ログインMy Ex Fiancé Uncle’s Obsession is a high-stakes billionaire romance set in modern-day New York, built around betrayal, power, and a dangerously intense love. Ava Sinclair’s life shatters when she discovers her fiancé, Ethan Cole, has been living a lie. Heartbroken and humiliated, she spirals into one reckless night with a stranger—only to later find out he is Adrian Blackwood, a powerful billionaire and her ex-fiancé’s uncle. When Adrian acquires the failing company where Ava works, she’s forced into close contact with the one man she cannot forget—and cannot escape. As Ava struggles to rebuild her life, she’s pulled into Adrian’s world of control, secrets, and obsession. Their connection deepens into something consuming, but it’s complicated by Ethan’s manipulations, a web of corporate sabotage, and the return of figures from Ava’s past. Tensions rise as jealousy, hidden agendas, and family conflicts threaten to destroy everything. When Ava discovers she’s pregnant, she makes the difficult choice to walk away, determined to protect herself and her child. But Adrian isn’t willing to let her go, setting off a chain of events filled with revenge, heartbreak, and dangerous consequences. In a story where love and control blur, Ava must decide whether to keep running from the past—or face it and choose a future on her own terms.
もっと見るAva's Pov
I thought the sound of laughter coming from our bedroom was the TV I’d forgotten to turn off. But as I pushed the door open, I realized the sound was much deeper, much more intimate, and coming from a man whose voice I didn’t recognize, wrapped in the arms of the man I was supposed to marry in a month.
The air in the hallway felt like it had been sucked out of the house. I stood there, my hand still gripped tightly around the doorknob, watching the scene unfold in slow motion. Ethan, my fiancé of two years, had his head thrown back, his fingers buried in the dark, messy hair of a man I had never seen before. The stranger was pinned against our headboard, the one we’d picked out together because the wood matched the floor—and he was looking at Ethan with a look of naked hunger.
It wasn't just the cheating that hit me. It was the familiarity of it. They weren't just caught in a moment of passion; they were comfortable. They were settled, as if it had been going on for ages.
Ethan saw me first. His laughter didn't fade; it died. It was a sharp, ugly silence that filled the room. He didn't scramble to pull the covers up. He didn't even push the man away. He just froze, his blue eyes widening as the color drained from his face.
"Ava," he whispered.
The stranger turned, looking at me with more curiosity than guilt. He was handsome in a rugged, careless way. He looked like the kind of man who didn't care about wedding dates or flower arrangements or the fact that Ethan was currently wearing the silk robe I had bought him for Christmas.
"Is this her?" the man asked. His voice was steady.
I didn't answer him. I couldn't. My throat felt like it was lined with glass. I looked at Ethan, the man who had promised me a lifetime of loyalty while he was busy building a secret world with someone else.
"How long?" I asked, my voice surprisingly flat. I didn't scream. Screaming felt like I was giving him permission to feel bad for me. I didn't want his pity.
"It’s not… it’s not what you think," Ethan said, finally sliding off the bed. He reached for his pants on the floor, stumbling over the fabric.
"It never is, is it?" I walked further into the room. Every step felt heavy, like I was walking through water. I stopped at the foot of the bed and looked at the stranger. "And you? Are you the reason he’s been staying late at the office for six months?"
The man shrugged, sitting up and leaning back against the pillows. "I'm the reason he doesn’t have to pretend” he said lazily “You ever notice how different he is when he’s with you?."
Ethan flinched. "Mark, shut up." He turned back to me, his hands shaking as he buttoned his shirt. "Ava, please. I love you. I do. This… I’m just confused. I didn't know how to tell you."
"Confused?" I repeated. I looked at the engagement ring on my left hand. The diamond was huge, clear, and perfectly cut. It was a billionaire’s promise. A CEO’s seal of ownership. It felt like a hot iron against my skin. "You weren't confused when you asked my father for his blessing. You weren't confused when we signed the contract for the venue yesterday."
"I was trying to be the man everyone expected me to be," Ethan said. He took a step toward me, but I stepped back.
"You should have tried being an honest one instead," I said.
I didn't wait for him to respond. I reached down, grabbed the ring by the band, and pulled it off. My finger felt strangely light, and the skin underneath was pale. I looked at the ring one last time, then I looked at the man in the bed.
"Since you like his things so much," I said, my voice cold and sharp, "you can have this too."
I flicked my wrist. The ring didn't just fall; it flew. It hit the stranger right in the center of his chest before bouncing off and landing on the duvet with a dull thud.
Ethan gasped. "Ava, that’s a two-hundred thousand dollar ring."
"Then you can use it to pay for your next secret getaway," I snapped. "I’m leaving. Don't call me. Don't have your lawyer call me. If I see your face again, I’ll make sure the board of directors sees those photos you think I don't know are on your cloud drive."
