
Ex-Husband's Denial: Wife Reclaims Her Shattered Life
Fiona prepared a candlelit anniversary dinner, scallops glistening on porcelain, champagne chilling beside a "Three Years" card—her secret pregnancy swelling beneath her silk dress.
The doorbell rang, but it was just a delivery. Then Emmanuel called: his ex, Carley Marshall, crashed her car. He blew off their night.
Cramps hit like a vise. She collapsed, blood soaking her gown, screaming into the phone: "I'm losing the baby!" Emmanuel scoffed, "Fake ploy for attention," and hung up—Carley's voice cooed in the background.
Paramedics rushed her to ER for emergency D&C. The baby was gone. Audrey saved her life. Emmanuel sent lilies with a card: "Stop dramatizing."
She signed divorce papers. He laughed it off, contested everything, froze her out of hotels and clubs. Dragged her from the St. Regis by force, dumped her sobbing on a rainy sidewalk with her suitcase in puddles—Gus drove off without looking back.
He thought she was manipulating him, playing jealous games for attention. But she'd truly carried his child, bled out alone while he comforted Carley. How could he not believe her, even after the hospital proof? Why twist her agony into lies?
Now blacklisted and broke, Fiona clutched her grandfather's antique restoration tools. No more begging—she'd expose his cruelty, rebuild from the ashes, and make him regret ever underestimating her.
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Chapter 1
Fiona adjusted the position of the seared scallops on the porcelain plate. Her hands trembled slightly, a fine vibration that traveled from her fingertips up to her wrists. She pressed her palm flat against her abdomen, feeling the smooth silk of her dress beneath her fingers, and then the firm, hidden secret beneath that. A smile touched her lips.
The dining table gleamed under the soft light of the chandelier. Two crystal flutes stood sentinel beside an ice bucket holding a bottle of Dom Pérignon. A small, square card sat next to it. "Three Years," it read in elegant gold script. Three years of a marriage that felt more like a business transaction, but tonight, that was going to change.
The doorbell rang.
Fiona's heart leaped. She wiped her hands on a kitchen towel and hurried toward the foyer, her heels clicking against the marble floor. He was early. He actually remembered.
She pulled the door open, her smile already wide.
It wasn't Emmanuel.
The doorman stood there in his brass-buttoned uniform, holding a flat, unmarked cardboard box. "Delivery for you, Mrs. Meyers."
Fiona's smile faltered. She took the box, the cardboard feeling heavy and cold. "Thank you."
She closed the door and leaned against it, staring at the box. No return address. No name. Just a plain brown wrapper. She set it on the console table, the excitement draining out of her like water from a cracked basin.
Her phone buzzed in her clutch.
She pulled it out. The screen lit up with the contact name: Emmanuel.
Relief flooded her, hot and sudden. She swiped to answer, pressing the phone to her ear. "You're early! I was just-"
"Fiona." His voice cut through the line, sharp and impatient. Background noise buzzed behind him-car horns, sirens, the murmur of a crowd.
"Emmanuel? Where are you?"
"I'm outside the hospital." He sounded breathless, but not with concern for her. "Carley was in a car accident."
Fiona froze. The name hit her like a physical blow to the sternum. Carley Marshall. The Hollywood starlet. His college girlfriend. The woman who existed in the periphery of their marriage like a ghost that refused to stay dead.
"Carley?" Fiona repeated, her voice hollow. "What does that have to do with-"
"It's bad, Fiona." His tone was clipped, authoritative. "The paparazzi are swarming. I have to be here."
"Today is our anniversary." The words came out small, pathetic even to her own ears.
"Are you serious right now?" The impatience in his voice curdled into disgust. "A woman's life is hanging in the balance. This isn't about you."
"But I-"
"I'll be home when I'm home. Don't wait up."
The line went dead.
Fiona stood in the silent foyer, the phone still pressed to her ear. The dial tone buzzed, a harsh, rhythmic sound that matched the sudden, hollow thud of her heart.
She lowered the phone. Her fingers were numb.
She walked back to the dining room on unsteady legs. The scallops were getting cold. The champagne was sweating in the bucket. The card with "Three Years" written on it seemed to mock her.
She reached for her champagne flute, meaning to take a drink, anything to wash down the bitter taste in her throat. Her hand shook violently.
The crystal slipped.
It hit the edge of the table and tumbled to the floor. The stem snapped, sending shards of glass skittering across the marble.
"Damn it," she whispered.
She crouched down, her dress pooling around her knees. She reached for the largest piece of glass, her vision blurring for a second.
Then the pain hit.
It started as a cramp, a dull ache in her lower back that wrapped around to her abdomen like a tightening vice. She gasped, pulling her hand back.
The cramp intensified, shifting from an ache to a sharp, tearing sensation. It felt like something was ripping inside her, violently and without mercy.
Fiona braced her hands on the floor, her breathing turning shallow. "No," she whimpered. "No, no, no."
She tried to stand, to get to the couch, but her legs felt like they were filled with wet sand. She pushed herself up halfway, sweat breaking out across her forehead and dripping down her back, soaking through the expensive silk.
Her knees buckled.
She hit the floor hard, her hip striking the marble. The impact sent a jolt of pain up her spine, but it was nothing compared to the agony in her belly. It was a tidal wave, crushing her from the inside out.
She curled into a fetal position, clutching her stomach. "Please," she cried out to the empty room. "Please, no."
She felt a gush of warmth between her legs. It was hot, too hot, and it soaked through her underwear, running down her thighs.
Fiona rolled onto her back, her eyes wide with terror. She looked down.
The pale champagne-colored silk was stained a deep, dark red. The blood was spreading, a blooming flower of crimson against the delicate fabric.
A scream tore from her throat, raw and primal.
She scrambled for her phone, her fingers slick with her own blood. She grabbed it, smearing red across the screen. She hit redial.
Pick up. Pick up. Pick up.
The line rang once. Twice.
"What now, Fiona?" Emmanuel answered, his voice laced with heavy irritation.
"Emmanuel." She sobbed, the words catching in her throat. "Help me. Please. The baby-"
In the background, she heard a soft, trembling voice. Carley. "Thank you so much for coming, Emmanuel. I was so scared."
Emmanuel ignored the voice on his end, focusing on the phone. "What kind of sick game are you playing?"
"It's not a game!" Fiona shrieked, the pain ripping through her again. "I'm bleeding! I'm losing the baby!"
"A baby?" He let out a short, cold laugh. It was a sound completely devoid of humor. "You think I'm stupid enough to fall for that? Using a fake pregnancy to compete for attention with a woman who is actually hurt? That's low, even for you."
"It's real! I swear to God, Emmanuel, I'm dying-"
"You're pathetic."
The line clicked dead.
Fiona stared at the phone. The screen went black.
She hit redial again.
The automated voice answered immediately. "The number you are trying to reach is currently powered off."
A wave of agony crashed over her, so intense it stole her breath. She dropped the phone. It landed with a soft thud on the marble, the screen facing up, smeared with her fingerprints.
She reached out, her hand trembling, trying to grab the leg of the dining table. Her fingers scraped against the wood, but she couldn't get a grip. Her hand slipped, leaving a bloody smear on the polished surface.
Her vision started to tunnel. The edges of the room grew dark.
She turned her head, her cheek pressed against the cold floor. Her eyes focused on the ice bucket. The bottle of Dom Pérignon sat inside, untouched, the condensation running down its sides like tears.
The light in the room seemed to fade.
On the wall above the table, the antique clock ticked. The minute hand clicked past the twelve.
Midnight.
The anniversary was over.
Fiona's eyes fluttered closed, the silence of the apartment swallowing her whole.
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8.0
When gifted cellist Vivienne Aurel inherits her late father's catastrophic $4.2 million debt, she expects to lose everything. She doesn't expect the debt to be bought by Caspian Vane, the most feared private equity magnate in New York. Caspian doesn't want to ruin her; he wants her to work exclusively for him as the artistic director of his new cultural foundation for eighteen months. Forced into his world under a binding agreement, Vivienne prepares to fight against a cold, transactional cage. But as the intense, quiet proximity between them begins to blur the lines of their contract, she discovers a terrifying truth: the man who now owns her future has been watching her from the shadows long before she ever knew his name.

