
My Husband's Betrayal, My Brilliant Rise
After six brutal months, I returned to my Seattle villa, my sanctuary. An unsettling quiet, then a cloying mix of cheap vanilla and baby talc hit me. Pink slippers, a cookbook, and a blonde hair on Nathan's hoodie screamed betrayal.
Unwashed baby bottles and a note from "M" to "feed the baby" confirmed my dread. A baby's cry led me to Misty, holding a baby with Nathan's exact curls. She claimed Nathan called me his "bankrupt ex-wife," my clothes gone, wedding photos crumpled, and his loving text proved his calculated fraud.
Nathan burst in, spewing gaslighting lies, despite finding a deed transfer for *my* house. His blame—that I was a "cold work machine"—only solidified my resolve. My husband used my money, home, and trust to build a new life, systematically trying to erase me. He didn't just cheat; he tried to steal everything. A venture capitalist doesn't just walk away from a hostile takeover.
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Chapter 5
Elena POV:
The Uber glided to a halt in front of the Hotel Sorrento.
A bellboy in a crisp uniform immediately rushed forward, holding a massive black umbrella over my head as he opened the car door. I stepped out, the wet pavement reflecting the warm, vintage lights of the hotel exterior.
I had booked this exact hotel five years ago to celebrate my first massive Wall Street bonus. It was a symbol of my independence, the place where I realized I didn't need anyone to survive. Tonight, I needed that reminder.
I walked straight to the front desk. My posture was rigid.
"The highest-tier executive suite you have available," I said. My voice was completely flat, devoid of any inflection.
As the receptionist typed into her computer, my phone screen lit up on the black marble counter. It was Nathan. Again. It was the fifteenth call in the last twenty minutes.
I picked up the phone, flipped it over, and placed it face down on the cold marble.
The receptionist handed me a gold keycard. I took it, gripped the handle of my suitcase, and walked to the elevators alone.
When the metal doors slid shut, I looked at my reflection in the mirrored walls. My red lipstick was still perfectly applied. My hair was sleek. But my eyes looked hollow, haunted by a bone-deep exhaustion.
I swiped the keycard and pushed open the heavy wooden door to the suite.
I didn't turn on the overhead lights. I just clicked on a single, dim floor lamp in the corner of the living room. The room was cast in heavy shadows.
I walked over to the massive floor-to-ceiling window. Outside, the Seattle rain was washing over the glittering city skyline in relentless sheets.
The silence of the room pressed against my ears. The adrenaline that had carried me out of the villa finally evaporated.
My knees gave out.
I slid down the cold glass of the window until I hit the carpet. I pulled my knees to my chest, buried my face in my hands, and let out a choked, ugly sob. My chest heaved violently. The pain of the betrayal tore through my ribs, sharp and suffocating.
I sat there in the dark, crying until my throat was raw.
But I only allowed myself ten minutes. Not a second more.
I forced my hands flat against the carpet and pushed myself up. My legs shook, but I stood straight.
I walked into the marble bathroom and turned the faucet to freezing cold. I cupped the icy water and splashed it over my face, washing away the tears and the ruined makeup. When I looked up into the mirror, the vulnerability was gone. My eyes were sharp, lethal, and focused.
I walked back into the living room, opened my suitcase, and pulled out my laptop. I set it on the mahogany desk and flipped it open.
I picked up my phone. I went into the settings and silenced Nathan's number. I didn't block him. Blocking him meant losing a paper trail of his harassment, and I needed every piece of evidence I could gather.
I opened the web browser and typed in Instagram. I searched for the name *Misty*.
It took me less than two minutes to find her. Her account was completely public. It was a digital shrine to vanity, filled with endless photos of designer bags, luxury hotel rooms, and expensive dinners.
I started scrolling down. I dragged the timeline back a year and a half. Back to the exact time I was drowning in the paperwork for a massive pharmaceutical merger.
I clicked on a photo of a candlelit dinner at a Michelin-starred restaurant.
I zoomed in on the bottom right corner of the image. Resting on the white tablecloth, holding a wine glass, was a man’s hand.
Wrapped around his wrist was a limited-edition Patek Philippe watch.
My chest went cold. I had bought that exact watch for Nathan for our fifth wedding anniversary.
I hit the screenshot shortcut. I saved the file and coldly renamed it *Evidence 1*.
I kept scrolling. Six months further back. A photo of Misty in a tiny pink bikini, standing on a pristine beach in Hawaii.
The caption read: *Thanks to my Mr. M for taking me to see the ocean. Best week ever!*
I stared at the background of the photo. Leaning against a palm tree, right behind her, was a custom-painted blue and silver surfboard. Nathan’s surfboard.
My fingers hovered over the keyboard. During that exact week, Nathan had told me he was attending a closed-door, intensive startup bootcamp in Silicon Valley with no cell reception.
My heart went completely numb. I wasn't angry anymore. I was a machine. I mechanically screenshotted the image, categorized it, and dropped it into a folder.
I scrolled up to a post from three months ago. It was a mirror selfie.
Misty was wearing a silk robe, posing with duck lips. But the background wasn't a hotel. It was my master bathroom.
Lined up perfectly on the marble counter behind her, deliberately placed in the frame, was my entire collection of La Mer skincare.
She had been standing in my bathroom, using my things, mocking me in plain sight while I was working myself to the bone across the world.
I slammed the laptop shut. A violent cramp seized my stomach, twisting my insides into a knot.
I took a deep, shuddering breath. I picked up my phone. I needed to see the core of the rot. I needed to see the money.
I stared at the bank icon on my phone screen and mutters to myself, "Let me see just how many people you've been feeding with my money."
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9.4
As a "wolfless" Omega at the absolute bottom of the pack hierarchy, my only goal was to build a safe, normal life with my fiancé, Dan.
That illusion shattered the day I came home early from work. I found Dan completely naked, tangled in my bedsheets with my cousin, Laura.
The suffocating stench of their betrayal polluted my home. Dan frantically tried to blame Laura, while she shrieked that they had been sleeping together for months. My sanctuary was destroyed. With no family to turn to, I fled into the night. Heartbroken and desperate for oblivion, I ended up in the office of my terrifying boss, Alpha Kane Cain. Fueled by whiskey and grief, I recklessly surrendered to him, signing a note consenting to whatever he wanted just to make the pain stop.
But the next morning, the blinding pleasure was replaced by pure terror. Kane hadn't pulled out. In our brutal world, an unmarked, wolfless Omega carrying an Alpha's child would be cast out and hunted. I panicked, begging him to let me leave, convinced I was just another disposable mistake.
Instead of letting me go, the ruthless Alpha's eyes darkened with a terrifying, primal possessiveness. He pulled out the note I had signed in my drunken haze.
"You gave me this power, little wolf," he growled, ordering his men to move my belongings to his estate. "Don't pretend you can take it back now."

