
The divorce he never saw coming
"Sign the papers and leave. My true love is coming home, and this house no longer has room for a placeholder like you."
For three years, Lia Leighton was the perfect, invisible wife to Julian Cohen-the cold-blooded titan of the Port Harcourt business world. She was the one who nursed his wounds, managed his scandals, and endured his family's cruelty, all while he treated her like a piece of furniture he'd forgotten he bought.
But on their third anniversary, instead of a celebration, Julian hands her a cold ultimatum. His "White Moonlight"-the woman who broke his heart years ago-has returned, and Lia is being discarded like yesterday's news.
Julian expects Lia to beg. He expects her to cry for the meager settlement he's tossed at her feet. After all, she's just a penniless orphan he rescued from the gutter... right?
He couldn't be more wrong.
Without a single tear, Lia signs the papers, leaves her wedding ring in the dust, and vanishes.
When she resurfaces, she isn't the quiet wallflower Julian threw away. She is the glamorous, untouchable CEO of the Leighton Global Empire-the very woman who now holds Julian's entire financial future in her hands.
As Julian's world begins to crumble, he realizes too late that he didn't just lose a wife; he lost the most powerful woman in the city. But when he finally falls to his knees to beg for mercy, Lia only offers a cold, devastating smile.
"Mr. Cohen, I don't negotiate with exes. Stay in your lane."
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Chapter 4
Julian threw the door to the penthouse open so hard the handle dented the pristine drywall.
"Lia!"
His voice boomed through the foyer, thick with a cocktail of rage and disbelief. He expected her to come running. He expected her to be standing there, perhaps crying, perhaps trembling, ready to explain that this "divorce" was just a sick joke or a desperate plea for attention.
But the silence that greeted him was deafening.
He marched into the living room, his chest heaving. "Lia, I know you're here! If this is about Elizabeth, we can talk, but filing legal documents behind my back is"
He stopped mid-sentence.
His eyes landed on the wall where the wedding portrait had hung for three years. The hook was empty. The wall looked naked, a mocking white rectangle staring back at him. On the floor lay a pile of shattered glass and the heavy gold frame, but the photo itself was gone.
A cold, hollow feeling began to settle in Julian's gut a feeling he hadn't experienced since he was a child. He turned and ran toward her bedroom.
He ripped the closet doors open.
Empty.
The hangers rattled against each other, sounding like dry bones. The scent of her something soft, like vanilla and rain was already beginning to fade, replaced by the sterile, lemon-scented air of the apartment's ventilation system. He moved to the dresser, pulling drawers out so quickly they fell to the floor.
Nothing. Not a hair tie. Not a stray earring.
She hadn't just moved out; she had erased herself.
Julian sat heavily on the edge of the bed the bed she had slept in alone for hundreds of nights while he worked late or "comforted" Elizabeth. He looked down and saw a small piece of paper on the floor.
He picked it up. It was the cutout of his own face from the wedding portrait. She had kept her face and left his behind.
"She really did it," he whispered, the reality finally crashing down. "She tricked me."
He was the top divorce lawyer in the country. He had dismantled fortunes and broken families with a flick of his wrist. And yet, his quiet, "sensible" wife had served him his own heart on a silver platter, and he had thanked her for it.
His phone vibrated in his pocket. He pulled it out, hoping praying it was her.
It was Elizabeth.
Jules, where are you? The caterers for the 'Freedom Gala' are asking about the wine list. I need your opinion. Come over?
Julian stared at the screen. For the first time in ten years, the sight of Elizabeth's name didn't bring a smile to his face. It brought a flash of irritation.
"Not now, Elizabeth," he muttered, shoving the phone back into his pocket.
He walked into the kitchen, his throat dry. He needed a drink. He opened the fridge and saw the rows of spicy condiments, the expensive steaks, the olives. Everything he liked.
Then he saw it. A small, half-empty carton of milk with a sticky note attached to it.
This was the only thing in this house I could actually eat without pain. You can keep the rest. - Lia.
Julian froze. Pain? He remembered the times he'd seen her clutching her stomach after dinner. He remembered the times she had asked if they could have something "plain," and he had laughed, telling her she needed to broaden her horizons. He had thought she was being picky.
He realized now she had been suffering in silence, literally poisoning herself just to sit across the table from him.