9.1
Alysia lay on the freezing operating table, moments away from donating her kidney to her brother's fiancée.
But as the anesthesia set in, a violent shock tore through her brain, awakening agonizing memories of a thousand brutal deaths across a thousand past lifetimes.
She suddenly realized her family's true plan. Her brother and his fiancée weren't just taking her organ; they were secretly plotting to declare her mentally unfit post-surgery to steal her entire trust fund.
When Alysia abruptly stopped the procedure and exposed the fiancée's kidney failure as the result of severe drug abuse, her family's reaction was chilling.
Her father didn't care about the truth or the law. He ordered his bodyguards to lock Alysia up until she agreed to the surgery, while her brother threatened to freeze her assets and seize her late mother's penthouse.
"You have no heart, Alysia. You don't deserve the Kent name," her aunt spat in disgust.
For lifetimes, she had kept her head down, taking the blame and sacrificing everything for a family that viewed her as nothing more than a disposable blood bag and a financial pawn.
The resignation that had clouded her eyes for so long vanished, replaced by the absolute, zero-degree cold of a glacier.
Ripping the IV from her hand and leaving her family in stunned silence, Alysia walked straight out of the hospital.
She had exactly forty-six hours to find a husband to secure her inheritance, and she knew exactly which ruthless billionaire CEO to target to help her burn the Kent family to the ground.

