
The Billionaire's Secret Paper Wife
Chantal Lewis's family legacy was twenty-four hours away from a fifty-million-dollar foreclosure.
Desperate to save her parents, she sold her soul, offering herself as a paper wife to Dell Valdez, a ruthless Wall Street billionaire needing a quick PR fix.
But Dell didn't just buy her; he trapped her in a living nightmare.
He forced her into a brutal three-year repayment plan she could never afford, treated her like a disposable prop, and deliberately leaked a scandalous paparazzi photo to destroy her hard-earned professional credibility.
Worst of all, the first time his calloused hand touched hers, a violent, terrifying flashback assaulted her brain.
The scorching heat of his palms and the distinct, dark scent of his cedarwood cologne perfectly matched the repressed memory of a pitch-black room where she was pinned to a mattress against her will.
Chantal didn't understand why her cold-blooded fake husband felt exactly like the monster from her unspoken trauma.
She understood even less why, after months of ignoring her, he was suddenly acting violently jealous and possessive when she merely smiled at another man!
Why did his scent match her attacker, and what was he truly planning?
Furious, she called him to threaten a divorce, only for his voice to drop into a lethal whisper.
"Try it. See what happens."
Before she could process his deadly threat, her office phone rang.
"Ms. Lewis," her receptionist trembled. "Your brother is in the lobby. He owes money to some very bad people, and they are coming here right now."
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Chapter 4
The morning air outside New York City Hall bites at Chantal's exposed neck.
She stands on the concrete steps, wearing a simple white button-down shirt and black slacks. She wraps her arms around her waist, shivering.
A sleek black Maybach pulls up to the curb.
The rear door opens, and Dell steps out. He is wearing a custom-tailored charcoal suit that looks like armor. He does not look at her. He does not say good morning. He walks straight up the steps, expecting her to follow.
Chantal falls into step behind him.
Julian Croft is waiting inside. He guides them past the crowded waiting area, straight into a private room in the back.
The city clerk looks at them with a practiced smile. "Do you have rings to exchange? Would you like to say vows?"
"No," Dell says. The single word is hard and absolute. Julian steps forward, handing the clerk a thick, notarized folder. "I have arranged for the marriage records to be sealed at the highest level of confidentiality," Julian states smoothly. "The press will not find a trace of this."
Chantal feels a hot flush of humiliation creep up her neck. She bites the inside of her cheek until it bleeds. It is a transaction, she reminds herself. It means nothing.
She signs the marriage certificate. Dell signs it.
The clerk hands the thin piece of paper across the desk. Dell takes it, doesn't even glance at it, and hands it to Julian.
They walk out of the building.
Dell stops at the bottom of the steps. "Three o'clock," he says, his eyes fixed on the street. "Do not be late."
He gets into the Maybach. The car pulls away, leaving her standing alone on the sidewalk.
Chantal takes the subway back to her cramped apartment in Queens. She packs her entire life into one faded canvas duffel bag.
At two o'clock, she drives her Honda Civic to the Upper East Side.
She pulls up to the massive wrought-iron gates of the Valdez property. The gates slowly swing open. She drives up the short, immaculate cobblestone path, her cheap car looking absurdly out of place against the imposing limestone facade of the Valdez townhouse.
A man in a pristine suit is waiting by the front door.
"Welcome, Mrs. Valdez," the man says, bowing slightly. "I am Reginald Poole, the estate manager. Allow me to take your bag."
Reginald takes the cheap canvas bag, his expression perfectly neutral, but Chantal feels the sting of the class divide like a physical slap.
She follows him inside. The house is a museum of cold marble, modern art, and silence.
Reginald leads her up the grand staircase and down a long hallway. He opens a door to a guest bedroom.
"This is your suite," Reginald says. He points down the hallway to a set of double doors at the far end. "Mr. Valdez's master suite is there."
The physical distance between the rooms is massive.
Chantal walks into her room. She unpacks her few cheap blouses and skirts, hanging them in the cavernous walk-in closet. She sits on the edge of the massive bed, looking down at her hands. Her mind flashes back to Dell's office, to the scorching heat of his palm and that sudden, terrifying memory of the dark room. A shiver races down her spine. She rubs her hands together, trying to erase the phantom sensation, forcing herself not to think about the paralyzing fear that had gripped her in that split second.
At six o'clock, she hears the sound of a car engine shutting off outside.
Her pulse jumps. She walks out of her room and heads toward the stairs.
Dell is walking up. He has loosened his tie, and he looks exhausted.
They meet at the top of the landing. The air between them instantly drops ten degrees.
"Do not interfere with my life in this house," Dell says, his voice a low, dangerous warning. "We live separate lives."
Chantal's spine stiffens. She lifts her chin.
"That is exactly what the contract says," Chantal fires back. "I have no interest in your life, Mr. Valdez."
Dell's jaw clenches at the formal title. He glares at her for one long second, then pushes past her.
He walks down the hall and slams the door to the master suite. The sound echoes through the empty house.
Chantal stands frozen on the landing.
Her phone buzzes in her pocket. She pulls it out. It is a text message from Niamh. Just a heartbreak emoji and two words: Thank you. Chantal lets out a heavy sigh, her thumb hovering over the screen before she locks it. She barely has the energy to process her own ruined life, let alone comfort her best friend right now. Another notification pops up.
It is an alert from her bank. A wire transfer of fifty million dollars has cleared.
She stares at the zeroes on the screen. A heavy, exhausting relief washes over her, but the massive, silent house presses in on her from all sides.
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7.4
I single-handedly saved my family's corporate empire from a hostile takeover, securing our market share for the next decade.
But my grandfather didn't see me as a hero. He saw me as a flawed piece of inventory.
To calm the board and fix the reputation I supposedly ruined, he forced me into an arranged marriage, auctioning me off to the highest bidder.
Desperate, I turned to my childhood friend, Egnacio, the only person who ever promised to protect me.
But instead of saving me, he publicly humiliated me. He used my desperation as a networking opportunity, pitching my arranged marriage as a business deal to a ruthless private equity king named Dexter Mathews.
Later that night, I caught Egnacio holding my cruel cousin in his arms.
"What man wants to be with a woman who looks at you like she's planning a hostile takeover?"
Hearing him mock my pain shattered the last bit of hope I had.
I realized I was never family to them. I was just a sharp knife, used to cut down their enemies and then traded for cash before I got dull.
The heartbreak vanished, replaced by a cold, violent rage.
I didn't break, and I didn't run.
Instead, I got into the back of Dexter Mathews's car. He had watched my family tear me apart, but he didn't see a broken pawn. He saw a queen.
And together, we were going to burn their entire empire to the ground.

