เข้าสู่ระบบ“I know you’re pregnant, Valentina. That’s why you have to die tonight. Two lives for the price of one. Efficiency was always my strong suit.” On her third wedding anniversary, Valentina is gifted a shallow grave. Her husband, Kennedy, was never a billionaire. He was a fraud who drugged her, watched her drown in a poisoned bath, and buried her so he could marry his mistress. He never expected the gardener to hesitate. Never imagined she would claw her way out of the mud, pregnant, broken, and alive. And he certainly didn’t expect her to return. Dragged from the storm by Ian Kingston, a titan so powerful Kennedy is nothing more than a disposable employee, Valentina finds herself mistaken for Misha, Ian’s vanished wife. “You have 365 days to prove you aren’t her, little bird. Until then, you wear my name, share my bed, and follow my rules.” Trapped in a ruthless case of mistaken identity, Valentina signs the contract and becomes Misha Kingston, cold, untouchable, wrapped in emerald silk and Ian’s dangerous protection. The next time Kennedy sees the wife he buried, she isn’t in a coffin. She’s on his boss’s arm. Wearing a crown. Looking down at him from a throne he can never touch. But Valentina hides a child conceived by her enemy… While being claimed by a king who refuses to let her go. He buried a wife. Now he’ll kneel before a goddess.
ดูเพิ่มเติม“You’re pregnant.”
The words hit like ice water. Valentina stared at the doctor, her hands trembling as she clutched the edge of the examination table. The sterile room smelled of antiseptic and faint lavender from the air freshener, but it did nothing to calm the storm raging inside her.
Pregnant?
With Kennedy’s child, the same man who’d spent three years treating her like something disposable, a toy he could break and discard at whim. She’d come to the clinic on a hunch, after weeks of nausea and missed periods, but hearing it confirmed made her world tilt.
How could she bring a child into this nightmare? Kennedy’s rages, his infidelities, the bruises he left not just on her skin but on her soul, they all flashed through her mind like a cruel montage.
She thanked the doctor numbly, gathered her things, and stepped out into the fading afternoon light. The streets of the city buzzed with life, people hurrying home from work, vendors calling out their wares, the distant hum of traffic, but Valentina felt utterly alone.
Night pressed down as she walked home, the sun dipping lower with each step, casting long shadows that seemed to reach for her. She prayed for daylight to linger, for the safety of the crowds and the brightness that hid her fears. Night meant returning to him, to the sprawling house that had once been a dream but now felt like a prison.
Her heels clicked against the pavement, each step echoing her dread. Memories flooded her: the Kennedy she’d met in college, charming and ambitious, with eyes that sparkled like polished onyx. He’d swept her off her feet with poetry and late-night talks about their future.
They’d married young, full of hope. But success had twisted him, money, power, the endless parade of women. Now, at twenty-eight, she was a shadow of that girl, enduring his cruelty in silence, hoping one day he’d remember who he used to be.
She reached the front door, her key trembling in the lock. She opened it expecting chaos: the acrid stink of spilled liquor, shattered glass from his latest outburst, his latest conquest sprawled somewhere on the couch, lipstick smeared and reeking of cheap perfume.
Instead, the air carried lilies and lemon polish, fresh and inviting. The house shone, unnaturally perfect. The marble floors gleamed under the chandelier’s soft glow, every surface dusted and arranged with precision. No scattered clothes, no empty bottles. It was as if a team of maids had descended while she was out.
Her heart slammed against her ribs. Kennedy never cleans. He left messes for her to handle, a constant reminder of her place. This was wrong, a setup for something sinister. Paranoia crept in, had he discovered her secret visits to the lawyer, her quiet plans to escape? She backed toward the door, pulse thundering in her ears.
Rose petals trailed upstairs to the bedroom, a crimson path like drops of blood leading to some ritual. Soft jazz floated down, romantic and wrong, the saxophone’s wail twisting her gut. It was their song from college, the one they’d danced to at their wedding. Nostalgia warred with fear.
She turned to flee, hand grasping the doorknob.
Kennedy stepped from the shadows, tuxedo crisp, crimson roses in hand, their thorns carefully pruned. The college boy she’d once adored stared back, not the monster with bloodshot eyes and a sneer. His dark hair was neatly combed, his jaw clean-shaven, exuding the charisma that had once made her knees weak.
“Valentina.”
His voice, low, raspy, tender froze her in place. It was the voice from their early days, before the alcohol and affairs eroded him. She wanted to run, but her feet betrayed her, rooted by a flicker of hope.
He caught her wrist gently, drew her in, and kissed her knuckles slowly, his lips warm against her skin. The gesture was intimate, reverent, sending a shiver down her spine.
“This is for you, my love.”
Every instinct screamed danger, the cleaned house, the petals, the music, it was too perfect, a trap baited with her deepest longings. But his arms wrapped around her, warm and sure, his cologne a familiar mix of sandalwood and spice. The jazz pulled her under, its melody wrapping around them like silk.
