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Genre

Fantasy

173 stories

FantasyPublished

142-‎At My Sister’s Wedding Dinner My Dad Introduced Me To The Groom’s Family And Said “This Is Our Daughter... She Makes A Living Cleaning Toilets.”

StoriesVerse•May 16, 2026

‎At My Sister’s Wedding Dinner My Dad Introduced Me To The Groom’s Family And Said “This Is Our Daughter... She Makes A Living Cleaning Toilets.”

FantasyPublished

141-My parents kicked me out after calling me “uneducated trash.” Dad shouted, “Get out, you lowlife.”

StoriesVerse•May 16, 2026

My parents kicked me out after calling me “uneducated trash.” Dad shouted, “Get out, you lowlife.”

FantasyPublished

124-He Rear-Ended Her, Threw Cash on Her Hood, and Said, “I’m Not Interested” — Three Hours Later, She Walked Into His Family’s Penthouse as the Bride They’d Already Chosen for Him

StoriesVerse•May 15, 2026

He Rear-Ended Her, Threw Cash on Her Hood, and Said, “I’m Not Interested” — Three Hours Later, She Walked Into His Family’s Penthouse as the Bride They’d Already Chosen for Him

FantasyPublished

119-‘Who Do You Think You Are?’ — The Waitress’s Bold Reply Left the Mafia Boss’s Fiancée Speechless!

StoriesVerse•May 15, 2026

‘Who Do You Think You Are?’ — The Waitress’s Bold Reply Left the Mafia Boss’s Fiancée Speechless! By 9:14 p.m. on a Thursday in late October, the smile on Charlotte Whitmore’s face had begun to crack. It was the kind of smile people in Manhattan magazines called effortless. The kind that had launched three charity campaigns, won over camera crews, and convinced half the city that Senator William Whitmore’s daughter had been born to be adored. In private, it was a different thing entirely. In private, Charlotte’s smile was a weapon with polished teeth. The restaurant was called Noir House, a dark velvet jewel tucked into Tribeca behind an unmarked black door. Wealthy men came there to eat in silence, make arrangements, bury bad news under expensive wine, and pretend the city was still ruled by conversation instead of data. Every table was lit by a low amber candle. Every server moved like part of the architecture. At the back booth, beneath a framed black-and-white photograph of lower Manhattan in the seventies, Charlotte set down her fork with a clipped little sound. “I said I wanted the lamb, Adrian.” Across from her, Adrian Vale lifted his wine glass but didn’t drink. He was thirty-eight, broad-shouldered, sharp-jawed, dressed in a charcoal suit that looked like it had been cut around his body rather than put on it. At his temples, a little gray had begun to show. It made him look not older, but harder. More finished. Like a blade already tested. “You ordered the duck,” he said. Charlotte laughed once. It was not a happy sound. “And then I changed my mind.” He looked at her over the rim of the glass. “The lamb service ended fourteen minutes ago.” “A restaurant like this can reopen a kitchen.” “A restaurant like this keeps standards.” The insult was quiet enough to pass for conversation. Charlotte knew he had meant it that way. Adrian was a man who rarely raised his voice because he never had to. Men twice his size lowered theirs around him. She leaned forward. “Do you enjoy embarrassing me?” He finally drank, then set the glass down with perfect care. “You never require my help to feel embarrassed, Charlotte.” Two tables over, one of Adrian’s men stopped cutting into his steak. Charlotte went pale, then pink, then pale again. Six weeks from now she was supposed to become Charlotte Vale, the wife of the most feared organized crime figure in New York. It was an alliance her father had engineered and Adrian had accepted with the enthusiasm of a man signing a weather report. For four years they had existed in that strange cold orbit. Not lovers. Not partners. Not exactly enemies. They attended galas. They posed for photographs. They survived dinners like this one with the brittle endurance of people being marched toward a future neither had chosen. Charlotte had told herself she could bend him eventually. All men bent. They bent for beauty, pressure, family, leverage, need. If not one thing, then another. But Adrian Vale, infuriatingly, kept refusing to bend. A shadow appeared beside the table. “Good evening,” the server said softly. “Can I bring you anything else tonight, Miss Whitmore? Mr. Vale?” Charlotte turned. The woman standing there wore the Noir House uniform: white blouse, black vest, black trousers, hair pulled back neatly. She was probably around thirty. Her face was striking, but not in the polished Upper East Side way Charlotte recognized. There was something cleaner about her beauty. Unadvertised. Her green eyes were steady in a way Charlotte disliked instantly. No perfume. No visible jewelry except tiny silver studs. No nervousness. That last part bothered Charlotte most. “Yes,” Charlotte said. “You can bring me the lamb.” The waitress gave the slightest apologetic incline of her head. “I’m sorry, ma’am. The lamb service is closed for the evening. The chef can prepare—” “Did I ask you for a speech?” “No, ma’am.” “Then don’t give me one.” A flicker passed through the waitress’s face. Not fear. Not offense. Maybe simple restraint. “My name is Mae,” she said. “If you’d like, I can ask the kitchen whether they can prepare another duck course with—” “Mae?” Charlotte repeated. “Just Mae? No last name?”

FantasyPublished

111-The Mafia Boss Hit the Wrong Waitress

StoriesVerse•May 14, 2026

A shy young waitress is accused of stealing a mafia boss’s million-dollar watch and humiliated in front of an entire luxury restaurant. But when she calmly calls her father, the powerful men in the room begin to realize Dominic Salvatore has made a mistake he may never survive. One slap exposes a secret identity, a hidden family name, and a truth the underworld was never supposed to forget.

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