The Racer and His Dr. Perfect
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When Dr. Joseph Johnson meets Charles Summers, a fearless racing star secretly battling a humiliating condition, the spark between them is instant—and wild. Through treatment, Joseph draws Charles into a whirlwind of obsession and desire, blurring the line between care and control… But when passion shifts into obsession, who will be the true prey in the end?
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Publish:2025-12-20
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The Billionaire Dad I Never Knew
Under the chandelier at the birthday party, Molly wore a sequined little dress, carrying a strawberry cake toward the corner. Laughter filled the air, and the champagne tower shimmered with dreamlike sparkles. Suddenly, the front door crashed open. A drenched man stood in the doorway, rainwater dripping from his trench coat onto the carpet. He stared fixedly at Molly, voice hoarse: "You're... Molly?" Silence fell over the room. The little girl looked up, her eyes utterly calm. "You've got the wrong place, Uncle. Mom didn't invite you." The man staggered, nearly losing his balance. "I'm your father... I've been looking for you for three years! After that car accident, they told me you were dead—said both of you died!" "Shut up." Her mother approached in high heels, elegantly linking arms with her well-dressed new boyfriend. "Sir, we've already called the police. Please leave immediately." The man roared, "Lin Wan! Can you say that to your child's face?! I'm her real father! The DNA will prove it!" The mother sneered, "What kind of homeless fraudster chasing compensation are you? My daughter was conceived through IVF—the father's information is confidential. Who do you think you are?" Gasps rippled through the crowd. At that moment, another door on the opposite side of the hall slowly opened. A man in gold-rimmed glasses stepped in, holding a document, followed by two people who looked like lawyers. "I regret interrupting this spectacle," he said, his gaze settling on Molly's face as he spoke softly, "but according to the Supreme Court's final ruling three months ago—I am Molly's biological father." Dead silence. He removed his glasses, eyes glistening. "Your mother illegally obtained my sperm sample. The artificial insemination was carried out overseas. This child... is truly mine." The mother's face paled. "Impossible! That file was destroyed long ago!" "But the surveillance footage wasn't," the man replied calmly. "Every moment you stole the sample from the fertility clinic is preserved in the official records." Molly looked down at the cake in her hands, watching the cream drip slowly onto the floor. Then she spoke, her voice childlike yet clear: "So... do I have two dads now?" No one answered. Only the thunder cracked outside, as if heaven and earth themselves were asking— Blood or nurture, lies or truth, which one truly earns the name of father?
I Kissed A CEO And He Liked It
I Kissed a CEO, and He Liked It The champagne tower shimmered coldly beneath the crystal chandeliers. When Alice stepped into the ballroom in ten-centimeter heels, every man’s gaze shifted—just slightly. She wore a black dress, a pearl necklace resting on her collarbone like a drop of poison suspended mid-fall. Jack approached with a wine glass in hand, his tie loosened by one button, eyes flickering over the pearls at her chest. He smirked, “All the female guests tonight have good taste.” Alice didn’t answer. Instead, she slowly traced a finger across his lapel, leaving behind a faint red mark—the color of her lipstick. “You’ve mistaken me,” she whispered. “I’m not a guest.” Before the words faded, a waiter stumbled into her, spilling red wine all over her skirt. Silk clung to her thigh. The crowd tittered. Someone murmured, “Who is she? Pretending to be high society and now completely humiliated.” But she smiled. At exactly 10:07 p.m., surveillance footage showed her entering the CEO’s private elevator. No access card swipe. Yet the door opened for her. Three days later, HR received a complaint: the Finance Director claimed he’d seen a woman’s photo hidden in Jack’s desk drawer. On the back was written: *Gabrielle Taylor, height 178cm, full measurements listed, marital status: married, husband’s surname unknown.* But Alice had never used that name. What truly sent chills down the spine was another security clip retrieved from the archives: that night, before stepping into the elevator, she’d paused in front of the grand hall mirror, adjusting her skirt. The camera zoomed in. She spoke silently to her reflection. No one could make out the words. Until I magnified it three hundred times, frame by frame. She said: “Darling, I’ve found you.” And the “you” she addressed was a charity gala photo on the wall behind Jack—a woman in pearls, arm-in-arm with him, smiling gently in the corner of the image. His wife. The one who died in a car crash five years ago. At her funeral, Jack wept against the coffin until his voice broke. Now, his new lover stood before him in the same dress, wearing the same pearls, drawing him slowly—step by step—back into hell. My phone vibrated. An anonymous message appeared: [Did you know? The real Gabrielle didn’t die in a car accident.] [You were the one who pushed her into the cremation furnace.]
