The Secret Mother And Her Cruel Tycoon

The Secret Mother And Her Cruel Tycoon

Qiang Weiwei

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My father was rotting in a cell, and my secret son, Leo, was the only reason I kept breathing. Then, everything shattered when Augustine Hoover's bodyguards dragged me to a remote estate and locked me in a room with a dying monster. The man in the dark was Augustine himself, bleeding from a wound and lost in a drug-induced delirium. He didn't see me as a person; he saw me as a debt to be collected. By dawn, the feverish attacker was gone, replaced by a cold, calculative billionaire in a wheelchair who told me I was now his property. I was trapped on a private island, forced to play nurse to keep my father protected in prison. While I suffered in silence, the world turned against me. My fiancé, Grant, went on national television to dump me, calling my family a disgrace. When Augustine finally brought me back to New York, it wasn't for freedom-it was to parade me at a gala where I saw Grant with his arm around my stepsister. She was wearing my dress, living my life, while I stood there with Augustine's bite mark fresh on my neck. The humiliation was total. Augustine offered me a deal: sign a marriage contract with a mandatory "Heir Production Clause," or watch my father die and my son disappear. He promised to crush my enemies, but his touch felt like a shackle. I felt a cold rage settle over me. If I was going to be a prisoner, I would be the most dangerous one he had ever seen. I realized then that everyone I loved was a pawn in a game I didn't even know was being played. I signed the papers and officially became Mrs. Hoover, the most envied and hated woman in the city. But as we pulled up to his gothic mansion, a burner phone in my pocket buzzed with a message from my father's oldest ally. The man I just married wasn't my protector. He was the one who framed my father and destroyed my life. I've entered the lion's den, and I won't stop until I've ripped his heart out.

Chapter 1 1

The door didn't just close; it slammed with the finality of a coffin lid.

She didn't have time to turn around before the lock clicked. The sound was small, metallic, and terrifyingly precise against the backdrop of the storm raging outside. She hammered her fists against the solid mahogany wood.

"Open it!" Her voice was a raw scrape in her throat. "My son-he'll be alone! Let me out!"

Nothing. No footsteps retreating. Just the heavy silence of the house on the other side and the roar of thunder rattling the windowpanes on this side. Panic, cold and sharp, pierced through her shock. Leo. Her mind screamed his name. He was safe with Mrs. Gable, but for how long? She was expecting her back yesterday. How many calls had she made? How long before she called the police, putting Leo right in the crosshairs of the vultures circling her family?

She slid down the door until her tailbone hit the floor. Her lungs burned, starved of oxygen. She tried to inhale, but the air in there was thick. It didn't smell like a guest room. It smelled like iron. Like old pennies and expensive tobacco.

Blood.

A low, guttural sound vibrated from the center of the room. It wasn't human. It sounded like a wounded animal waiting to snap its jaws.

She held her breath, her heart hammering against her ribs like a trapped bird.

Flash.

Lightning tore through the sky, illuminating the room in a stark, blue-white strobe.

The bed was massive, a dark island in the center of the room. But it was the chaos around it that froze her blood. IV poles knocked askew. Shattered glass ampoules glinting on the Persian rug. And a man.

He was on the floor, half-propped against the side of the mattress. He was shirtless. Bandages were wrapped haphazardly around his torso, dark stains blooming through the white gauze.

The darkness swallowed the room again instantly.

She scrambled to her feet. The window. She needed the window. She had to get back to Leo.

She took a step into the black void, her hands outstretched.

Something hot and hard clamped around her ankle.

She screamed as the grip tightened, crushing bone. The force yanked her leg out from under her. She hit the floor hard, the breath knocked out of her, the thick carpet burning her cheek.

Before she could scramble away, a heavy weight pinned her down.

"Who sent you?"

The voice was a jagged whisper right in her ear.

He flipped her over. His hands were iron clamps on her shoulders, pinning her into the plush rug. Another flash of lightning lit up his face.

He was beautiful in a terrifying, ruined way. Sweat matted his dark hair to his forehead. His eyes were blown wide, pupils dilated so much they swallowed the irises. He wasn't seeing her. He was seeing a ghost. A threat.

"I asked you a question," he snarled. His hand moved to her throat. His thumb pressed against her windpipe, cutting off her air.

"No one!" She clawed at his forearm. Her nails dug into his skin, scraping against the fever-hot flesh. "Please. I'm not... I'm not who you think I am."

"Liar."

He squeezed.