He swayed them in a slow dance, his hand firm on the small of her back, guiding her with the ease of old lovers. When she opened her mouth to protest, to demand answers, he kissed her, deep, tasting of wine and old promises. His tongue danced with hers, coaxing, not demanding, and for a moment, she melted into it, the world narrowing to the heat of his mouth.
“I’ve been a monster,” he whispered against her lips, his breath hot on her skin. “The affairs, the cruelty… a twisted test. To see if you’d break. You never did. You’re everything I never deserved.”
Tears stung her eyes, hot and unbidden. She pulled back slightly, searching his face for lies. “You knew me back then, Kennedy. The real me. The girl who laughed at your stupid jokes, who believed in us.”
“I did.” He pressed his forehead to hers, his eyes closing as if in pain. “And I hated myself for destroying the only person who ever loved me without conditions. Tonight changes everything. My name, my fortune, my protection, it’s all yours now.”
She wanted to believe. God, she wanted to. The pregnancy test burned in her mind, could this be a turning point? A chance for redemption? Her hand instinctively went to her belly, hidden under her blouse, protecting the secret life within.
He led her to the candlelit bedroom, the door creaking open to reveal a scene from a fairy tale. Flickering flames cast golden shadows on the walls, petals crunched softly underfoot, releasing their floral scent. The bed was made with fresh silk sheets, turned down invitingly.
As he undressed her with reverent hands, his fingers trembling slightly as they unbuttoned her blouse, he kissed her collarbone, her breasts, her stomach, lingering there as if sensing her secret.
Her mind spun. Is this real? Could my baby have a father after all? The man I married in college… is he back? Doubts swirled, but his touch was gentle, exploratory, not the rough grabs she’d grown accustomed to.
His mouth closed over her nipple, sucking gently, his tongue swirling in lazy circles. She gasped, her fingers threading into his hair, pulling him closer despite herself.
So long since touch felt like love instead of ownership. Heat pooled between her thighs, her body responding even as her mind warned caution.
“You’re beautiful,” he rasped, voice thick with emotion, his eyes dark with desire as he looked up at her.
His fingers found her slick heat, circling her clit with agonizing slowness, dipping inside her with expert precision. He was patient, watching her face, adjusting to her every gasp and moan until she trembled on the edge.
If this is true… our child could grow up loved.
The thought anchored her, pushing away the shadows of doubt.
She shattered around his hand, her climax ripping through her like a wave, crying his name in a voice hoarse with need. He held her through it, kissing tears away from her cheeks, murmuring endearments.
Then he settled between her thighs, his erection pressing against her, eyes locked on hers. “Tell me you want this.”
“I do,” she breathed, legs wrapping him tight, pulling him closer. For us. For the baby.
He thrust in slow, deep, filling her completely. They groaned together, the sound raw and primal. He moved with controlled hunger, long strokes hitting every sensitive place inside her, building her again with deliberate rhythm. She clung to him, nails scoring his back, meeting him thrust for thrust, their bodies slick with sweat.
This is the Kennedy I dreamed of. The one who’ll protect us.
Her second climax hit hard, stars exploding behind her eyes as she clenched around him. He followed moments later, burying deep, spilling inside her with a broken groan of her name, his body shuddering against hers.
They collapsed, tangled and sweat-slick, breaths mingling in the afterglow. He pulled her close, kissing her temple, her cheek, her lips, soft, lingering presses that spoke of affection.
“Stay,” he murmured, his voice a rumble in his chest. “I’m running you a bath. Roses, coconut, oils. Let me spoil you tonight.”
Valentina nodded, drifting in a haze of contentment. Minutes later, she heard the water running, the scent of roses and coconut wafting from the en-suite bathroom.
She slipped into a robe and padded in, the steam curling around her like a lover’s embrace. The tub brimmed, water shimmering thickly, heavy with scent, bubbles foaming invitingly.
She stepped in, the warmth enveloping her feet, then her calves, soothing her aches.
The moment the water enveloped her fully, heaviness flooded every limb, warm lead spreading fast from her toes to her fingertips. Her heart stuttered, slowed to a sluggish beat. Her lungs forgot how to pull air, each inhale a labored rasp. Legs floated useless; arms refused to lift, hanging limp at her sides.
Panic exploded in her chest. No! What was this? The water felt wrong, too viscous, clinging like syrup. She tried to stand, to haul herself out, but nothing obeyed. Muscles turned to stone, unresponsive. The “oils” were poison, paralytic, insidious, turning her body against her without the telltale burn, without mercy. How had she not smelled it? The roses masked everything.
Water rose as her body sank deeper. It lapped her chin, her lips, teasing the edges of her mouth. She thrashed weakly, but it was futile; porcelain slipped under numb fingers, offering no purchase.
Scented liquid flooded her nose, her mouth, turning each breath into a choked gurgle, bubbles bursting on her lips.
The door clicked shut, the sound ominous in the steamy room.
Darkness closed in at the edges of her vision. Struggles faded to twitches, her body betraying her utterly. The baby, oh God, the baby…would it feel this too? Terror for her child amplified her horror.
