Trust Fund Trouble

Trust Fund Trouble

Truthhurt

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Ivy Monroe thought her biggest problem was choosing between ramen or rent-until a mysterious trust fund unlocks a world she was never meant to find. Now she's tangled in a web of elite lies, secret legacies, and a family fortune that's more curse than blessing. Enter Alec Delacroix: rich, reckless, and hiding something dangerous. He's everything Ivy shouldn't want-especially when she learns his last name is tattooed across half the conspiracy trying to erase her past. As enemies close in and buried truths come back to bite, Ivy must decide who to trust when everyone wears a mask-and what she's willing to risk to uncover the truth. Money can't buy love. But it can fund revenge.

Chapter 1 Zero Balance, Zero Clue

The first thing you learn at Kensington Prep isn't how to calculate compound interest or speak fluent French it's how to fake it.

Fake your smile.

Fake your designer.

Fake that you actually belong.

The second thing you learn? Never cross a Delacroix. Especially not the heir to the Delacroix billions Alec Roman Delacroix, also known as the walking, talking reason half the girls here forgot their GPAs.

"Liv, you're staring again."

I blinked, snapping my gaze away from Alec's profile as he leaned against the marble railing, sipping something gold and expensive. His jawline could cut glass. So could his attitude.

"I wasn't staring," I muttered.

"Uh-huh," said Dani, my best friend and certified chaos enabler. "You were mentally undressing him like he's a Dior mannequin."

I elbowed her lightly. "Gross."

"Please. You've had a crush on him since junior year. Just admit it so I can die in peace."

"I'm not into him," I lied. "He's everything I hate rich, arrogant, and allergic to shirts that cost less than a mortgage."

"Don't forget emotionally unavailable," she added with a grin. "That's your real type."

I sighed and took a sip from my plastic champagne flute. The bubbly burned slightly, too sweet and too fake just like the glittering ballroom we stood in. It was opening night of the Delacroix Foundation's Annual Gala, a.k.a. the excuse all the old money families used to flex on each other while pretending to care about charity.

My invite came from the scholarship list. Dani's came from being the daughter of a disgraced crypto king who was now "consulting abroad." Read: hiding in Bali.

"Did you see the donor list?" she asked, eyes gleaming with gossip. "Alec's dad just dropped ten million like it was tip money."

"Gross," I repeated, but this time I meant it.

I hated everything the Delacroix name stood for opulence, power, and the kind of wealth that could bury your mistakes six feet deep with a single phone call.

And yet... I couldn't look away from him.

"Earth to Liv," Dani whispered. "He's coming over."

"What?"

"Act cool. Or better act expensive."

I tried to casually sip my drink again, promptly choking as Alec stopped directly in front of me.

"Olivia Monroe," he said, voice smooth like danger wrapped in velvet.

My stomach dropped. We'd spoken exactly twice before-once when he accidentally sat in my assigned seat during Econ, and again when I'd called him out for texting during a student council meeting.

"Delacroix," I said, trying to match his calm tone.

"You always say my name like it's an insult," he noted, eyes scanning me like I was a puzzle he wasn't sure how to solve.

"Maybe it is," I replied sweetly.

Dani let out a tiny, strangled squeak behind me.

His mouth curved just slightly. "I like your dress."

I blinked. "It's vintage."

"Translation: not five thousand dollars," he said, nodding. "Brave move around this crowd."

"Bold of you to assume I care what this crowd thinks."

He studied me for a beat. "You should. You're on their radar now."

I frowned. "Why?"

His gaze darkened. "Because your name was added to the trust fund case."

Everything around me slowed.

"What?"

He stepped closer, lowering his voice. "Your mom's name came up. In my family's legal audit."

I froze. "That's not possible. My mom died broke. She didn't even leave behind a will."

He didn't blink. "Apparently, someone thinks otherwise."

My throat tightened. "What are you talking about?"

"Let's just say," Alec said, his tone quiet but sharp, "you're not the only one who hates the Delacroix name. Someone's trying to link your family to ours."

I took a step back. "Why would they do that?"

"Money. Revenge. Maybe both."

I stared at him, heart thudding in my chest. "This is a joke, right?"

"I don't joke about family legacy."

He glanced at the crowd and then back at me. "You should come with me."

"No."

"Liv

"I'm not going anywhere with you."

He exhaled, frustrated. "Fine. But when the tabloids dig up dirt that doesn't exist, don't say I didn't warn you."

