
His World Crumbling To Dust
My husband thought I was just a docile wife, easily controlled. He didn't know I'd spent five years meticulously dismantling his life. Tonight, his world would finally crumble into dust.
For five years, I endured Jackson's entitled demands and his family's greed, silently funding their lavish life in our Beverly Hills mansion.
My illusion shattered finding his mistress Amber's lingerie in his suitcase. My attorney just severed all financial ties, making Jackson's arrogant demands hollow.
I tossed my diamond ring into the trash, summoning an industrial compactor. Jackson, his mother, and mistress watched in horror as their designer luggage, bought with my money, was crushed, turning their lavish trip into garbage.
A cold, dead smile marked my cathartic release from five years of betrayal. How could they be so blind to the woman they dismissed?
Stepping into an armored Maybach, I left them in chaos. My iPad confirmed Jackson's credit cards freezing. This wasn't just divorce; it was a calculated demolition, making their pampered lives very real.
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Chapter 3
Hailey Hogan POV:
Jackson didn't even bother to put on slippers. He charged down the grand spiral staircase barefoot, his silk robe flapping open like a crazed animal breaking out of a cage.
I heard his heavy, frantic footfalls slapping against the marble before I saw him.
He sprinted straight past me and out the front doors, lunging toward the driveway. He reached out into the empty air, trying to grab the back of the garbage truck as it rolled out of the heavy iron gates. He missed completely, his hands grasping nothing but diesel exhaust.
Jackson spun around. His chest heaved, and his eyes were completely bloodshot.
He locked onto me. I was standing calmly in the foyer, adjusting the collar of my trench coat with slow, deliberate movements.
He charged up the steps, his face contorted in absolute rage. He raised his right hand high, his palm open, aiming a strike directly at my face to put the "crazy" woman back in her place.
I didn't blink. I didn't flinch.
Before his hand could even begin its descent, my right arm snapped out.
*Smack.*
The sound of my palm colliding with his cheekbone cracked through the cavernous foyer like a gunshot.
The force of the blow snapped Jackson's head violently to the side. He stumbled back, his bare feet slipping on the polished marble. A thin line of dark blood instantly welled up at the corner of his split lip.
He brought a trembling hand to his face, his eyes wide with utter shock. In five years of marriage, I had never raised my voice, let alone struck him.
I calmly reached into my coat pocket and pulled out an individually wrapped antibacterial wet wipe. I tore the foil open, pulled out the cloth, and began slowly, methodically cleaning my right hand.
"Are you out of your fucking mind?!" Jackson roared, spitting a drop of blood onto the floor. "That was our entire luggage! Everything for St. Barts!"
I finished wiping my fingers. I balled up the wet wipe and flicked it with pinpoint accuracy. It hit him squarely in the chest.
I looked at him with pure, unadulterated disgust.
"I bought those clothes, Jackson," I said, my voice dropping to a deadly, quiet register. "I bought the bags. I bought the jewelry. They were bought with my money. Which means I have the absolute right to treat them exactly as what they are. Trash."
Rapid footsteps echoed from the second-floor landing. Amber appeared at the top of the stairs, clutching her sheer silk robe around her waist. Her hair was a mess, and her eyes darted wildly around the empty foyer.
"Where are the bags?" Amber shrieked, her voice pitching into a hysterical whine. "Where are my limited-edition resort dresses?!"
I slowly shifted my gaze to her. I looked at her the way one looks at a rat crawling out of a sewer drain.
"You mean the dresses you charged to Jackson's supplementary card?" I asked, my tone dripping with ice. "The card that draws directly from my personal checking account?"
Amber's face drained of all color. She froze on the bottom step, her eyes darting to Jackson. She quickly scrambled behind his broad back, clutching his arm and putting on a pathetic, trembling act.
