gates slammed shut, I wiped my face and opened "Proxy," a high-end app for the 1% who need hired bodies for their dirty emotional work. I didn't have the luxury of a broken heart; I had a foster home to roof and dialysis bills to pay. My next gig was a "hazard pay" nightmare with Antoinette Lowe, a cold-blooded professor who used me as a vessel for her grief. One hour I was wearing a five-thousand-dollar tuxedo while she hurled porcelain vases at my head, screaming about the man who left her at the altar. The next, she had me in a French maid outfit, scrubbing her kitchen floors on my hands and knees while she mocked my dignity. I became her ghost, her servant, and her scripted lover, whispering "you are breathtaking" for a five-hundred-dollar bonus while a silent timer vibrated on my wrist. I lived my life in fragments: a silent audience for a violent cellist by night, and a commanding voice on a headset for a girl who couldn't sleep. I was everyone's everything, yet I was becoming a man with no face of my own. I realized then that these people didn't want a human; they wanted a mirror that didn't bleed. Antoinette started believing the lies I sold her, convinced she was my muse instead of my paycheck. She didn't see the calculation in my eyes or the way I analyzed her every weakness just to stay in character. "I am whatever you need me to be, Ms. Lowe," I told her, my voice a perfect mask of devotion. The obsession is growing, the roles are bleeding together, and the danger is peaking. But as long as the deposit clears, I'll keep playing the game until there's nothing left of me to sell.”
1

Chapter 1 1

22/01/2026

2

Chapter 2 2

22/01/2026

3

Chapter 3 3

22/01/2026

4

Chapter 4 4

22/01/2026

5

Chapter 5 5

22/01/2026

6

Chapter 6 6

22/01/2026

7

Chapter 7 7

22/01/2026

8

Chapter 8 8

22/01/2026

9

Chapter 9 9

22/01/2026

10

Chapter 10 10

22/01/2026

11

Chapter 11 11

22/01/2026

12

Chapter 12 12

22/01/2026

13

Chapter 13 13

22/01/2026

14

Chapter 14 14

22/01/2026

15

Chapter 15 15

22/01/2026

16

Chapter 16 16

22/01/2026

17

Chapter 17 17

22/01/2026

18

Chapter 18 18

22/01/2026

19

Chapter 19 19

22/01/2026

20

Chapter 20 20

22/01/2026

21

Chapter 21 21

22/01/2026

22

Chapter 22 22

22/01/2026

23

Chapter 23 23

22/01/2026

24

Chapter 24 24

22/01/2026

25

Chapter 25 25

22/01/2026

26

Chapter 26 26

22/01/2026

27

Chapter 27 27

22/01/2026

28

Chapter 28 28

22/01/2026

29

Chapter 29 29

22/01/2026

30

Chapter 30 30

22/01/2026

31

Chapter 31 31

22/01/2026

32

Chapter 32 32

22/01/2026

33

Chapter 33 33

22/01/2026

34

Chapter 34 34

22/01/2026

35

Chapter 35 35

22/01/2026

36

Chapter 36 36

22/01/2026

37

Chapter 37 37

22/01/2026

38

Chapter 38 38

22/01/2026

39

Chapter 39 39

22/01/2026

40

Chapter 40 40

22/01/2026