WebNovels

Bound to the Billionaire: His Defiant Queen

JupiterCapriccio
14
chs / week
The average realized release rate over the past 30 days is 14 chs / week.
--
NOT RATINGS
4.8k
Views
Synopsis
Harlem Tamrin has never believed in love. Alone in Berlin, she trades affection for ambition and keeps her heart locked behind sharp words and colder walls. Independence is survival. Wealth is freedom. Men? Distractions. Until Ezra Roth. Heir. Playboy. Untouchable. The golden boy with everything, except her. She hates him. He wants her. Their collision pulls them into a world of Hollywood, fashion, fame, and power games where desire feels like war and love is the last thing either can afford. But when obsession burns hotter than reason, will they rise together, or be left in gilded ashes? Excerpt from book: Ezra leaned closer, his voice low enough to scorch. ‘Tell me to stop.’ Harlem’s breath hitched; annoyed at him, annoyed at herself, annoyed at the way her pulse betrayed her. She should’ve pushed him back. She should’ve laughed in his face. Instead, she whispered the one word that would ruin them both. ‘Don’t'.
VIEW MORE

Chapter 1 - THE NIGHT I STOPPED BELONGING

Harlem's POV

I knew I was leaving long before I could admit it. Maybe I'd been planning it for weeks and maybe the decision had already lived inside me, growing a pair of fangs and claws, waiting for the right night to bite. My father's voice echoed through the living room like a gunshot. "If you walk out that door, Harlem, don't bother coming back."

 

He didn't raise his tone. He didn't need to. His words had a way of cutting without volume; emotionless, measured, final. Mom ran out their room and when she saw me with my luggage she looked at me like I had just put a knife through her. She covered her mouth with her hands and her eyes started to water.

"Harrison, what are you saying? She's still our child—"

 

"I said what I said," he interrupted, his eyes still locked on me. Cold. Proud. Determined to win whatever game he thought this was. But this wasn't a game. He wanted to sell me off; to a man old enough to have known my grandfather. A man who smiled at me like I was something to unwrap. A man whose cologne smelled like rust and money. I literally hated him.

 

He came to our house once, with a briefcase full of promises and a laugh that made my skin crawl. He spoke about dowries, alliances, and "responsibility." All I heard was "ownership." And I refused. What was my father thinking? Trying to marry me off like this isn't the 21st Century. I know this was his idea of giving me a stable life but I was only 24, I could give myself a stable life. And I know my father owed him for saving his life years back, but I'll be damned if I'm the one they use to pay the price.

 

The night I told Papa I wouldn't do it; he looked at me like I'd spat on his pride. "You think you know life because you have dreams?" he asked. "No," I said, voice trembling but clear. "I know life because I'm the one who has to live it."

 

That was the last normal conversation we ever had. So, I waited until midnight. The house was quiet except for the ticking of the clock. I'd packed my bag earlier; my savings, my passport, a few clothes, a notebook, and the stubborn hope that I'd find something better.

When I opened the front door, the night air hit me like freedom wrapped in fear. Papa was standing by the stairs. He must've known I'd leave. Like Father like daughter, I guess. His eyes met mine, heavy and unreadable. "You really want to do this?"

 

"Yes, don't try and stop me." I said. He nodded once, slow. "Then go. And don't ever come back."

Mama's cry split the silence. "Harlem, please!" But I couldn't look back. I was scared that if I did, I'd never leave and that won't be good for me. I smiled a subtle smile at her, turned my back and did exactly what needed to be done. I left.

I walked into the night with shaking hands and a burning chest: not knowing where I was going, only knowing I could never return. That was the night I stopped belonging to anyone.

And maybe… the night I finally started belonging to myself.