Jackson immediately puffed out his chest, wrapping a protective arm around Amber.
"You are acting like an insane, jealous shrew, Hailey!" Jackson yelled, trying to regain his dominant footing.
I let out a short, breathy laugh. The sound was completely hollow, echoing off the high ceilings and wrapping around the two of them like a noose.
Through the open front doors, tires crunched softly against the gravel.
A custom, armored black Maybach glided silently to a halt right at the base of the portico steps.
A man in a sharp black suit stepped out of the driver's seat. He walked around the hood and pulled open the heavy rear door, standing at rigid attention.
Jackson stared at the car. His mouth opened slightly. He had never seen that vehicle in his life. He had no idea I possessed the resources to summon a private driver in the middle of the night.
I reached down and picked up my minimalist black carry-on. I didn't look back at the staircase. I walked straight toward the open doors.
Panic suddenly flashed in Jackson's eyes. The reality of my departure finally pierced his thick skull. He lunged forward, reaching out to grab my forearm. "Hailey, wait—"
A shadow moved.
The bodyguard who had opened the car door stepped forward with terrifying speed. He planted himself directly between Jackson and me. He was built like a brick wall, his cold, dead eyes staring down at Jackson's bare feet and silk robe.
Jackson hit the invisible wall of the bodyguard's aura and stopped dead in his tracks, his hand falling limply to his side.
I paused at the open door of the Maybach. I turned my head slightly, looking over my shoulder. I let my eyes sweep over Jackson and Amber one last time. They looked small. Insignificant. Like ants scurrying on a sidewalk.
I stepped into the spacious, leather-scented rear of the Maybach.
The bodyguard slammed the heavy door shut. The sound was deep, final, and absolute.
The Maybach's engine purred. The car pulled away from the estate, its sleek red taillights slicing through the dark Beverly Hills night like a bleeding wound.
Jackson bolted out the front door, stopping at the edge of the steps. He choked on a lungful of exhaust fumes. With a feral scream, he kicked a priceless Ming dynasty replica vase sitting by the door. It shattered into a thousand pieces.
Amber crept out behind him. She slipped her arms around his waist, resting her chin on his shoulder. Her eyes gleamed with a hidden, victorious thrill.
"Darling, with her gone, we don't even have a change of clothes for tomorrow's flight."
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9.0
I died alone in the medical wing giving birth to our son.
"Tell her to calm down and stop the theatrics."
Those were the last words my mate, the Alpha, said about me while I bled out.
Instead of passing on, my soul was tethered to the packhouse. I was forced to watch my best friend Seraphina seamlessly step into my life, taking my baby and my husband before my body was even cold.
To secure her place, she planted my blood-soaked birthing blanket in the woods to frame me for faking my own kidnapping.
Ryker swallowed her lies completely. He refused to send a search party, telling the entire pack my disappearance was just a pathetic plea for attention and money.
As a helpless ghost, I watched Seraphina brainwash my one-year-old son into calling her his mother and teach him to joyfully trample my beloved garden.
"Bad mommy ran away. Don't love Kaelen."
Hearing my own child parrot those venomous words was a dagger to my soul.
Whenever anyone questioned my absence, Ryker fiercely defended her, dismissing the desperate warnings of my loyal friends and his own elders.
The man I loved and died for treated my memory like a malicious joke, grateful for an excuse to replace me while living with my murderer.
But when Seraphina's mask finally slipped, and the horrifying truth of my death crashed down on him, it was far too late.
Seeing him crumble in agonizing regret brought me no comfort.
I no longer wanted his love or his desperate apologies.
Now, I only wanted his absolute ruin.