With that, Alec turned and walked away, disappearing into the throng of glittering gowns and designer tuxedos.

"What the actual hell just happened?" Dani whispered.

I couldn't answer. My brain was still short-circuiting.

My mom had been a nurse. She'd worked double shifts to keep me in school and ramen in our cupboard. The idea that she'd somehow been connected to the Delacroix billions? Impossible.

Unless...

I pulled out my phone with shaking hands and opened my inbox. There it was an unread email from a law firm I didn't recognize:

Subject: Potential Claim Estate of Sylvia Monroe

I clicked it open. The words blurred together, but one line stood out:

"You may be entitled to inheritance held in trust by the Delacroix estate."

"Dani," I whispered. "I think I'm in trouble."

She grabbed my arm. "Okay, deep breaths. We can handle this."

"Can we?" I asked, eyes wide. "Because I think Alec just declared war on me."

"Or flirted with you," she muttered.

"Same thing in rich people language."

Before I could spiral further, my phone vibrated with a new notification.

Blocked number. One text.

"Leave it alone, Olivia. You don't know what you're digging into."

My fingers went cold.

"Dani..."

She read over my shoulder, then grabbed my arm. "We're leaving. Now."

We pushed past the crowd, out through the glass doors and into the cool night air. I sucked in a shaky breath, the scent of gardenia mixing with city smog.

"I don't get it," I said. "My mom never said anything. No hidden accounts, no secret trust funds

"Maybe she didn't know."

"Or maybe she did and took it to the grave."

We stopped at the valet stand. Dani raised a brow. "You okay?"

"I don't know," I admitted. "But if someone thinks I'm a threat... I need to find out why."

She linked her arm through mine. "We'll dig, but carefully."

I nodded, even though nothing about this felt safe.

The valet brought around Dani's cara beat-up Tesla she swore still had trauma from her dad's crypto crash. I climbed in, brain still spinning.

If my mom was connected to the Delacroixs, even by accident...

It meant I was sitting on a powder keg.

And Alec Delacroix might be holding the match.

The first thing you learn at Kensington Prep isn't how to calculate compound interest or speak fluent French-it's how to fake it.

Fake your smile.

Fake your designer.

Fake that you actually belong.

The second thing you learn? Never cross a Delacroix. Especially not the heir to the Delacroix billions-Alec Roman Delacroix, also known as the walking, talking reason half the girls here forgot their GPAs.

He was everything this school worshipped , menace, and a last name carved into every building on campus.

"Liv, you're staring again."

I blinked, snapping my gaze away from Alec's profile as he leaned against the marble railing, sipping something gold and expensive. His jawline could cut glass. So could his attitude.

"I wasn't staring," I muttered.

"Uh-huh," said Dani, my best friend and certified chaos enabler. "You were mentally undressing him like he's a Dior mannequin."

I elbowed her. "Gross."

"Please. You've had a crush on him since junior year. Just admit it so I can die in peace."

"I'm not into him," I lied. "He's everything I hate rich, arrogant, and allergic to shirts that cost less than a mortgage."

"Don't forget emotionally unavailable," she added with a wicked grin. "That's your real type."

I sighed and took a sip from my plastic champagne flute. The bubbly burned slightly too sweet and too fake just like the glittering ballroom we stood in. It was opening night of the Delacroix Foundation's Annual Gala, a.k.a. the excuse all the old money families used to flex on each other while pretending to care about climate change.

My invite came from the scholarship list. Dani's came from being the daughter of a disgraced crypto king who was now "consulting abroad." Read: hiding in Bali.

Tonight was extra glamorous. Strings of fairy lights dangled from the chandeliers like constellations on caffeine. A string quartet played a dramatic remix of "drivers license." Waiters weaved through the crowd with caviar bites and crystal flutes. I was ninety percent sure one of the appetizers was just gold leaf on a cracker.

"Did you see the donor list?" Dani asked, eyes gleaming with gossip. "Alec's dad just dropped ten million like it was tip money."

"Gross," I repeated, but this time I meant it.

I hated everything the Delacroix name stood for-opulence, power, and the kind of wealth that could bury your mistakes six feet deep with a single phone call.

And yet... I couldn't look away from him.

It was annoying, the way he owned the space without even trying. The confidence. The sharp suit. The way the light hit his cheekbones like God was playing favorites.

