Game of Billionaires
Bella
I learned how to survive. A cocktail of elegance and submission, that’s what Ted taught me to be. He called it “polishing a diamond,” but what he really meant was turning me into his most prized possession—a doll he could flaunt, a pawn he could play. I hate the way they look at me here, the way their money gives them permission to strip me down with their eyes. But I stay. I endure. Not because I want to, but because Ted has made it clear—leaving isn’t an option. Not for someone like me.
Then Jonathan walked in. Dark, sharp, and dangerous in a way that made me don't want to look away while I could.
He didn’t see me as a trophy. He looked at me like he wanted to understand.
It terrified me. It thrilled me. It made me want to trust him. He doesn’t asking me to stay. He’s asking me to fight.
Jonathan
Bella is a woman wrapped in contradictions—soft, but not fragile; beautiful, but haunted. She smiled as if she wasn’t breaking, but I could see the cracks. It’s in her eyes. I’ve seen that look before—in the mirror, after I buried my wife and daughter.
I told myself I was only curious, that my interest in her wasn’t personal. It was a lie. Bella has become a fixation I can’t shake. She’s like an unsolvable puzzle, and I’ve never been able to resist a challenge. I want to save her, but it’s not just about her anymore. It’s about me. About proving to myself that I can still protect someone, that I’m not the failure I see every time I close my eyes.
But this isn’t just about saving her. It’s about winning.
Ted thinks he’s untouchable, that his web of lies and power can’t be unraveled. But he underestimates me. He doesn’t see the man I used to be, the one who destroyed anyone standing in his way. Bella’s the key to this game, and if I have to burn The Shining Fox to the ground to set her free, I will.
She’s starting to trust me, but that’s where the danger lies. Ted knows how to twist the truth, to weaponize her doubt against me. And if I lose her trust, I lose everything.
I’ve played games like this before—power, money, control. She’s my salvation, and I’ll stop at nothing to make her mine. Even if it means becoming the monster she’s running from.
This is a game of kings—the most ruthless player will win.