Black spots danced in her vision. Her lungs convulsed. She kicked out, her knee connecting with his side, right where the bandages were.

He didn't even flinch. It was like kicking a stone wall.

"Stop," she wheezed, tears leaking from her eyes. They rolled down her temples and dripped onto his hand. "Please."

His grip loosened, just a fraction. He blinked, his head tilting to the side. The murderous rage in his eyes shifted into something else. Something darker. More confused. The drugs in his system were rewriting his reality in real-time.

"You smell like rain," he murmured. His voice lost its edge, becoming thick and slurred.

His hand slid from her throat to her collarbone. It wasn't a caress. It was a claim.

"No," she sobbed, trying to shove him off.

He grabbed her wrists with one hand, pinning them both above her head effortlessly. The movement tore the silk of her blouse. The sound of ripping fabric was louder than the thunder.

"You don't leave," he said, his face burying into the crook of her neck. His skin was burning up. "Nobody leaves."

She screamed again, but the thunder swallowed it whole.

Light.

It was the first thing she registered. Cruel, sharp, morning sunlight slicing through the gaps in the heavy velvet curtains.

Then came the pain.

It radiated from everywhere. Her wrists ached. Her throat felt bruised. Her head throbbed with a dull, rhythmic pounding.

She opened her eyes and stared at the ceiling. It was hand-painted. Cherubs and clouds. A mockery of heaven looking down on hell.

She sat up, clutching the sheet to her chest. She was naked. Her clothes were gone. A cold dread, worse than the fear from last night, washed over her. The sheet felt too clean, the bed too neat.

The bathroom door clicked open.

The man from last night rolled out. He was in a wheelchair now, his legs covered by a charcoal blanket. He wore a fresh shirt, crisp and white, buttoned to the collar. His face was pale, clean-shaven, and composed.

The monster from the floor was gone. In his place was a statue carved from ice.

He stopped the wheelchair at the foot of the bed. He looked at her. He didn't look at her face. He looked at the bruises on her arms, the mark on her neck. He looked at her like she was a car that had been scratched in a parking lot. An inconvenience.

"You're awake," he said. His voice was smooth, devoid of the gravel from last night.

"You..." Her voice cracked. She cleared her throat, wincing at the pain. "What did you do to me?"

He didn't flinch. He didn't apologize. He didn't even look surprised. His gaze was chillingly indifferent. "My staff cleaned you up after you fainted. Your clothes were torn and soiled."

He picked up a blue folder from his lap and tossed it onto the bed. It slid across the duvet and hit her leg.

"Read it."

"I want my clothes," she said, her voice shaking. "I want to leave."

"You attacked me," he said calmly.

Her jaw dropped. "I attacked you?"

He pointed a long, elegant finger at his own forearm. Three angry red welts from her fingernails stood out against his skin.

"Physical evidence of assault," he said. "Trespassing on a private island. Attempted murder of a corporate executive."

"You're insane," she whispered. "You were delirious. You tried to kill me."

"I was defending myself against an intruder," he countered. "That's how the police report will read. Unless..."

He nodded at the folder.

She opened it with trembling fingers. It wasn't a police report. It was a debt transfer agreement.

Mann Family Assets. Defaulted.

Total Liability: $12,000,000.

Transferred to: Hoover Industries.

"Your father's debt," he said. "I bought it this morning. Along with his bail bond."

She looked up at him. The room spun. "Why?"

"Because you saw me weak," he said. "And I can't have loose ends running around telling the press I was hallucinating on my bedroom floor."

"So I'm what?" She gripped the sheet tighter. "A prisoner?"

He rolled his wheelchair closer. The motor hummed softly. He reached out, and she flinched, pressing herself against the headboard.

He didn't touch her. He just reached past her and pressed a button on the bedside table.

The door opened. A massive man in a black suit stepped in, filling the frame. Jericho. The one who had thrown her in here last night. Behind him stood a severe-looking woman holding a tray. On the tray was a glass of water, a single white pill, and a black maid's uniform.

"Marta will see to your needs," the man in the wheelchair said. "Take the pill. It's a contraceptive. We don't need complications."

"I'm not taking anything from you."

"Then Jericho will hold you down while Marta puts it down your throat."

He said it without malice. Just a fact. Like stating the weather.

She looked at the pill. Then at the uniform. Then at him.

"Who are you?" she asked.

He maneuvered his wheelchair around. He paused at the door, looking back over his shoulder. His eyes were grey, like the storm that had passed.

"Here," he said, "you aren't a guest, Aislinn. You are collateral."

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