"Earth to Liv," Dani whispered. "He's coming over."

"What?"

"Act cool. Or better act expensive."

I tried to casually sip my drink again, promptly choking as Alec stopped directly in front of me.

"Olivia Monroe," he said, voice smooth like danger wrapped in velvet.

My stomach dropped. We'd spoken exactly twice before once when he accidentally sat in my assigned seat during Econ, and again when I'd called him out for texting during a student council meeting. He'd smirked both times like my attitude amused him.

"Delacroix," I said, trying to match his calm tone.

"You always say my name like it's an insult," he noted, eyes scanning me like I was a puzzle he wasn't sure how to solve.

"Maybe it is," I replied sweetly.

Dani let out a tiny, strangled squeak behind me.

His mouth curved just slightly. "I like your dress."

I blinked. "It's vintage."

"Translation: not five thousand dollars," he said, nodding. "Brave move around this crowd."

"Bold of you to assume I care what this crowd thinks."

He studied me for a beat, his gaze unreadable. "You should. You're on their radar now."

I frowned. "Why?"

His expression shifted, the teasing edge gone. "Because your name was added to the trust fund case."

Everything around me slowed.

"What?"

He stepped closer, lowering his voice. "Your mom's name came up. In my family's legal audit."

I froze. "That's not possible. My mom died broke. She didn't even leave behind a will."

He didn't blink. "Apparently, someone thinks otherwise."

My throat tightened. "What are you talking about?"

"Let's just say," Alec said, his tone quiet but sharp, "you're not the only one who hates the Delacroix name. Someone's trying to link your family to ours."

I took a step back. "Why would they do that?"

"Money. Revenge. Maybe both."

I stared at him, heart thudding in my chest. "This is a joke, right?"

"I don't joke about family legacy."

He glanced at the crowd and then back at me. "You should come with me."

"No."

"Liv

"I'm not going anywhere with you."

He exhaled, frustrated. "Fine. But when the tabloids dig up dirt that doesn't exist, don't say I didn't warn you."

With that, Alec turned and walked away, disappearing into the throng of glittering gowns and designer tuxedos.

I felt like someone had unplugged my brain.

"What the actual hell just happened?" Dani whispered.

I couldn't answer. My thoughts were spiraling. My mom had been a nurse. She'd worked double shifts to keep me in school and ramen in our cupboard. The idea that she'd somehow been connected to the Delacroix billions?

Impossible.

Unless...

I pulled out my phone with shaking hands and opened my inbox. There it was an unread email from a law firm I didn't recognize:

Subject: Potential Claim – Estate of Sylvia Monroe

I clicked it open. The words blurred together, but one line stood out:

"You may be entitled to inheritance held in trust by the Delacroix estate."

"Dani," I whispered. "I think I'm in trouble."

She grabbed my arm. "Okay, deep breaths. We can handle this."

"Can we?" I asked, eyes wide. "Because I think Alec just declared war on me."

"Or flirted with you," she muttered.

"Same thing in rich people language."

I laughed, but it came out hollow.

Before I could spiral further, my phone vibrated with a new notification.

Blocked number. One text.

"Leave it alone, Olivia. You don't know what you're digging into."

My fingers went cold.

"Dani..."

She read over my shoulder, then grabbed my arm tighter. "We're leaving. Now."

We pushed past the crowd, out through the glass doors and into the cool night air. The sharp chill slapped my skin, grounding me for half a second. I sucked in a shaky breath, the scent of gardenia mixing with city smog and old money paranoia.

"I don't get it," I said. "My mom never said anything. No hidden accounts, no secret trust funds

"Maybe she didn't know."

"Or maybe she did and took it to the grave."

A black SUV rolled past, windows tinted. I caught a flash of a figure insidebsomeone watching.

We stopped at the valet stand. Dani raised a brow. "You okay?"

"I don't know," I admitted. "But if someone thinks I'm a threat... I need to find out why."

She linked her arm through mine. "We'll dig. Carefully. Quietly. No TikToks about it."

I managed a weak smile. "Deal."

The valet brought around Dani's cara beat-up Tesla she swore still had trauma from her dad's crypto crash. As I climbed in, I glanced back at the ballroom, the glowing chandeliers, the polished perfection of the Delacroix world.

I wasn't just a scholarship girl anymore.

I was a liability.

A threat.

A target.