I turned on my heel and walked out. I didn't grab a suitcase. I didn't grab my coat. I grabbed my car keys from the bowl in the foyer and slammed the front door so hard the glass panes rattled.
The night air was cold, but I welcomed it. My hands didn’t stop shaking even after I got into the car. Then I hit the steering wheel. Hard.
“Stupid,” I muttered. I didn’t even know if I meant him or me.
Ending the relationship didn’t just break my heart—it left me halfway homeless. My lease was almost up, and I had no intention of renewing it, no plan, no safety net. Just consequences.
This is what happens when you build your life around a man and forget to build one for yourself.
Going back to Ethan’s place was never an option—not after what I walked in on in our bedroom. Some lines don’t get crossed twice. So just like that, his name joined a list I never wanted to grow.
George was the first. Now, Ethan.
I had nowhere else to go, other than my own apartment, so instead I went to Mia’s apartment. She has been my best friend for years and was the only person I could stay with for sometime.
By the time I got to her place, the anger had burned out. What was left was worse.
Emptiness. The kind that made everything feel unreal.
"Ava? What happened? Are you hurt? Talk to me—did you have an accident?"
Those were the first words she said when she opened the door and saw the state I was in.
The next minute Chloe was all over me but my mind had shut me out, I didn’t want to explain anything I just wanted to be left alone.
“Well since we’re not going to be talking it’s better we go out and have some fun to lighten the mood” Chloe said clearly not liking my mood
“I think that’s a good idea” Mia agreed but I wasn’t having it.
“I’m not going” I said folding myself more into the sofa “I’ll be here when you get back”, the last thing I needed was more pity.
Finally they succeeded in dragging me out, Chloe had snapped and I couldn’t deal with her temper so I agreed reluctantly.
Inside the bar, the bass hit me like a physical wall. The air smelled of expensive gin, sweat, and desperation. I pushed through the crowd, ignoring the bodies pressing against mine, as we headed straight for the bar.
"Double scotch. Neat," I told the bartender.
I didn't look around until the glass was in my hand. I downed half of it in one go, the liquid burning a trail down my throat. It felt good. It felt real.
Mia and Chloe were having fun and I felt bad for being a show killer so I stood and that was when I realized how much drink I had, my feet fumbled as I moved away from them.
I found a seat in a corner more quiet. I leaned against the marble counter and stared at the empty space on my ring finger. I felt a surge of anger, followed by a hollow sense of freedom. I was done being the perfect fiancée. I was done being the "beautiful obsession" of a man who didn't even know who he was.
"You’re staring at that hand like it’s a crime scene," a voice said beside me.
It was a deep voice. Low, smooth, and laced with an authority that didn't need to shout to be heard. I turned my head slowly.
The man sitting two stools away was dangerous. That was the first thought that entered my mind. He was wearing a charcoal suit that cost more than my car, but he wore it with a casualness that suggested he didn't care if it got ruined. His dark hair was brushed back, revealing a sharp jawline and eyes that were so dark they looked like ink.
He wasn't drinking a colorful cocktail. He had a glass of dark amber liquid in front of him, and he was watching me with a look of intense, quiet curiosity.
"Maybe it is," I said, my voice raspy. "I just got rid of a dead weight."
The man tilted his head. His gaze dropped to my bare finger. "A very expensive weight, I imagine."
I looked at him, really looked at him. He was too polished for this club. He looked like the kind of man who owned the building, or the city, or both. In my state of mind, I didn't see a powerful man. I saw a distraction. A professional-grade distraction.
His gaze dropped briefly to my hand. Then back to my face. No pity just calculation. My pulse stuttered. Good. Let him look. “How much for the night?” I asked.
“Careful,” he said quietly. “You’re either very brave… or very reckless.” A pause.
His eyes didn’t leave mine. “I haven’t decided which one makes you more dangerous.”
"You heard me," I said, turning my body to face him fully. I reached into my bag and pulled out the envelope of cash I’d withdrawn earlier that day for the wedding florist. I slapped it onto the bar between us. "You’re the most beautiful thing in this room. I have a very bad memory I need to erase, and I don't want to do it alone. What’s your rate?"
A slow, dark smile spread across his face. It wasn't a kind smile. It was the smile of a hunter who had just seen the prey walk into his trap willingly. He didn't look at the money. He kept his eyes on mine.
"You think you can afford me?" he asked.
"I have more where that came from," I lied, my voice steady. "And a very high limit on my credit card. I’m not looking for a conversation, and I’m definitely not looking for a boyfriend. I want a service. Are you available, or should I go find someone else?"
The man stood up. He was taller than I expected, his presence suddenly dwarfing everyone else at the bar. He reached out and picked up the envelope, but he didn't open it. He tucked it into his inner jacket pocket.
