7303 Book(s) Related to falling for the wrong one

They Thought He Was a Student… He Was a Weapon

They Thought He Was a Student… He Was a Weapon

833 Views · Ongoing · Clinton
They gave him 24 hours to hand over the girl.
He gave them 30 seconds to regret .

Jack Cole was supposed to be nobody—just another quiet college student.
No records. No past. No trace he ever existed.

But when a powerful family tries to take his cousin as part of a dirty deal…
and a billionaire heiress becomes the target of a professional kill team…

Something buried comes back.

The campus?
Just his cover.

The truth?
He’s a weapon trained for war—
the kind governments deny, and enemies never see coming.

Now the richest family in the city wants him dead.
A private army is moving in.
And a global biotech empire is pulling strings from the shadows.

They think they’re hunting him.

They’re wrong.

Jack isn’t running.
He’s choosing who dies first.
I Wed a Mafia Don, and They Are Tormented by Remorse

I Wed a Mafia Don, and They Are Tormented by Remorse

469 Views · Ongoing ·
"Shocking Secrets of the Carter Family Heir Leak Out Once Again!"
Jiang Qiwan curled up in the bridal suite, scrolling through explicit photos of Shen Luoyu with another woman.
The shots were secretly taken yet captured damning angles.
Through the car window, the two were caught in an intimate tryst.
Jiang Qiwan let out a cold laugh, tossing the photos carelessly into the trash can, heavy exhaustion flooding her eyes.
"Do I really have to cut my hair like this?"
"Ma’am, this is the young master’s order. Only if you get the same short haircut as Miss Lin Xue can the rumors from last night be cleared up. Of course, you can refuse—if you never wish to see your younger brother again."
I Refused to Save Her, Then Crushed My Ex-Wife’s Corporate Empire

I Refused to Save Her, Then Crushed My Ex-Wife’s Corporate Empire

673 Views · Ongoing · Hades
Victoria discovered that I hadn't submitted any supplemental medical expense claims for two weeks.
She assumed I had finally been disciplined and had given up what she called "the exploitative nature of the lower class."
Little did she know, my backpack held the signed divorce papers and my mother's death certificate.
As I turned to leave, I was still wearing the discounted trench coat she'd casually given me three years ago when we got married.
What she didn't know was that I, a deep-sea geology genius from MIT, willingly endured three years of her humiliation and ridiculous rules, just so my mother could stay in her conglomerate's private hospital to prolong her life.
Now, my mother has died because of unpaid bills , and even her ashes are carried by me in a cheap canvas bag.
Now that my loved one is dead, there's no need for me to continue being her obstructive dog on Wall Street. The lives she owed with those approval forms, I will settle with the collapse of her entire conglomerate empire.