And if what Alec said was true, I wasn't just crashing their party.

I might've been born into it.

The first thing you learn at Kensington Prep isn't how to calculate compound interest or speak fluent French it's how to fake it.

Fake your smile.

Fake your designer.

Fake that you actually belong.

The second thing you learn? Never cross a Delacroix. Especially not the heir to the Delacroix billions Alec Roman Delacroix, also known as the walking, talking reason half the girls here forgot their GPAs.

"Liv, you're staring again."

I blinked, snapping my gaze away from Alec's profile as he leaned against the marble railing, sipping something gold and expensive. His jawline could cut glass. So could his attitude.

"I wasn't staring," I muttered.

"Uh-huh," said Dani, my best friend and certified chaos enabler. "You were mentally undressing him like he's a Dior mannequin."

I elbowed her lightly. "Gross."

"Please. You've had a crush on him since junior year. Just admit it so I can die in peace."

"I'm not into him," I lied. "He's everything I hate rich, arrogant, and allergic to shirts that cost less than a mortgage."

"Don't forget emotionally unavailable," she added with a grin. "That's your real type."

I sighed and took a sip from my plastic champagne flute. The bubbly burned slightly, too sweet and too fake just like the glittering ballroom we stood in. It was opening night of the Delacroix Foundation's Annual Gala, a.k.a. the excuse all the old money families used to flex on each other while pretending to care about charity.

My invite came from the scholarship list. Dani's came from being the daughter of a disgraced crypto king who was now "consulting abroad." Read: hiding in Bali.

"Did you see the donor list?" she asked, eyes gleaming with gossip. "Alec's dad just dropped ten million like it was tip money."

"Gross," I repeated, but this time I meant it.

I hated everything the Delacroix name stood for opulence, power, and the kind of wealth that could bury your mistakes six feet deep with a single phone call.

And yet... I couldn't look away from him.

"Earth to Liv," Dani whispered. "He's coming over."

"What?"

"Act cool. Or better act expensive."

I tried to casually sip my drink again, promptly choking as Alec stopped directly in front of me.

"Olivia Monroe," he said, voice smooth like danger wrapped in velvet.

My stomach dropped. We'd spoken exactly twice before-once when he accidentally sat in my assigned seat during Econ, and again when I'd called him out for texting during a student council meeting.

"Delacroix," I said, trying to match his calm tone.

"You always say my name like it's an insult," he noted, eyes scanning me like I was a puzzle he wasn't sure how to solve.

"Maybe it is," I replied sweetly.

Dani let out a tiny, strangled squeak behind me.

His mouth curved just slightly. "I like your dress."

I blinked. "It's vintage."

"Translation: not five thousand dollars," he said, nodding. "Brave move around this crowd."

"Bold of you to assume I care what this crowd thinks."

He studied me for a beat. "You should. You're on their radar now."

I frowned. "Why?"

His gaze darkened. "Because your name was added to the trust fund case."

Everything around me slowed.

"What?"

He stepped closer, lowering his voice. "Your mom's name came up. In my family's legal audit."

I froze. "That's not possible. My mom died broke. She didn't even leave behind a will."

He didn't blink. "Apparently, someone thinks otherwise."

My throat tightened. "What are you talking about?"

"Let's just say," Alec said, his tone quiet but sharp, "you're not the only one who hates the Delacroix name. Someone's trying to link your family to ours."

I took a step back. "Why would they do that?"

"Money. Revenge. Maybe both."

I stared at him, heart thudding in my chest. "This is a joke, right?"

"I don't joke about family legacy."

He glanced at the crowd and then back at me. "You should come with me."

"No."

"Liv

"I'm not going anywhere with you."

He exhaled, frustrated. "Fine. But when the tabloids dig up dirt that doesn't exist, don't say I didn't warn you."

With that, Alec turned and walked away, disappearing into the throng of glittering gowns and designer tuxedos.

"What the actual hell just happened?" Dani whispered.

I couldn't answer. My brain was still short-circuiting.

My mom had been a nurse. She'd worked double shifts to keep me in school and ramen in our cupboard. The idea that she'd somehow been connected to the Delacroix billions? Impossible.

Unless...

I pulled out my phone with shaking hands and opened my inbox. There it was an unread email from a law firm I didn't recognize:

Subject: Potential Claim Estate of Sylvia Monroe

I clicked it open. The words blurred together, but one line stood out:

"You may be entitled to inheritance held in trust by the Delacroix estate."