8.1
Arnetta had been married to a wealthy man for three years, but she had never even seen his face.
After a wild night of drinking, she woke up in a hotel room next to a handsome, ruthless stranger.
He coldly kicked her out, mocking her as just another desperate woman trying to sleep her way to the top.
To her shock, she soon discovered the stranger was Brennan Kirkland—her firm's top-tier client and a legendary Wall Street billionaire.
Hiding her true identity as a corporate spy, she manipulated her way into becoming his executive assistant to steal his data.
During a business dinner, Arnetta received a humiliating text from her absent husband, demanding a divorce and calling her a greedy parasite.
"He is a deadbeat coward who thinks money solves everything," Arnetta spat in anger.
"A man who hides behind lawyers is weak," Brennan agreed coldly.
He had absolutely no idea he was insulting his own actions, nor did he realize the wild, gold-digging wife he despised was sitting right across from him.
The next day, her husband's legal team sent a brutal twenty-million-dollar settlement offer, threatening to ruin her if she didn't take the payoff and disappear.
Staring at the degrading ultimatum, Arnetta's hands shook with blinding rage.
She looked at Brennan, who was busy plotting to destroy his own wife, and a terrifyingly calm smile touched her lips.
She wasn't just going to take the money; she was going to completely destroy him.

8.2
I went to a private clinic for a routine physical, only to find out I was pregnant.
It was impossible. I took my birth control every single day. But when the doctor tested my pills, they turned out to be high-purity vitamin placebos. My billionaire husband, Denton, had been systematically replacing my medication.
Yet, on our anniversary, he brought my sister Beverly home, demanding a divorce so he could marry her. When I refused to sign a settlement that left me with nothing, he froze my accounts and blacklisted me across New York.
My own father disowned me. When an old friend offered me a job just so I could afford prenatal care, Denton launched a ruthless financial attack to bankrupt his firm.
Then, Beverly got into a car crash. Denton's bodyguards dragged me off the street and forced me into a hospital trauma room. Beverly was hemorrhaging, and I was the only blood match.
I cried and begged Denton to stop, desperately trying to protect my fragile pregnancy without exposing my baby to the monster who controlled my life.
"Please, my body can't handle this. Don't do this to me!"
But he just looked at me with pure disgust and ordered his men to strap me to the chair, forcing the needle into my vein while threatening to kill me if his mistress died.
As I dragged my bleeding, cramping body out of the hospital into the freezing snow, my last shred of hope died.
I touched my stomach and made a vow: I would disappear, and I would make them all pay.

9.1
He postponed putting my name on the deed 18 times.
Each time, his mentee Ciera had an “emergency.” Each time, he ran to her.
I watched him give her his prized Montblanc pen—the one he wouldn’t even let me borrow. I saw her post their late nights on Instagram. I ate anniversary dinners alone while he “mentored” her.
Then he bought me a necklace—identical to the one she just flaunted online.
That was when I stopped feeling anything.
I didn’t cry. I didn’t fight. I simply packed two suitcases, resigned from our firm, and booked a one-way ticket to London.
He thinks I’m coming back in a week.
He has no idea I’m gone for good.
Nineteen broken promises. One silent goodbye. And a new life waiting across the ocean.

7.4
My mother was dying and desperately needed a half-million-dollar deposit for an experimental heart surgery by tomorrow.
I swallowed my pride and begged my wealthy husband, Garrick, to save her life.
Instead of helping, he laughed coldly and threw a thick stack of divorce papers right in my face.
"A hen that can't lay eggs gets slaughtered," he sneered, ruthlessly poking my flat stomach.
He revealed that his secretary, my supposed friend Lacey, was already pregnant with his heir.
To him, our three years of marriage was just a business transaction, and now that my family was bankrupt, I was nothing but damaged goods.
He flicked a humiliating five-thousand-dollar check at me as his final act of charity, then locked me out of our townhouse into the freezing, pouring rain.
I had spent years enduring agonizing hormone treatments for a fertility issue that wasn't even my fault, only to be discarded like trash when I needed him the most.
Was my dignity, my absolute devotion, and my mother's life really worth nothing to him?
Driven by pure, reckless desperation, I threw myself directly into the path of a moving Rolls-Royce Phantom on Fifth Avenue.
It belonged to Holden Tillman, the ruthless patriarch of the Tillman empire—and the uncle Garrick lived in absolute terror of.
I thought I was walking into my death, but instead, I became his fiancée, ready to make Garrick and Lacey pay for every tear I shed.

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."