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In love with the one I should hate

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dark
forbidden
family
opposites attract
friends to lovers
badboy
gangster
heir/heiress
drama
bxg
campus
highschool
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Blurb

This story follows Briella, a young woman whose life has always felt empty a distant father, a deadmother, and friends who betray her when she needs them most. Her world shatters when her boyfriendhumiliates her, leaving her humiliated and alone. Enter Malik magnetic, dangerous, and connected to apast Briella doesn’t know yet.Years ago, Briella’s father took everything from Malik and his family. Malik has returned to collect, andBriella is his way in. But what begins as manipulation quickly becomes something far more complicated.Malik teaches Briella how to reclaim her power, emboldens her to stand up to those who hurt her, andpulls her into a darker, intoxicating game.Malik is not a simple villain he’s calculating, charismatic, and terrifyingly patient. Each step of his planbrings Briella deeper into his world, until she can’t tell if she’s falling for him or falling apart. And yet,there are cracks in Malik’s armor vulnerable moments that make Briella (and the reader) question wherethe performance ends and the real man begins.The story builds to a devastating reveal: Briella learns Malik has been using her as a weapon against herfather. Malik admits he intends to destroy him completely but by now, Briella has uncovered a familysecret that complicates everything. She must decide whether to side with her father despite his mistakes orwalk away from them both.In the end, Malik is left at a crossroads: finish the revenge he’s dreamed of for years, or let Briella go evenif it means losing the only person who ever saw the broken boy beneath the anger.This is a story about power, choice, and the dangerous pull between love and destruction. My hope is thatreaders will be torn rooting for Briella to grow strong enough to save herself, yet unable to look awayfrom Malik’s fire.

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Chapter 1 — Whispers in the Halls
People always said my father owned every room he walked into. I used to believe them — until I realized I could walk into the same room and vanish. At one of his charity galas, I remember standing in pale blue silk my mother had picked before she died. People would take my hand politely, eyes already darting back to him. By the night's end, my cheeks ached from smiling at strangers who forgot my name before letting go. That’s when it sank in: being Robert Morgan’s daughter meant being a shadow. My mother had been the only one who saw me. She remembered cinnamon on my cocoa, the way I hated thunderstorms, the way I laughed when no one else did. She called me her light. She’s been gone five years, and the house has been dim. So I built my world elsewhere. Jade, my best friend, filled the sister-shaped hole. Luke, my boyfriend, promised me love where my father gave silence. It wasn’t much, but it kept me from crumbling. October burned the campus in red and gold, mornings sharp as broken glass. Whispers rode the air that day, thin and cutting. “She has no idea.” “Everyone else knows.” The words followed me like gnats. By the time I reached the library, the knot in my chest had tightened. Somebody was being lied to. Somebody was about to shatter. I told myself it couldn’t be me. Jade was already perched at our table, glossy and perfect as always. She didn’t even look up. “You’re late.” “It’s nine-oh-two,” I said, dropping into the seat. “Still late.” Her smile was sharp enough to slice. I opened my laptop, trying to ignore the looks and whispers bleeding across the room. “What’s with everyone today? Gossip’s insane.” Jade twirled her straw, voice soft, eyes too bright. “Let’s just say… you’re lucky Luke notices you. Most guys wouldn’t.” My throat tightened. “What’s that supposed to mean?” Her laugh was sweet, her words were poisoned honey. “Relax. I’m saying he’s different. He sees you.” It should’ve comforted me. Instead, it stung like she’d pinched a bruise. “Right.” She leaned forward, dropping her voice. “Secrets never stay hidden for long, Bri. Whoever’s messing up? They’ll get caught.” The way her gaze lingered on me made my stomach knot. The library doors opened. The hum of chatter faltered. He walked in like he owned the oxygen. Broad shoulders under a dark jacket, stride slow but sure, hair falling into sharp, unreadable eyes. Malik Hayes. I’d never spoken to him, but his reputation carried like smoke. Expelled once. Fights. His family was ruined years ago, and now clawing back from the ashes. None of it has been confirmed. All of it whispered. As he passed, a nervous freshman muttered a “Hey.” Malik’s mouth curved — a flash of a smile, disarmingly kind. Then gone, his face iced back to stone. Conversations stuttered, eyes followed. And then his gaze pinned me. Not casual. Not curious. Heavy, as if he already knew my cracks, my faults. Heat crawled up my neck before I tore my eyes away. “Careful,” Jade murmured, watching me watch him. “That one’s dangerous. The kind your dad would never let near you.” “Good,” I muttered, but my pulse betrayed me. As he moved past, I swore I heard him murmur under his breath — low, bitter: “Morgan’s daughter.” My chest tightened. How did he— The day bled away in fragments. By evening, I’d convinced myself the whispers were about someone else. Until my phone buzzed. Unknown Number: You should see where Luke is right now. My fingers froze. Me: Who is this? Unknown: Glass Room. Back booth. The Glass Room was the campus bar. I should’ve deleted it. Instead, I grabbed my jacket. The moment I stepped inside, sound swallowed me whole. Bass pounded through the floor, air thick with sweat and beer. Lights strobed, blinding, disorienting. I shoved through bodies, the floor sticky beneath my shoes. A stranger crashed into me, sloshing beer across my shirt. Cold spread down my chest, and I shoved harder, heart pounding against my ribs. Then I heard it. Luke’s laugh. Familiar. Wrong. I followed the sound. My stomach tightened with each step. He was in the back booth, his hand knotted in a girl’s hair, mouth pressed to hers like she was oxygen. My heart plummeted. For a second, I prayed it was anyone else. Some random girl. Then she shifted. Jade. The bass shook my chest, but it was nothing compared to the hollow collapse inside me. Luke’s eyes flew open, shock flashing as he yanked back. “Bri—” The glass in my hand tipped before thought could stop it. Ice and liquid crashed over him, soaking his shirt. The music faltered. The crowd stilled. Jade only smirked, leaning into him, voice syrup-sweet but loud enough for everyone to hear. “Guess secrets don’t stay hidden, huh?” The words hit harder than the betrayal itself. From the shadows, slow clapping cut the silence. One. Two. Three. Malik Hayes stepped forward, cigarette glowing between his fingers. His eyes flicked over me, amused, assessing, like he’d been waiting. “Finally,” he said, voice low, curling like smoke. “Now you’re interesting.” I shoved out into the night air, the cold slapping my soaked shirt. My chest burned, my throat tight, but I couldn’t stop walking. Footsteps followed. “Go away,” I snapped, but the voice that answered made my pulse spike. “I was wondering how long it would take for you to see the truth.” He leaned under the streetlamp, smoke curling around sharp features. Malik. I crossed my arms. “And you care because…?” He took a drag, eyes gleaming. “Because you look like someone who hates losing. And I like that.” “Who even are you?” His smile was faint, unsettling. “Someone who knows exactly how to make people pay.” “That’s not an answer.” “Sure it is,” he said, voice rough. Then, softer, almost slipping: “You want blood. And I—” He stopped himself, smirk sliding back into place. “Let’s just say I can help you spill it.” My stomach twisted. “I didn’t ask for your help.” He stepped closer, close enough that the smoke wrapped around me, bitter and dizzying. “Good. I don’t offer help.” He studied me for a beat, eyes dark, unreadable. Then his voice dropped, rawer, like he was building the words as he spoke. “What I offer is revenge. The kind that leaves scars.” I swallowed, torn between fear and fury. “And if I said yes… what would I have to do?” His mouth curved, slow and cruel. “First,” he said, “you’ll have to become someone your father wouldn’t even recognize.”

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