"I like a woman who knows what she wants," he said. "But you should know, I don't give refunds."
"I don't plan on asking for one," I replied.
He didn't take my hand. He simply turned and started walking toward the private exit at the back of the club. I followed him, my heart hammering against my ribs. I knew this was reckless. I knew this was a mistake. But as I watched the way his shoulders moved under that expensive suit, I realized I didn't care.
We didn't go to a hotel. A black SUV was waiting at the curb, and the driver opened the door without a word. We drove in silence through the city, the lights blurring past the window. We ended up at a high-rise building on the edge of the water.
His penthouse was exactly what I expected. Glass walls, leather furniture, and a view that made the world look small. It was cold. It was perfect.
The night that followed was what I didn't remember. Morning came too fast. The light was wrong. For a few seconds, I didn’t move.
What had I done?
The reality hit me instantly. I was in a stranger’s bed. Then the memories came rushing in. I had paid—or tried to pay—a man to sleep with me?
I sat up slowly, pressing my hand to my forehead. Beside me, the man was still asleep. His face was calmer now, less guarded, but he still looked like someone I shouldn't have messed with. I looked at the nightstand and saw the envelope of cash sitting there.
I felt a wave of shame, but I pushed it down. I got out of bed, moving as quietly as a cat. I gathered my clothes from the floor and dressed with shaking hands. I didn't bother with my heels yet; I carried them in one hand.
By the time I got back to Mia’s apartment I was sure there’s no way I wasn’t giving an explanation.
Adrian’s POV The silence lingering across the executive floor after Daniel Mercer’s termination felt thick enough to choke on. Employees avoided eye contact as security escorted him through the lobby carrying a cardboard box filled with the remains of his career, and the fear hanging in the air reminded me of blood spreading quietly through water. Fear was useful in corporations like this because terrified people became careful, obedient, and predictable, and right now I needed every single person inside Aurelius Group afraid enough to stop making mistakes. Outside my office windows, Manhattan disappeared beneath dark storm clouds while rain streaked against the glass in uneven patterns that made the entire city look distorted and restless. I thought about how Ava must have felt that morning walking through the office while people tore her apart with whispers and half-hidden laughter, and something ugly tightened violently inside my chest. The image wouldn’t leave my head
Ava’s POV The elevator ride to the thirty-second floor felt longer than it ever had before. Every second stretched painfully as I stood beside Adrian in complete silence, hyperaware of the warmth radiating from him and the cold knot twisting tighter inside my stomach. My reflection stared back at me from the polished elevator walls—pale face, tense shoulders, tired eyes that barely looked like mine anymore. I looked like someone people would talk about. The thought made me sick. Another notification lit up my phone. I didn’t check it. I couldn’t. The elevator doors slid open with a soft chime, and the moment I stepped onto the executive floor, I felt it immediately. Silence. Not normal office silence. This was worse. Conversations stopped quickly. Keyboards slowed. Heads lifted subtly before snapping back down the second they noticed me looking. They knew. Every single person here knew. Heat crawled painfully up my neck as I walked toward my desk, trying to ignore the way peo
Adrian’s POV Something is wrong with Ava Sinclair. I know it the second she steps onto the executive floor the next morning. The air changes around her before she even reaches her desk. Most people would never notice it. To everyone else, she looks exactly the same—elegant, composed, impossible to read. But I notice. Because after last night, my attention tracks her automatically now, like instinct sharpening into obsession. And because Ava only becomes this controlled when something underneath her is close to breaking. The sharp sound of her heels cuts across the marble floor in steady, measured clicks. Too steady. Every movement feels rehearsed, polished down to precision. Her dark hair falls neatly over one shoulder, her expression smooth as glass as she greets the receptionist with a quiet good morning. No hesitation. No stumble. Yet there’s tension hidden beneath it. I can see it in the rigid set of her shoulders. In the way her fingers tighten around the tablet in her han
Ava’s POVMy breath stops. Because staring back at me—is a video file.And the preview frame…is me. In Adrian’s office. From earlier.My face stares back at me from the frozen preview screen, standing in Adrian’s office with his hand wrapped around my waist seconds before he kisses me. A pulse of panic shoots through me as I click the video open. The footage plays silently. I Watch myself walk into Adrian’s office earlier that afternoon, see the tension build between us. Every glance, each step closer. Every second that should have been private. Then the kiss happens. My stomach twists violently. The camera catches everything. Not just the kiss, but the way I kissed him back. “Oh my God…” I slam the laptop shut instantly like it somehow changes what I just saw. My chest rises sharply as I push away from the table, my pulse thundering so hard it hurts. There was a camera in Adrian’s office. Not just a camera but someone planted it there. And Ethan somehow has the footage. A cold






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