Elias Carter, the perfect preacher’s son, meets y/n—beautiful, wild, and chaotic. The town calls her trouble and suddenly everything Elias thought he wanted is thrown upside down.
Jihoon and Y/n were once inseparable as trainees, sharing laughter, late-night practices, and secret dreams of debuting. But once they debuted in separate groups, life pulled them into different worlds. Years later, they unexpectedly meet at a high-profile event, and sparks fly—an instant, forbidden love that neither can ignore. Between flashing cameras, screaming fans, and the strict rules of the entertainment industry, they have to navigate a secret romance without anyone finding out.
Y/N is a skilled Demon Slayer trainee, acting like a big sister to Nezuko while balancing the chaotic team: anxious Zenitsu, wild Inosuke, and quiet admirer Tanjiro. She’s been drawn to a new trainee, Kaito, which sparks tension as Tanjiro struggles with his hidden feelings. Together, they face dangerous missions, but unspoken emotions, jealousy, and growing bonds threaten to complicate their teamwork.
At St. Celeste Academy, Manhattan’s elite teens play a dangerous game of power, secrets, and influence. With old-money queens, bad-boy heirs, and influencers watching her every move—and @TheEmpireFiles exposing every secret—only one question matters: who will climb the social ladder, and who will fall?
Auron is torn. His agency wants him to eliminate threats, to enforce control over the city, to stay untouchable. But whenever he’s near Y/N, he hesitates. She’s the only person who can humanize him, remind him he could be something more than a weapon. And she doesn’t trust him—she hates what he represents publicly, even if she can see the cracks.
Back in high school, she couldn’t stand him. He was short, ugly, loud, careless, always saying the wrong thing at the wrong time. The kind of guy who made her roll her eyes before he even opened his mouth. When he moved to another state, she barely noticed—if anything, the halls felt quieter. She did notice how much easier it was to focus. She buried herself in school, stayed up late studying, stopped wasting energy on people who annoyed her. By the time graduation came, she had a plan, a future