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Neighbors Stalker
Married To My Ex-Fiancé's Silent Uncle
Twenty minutes before the "Wedding of the Century" at The Plaza, I stood outside the Presidential Suite in a fifty-thousand-dollar Vera Wang gown. I was the girl from a West Virginia trailer park about to marry Hugh Maxwell, the golden heir to a billion-dollar defense empire. I pushed the door open only to find Hugh pinned against the bed with my own stepsister, Floy. She was wearing my bridal diamond necklace, and the sounds of their laughter scraped against my eardrums like sandpaper. I didn't scream; I listened as Hugh grunted that once the wedding was over and the trust fund unlocked, he'd dump "that hillbilly trash" on a bus back to the mountains. They weren't just cheating; they were planning to steal my family's land deeds and leave me with nothing. When I set off the sprinklers and exposed their naked bodies to the paparazzi, the Maxwell family didn't apologize. They called me a "greedy peasant" and threatened to ruin my life unless I signed a new deal to save their crashing stock. I realized then that I was never a bride to them. I was a transaction, a rounding error in a ledger to be used and discarded. They thought my poverty made me weak and my silence made me a victim. "If we don't have a marriage certificate by midnight, the bank freezes thirty percent of our liquidity," their lawyer warned. So, I gave them exactly what they wanted. I used a loophole in their hundred-year-old family covenant and married the only other direct heir available. I didn't marry Hugh. I walked into the ICU and married his uncle, Fleet Maxwell-the legendary war hero who had been in a vegetative state for months. Now, I am the matriarch of the Maxwell dynasty. I've suspended Hugh's executive powers, exiled my mother-in-law to the Swiss Alps, and taken control of the family vault. They think I'm just a gold-digger waiting for a "corpse" to die so I can collect a fifty-million-dollar widow's payout. But last night, as I lay beside my comatose husband, the man they called a vegetable gripped my hand back.
Neighbors Stalker
Keana Loiuse De Leon, a simple woman living in a simple house. Being serious about life and studies, she no longer notices the people around him. She's about to graduate, and that's all she's looking forward to in order to achieve his longed for success in life. But despite being serious. Th
Hildegarde's Neighbors
"Mamma," said Hildegarde Grahame, flying into her mother's room, "I have news for you, thrilling news! Guess what it is!" ...
Greek Gods As Neighbors
Raquel Alvarez takes her future seriously and works diligently. Her goals include becoming a psychologist as well as getting Ares Hildago to notice her. Raquel has always had an intense fascination with Ares. Although she lives next door, Raquel has never spoken with him directly but still can't hel
DEALING WITH THE STALKER
Rose Emerald is a beautiful 21 years old University student struggling to balance the equation between her school work chosen for her by her parents and her music career. Things are not really going well and easy for her. Then fate smiles on her and sends her the illustrious and famous Christian Jak
From Savior to Obsessed Stalker
The passcode to Conrad Ellison' s private villa was my birthday, a gesture I once thought was the most romantic in the world. Now, it felt like a key to a gilded cage. I walked through his silent mansion, a cold knot of unease growing in my stomach. Then I heard it-a low moan from his bedroom. The
My Neighbors / Stories of the Welsh People
My Neighbors / Stories of the Welsh People by Caradoc Evans
She's my Stripper, He's my Stalker
"She's My Stripper, He's My Stalker" follows the story of Chloe, a young woman who finds herself in a difficult situation that leads her to pursue a career in stripping, despite her initial reservations. Although she initially struggles with her new line of work, Chloe eventually finds herself at ea
The Hispanic Nations of the New World: A Chronicle of Our Southern Neighbors
The Hispanic Nations of the New World: A Chronicle of Our Southern Neighbors by William R. Shepherd