"Dani," I whispered. "I think I'm in trouble."

She grabbed my arm. "Okay, deep breaths. We can handle this."

"Can we?" I asked, eyes wide. "Because I think Alec just declared war on me."

"Or flirted with you," she muttered.

"Same thing in rich people language."

Before I could spiral further, my phone vibrated with a new notification.

Blocked number. One text.

"Leave it alone, Olivia. You don't know what you're digging into."

My fingers went cold.

"Dani..."

She read over my shoulder, then grabbed my arm. "We're leaving. Now."

We pushed past the crowd, out through the glass doors and into the cool night air. I sucked in a shaky breath, the scent of gardenia mixing with city smog.

"I don't get it," I said. "My mom never said anything. No hidden accounts, no secret trust funds

"Maybe she didn't know."

"Or maybe she did and took it to the grave."

We stopped at the valet stand. Dani raised a brow. "You okay?"

"I don't know," I admitted. "But if someone thinks I'm a threat... I need to find out why."

She linked her arm through mine. "We'll dig, but carefully."

I nodded, even though nothing about this felt safe.

The valet brought around Dani's cara beat-up Tesla she swore still had trauma from her dad's crypto crash. I climbed in, brain still spinning.

If my mom was connected to the Delacroixs, even by accident...

It meant I was sitting on a powder keg.

And Alec Delacroix might be holding the match.

The first thing you learn at Kensington Prep isn't how to calculate compound interest or speak fluent French-it's how to fake it.

Fake your smile.

Fake your designer.

Fake that you actually belong.

The second thing you learn? Never cross a Delacroix. Especially not the heir to the Delacroix billions-Alec Roman Delacroix, also known as the walking, talking reason half the girls here forgot their GPAs.

He was everything this school worshipped , menace, and a last name carved into every building on campus.

"Liv, you're staring again."

I blinked, snapping my gaze away from Alec's profile as he leaned against the marble railing, sipping something gold and expensive. His jawline could cut glass. So could his attitude.

"I wasn't staring," I muttered.

"Uh-huh," said Dani, my best friend and certified chaos enabler. "You were mentally undressing him like he's a Dior mannequin."

I elbowed her. "Gross."

"Please. You've had a crush on him since junior year. Just admit it so I can die in peace."

"I'm not into him," I lied. "He's everything I hate rich, arrogant, and allergic to shirts that cost less than a mortgage."

"Don't forget emotionally unavailable," she added with a wicked grin. "That's your real type."

I sighed and took a sip from my plastic champagne flute. The bubbly burned slightly too sweet and too fake just like the glittering ballroom we stood in. It was opening night of the Delacroix Foundation's Annual Gala, a.k.a. the excuse all the old money families used to flex on each other while pretending to care about climate change.

My invite came from the scholarship list. Dani's came from being the daughter of a disgraced crypto king who was now "consulting abroad." Read: hiding in Bali.

Tonight was extra glamorous. Strings of fairy lights dangled from the chandeliers like constellations on caffeine. A string quartet played a dramatic remix of "drivers license." Waiters weaved through the crowd with caviar bites and crystal flutes. I was ninety percent sure one of the appetizers was just gold leaf on a cracker.

"Did you see the donor list?" Dani asked, eyes gleaming with gossip. "Alec's dad just dropped ten million like it was tip money."

"Gross," I repeated, but this time I meant it.

I hated everything the Delacroix name stood for-opulence, power, and the kind of wealth that could bury your mistakes six feet deep with a single phone call.

And yet... I couldn't look away from him.

It was annoying, the way he owned the space without even trying. The confidence. The sharp suit. The way the light hit his cheekbones like God was playing favorites.

"Earth to Liv," Dani whispered. "He's coming over."

"What?"

"Act cool. Or better act expensive."

I tried to casually sip my drink again, promptly choking as Alec stopped directly in front of me.

"Olivia Monroe," he said, voice smooth like danger wrapped in velvet.

My stomach dropped. We'd spoken exactly twice before once when he accidentally sat in my assigned seat during Econ, and again when I'd called him out for texting during a student council meeting. He'd smirked both times like my attitude amused him.

"Delacroix," I said, trying to match his calm tone.

"You always say my name like it's an insult," he noted, eyes scanning me like I was a puzzle he wasn't sure how to solve.

"Maybe it is," I replied sweetly.

