
The Billionaire's Priceless Debt
9.4
Rating
15
Chapters
32.5K
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Billionaire
Revenge
Romance
Nora Vance was stripped of her family's legacy and left to authenticate pawn shop jewelry to survive. She expected to be blackmailed by a corrupt dealer, not rescued by Julian Croft, the ruthless CEO of the global Croft Syndicate. Julian claims he owes Nora a life debt from eight years ago, effectively giving her a blank check to his empire. But Nora refuses to be a charity case. She treats the billionaire as her personal debtor, demanding a senior position in his company as 'interest.' When Julian's polished, territorial fiancée tries to bully Nora out of the picture with a multi-million dollar bribe, Nora simply pockets the money—and initiates a hostile takeover of the woman's life.
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Chapter 1
The basement office of Vargas Antiquities smelled of stale cigar smoke, desperation, and the sharp, metallic tang of brass polish. Nora Vance sat at the scarred wooden desk, the jeweler's loupe pressed to her right eye, completely motionless. "Well?" Marcus Vargas demanded, his heavy hands slamming down on the edge of the desk. The cheap wood groaned under his weight. "Stop stalling, Vance. Just sign the damn appraisal."Nora didn't flinch. She slowly lowered the loupe, placing the diamond-encrusted pendant back onto the velvet display pad. Her movements were precise, deliberate, and entirely devoid of the fear Vargas was so desperately trying to provoke. "I'm not stalling, Marcus," Nora said, her voice a cool, even monotone. She pushed the velvet pad back across the desk. "I was simply taking a moment to marvel at the sheer audacity of this forgery. The setting is modern platinum masquerading as nineteenth-century silver, and the primary stone is a lab-grown moissanite. If you try to auction this as a Romanov heirloom, you won't just be laughed out of the room. You'll be indicted."Vargas's face flushed a violent, mottled red. He rounded the desk, his massive frame towering over her. "You think you're still sitting in your daddy's ivory tower? Your family is ruined, Nora. You're a disgraced nobody authenticating pawn shop trash to make rent. You will sign the certificate of authenticity, or I will make sure you don't walk out of this basement."Nora leaned back in her chair, crossing her arms. She calculated the distance between herself and the heavy iron door, then weighed it against the brass paperweight sitting on the edge of the desk. She could probably fracture his orbital bone before he grabbed her. "My family's ruin doesn't change the refractive index of moissanite," Nora said calmly, meeting his furious gaze. "And my signature is the only thing of value I have left. I don't sell it for cheap threats, and I certainly don't sell it for fakes. Find another appraiser.""There is no other appraiser!" Vargas roared, spittle flying from his lips. He grabbed the back of her chair, violently jerking it forward. "I have a buyer arriving in twenty minutes. A buyer who will kill me if he thinks I'm trying to screw him. So you are going to pick up that pen, you arrogant little bitch, and you are going to—"The heavy iron door of the office didn't just open; it was kicked off its hinges with a deafening metallic screech. Vargas spun around, dropping the chair. Nora remained perfectly still, her eyes darting to the doorway. The man who stepped over the ruined threshold looked as though he had materialized from an entirely different universe. He was tall, broad-shouldered, and dressed in a bespoke charcoal suit that likely cost more than the entire inventory of Vargas's shop. His face was a study in ruthless geometry—sharp jaw, high cheekbones, and dark, predatory eyes that swept the room before locking instantly onto Nora. Two massive men in dark suits flanked him, stepping into the cramped office like a synchronized strike team. "What the hell is this?" Vargas stammered, his bravado evaporating in an instant. "Who are you? You can't just break into my—""Quiet," the man said. His voice wasn't loud, but it possessed a terrifying, absolute authority. It was the voice of a man who had never been told 'no' in his adult life. He didn't look at Vargas. He didn't even acknowledge the dealer's existence. He walked straight toward the desk, his gaze fixed on Nora. "Nora Vance," he said, the syllables rolling off his tongue like a verdict.
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