7.5
She was dead. Or at least, that's what they thought. Now, five years later, Ivy Richardson stood at her own grave, ready to face the man who put her there.
Ivy, in a custom coat, stood at her cold, black marble gravestone. "Beloved daughter and fiancée," the inscription read—a cruel joke mirroring her heart's wasteland.
A gravedigger dropped his shovel, face ashen. Trembling, he pointed, gasping, "Oh my God... you look exactly like her." He saw a ghost; Ivy was alive.
She paid for silence. Then, Clayton, her former fiancé, appeared, shaking: "Ivy? Where have you been?" She crushed his cheap lilies, her lethal gaze replacing the girl he'd abandoned.
He snarled, blaming her, justifying her "Do Not Resuscitate" order for his mistress, Ainsley. Ivy's cold laugh mocked his pathetic lies.
"Fiancé?" she echoed, revealing her new wedding ring. "That title expired when you signed the DNR... and Ainsley was watching, wasn't she?" With an icy "Go to hell," Ivy left him slipping in the mud.

8.3
On the night of my career-defining art exhibition, I stood completely alone. My husband, Dante Sovrano, the most feared man in Chicago, had promised he wouldn’t miss it for the world. Instead, he was on the evening news.
He was shielding another woman—his ruthless business partner—from a downpour, letting his own thousand-dollar suit get soaked just to protect her. The headline flashed below them, calling their new alliance a "power move" that would reshape the city.
The guests at my gallery immediately began to whisper. Their pitying looks turned my greatest triumph into a public spectacle of humiliation. Then his text arrived, a cold, final confirmation of my place in his life: “Something came up. Isabella needed me. You understand. Business.”
For four years, I had been his possession. A quiet, artistic wife kept in a gilded cage on the top floor of his skyscraper. I poured all my loneliness and heartbreak onto my canvases, but he never truly saw my art. He never truly saw me. He just saw another one of his assets.
My heart didn't break that night. It turned to ice. He hadn't just neglected me; he had erased me.
So the next morning, I walked into his office and handed him a stack of gallery contracts.
He barely glanced up, annoyed at the interruption to his empire-building. He snatched the pen and signed on the line I’d marked.
He didn’t know the page tucked directly underneath was our divorce decree.
He had just signed away his wife like she was nothing more than an invoice for art supplies.

9.1
My family and fiancé begged me to donate my last remaining kidney to my twin sister, Kyleigh. They didn't know I was already dying.
My fiancé, Axel, gave me an ultimatum.
"Donate the kidney, or I'll break our engagement and marry Kyleigh. It's her dying wish."
I agreed, only for them to frame me for plagiarism with my own thesis, forcing me to confess on camera. They never knew I was the one who secretly saved our father with my other kidney five years ago-a sacrifice Kyleigh had stolen all the credit for.
As they wheeled me into the operating room, they celebrated with Kyleigh, promising her a future built on my death. I was already a ghost to them.
But I died on the table. The surgeon, seeing the old surgical scar and the poison riddling my body, walked out to face them.
"This wasn't a donation," she announced, her voice cold as steel. "This was murder."

7.6
I woke up to the suffocating smell of copper and sulfur, my fingers wrapped around a blood-soaked leather whip.
Hanging from an obsidian cross in front of me was a boy with silver hair and dead, golden eyes.
His pale chest was torn open to the bone.
I recognized those eyes immediately. I had spent three years describing them on my laptop.
He was Kamari Monroe, the tragic, overpowered protagonist of my own web novel.
And I wasn't just a bystander. I was Benedict Guerrero, the sadistic academy headmaster. The ultimate villain.
A reel of images flashed in my mind: my original ending. Kamari, fully awakened, skinning me alive and burning my soul in a furnace for forty-nine days.
My loyal attack dog, Gideon, stepped forward with a basin of glowing green liquid.
"Headmaster, let me wake him up with this bone-rot acid so you can resume."
If that acid hit Kamari, his hatred would become permanent. My gruesome death would be sealed.
But if I broke character and apologized, the magical world would sense the shift, and Kamari would just think it was a sicker, more twisted trap.
How was I supposed to survive a death sentence I wrote myself?
I couldn't show weakness. I had to play the monster to survive.
Suppressing my terror, I smashed the acid basin, healed his ruined flesh with agonizing dark magic, and lied straight to his face.
"Someone had to be the monster to push you into the fire."
This time, I will rewrite my own fate.

9.3
Ginny was chained to a concrete pillar in an abandoned warehouse, bleeding and betrayed by the two people she trusted most.
Her fiancé, Brant, and her adopted sister, Coretta, had just slashed her face open. Brant coldly admitted she was nothing but a disposable key to a vault, right before he tossed a lighter onto the gasoline-soaked floor.
As Ginny burned alive in the roaring inferno, the heavy iron doors were violently smashed open. Bedford Parks—the notoriously ruthless, germaphobic "monster" of Silicon Valley whom Ginny had always feared—charged straight into the flames. Ignoring the blistering heat, he shielded her charred body with his own. A massive steel beam collapsed, snapping his spine.
"I love you."
He coughed up blood, whispering his final words against her blackened skin before dying to protect her.
Hovering as a ghost, Ginny's soul screamed in agonizing realization. She had spent her life terrified of Bedford, yet he was the only one who truly loved her, while her supposed family laughed at her gruesome murder.
Suddenly, a blinding white light swallowed the warehouse.
Ginny gasped for air, opening her eyes to find herself sitting in the back of a luxury Maybach. She was eighteen again, wearing the humiliating clown makeup Coretta had tricked her into wearing on the day she was brought back to the wealthy Steele estate.
Ginny stared at her reflection, her dark eyes turning cold and sharp.
This time, she would tear her betrayers apart piece by piece, and she would protect her "monster."