Dani let out a tiny, strangled squeak behind me.

His mouth curved just slightly. "I like your dress."

I blinked. "It's vintage."

"Translation: not five thousand dollars," he said, nodding. "Brave move around this crowd."

"Bold of you to assume I care what this crowd thinks."

He studied me for a beat, his gaze unreadable. "You should. You're on their radar now."

I frowned. "Why?"

His expression shifted, the teasing edge gone. "Because your name was added to the trust fund case."

Everything around me slowed.

"What?"

He stepped closer, lowering his voice. "Your mom's name came up. In my family's legal audit."

I froze. "That's not possible. My mom died broke. She didn't even leave behind a will."

He didn't blink. "Apparently, someone thinks otherwise."

My throat tightened. "What are you talking about?"

"Let's just say," Alec said, his tone quiet but sharp, "you're not the only one who hates the Delacroix name. Someone's trying to link your family to ours."

I took a step back. "Why would they do that?"

"Money. Revenge. Maybe both."

I stared at him, heart thudding in my chest. "This is a joke, right?"

"I don't joke about family legacy."

He glanced at the crowd and then back at me. "You should come with me."

"No."

"Liv

"I'm not going anywhere with you."

He exhaled, frustrated. "Fine. But when the tabloids dig up dirt that doesn't exist, don't say I didn't warn you."

With that, Alec turned and walked away, disappearing into the throng of glittering gowns and designer tuxedos.

I felt like someone had unplugged my brain.

"What the actual hell just happened?" Dani whispered.

I couldn't answer. My thoughts were spiraling. My mom had been a nurse. She'd worked double shifts to keep me in school and ramen in our cupboard. The idea that she'd somehow been connected to the Delacroix billions?

Impossible.

Unless...

I pulled out my phone with shaking hands and opened my inbox. There it was an unread email from a law firm I didn't recognize:

Subject: Potential Claim – Estate of Sylvia Monroe

I clicked it open. The words blurred together, but one line stood out:

"You may be entitled to inheritance held in trust by the Delacroix estate."

"Dani," I whispered. "I think I'm in trouble."

She grabbed my arm. "Okay, deep breaths. We can handle this."

"Can we?" I asked, eyes wide. "Because I think Alec just declared war on me."

"Or flirted with you," she muttered.

"Same thing in rich people language."

I laughed, but it came out hollow.

Before I could spiral further, my phone vibrated with a new notification.

Blocked number. One text.

"Leave it alone, Olivia. You don't know what you're digging into."

My fingers went cold.

"Dani..."

She read over my shoulder, then grabbed my arm tighter. "We're leaving. Now."

We pushed past the crowd, out through the glass doors and into the cool night air. The sharp chill slapped my skin, grounding me for half a second. I sucked in a shaky breath, the scent of gardenia mixing with city smog and old money paranoia.

"I don't get it," I said. "My mom never said anything. No hidden accounts, no secret trust funds

"Maybe she didn't know."

"Or maybe she did and took it to the grave."

A black SUV rolled past, windows tinted. I caught a flash of a figure insidebsomeone watching.

We stopped at the valet stand. Dani raised a brow. "You okay?"

"I don't know," I admitted. "But if someone thinks I'm a threat... I need to find out why."

She linked her arm through mine. "We'll dig. Carefully. Quietly. No TikToks about it."

I managed a weak smile. "Deal."

The valet brought around Dani's cara beat-up Tesla she swore still had trauma from her dad's crypto crash. As I climbed in, I glanced back at the ballroom, the glowing chandeliers, the polished perfection of the Delacroix world.

I wasn't just a scholarship girl anymore.

I was a liability.

A threat.

A target.

And if what Alec said was true, I wasn't just crashing their party.

I might've been born into it.

