Filter By
Updating status
AllOngoingCompleted
Sort By
AllPopularRecommendationRatesUpdated
I Stopped Loving My Boyfriend Who Faked His Illness

I Stopped Loving My Boyfriend Who Faked His Illness

When Tessa Shoreman read Henry Jennings' cancer report, she immediately paid her hard-earned money of sixty thousand to the hospital. She had saved the money from working part-time while she was in university. However, she was worried the money was not enough, so she held back her fear as she sold a kidney to the black market to get more. As she walked to the ward door with a heavy bag filled with cash, she heard shrill laughter coming from inside. "That cheap woman, Tessa Shoreman, got tricked by us again. Haha!" Tessa's hand gave pause right when she was about to push the door open. What did he mean by saying she was tricked? Tessa looked through the glass on the door to see inside the ward. When she left, the man looked extremely weak, but he was now sitting up lazily in bed. Henry had a cigarette in his mouth, and he was blowing smoke rings nonchalantly. He did not look like a cancer patient at all. "It's been two years, and that woman still has no idea." "If she hadn't beaten Serene to first place, Henry would never have left behind his life as a rich heir and planned such an elaborate scheme to become a working-class man living in a cheap rental home. The way that cheap, penniless woman looks at Henry is so amusing." "We agreed that the punishment ends when Henry and Serene get engaged. It looks like time is almost up. We've probably punished her 108 times in the past two years." "The first time was lying to her that Henry didn't have a suit for a job interview. She worked tirelessly for 72 hours straight before she earned enough money for one, but that suit was given to the domestic help to use as a cleaning cloth. The second time was tricking her into believing Henry had a high fever. She forfeited during the finals of a scientific research competition to race home and take care of Henry in the hospital…" "Sigh. Too bad it's coming to an end. I'm going to miss entertaining myself with her."
Short Story · Romance
8.4K viewsCompleted
Read
Add to library
Si je n’avais jamais connu la lumière

Si je n’avais jamais connu la lumière

Le jour où mes parents avaient divorcé, la pluie tombait à verse. Sur la table, il y avait deux accords. L'un disait qu'on resterait dans le vieux quartier avec notre père, endetté à cause de son addiction au jeu. L'autre disait qu'on partirait vers la côte avec notre mère qui allait se remarier avec un riche homme d'affaires. Dans ma vie précédente, ma sœur pleurait et insistait pour suivre notre mère, tandis que j'avais préparé mes bagages en silence et j'avais suivi notre père. Plus tard, papa avait arrêté de jouer, il était devenu riche grâce aux démolitions et il m'avait comblée de soins et d'affection. Mais chez son beau-père, ma sœur subissait une froide indifférence et on ne la laissait pas sortir. Elle avait fini par mourir de dépression. Cette fois, quand tout a recommencé, ma sœur a arraché la cigarette de la main de papa et s'est accrochée à lui sans le lâcher. « Clara, j'ai pitié de papa. Toi, va avec maman profiter d'une belle vie. Je te laisse les bons jours. » Papa est resté un instant stupéfait, puis il a caressé la tête de ma sœur avec soulagement. Je n'ai rien dit et j'ai pris le billet pour la côte. Mais elle ne savait pas que, dans ma vie précédente, mon père avait réussi à arrêter de jouer parce que moi, atteinte d'une tumeur au cerveau, j'avais travaillé pour rembourser ses dettes jusqu'à cracher du sang, et j'avais presque donné ma vie pour le ramener sur le droit chemin.
Read
Add to library
Betray Me, and You’re Dead

Betray Me, and You’re Dead

Ode to the NightingaleFeel-Good StoryMistress
My husband, Luca, had a childhood sweetheart named Sophia. Years ago, during a brutal gang shootout, Sophia shielded him from the worst of the bloodshed, and since then, she had suffered from severe PTSD. Because of that, Luca would push aside family business every year and fly to our estate on a secluded island off the coast of Sicily to spend three months “helping her recover.” “Victoria, she lost her mind because of me,” he told me. “I’m responsible for her. I hope you can be magnanimous.” So, I nodded. And eventually, I got used to the fact that every year, my husband would disappear for three months to fulfill what he called a moral obligation. That was until the day I flew in without warning to inspect the family’s money-laundering network on that island and saw him. In the town square, under the bright Mediterranean sun, Luca was standing there with a five-year-old boy by his side. “Papa, how long do we have to hide on this island?” the child asked. “I want to go to New York. I want to see the Empire State Building.” Luca laughed gently and scooped him up in his arms. With his other hand, he held Sophia’s. “Antonio, be good,” he said affectionately. “Papa’s position is… complicated. When you turn eighteen and pass the family’s initiation ceremony, I’ll kill that woman and her dead old man. Then, I’ll take you back to New York to inherit the entire Corleone family.” I stood in the shadows, unseen. Slowly, I lit a cigarette. The smoke curled around me as their voices drifted over, the conversation getting more vicious as it went. Sophia leaned into his chest, her tone sweet and coy. “Luca, I’ve been with you for seven years without a name or a title. How much longer are our son and I supposed to live like ghosts?” Luca sighed. “I don’t have a choice. The old man in the Corleone family is still alive. I married Victoria just to get her territory. Don’t worry. I’ve been adding something to her milk every day. She’ll never get pregnant in this lifetime. My family bloodline will only continue through you.” The last thread of reason in my mind snapped. In the six years of marriage we shared, I had been infertile. I’d taken countless hormone injections to stimulate ovulation. I’d knelt in church and prayed more times than I could count. Yet, all along, the devil poisoning me was my own husband. The initial shock faded quickly into rage. I crushed out my cigarette and pulled out my phone. Then, I dialed my uncle, the family’s clean-up man. “Uncle Rocco,” I said calmly, “Luca betrayed me. He betrayed the family. Order a coffin in the finest black walnut for me, and make it large, large enough to fit a family of three.”
Short Story · Mafia
5.0K viewsCompleted
Read
Add to library
PREV
12345
SCAN CODE TO READ ON APP
DMCA.com Protection Status