7.6
Isolde Mitchell knew her wealthy husband was cheating on her, but the true nightmare began when her mother-in-law summoned her.
The older woman coldly announced that the mistress was pregnant with a boy and would be moving into their estate.
Because Isolde's family had gone bankrupt and she had only given birth to a frail daughter, she was deemed completely worthless.
When Isolde packed her bags and demanded a divorce, her husband Clark just laughed.
He threatened to use their ironclad prenup to leave her penniless and take full custody of her daughter just to torture her.
To make matters worse, he forced Isolde to secure a failing business deal with the ruthless billionaire Jacques Valdez, essentially ordering her to sell her body to get the signature.
"If you fail, you will never see Bria again."
He even sent his goons to snatch the little girl from her preschool to prove his point.
Isolde was completely cornered, trembling with a mix of rage and absolute despair.
How could the man she married be such a monster? She would rather die than let them destroy her daughter, but how could a bankrupt mother fight a powerful dynasty with absolutely nothing?
Out of options, she looked at the private business card the terrifying billionaire Jacques had unexpectedly given her daughter.
Swallowing her pride, she decided to make a deal with the devil himself, ready to use his power to tear her husband's family apart.

8.4
Ayleen Avery was just a struggling hotel worker trying to survive her shift. But during a sudden blackout, she accidentally stumbled into the pitch-black VIP suite of a ruthless billionaire driven mad by chronic insomnia.
Calmed only by her unique natural scent of roses and rain, the terrifying man attacked her from the shadows and forced himself on her. Terrified and broken, Ayleen fled at dawn, unknowingly leaving behind her late mother's antique rose necklace in his bed.
Her greedy coworker found the necklace, claimed to be the woman from that night, and was instantly swept into a life of luxury. Meanwhile, Ayleen was blackmailed into a forced marriage with her attacker—Cassius Doyle—to save her adoptive father from prison. Deceived by the stolen necklace, Cassius believed Ayleen was a manipulative spy. He brought the coworker into their home and paraded her around the master bedroom.
"In this house, you are lower than the dirt on my shoes."
He choked Ayleen, forced her to sleep in a damp storage room, and treated her with violent disgust while pampering the thief.
Ayleen was suffocating in absolute despair. She had lost her innocence, her freedom, and her mother's only relic to a vicious liar. She couldn't understand how this all-powerful man could be so completely blind. Why couldn't he recognize the very scent that had cured his agonizing madness?
Staring at the dark bruises he had just left on her neck, Ayleen wiped the blood from her lip. She would endure this three-month marriage to secure her family's safety, but once the contract ended, she would expose the truth and tear down the fake savior he cherished so much.