Just as her face slipped under, the water closing over her like a shroud, the door opened again.
Kennedy stood there, tuxedo immaculate, face blank as a mask, devoid of the tenderness from moments ago. Beside him, Lilith, his secretary, his mistress, wearing Valentina’s favorite silk robe that hugged her curves mockingly, Valentina’s diamond necklace glinting at her throat like stolen stars.
Valentina fought one last time, summoning every ounce of will. A trembling hand broke the surface toward him, fingers splayed in desperate pleas.
She forced the words in a wet, dying rasp, bubbles forming on her lips. “Kennedy… I’m pregnant.”
His gaze never warmed, cold as the water claiming her. He tilted his head slightly, as if considering a minor inconvenience.
“I know. That’s why the bath had to be tonight. Two lives for the price of one. Efficiency was always my strong suit.”
Lilith crouched at the tub’s edge, her perfume cloying over the roses, fingers sliding into Valentina’s soaked hair.
She yanked Valentina’s head back just enough for eye contact, possessive, triumphant, her green eyes gleaming with malice.
She traced a nail down Valentina’s cheek, sharp enough to leave a faint red line.
“All those pretty promises… and you fell for them. The accounts, the will, the insurance, everything locks in when your heart stops. And the little accident inside you?” Her smile cut deeper than any knife, lips curling in cruel delight. “We’ll handle that too.”
The bath was a masterpiece of marble and gold, but to Valentina, the steam felt like the humid breath of a predator. As she scrubbed the graveyard grit and dried copper of her own blood from her skin, her hands hovered protectively, almost reflexively over the slight, firm swell of her lower abdomen.Four months. She was carrying the seed of a murderer, and now she was trapped in the lair of a king.If Ian Kingston, the man whose power felt like a physical weight in every room, realized his wife was carrying another man’s blood, the 365-day contract wouldn't just be void. It would be her death warrant.She dressed in the dress the maid had left, a liquid-silk garment in a deep, venomous emerald. It clung to her damp skin like a second, more expensive layer of armor. She looked into the vanity mirror and suppressed a scream. Misha. With her dark hair slicked back and her amber eyes narrowed in survival, the resemblance was no longer a coincidence; it was a curse.I am a ghost with a
The car ride was a blur of violence and luxury. Valentina, still reeling from the cold grip of the man who called her Misha, tried to fling herself toward the door, her nails clawing at the leather."Let me out! Help!" she shrieked, her voice cracking.But the men inside weren't men; they were stone walls in tailored suits. One bouncer, a giant with a face like a scarred mountain, caught her wrists in one hand. He didn't hurt her, but his strength was absolute, pinning her against the seat as the car tore through the city at a breakneck speed."Quiet," the man in the front, Ian, commanded without looking back.The car surged through massive iron gates, up a winding drive lined with ancient oaks, and skidded to a halt before a palace of glass and marble. This wasn't just a house; it was a fortress of wealth.Valentina was hauled out, her feet barely touching the ground. Her throat felt like she had swallowed hot coals, dry, raw, and bleeding from the screaming and the choking. The fi
“Mommy, you’re finally back!”The words were a physical blow, more shocking than the near-impact of the car. Valentina lay on the wet asphalt, the air forced from her lungs by the sheer weight of the two children clinging to her. Their warmth was a stark, jarring contrast to the icy rain and the stench of the gutter.Ivy was sobbing into the crook of Valentina’s neck, her small, gloved hands clutching the ruined fabric of Valentina’s dress as if she were trying to sew her back into their lives with her fingernails. Ivan was anchored to her waist, his body shaking with a relief so profound it felt like a sob.“No… no, little ones,” Valentina wheezed, her voice a shredded, terrifying rasp. She tried to peel their small fingers away, her hands trembling with a mix of terror and an inexplicable, hollow ache. “You’re mistaken… I’m not… I’m dirty… please, you’ll get sick…”“Don’t leave again!” Ivy wailed, her voice rising in a frantic crescendo. “We waited every night at the window! Papa sa
The rain began as a cold, mocking drizzle, turning the grime of the alley into a slick black sludge.Valentina…. no, she had to stop thinking of herself as the woman who loved Kennedy forced her fingers to dig into the wet pavement. Her muscles screamed, the paralytic leaving behind a lingering, leaden tremor that made every movement feel like wading through thick tar.She dragged herself upright, leaning against a graffiti-stained brick wall. Every breath felt like swallowing shards of glass; her throat was a ring of fire where Kennedy’s thumbs had tried to extinguish her soul.She began to walk. Each step was a battle against gravity. She was a phantom in a torn silk gown, a ruined bride of the night, trailing the faint, ironic scent of expensive lilies and cemetery dirt.As she stumbled toward the mouth of the alley, the neon glare of the city hit her like a physical blow. She passed a high-end boutique, its glass polished to a mirror finish. Valentina stopped. She didn't mean to l












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