7.3
Lukas Reiner built his life based off a promise 9 years ago with Viktor Volkov... the only person who actually saw him and knew him for what he actually was. They dreamed of the same future, the same ice, the same victory together. Until Viktor disappeared without a word, leaving Lukas behind with nothing but silence, rain... and feelings he never got to confess.
Now, Lukas is at the top of college... Captain, prodigy and untouchable on ice until Viktor comes back.
Colder and older, acting like the past never existed.
Their reunion explodes into violence, but being forced to work together drags them into something far more dangerous than hate.
The tension turns into stolen moments and those moments turn into a habit but before either of them can stop it, the line between resentment and desire begins to blur.
Lukas never let go of the past.
Viktor never planned to face it.
But on the ice, there's nowhere left to run.

9.2
Arla was supposed to marry Clinton Freeman, the perfect fiancé who had promised to love her and protect her five-year-old son.
But instead, the cold steel of a dagger pierced her chest.
As she collapsed onto the freezing basement floor, she watched her adoptive sister Blair laugh.
"Look at her," Blair sneered, kicking her son's small, blue, lifeless body.
Clinton stood there, calmly wiping the bloody blade on a pristine handkerchief.
In her dying moments, the horrifying truth became clear. Her fiancé and her adoptive family had been plotting all along to steal her massive trust fund.
To break her, they had secretly tortured her child. Clinton had watched Blair pierce the little boy's arms with sewing needles, rewarding him with candy to keep him silent.
Arla's lungs burned with the taste of copper and ash.
She couldn't understand why the family she trusted could be so monstrous, or why they had to brutally murder an innocent child just for money.
The darkness swallowed her whole, drowning her in suffocating hatred and absolute despair.
Then, she gasped for air.
The concrete floor was gone, replaced by the silk sheets of a hotel penthouse suite.
Arla had been reborn to the exact night six years ago—the very day Blair first dragged her son into the dark attic.
This time, she picked up a solid silver letter opener, ready to burn them all to the ground.

9.1
"You're already soaked, aren't you?" Jax growled, his fingers teasing under the hem of her tight janitor dress. "Three of us... and you're dripping before we even start."
Shy, curvy Lila only took the late-night cleaning job for the money. She never expected to become the prize in a filthy bet between the three hottest guys in the dorm.
Cocky Jax, intense Miles, and playful Theo made a wager: the first one to make the chubby cleaner come wins.
But when they discover how easily she gets wet and how desperately she's fantasized about being shared by multiple men, the bet turns into something much greedier.
Now every shift ends with Lila bent over in her sexy uniform, soft body worshipped and passed between three hard cocks - moaning, shaking, and living out her dirtiest fantasy.
She knows it's wrong. She knows it's risky.
But why stop when three gorgeous men are competing to ruin her every night?

8.6
Ellery was trapped in a suffocating marriage with Manhattan's most ruthless billionaire, Holland Sutton.
She silently endured his blatant affairs, even measuring his mistress for custom lingerie at her own design studio. She drank foul, black fertility potions forced on her by his cruel mother, who treated her like nothing more than a breeding machine.
She only tolerated the endless abuse because her own brother blackmailed her. He threatened to pull the plug on their dying mother's life support if Ellery didn't secure Holland's massive investment for his company. So, she swallowed her pride. She let Holland drag her around like a trophy, let his mother demand she quit her business, and allowed herself to be stripped of all dignity.
But then, the devastating news broke.
Holland's cousin had just welcomed a baby boy, securing the family inheritance. Ellery's womb was suddenly useless to the Sutton empire. The promised investment for her brother was instantly revoked. Every humiliation, every bitter potion she had choked down, was for absolutely nothing. She had been the perfect, silent puppet in a sick game she could never win.
Yet, Holland simply dragged her to the closet and threw a black haute couture gown at her feet.
"Put that on. Tonight, you are going to smile and show all of New York that my marriage is perfectly intact."
Staring at the heavy dress on the floor, a cold, terrifying clarity replaced her despair. If the rules of his twisted game had changed, then so had hers.