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Sutton Horsley
5.0

My stepmother sold me like a piece of inventory to a man known for breaking people just to plug the financial crater my father left behind. I was delivered to the Morton estate in the middle of a freezing storm, stripped of my phone, and told that if I didn't make myself useful, my senile grandfather would be evicted from his care facility by noon. The master of the house, Adonis Morton IV, was a monster living in a silent mausoleum, driven to the brink of madness by a sensory condition that turned every sound into a physical assault. When I was forced into his suite to serve him, he didn't see a human being; he saw a source of agony. In a fit of animalistic rage, he pinned me to the wall and nearly strangled me to death just for the sound of a shattering teacup. I only survived by using my grandfather’s secret herbal blends and pressure-point therapy to force his overactive nervous system into a drugged sleep. But saving him was my greatest mistake. Instead of letting me go, Adonis moved me into a guest suite connected to his own bedroom by a hidden door. He didn't just want me as a servant; he needed me as a human white-noise machine to drown out the demons in his head. The nightmare deepened when he took the promissory note that defined my freedom and tore it into confetti. By destroying the debt, he destroyed my exit strategy. He replaced my maid’s uniform with a silver silk dress that clung to my skin but did nothing to hide the dark, ugly bruises his fingers had left on my neck. He branded me as his "primary care associate," a title that was nothing more than a gilded cage. I felt a sickening sense of injustice as he forced me to sign a contract that banned me from contacting other men and required me to sleep wherever he slept. He looked at me with a possessive heat, calling me his "medication" rather than a woman. My family had sold my body, but Adonis Morton was intent on owning my very presence, using my grandfather’s medical bills as a leash to keep me within twenty feet of him at all times. Standing in a neglected greenhouse with mud staining my expensive silk, I realized I was no longer a victim waiting for rescue. If I was going to be his medication, I would learn how to be his cure—or his undoing. I began clearing the weeds with a cold, calculated frenzy, determined to turn this prison into my laboratory. He thinks he has trapped a helpless girl, but I am going to pry open the cracks in his stone walls until his entire world comes crashing down.

Flash Marriage To My Best Friend's Father

Flash Marriage To My Best Friend's Father

Madel Cerda
4.5

I was once the heiress to the Solomon empire, but after it crumbled, I became the "charity case" ward of the wealthy Hyde family. For years, I lived in their shadows, clinging to the promise that Anson Hyde would always be my protector. That promise shattered when Anson walked into the ballroom with Claudine Chapman on his arm. Claudine was the girl who had spent years making my life a living hell, and now Anson was announcing their engagement to the world. The humiliation was instant. Guests sneered at my cheap dress, and a waiter intentionally sloshed champagne over me, knowing I was a nobody. Anson didn't even look my way; he was too busy whispering possessively to his new fiancée. I was a ghost in my own home, watching my protector celebrate with my tormentor. The betrayal burned. I realized I wasn't a ward; I was a pawn Anson had kept on a shelf until he found a better trade. I had no money, no allies, and a legal trust fund that Anson controlled with a flick of his wrist. Fleeing to the library, I stumbled into Dallas Koch—a titan of industry and my best friend’s father. He was a wall of cold, absolute power that even the Hydes feared. "Marry me," I blurted out, desperate to find a shield Anson couldn't climb. Dallas didn't laugh. He pulled out a marriage agreement and a heavy fountain pen. "Sign," he commanded, his voice a low rumble. "But if you walk out that door with me, you never go back." I signed my name, trading my life for the only man dangerous enough to keep me safe.

One Night With My Billionaire Boss

One Night With My Billionaire Boss

Nathaniel Stone
5.0

I woke up on silk sheets that smelled of expensive cedar and cold sandalwood, a world away from my cramped apartment in Brooklyn. Beside me lay Ezra Gardner—my boss, the billionaire CEO of Gardner Holdings, and the man who could end my career with a snap of his fingers. He didn’t offer an apology for the night before; instead, he looked at me with terrifying clarity and proposed a cold, calculated business arrangement. "Marriage. It stabilizes the board and solves the PR crisis before it begins." He dressed me in archival Chanel and sent me home in his Maybach, but my life was already falling apart. My boyfriend, Irving, claimed he had passed out early, yet his location data placed him at my best friend’s apartment until three in the morning. When I tried to run, I realized Ezra was already ten steps ahead, tracking my movements and uncovering the secret I’d spent twenty years hiding: my connection to the powerful Senator Grimes. I was trapped between a CEO who treated me like a line item on a quarterly report and a boyfriend who had been using me while sleeping with my closest friend. I felt like a pawn in a game I didn't understand, wondering why a man like Ezra would walk up forty flights of stairs on a broken leg just to make sure I was safe. "Showtime, Mrs. Gardner." Standing on the red carpet in a gown that cost more than my life, I watched my cheating ex-boyfriend’s face turn pale as Ezra claimed me in front of the world. I wasn't just an assistant anymore; I was a weapon, and it was time to burn their world down.

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