I was forced to marry Drake Knox, a Wall Street titan twice my age. I fought him at every turn, but his cold control slowly melted into a possessive passion I couldn't resist. Then his ex-girlfriend, Julia, returned, claiming a terminal illness had brought her back to him. He chose her. When I was injured and left bleeding in a hotel lobby, he ran to comfort her. When she murdered my dog, Peanut, and framed me, he believed her lies without question. His punishment for my "betrayal" was to lock me away in his mansion, a gilded cage he called protection. He sacrificed my safety, my sanity, and my freedom for the woman he truly loved. I was just a substitute. So I ran. And when he chased me down a highway, I gave him an ultimatum: let me go, or watch me die. I stepped in front of a speeding truck. I never expected him to swerve his own car into its path, sacrificing himself to save me.
I was forced to marry Drake Knox, a Wall Street titan twice my age. I fought him at every turn, but his cold control slowly melted into a possessive passion I couldn't resist.
Then his ex-girlfriend, Julia, returned, claiming a terminal illness had brought her back to him.
He chose her. When I was injured and left bleeding in a hotel lobby, he ran to comfort her.
When she murdered my dog, Peanut, and framed me, he believed her lies without question.
His punishment for my "betrayal" was to lock me away in his mansion, a gilded cage he called protection.
He sacrificed my safety, my sanity, and my freedom for the woman he truly loved. I was just a substitute.
So I ran. And when he chased me down a highway, I gave him an ultimatum: let me go, or watch me die. I stepped in front of a speeding truck.
I never expected him to swerve his own car into its path, sacrificing himself to save me.
Chapter 1
They said I was going to marry him, a a man twice my age, a Wall Street titan they called the 'Reaper.' I laughed. They didn't know who they were dealing with.
My name is Chelsie Miller, and freedom was my religion. At twenty-one, I owned New York City, or at least, that's how it felt when I was cruising down Fifth Avenue in my vintage Shelby Cobra, wind whipping through my hair, the city lights a blur. I was a Miller heiress, yes, but I built my own empire of defiance. My father, Fred Wallace, called it "wild." I called it living.
Then came the decree: I was to marry Drake Knox. Thirty-one years old, a decade my senior, and supposedly the most formidable mind on Wall Street. He was discipline in a suit, a man who probably ironed his socks. I was chaos in couture. The very idea made my stomach churn. "He'll tame you," my father had declared, a glint of triumph in his eyes. Tame me? That was a challenge I was born to accept.
The first attempt to shake him off was at our engagement party. A lavish affair, naturally, held at his penthouse. I arrived two hours late, wearing a scarlet dress slit to my hip, and promptly started a champagne-fueled dance-off on a table with a gaggle of male models. My father's face was purple. Drake? He just leaned against the bar, watching with an annoyingly calm smirk.
He bought me a diamond necklace the next day. "For your... spirited performance," he'd said, his voice a low rumble. It was easily a million dollars. He thought he could buy me. He thought he could indulge me into submission. It only fueled my fire.
My next move was more direct. I took his prize-winning, meticulously restored classic convertible – a car he adored more than anything, I was sure – and drove it straight into the reflecting pool in front of his Manhattan office building. The splash was glorious. The headlines even more so. I waited for the fury, the annulment papers.
Instead, I got a call. "Chelsie," his voice was surprisingly devoid of anger. "You missed a spot. The convertible looks much better with a matching pool." He chuckled. A genuine, unsettling chuckle. "Next time, let me know. I'll get us a crane. We can make it a performance piece." My jaw dropped. He wasn't just indulging me; he was escalating the game.
The day before the wedding, I vanished. I left a note: "Runaway bride. Find me if you can, Reaper." I chartered a private jet to the Caribbean, convinced he'd finally give up. He wouldn't risk the public humiliation of a no-show bride.
I was wrong.
Mid-flight, the plane suddenly shuddered. A familiar, deep voice cut through the cabin's intercom. "Chelsie, darling, it's Drake. Did you really think I'd let you escape that easily?" My blood ran cold. He had found me. More than that, he had hijacked the plane.
The plane landed on a deserted airstrip. Drake was waiting, leaning against a sleek black SUV, looking impossibly calm. He wore a crisp white linen shirt that made him look less like a Wall Street titan and more like a predatory beach god. "Get in," he commanded, his eyes gleaming. I hesitated, but something in his gaze, a possessive fire I hadn't seen before, made me move.
We sped down a winding coastal road, the ocean a shimmering blue beside us. I was fuming, plotting my next escape. Suddenly, a deer darted onto the road. Drake swerved violently. I screamed as the car fishtailed. He instinctively threw his arm across my chest, pushing me back against the seat, shielding me. The next thing I knew, there was a deafening crunch of metal, the smell of burning rubber, and then darkness.
I woke up to the sound of sirens, a throbbing pain in my head. My chest felt tight, but I could breathe. I looked over. Drake was slumped against the steering wheel, his face pale, blood blooming on his pristine white shirt. My breath hitched. He had saved me. At the cost of himself.