Love, Lies, Revenge
When she pushed the door open, her high heels shattered the moonlight scattered across the floor. The office lights were dim and intimate. Andrew was wrapped around that young girl, laughing carelessly. His wine glass was halfway to his lips when he saw her—his hand paused for just a second before he curled his lips into a smirk. "Back already? The new flavor's pretty good. Want a taste?" I didn't answer. I simply placed the divorce papers gently on the table. He glanced at them and snorted. "You always do this—storm out, then crawl back. Done with your act? Can we go eat now?" I removed my gloves slowly, rolled up my sleeve, revealing the old scar healed shut along my inner wrist. "Three years ago, you said if I ever mentioned divorce, I'd have to crawl out of this house on my knees." I tapped the play button on my phone. From it poured his voice—tender, heartfelt—whispering "I love you," saying "I can't live without you," calling me "Lin Wan, you're my life." It was the video he’d recorded in tears outside my door, begging for forgiveness. Now, it had been forwarded to his chairman father, to his fiancée’s family, and to every gossip-hungry financial outlet in the city. "Andrew," I finally spoke, my voice soft as snow settling into ashes, "I'm not here to reconcile." "I'm here to acquire your company." His face turned pale. He shot upright, knocking his chair over with a crash. I turned and walked away, leaving behind just one final sentence: "Oh, by the way—your father just signed the equity transfer documents. Wish you both a lifetime of happiness."
His Lost Lycan Luna
Embers glowed red, like the grip of her mother’s hand in her final moments. Ari stood barefoot on the scorched earth behind the manor, her dress flapping in the night wind like a tattered banner. The nobles formed a circle around her, their golden spectacles reflecting cold, glittering eyes. "Daughter of a traitor—unworthy of bearing the heirloom of the Wolfblood." They pointed at the silver chain around her neck, the one her mother had died to leave behind, engraved with forgotten moon-script: *Blood not cold, oath unbroken.* Ivy screamed from behind iron bars, but her voice drowned beneath the crackling flames. A man who looked like a cook approached, a boning knife in hand, a scar cutting across his face, grinning like a madman. "Heard your sister preferred her feet burned raw rather than give it up?" He hurled a ladle of hot oil into the fire. The blaze roared skyward. "Well then, let's see how much pain the little sister can take tonight." Ari didn’t turn. She only stared into the churning sparks within the coals—seeing again that night ten years past: her mother being dragged into the woods, pressing this very necklace into her palm with her last breath. "You call me the child of a traitor?" she finally spoke, her voice ragged as tearing cloth. "But tell me—who among you remembers who took the hunters’ silver arrows so you could live?" The crowd stirred. Doubt flickered. Then—a shadow cut across the firelight. A man in a tailored suit stepped from the darkness, his polished shoes treading over ash without a sound. His gaze swept over Ari—the trembling spine held unbent—and slowly, he removed his gloves. "Gentlemen," his voice low and heavy, "what you are burning is not a traitor’s bloodline. It is the last living descendant of the final Wolf Lord." He lifted his eyes, their depths dark as an abyss: "And I have come to bring her home." The wind stilled. The fire burned on. A tear traced down Ari’s cheek—but she did not step back. The game was set. Survival has always been written by the victor.
The Equestrian Star's Cinderella Bride
After a reckless one-night stand with equestrian champion Phillips Hobbs, hotel maid Cindy Becker is caught in a scandal that forces them into a flash marriage. Bound by pride and passion yet divided by class and circumstance, their fragile union faces relentless tests—from Phillips’ devoted fiancée to the weight of family expectations. But as jealousy, rivalry, and sacrifice threaten to tear them apart, Cindy and Phillips uncover a truth neither expected: their lives have been intertwined long before that night.
Gold Digger's True Love
At the elite gala, crystal chandeliers shimmering above champagne towers, Juliet Hayes stepped into the ballroom in a crimson gown, a silver small-caliber pistol aimed at Victor Astor’s chest. “You owe me,” she sneered, eyes sharp as blades. “Did you think I wouldn’t come back—when you left me on that Venetian bridge three years ago?” Silence gripped the room. Victor only smiled, lifting his wine glass with deliberate grace. “Oh? Then tell me—exactly who are you?” The livestream chat exploded: [No way! This Juliet is fake! The real Miss Hayes has been locked away in a sanatorium by Victor for five years!] [Plot twist incoming! Every move she makes is part of his script!] [Even her name was given by him… oh god, she’s just a doll he created…] Juliet froze. She remembered the night she fled the slums—he gave her the name "Juliet," taught her aristocratic diction, sent her into Parisian high society. She thought it was love. It was training. “You think you’re here for revenge?” Victor set down his glass, stepping closer. “But you don’t even realize it—your dress, your words, even the way you hold that gun—all written by my brother, Jasper, just for you.” She pulled the trigger. The gunshot rang out. But it wasn’t Victor who fell—it was the bodyguard rushing in behind her, blood blooming across his chest, the Hayes family crest pinned to his jacket. “He’s the real one.” Victor’s voice turned icy. “And you? You wouldn’t pass a DNA test.” Staggering backward, Juliet crashed into the champagne tower. Glass shattered. On the grand screen at the far end of the hall, surveillance footage flickered to life—a pale woman in a wheelchair, smiling quietly at the camera. *That* is Juliet Hayes.” Victor said. “I’ve killed seven impostors before you. You’re the eighth.” She finally understood—no one ever intended for her to walk out alive the moment she stepped onto that red carpet. In the next breath, she dropped to her knees—not in surrender, but raised the gun to her own temple. “If I’m not her… then who am I?” Victor looked down, whispering like a lover’s kiss: “You were my most perfect forgery. Pity—even the finest counterfeit must burn.” Flames crept from the hem of her dress. Music swelled once more. At the center of the dance floor, only a pair of bloodstained red dancing shoes remained, slowly spinning.