8.7
Five years ago, I was the invisible scholarship charity case at an elite Manhattan prep school, trying to survive in a sea of trust-fund babies.
Arlo Hammond, the untouchable billionaire heir, made sure to completely dismantle my soul.
When his wealthy friends asked if he noticed me, his mocking laughter echoed down the hallway.
"Are you out of your mind? You seriously think I'd be interested in a boring little nerd like her?"
But the moment we were alone, he would corner me in dark alleys, pinning my wrists against brick walls with terrifying, possessive jealousy if my phone even buzzed. He played his twisted games until I was left standing in the rain with my shattered dignity.
Now, I am an Assistant District Attorney. I spent years burying those memories under mountains of legal files.
But tonight, he returned.
When we crossed paths at an exclusive club, he looked at me with the cool detachment he'd give a piece of furniture. In front of a crowd of elites, he coldly declared:
"We have absolutely nothing to do with each other anymore."
Then he walked away to pick up a supermodel, leaving me trembling from the sheer humiliation.
I didn't understand. If I was so worthless to him, why did he still have my birthday tattooed in dark ink on his wrist? Why did he look at me with such raw, painful vulnerability in the shadows?
I stared at my pale reflection in the mirror and made a silent vow.
I am not that pathetic seventeen-year-old anymore, and I will prove to him that I am completely, entirely over him.

9.7
"Sign it. You're no woman if you can't give me an heir."
Niamh gave Marcus two years of her life, her unwavering loyalty, and her silent love. In return, the billionaire CEO served her divorce papers and a one-way ticket to the gutter.
Cast out into a rainy night with nothing but the clothes on her back and twelve dollars, Niamh’s story should have ended there.
Instead, she stumbled on a stranger in the rain.
In an attempt to save him, he kisses her senseless. He is the last Lycan King standing, and a man of terrifying power, yet he is haunted by a seven-century curse.
When the king has a taste of Niamh in the pouring rain, he knew he had to keep her for himself, even though she was human and it was against the laws of their kind not to mingle with humans.
The King needs her essence and Niamh realizes she could use her body to get what she wanted; revenge on Marcus and his mother for humiliating her and making her waste her time.
Now, the woman Marcus discarded is rising as a global conglomerate queen and a Divine Enchantress as assigned by the Moon Goddess.
While her ex-husband’s empire crumbles into bankruptcy and his body rots with a shameful curse, Niamh is learning that being "claimed" by the King is much more than the contract she'd initially made with him.
He wanted to use her as his cure. She wanted to use him for her revenge.
But in the Lumina Realm, the Goddess has other plans.

9.7
For three years, I believed I had the perfect, flawlessly submissive wife.
But right as I was about to sign a fifty-million-dollar divorce settlement to make her go away quietly, I suddenly heard a sharp, ecstatic voice echoing inside my skull.
"Freedom! Long live freedom! I finally shook off this absolute bastard!"
I snapped my head up, only to see Iris sitting across the table, her delicate shoulders trembling as she sobbed into her hands, looking like a shattered woman losing her entire world.
It wasn't a hallucination; I could actually hear her inner thoughts. The realization hit me like a physical blow. My fragile, heartbroken wife was a calculating hypocrite who mentally cursed me out while physically begging me to stay. When I later dragged her out of a nightclub where she was partying half-naked, I heard her true thoughts about our intimacy—she considered our nights together a mere "complimentary clause" in our business contract. Even the loving, home-cooked French dinners I cherished were exposed through her mind to be microwaved Michelin-star takeout.
For three years, I had prided myself on being a dominant, attentive husband, yet I was played for an absolute fool. How could she fake every single tear, every single touch, with such terrifying perfection while viewing me as nothing more than an ATM?
Looking at her cowering on my penthouse floor, clutching an anniversary Birkin bag she secretly planned to sell for a Porsche, a dark rush of power blinded me.
I wasn't just going to let her walk away with my millions anymore; I was going to use my new ability to rip off her mask and utterly destroy her.