"Drake!" My voice was hoarse, unfamiliar. Guilt, sharp and cold, pierced through my defiance. He stirred, groaning softly. His eyes fluttered open, unfocused at first, then locked onto mine. "Chelsie?" he mumbled, his voice weak. "Are you... are you okay?"
He was asking about me. Not his broken car, not his own bleeding body, but me. A strange, unfamiliar warmth spread through my chest, chasing away the cold edge of fear. It was a feeling I hadn't anticipated, a tremor deep within my carefully constructed walls.
Later, in the hospital, my father ranted about my recklessness. Drake, his arm in a sling, his head bandaged, simply looked at me. "She's shaken, Fred," he said, his voice soft, almost tender. He saw past my anger, past my rebellious facade. He saw me.
That night, lying in my hospital bed, I couldn't stop thinking about his arm across my chest, his whispered concern. It was a terrifying, exhilarating realization. He might be cold, controlling, and infuriating, but in that moment, he had given me something no one else ever had: complete, unconditional protection. My heart pounded, a rhythm I hadn't felt before.
The next morning, he came to my room. "Still planning on running?" he asked, a hint of vulnerability in his eyes. I looked down at my hands. "Maybe," I whispered, then met his gaze, a new resolve hardening my voice. "But only if you promise to chase me properly next time. And maybe... maybe let me drive sometimes."
A slow smile spread across his face, a genuine warmth reaching his eyes. "Deal," he said, and for the first time, I felt a thrill that wasn't about rebellion, but something deeper.
We were married a week later, a quiet ceremony no one expected. The rebellion faded, replaced by an intoxicating dance of power and passion. He was possessive, but in a way that made me feel cherished, not caged. He indulged my every whim, but now, I found myself indulging his. In the bedroom, he was utterly dominant, demanding, and I, the wild one, found myself gladly submitting to his every touch, every command. "Mine," he'd whisper, his lips pressed against my neck, his arms tightening around me. "You are irrevocably mine." And I'd believe him, completely, utterly lost in the intoxicating world he had woven around me.
Then he left for a business trip to Hong Kong. "Just a week, Chelsie," he promised, kissing my forehead. I found myself missing him even before he was gone. I decided to surprise him, planning a romantic welcome home dinner. The quiet of the mansion felt strange without him.
My phone buzzed. An unknown number. A text message: "Please, Chelsie, I need your help. Drake is with her. She's ill, dying. He doesn't know what to do."
My heart lurched. What was this? Dying? Drake? I started to reply, asking who this was, but the message was gone. Deleted. It didn't make sense. Drake wouldn't hide anything from me. Would he?
A sickening suspicion began to crawl into my gut. My hands trembled as I typed Drake's name into a search engine. The results were innocuous, business news, nothing personal. But then, a flicker. An old article from five years ago. "Wall Street Titan Drake Knox's Heartbreak: Julia Sosa's Tragic Battle." My blood ran cold. Julia Sosa. The classical pianist. His ex-girlfriend. The one he never talked about.
The text message. "He's with her." "She's ill, dying." A cold dread settled in my stomach. No. It couldn't be. Not now. Not when everything felt so perfect.
I had to see for myself. I booked the first flight to Hong Kong, my heart hammering against my ribs. I knew Drake was staying at the Peninsula. When I arrived, the lobby was a blur of gold and marble. I saw him. My Drake. He wasn't alone.
He was sitting in the elegant hotel cafe, his head bowed, listening intently to a woman. Her hair, long and dark, fell softly around her shoulders. She was thin, almost fragile, with large, luminous eyes. Julia Sosa. There was an intimacy in their posture, a shared vulnerability that struck me like a physical blow. He reached out, his large hand gently covering hers. His expression was soft, concerned, a look I now recognized as tenderness. But it wasn't for me.
My throat tightened. I watched, unseen, as she spoke, her voice low and mournful. He leaned closer, his dark head almost touching hers. He looked at her as he had looked at me in the hospital, with that same profound concern. But it was more than that, now. It was something deeper, older, a connection forged in a past I knew nothing about.
Then she looked at him, her eyes brimming with tears. She whispered something, too low for me to hear. But the way his jaw tightened, the way his gaze lingered on her face, spoke volumes. This wasn't just a sick friend. This was his past, his unresolved pain, staring him right in the face. And I, his wife, was suddenly, acutely, aware of my place: a stand-in, a substitute for the woman he had truly loved.
The air felt thin. My world, once vibrant and full of his presence, was now just a stage for a scene I didn't belong in. Julia's hand tightened on Drake's, and she leaned her head against his shoulder. His arm went around her, a comforting, possessive gesture. The knife twisted deeper. His ex-girlfriend. His white moonlight. He still harbored feelings for her. And I was just the girl he settled for.
My carefully built world crumbled around me, a silent, devastating collapse. It was all a lie. All of it.
Chapter 1
18/12/2025
Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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Chapter 11
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Chapter 12
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Chapter 13
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Chapter 14
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Chapter 15
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Chapter 16
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Chapter 17
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Chapter 18
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Chapter 19
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Chapter 20
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Chapter 21
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Chapter 22
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Chapter 23
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