MasukI was just a nobody actor, killing time reading a trashy novel where the Omega side-character had my name. His only purpose? To be a disposable prop for the Alpha ML, a walking, talking disaster who gets his life ruined in 50 chapters flat. I hated him. I hated his pathetic weakness. Then I died. And I woke up as him. Now, I'm that cannon fodder. I'm in the body of the fool I despised, on the eve of his public humiliation at the hands of the novel's god-like Alpha, Huo Yan. The worst part? I never finished the book. I know how I'm supposed to die, but I have no idea how this story ends. My only guide is a faint voice in my head, a "Survival System" that gives me one simple, terrifying rule: Don't attract the protagonist. So I have a plan. Be invisible. Be boring. Stay away from Huo Yan. But I messed up. In one desperate moment to save my own skin, I did something unexpected. I showed a spark of talent the original "me" never had. And the Alpha, the man who should be looking at the female lead, is now looking at me. His scent, a predator's frost, hunts me in crowded rooms. His eyes, dark and possessive, follow my every move. He cornered me after a gala, his voice a low growl against my ear. "You are not the Omega from the script," he whispered, his touch branding my skin. "You are a liar. And I will peel back every layer until I find the truth." The plot is broken. The Alpha is obsessed. And my survival system is flashing red. I came here to avoid my death, but now I'm terrified I might just be the reason this story becomes a tragedy.
Lihat lebih banyakLiang was in the production office at six AM as he always was, as he had apparently always been — present before anyone else, managing the day's first complications before the day had officially begun, moving through the estate's systems with the quiet efficiency of someone who understood that invisible competence was the most powerful kind.I had been watching him do this for seven weeks and had catalogued it as simply how Liang operated.I had not understood, until last night, that I was watching someone run a parallel operation inside the one I could see.Huo Yan came in two minutes after me. He closed the door behind him. Liang looked up from his laptop and his expression did something I had never seen it do before — not surprise, not guilt, but the specific quality of a man who has been waiting for a particular conversation and is relieved it has finally arrived.He closed the laptop."You found her," he said."She found us," Huo Yan said. "Because you sent her.""Yes."The singl
The library at ten PM was a different room than the library at eight-forty-five AM.In the mornings it had the quality of a thinking space — quiet and useful, the particular silence of accumulated books and undisturbed air. At night it was something else. The overhead lights were off. The lamp on the reading table threw a circle of amber that made the rest of the room feel deliberately dark, the shelves retreating into shadow, the corners becoming their own private territories.Huo Yan was already there when I arrived at nine-fifty. Standing at the window with his back to the room, looking at nothing visible in the dark outside. He didn't turn when I came in but his shoulders shifted slightly — the specific acknowledgment of someone who had registered your arrival without needing to confirm it visually.I sat in the chair nearest the lamp. Put my phone on the table. Watched the minute hand on the wall clock move from nine-fifty to nine-fifty-five.At nine-fifty-eight the door opened.
Huo Yan came to my room at nine PM.Not the study — my room. He knocked twice, even, and when I opened the door he came in and sat in the chair by the window without ceremony, without performing ease, without any of the layers that the production day required. Just him. Just the particular quality of a man who has decided to be present for something difficult and is being present for it.I sat on the edge of the bed. Put my phone on the mattress between us. Let him read all three messages in sequence without commentary.He read them once. Then he read them again. His face did the thing it did when it was processing something that required more than one layer — not blank, not cold, but running deep, the calculation happening somewhere below the surface of expression.When he finished he set the phone down.The ocean was loud tonight. The wind had come up off the water and was pressing against the estate's windows with the flat insistence of something that intended to be noticed. The ro
The second morning arrived with the particular quality of something that had been set in motion and was not going to stop on its own. I woke at five-fifty with the phone already in my hand — I'd fallen asleep holding it, which told me more about my mental state than I wanted to examine. The screen was dark. No new messages. The unknown number was silent, doing what unknown things did when they wanted you to feel their absence more than their presence. I got up. Showered. Stood at the window with the ocean below and ran what I knew. Two messages. Timed deliberately — the first arriving the morning after Huo Yan's public statement, the second hours later when I hadn't responded to the first. The timing said: I'm tracking you in real time. The content said: I know things about Huo Yan that aren't public. The direction said: ask him about Venice. I had not asked him about Venice. I had also not told him about the messages. This was the first time since the pool that I was carrying s
The words on the single sheet of paper felt like they were crawling off the page and burrowing into my skin. "In all matters professional and private." It wasn't a contract; it was a receipt. I was now the property of Huo Yan, and the terms were non-negotiable. My hand, the traitorous limb, was st
He didn't drag me. That was the terrifying part. His grip on my wrist was firm, but he walked with a calm, unhurried pace, as if we were simply taking a stroll. It was the confidence of a man who knew his prey wasn't going to run. Mostly because I couldn't. My legs were moving, but my brain was sti
His finger on my chin was a brand. It was a question and a threat all at once, and my brain, the poor, overworked thing, was having a complete system shutdown. I was supposed to be groveling, pathetic, forgettable. I was not supposed to be intriguing. This was a critical script error. "They told
The last thing I remember with any sort of pathetic clarity is the taste of cheap ramen and the blinding glare of a truck's high beams. Classic, right? A real gourmet-meets-grim-reaper special. In my defense, I was multitasking. As a struggling actor whose biggest role to date was "Background Custo






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