
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 3
"I strongly advise against this, Mrs. Meyers." Dr. Harris frowned, his glasses perched on the end of his nose. "You had a significant hemorrhage. You need rest."
The hysterical laughter that had torn from her throat earlier had died completely, leaving behind an icy calm. The tears she might have shed had frozen somewhere deep inside her chest. There was no more room for pain, only a cold, clear purpose. He had taken everything. Now, she would take back herself.
"Sign the papers," Fiona said, standing by the hospital bed. Her knees were weak, and a dull ache throbbed between her legs, but she didn't care. "I'm leaving."
Audrey stood beside her, carrying a small overnight bag. "I'll take care of her, Doctor."
Dr. Harris sighed, shaking his head. He signed the discharge form with a flourish. "Take it easy. No heavy lifting. Come back if you experience any fever or excessive bleeding."
Fiona didn't wait for him to finish. She was already walking toward the door.
The ride back to the penthouse was silent. Audrey kept glancing over at her, but Fiona just stared out the window at the passing city. Every bump in the road sent a jolt of pain through her abdomen, but she welcomed it. The pain was real. It was the only thing that felt real.
The elevator doors opened directly into the foyer.
The apartment was spotless. The cleaning crew had been there. The blood was gone. The shattered champagne glass was gone. The scattered lily petals were gone.
It was as if last night had never happened.
Fiona walked slowly into the living room. The air smelled faintly of bleach and lemon cleaner, trying to mask the scent of copper that still lingered in her memory.
She walked past the dining table. The champagne bucket was gone. The table was bare.
She paused at the foyer console table. The unmarked cardboard box from last night still sat there, untouched. With numb fingers, she tore the plain brown wrapper open. Inside lay a polished wooden case containing her late grandfather's antique restoration tools. A final gift, delayed by probate, arriving exactly when she needed a reminder of who she was before Emmanuel Meyers. She picked up the heavy wooden box and carried it with her.
She walked into the bedroom. The sheets were crisp and white, perfectly made. The pillow where Emmanuel slept was untouched.
Fiona sat down on the edge of the sofa in the living room. She didn't turn on the lights. The apartment was shrouded in the gray light of dawn.
She sat there, her hands folded in her lap, her eyes fixed on the front door.
She waited.
Six o'clock came. The sky outside the floor-to-ceiling windows began to lighten, turning from gray to a pale, washed-out blue.
The electronic lock clicked.
The heavy wooden door swung open.
Emmanuel stepped inside. He was still wearing the suit from last night, the jacket slung over his arm. His tie was loosened, the top button of his shirt undone.
And he smelled of her.
It was subtle, hidden beneath the scent of his cologne and the stale air of the hospital, but Fiona's nose picked it up instantly. The floral, musky scent of Carley Marshall's signature perfume.
He dropped his keys on the console table and looked up, seeing her sitting in the shadows. He stopped, his brow furrowing.
"Fiona?" He sounded annoyed. "What are you doing sitting in the dark?"
She didn't answer. She just looked at him.
He walked closer, tossing his jacket onto a chair. "Are you going to say something? Or are you just going to sit there looking pathetic?"
"Where were you?" Her voice was steady, a flat line of sound.
Emmanuel rolled his eyes. He walked to the bar and poured himself a glass of water. "I told you. Carley was in an accident. It was all over the news. I had to be there."
"Is she dead?"
Emmanuel turned, his eyes narrowing. "What?"
"Is Carley dead?" Fiona repeated, the words slow and deliberate.
"Don't be crass." He took a step toward her, his jaw tight. "She has a concussion and a broken wrist. It could have been much worse."
"But it wasn't." Fiona stood up. The sudden movement made her head spin, and she gripped the arm of the sofa to steady herself. "She has a broken wrist, and you left your wife alone on your anniversary."
"You were fine." He scoffed. "You were just sitting here feeling sorry for yourself."
Fiona looked at him. Really looked at him. The sharp angles of his face, the cold indifference in his dark eyes. He didn't care. He had never cared.
"Did you believe me?" she asked softly.
Emmanuel stilled. "Believe you about what?"
"When I called. When I told you I was losing the baby."
A flicker of something-annoyance, guilt, maybe both-crossed his face before it smoothed back into arrogance. "It was a desperate ploy, Fiona. Using a fake pregnancy to get my attention? It was pathetic."
"So you didn't believe me."
"Of course I didn't." He stepped closer, towering over her. "You think I don't know how your mind works? You saw Carley getting attention, and you couldn't stand it. So you made up a lie."
Fiona stared at him for a long moment. Then, a slow, bitter smile spread across her face. It was a smile that held no warmth, no humor. Only a deep, abiding disgust.
She raised her hand.
The sound of the slap echoed through the silent apartment like a gunshot.
Emmanuel's head snapped to the side. A red mark bloomed on his cheek. He stood frozen for a second, shock widening his eyes.
Then his hand shot out, his fingers wrapping around her wrist like a vise. "Don't you ever-" he started, his voice low and dangerous.
"We're done."
The words cut him off. He stared at her, his grip tightening.
"What did you say?"
"I said, we're done." Fiona didn't flinch. She met his gaze with a cold fury that matched his own. "I want a divorce."
Emmanuel laughed, a short, harsh sound. He released her wrist, stepping back. "A divorce? Over this? Don't be ridiculous, Fiona. You're not going anywhere."
"You don't get to decide that anymore."
"I'm the one who decides everything in this marriage." He straightened his tie, his arrogance returning full force. "You're my wife. You'll act like it."
Fiona shook her head. The last thread of hope, the last tiny shred of love she had harbored for this man, snapped.
She turned her back on him and walked toward the study.
"Where do you think you're going?" Emmanuel called after her, his voice rising. "I'm not finished talking to you!"
Fiona ignored him. She walked into the study and slammed the door shut. She turned the lock with a decisive click.
She leaned her back against the door, her legs finally giving out. She slid down the wood until she was sitting on the floor.
Tears burned in her eyes, but she refused to let them fall. She wouldn't cry for him anymore. She wouldn't cry for this.
She pushed herself up and walked to the desk. She opened the bottom drawer and pulled out the safe box. She keyed in the combination and opened it.
Inside was a copy of their prenuptial agreement and her passport.
She looked at the agreement. The name on it was Fiona Meyers.
She felt a wave of revulsion. That name felt like a brand, a mark of ownership. She never wanted to see it again.
She picked up her phone and dialed the lawyer Audrey had recommended.
"It's Fiona Miller," she said when the phone was answered. "I need those papers ready as soon as possible."
She hung up and walked over to the small shredder in the corner of the room.
She opened the top drawer of the desk and pulled out a stack of photographs. Her and Emmanuel at their wedding. On vacation. At charity galas. Smiling. Happy. Lies.
She fed the first photo into the shredder. The machine whirred to life, grinding the image into thin strips of paper.
She fed another. And another.
The sound of the shredder was loud in the quiet room, a mechanical growl that swallowed the past whole.
She didn't stop until every photo was gone.
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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.