Suddenly, the penthouse felt too large. The marble felt too cold.
"I'll find her," Julian said to the empty room, his jaw tightening. "She's a Leighton. She has nowhere to go. She'll be at her sister's or a hotel. By tomorrow morning, I'll have Lewis withdraw the filing, and I'll bring her back."
He convinced himself it was just a tantrum. A very sophisticated, legal tantrum.
One Hour Later: A Small Café across town.
I sat in the corner of a dimly lit café, a bowl of warm, plain oatmeal in front of me. It was simple. It was bland. And it was the most delicious thing I had tasted in years.
Stella sat across from me, her eyes wide as she scrolled through her phone.
"Lia, you are a legend," she whispered. "The legal forums are already whispering. 'Top Divorce Lawyer served by mystery wife.' They don't know it's you yet, but they know someone got the better of Julian Cohen."
"I don't care about the forums, Stella," I said, taking a slow, peaceful bite. "I just want to be able to wake up without a knot in my stomach."
"So, what's the next move? He's going to come looking. You know Julian he hates losing more than he loves winning."
I looked out the window. A black sedan had just pulled up across the street. For a second, my heart stopped, thinking it was his. But a stranger stepped out.
"Let him look," I said, my voice cold and clear. "He spent three years looking right through me. Now, he can spend the rest of his life looking for a woman who doesn't exist anymore."
I pulled out a new SIM card and swapped it into my phone. I deleted my social media. I deleted his number.
"Tomorrow," I told Stella, "I start the new job. And in thirty days, the 'Placeholder Wife' officially dies."
The next morning, Julian arrives at Lia's sister's house, confident he will find her there. But instead of Lia, he is met by a process server who hands him a second set of papers. It's an injunction Lia has filed a restraining order, citing "emotional distress
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9.2
Averie spent hours preparing a perfect third-anniversary dinner for her billionaire husband, Jarett Sharp.
Instead of celebrating, she received an anonymous photo of him intimately holding another woman.
When Jarett finally arrived, he didn't even look guilty.
"Candida. It's okay. Don't be scared. I'm on my way."
He simply took a call from his mistress, shoved Averie aside, and walked right back out the door.
That same night, Averie's father suffered a massive heart attack.
The hospital demanded a half-million-dollar deposit before they would operate.
But when Averie frantically tried to use the emergency medical trust card Jarett had given her, it was declined.
Jarett had deliberately frozen her access to the funds just hours earlier.
While she begged his assistant on the phone, Jarett refused to be disturbed, busy wrapping his expensive coat around his mistress in the hospital garden.
Averie collapsed in the hallway, realizing the man she loved was deliberately letting her father die.
In the end, a childhood friend stepped in to pay the bill and save her father's life, while her billionaire husband later pinned her to their bed, throwing a check at her and reminding her he had bought her for three million dollars.
Averie didn't shed a single tear.
She slowly ripped his check into pieces, left her massive diamond ring on the dresser, and walked out into the cold New York night with nothing but her old suitcase.
She pulled out her phone and dialed her old ballet professor.
She wasn't just going to leave Jarett Sharp. She was going to destroy him.

9.7
Emaline Finley was drowning in massive debt to keep her dying father alive, even enduring a humiliating blind date with an arrogant man just to find a financial lifeline.
But the fatal blow came from her former best friend, Kitty. Kitty, who was already engaged to Emaline's ex-boyfriend, deliberately told Emaline's father that his expensive treatments were bleeding his daughter dry.
Out of extreme guilt, her father threw away his life-saving medication and checked himself out of the hospital to die at home. When Emaline found him, he was coughing up pools of bright red blood, his lungs rapidly collapsing. As the paramedics rushed him away, Kitty called to gloat, mocking Emaline's poverty and telling her to go watch her father die.
Emaline was completely shattered, suffocating under the sheer injustice of it all. She had been betrayed, stripped of her dignity, and was now forced to watch her only parent slip away because of a cruel, spiteful lie.
Just as her world went dark, a wildly wealthy stranger stepped in. Cullen Preston, the mysterious man who had witnessed her humiliating date, paid the astronomical medical bills and brought in the city's top surgeon to pull her father back from death. But his salvation wasn't charity.
"Consider it a dowry."
He bought her father's life, and in exchange, he demanded Emaline as his wife.

7.4
I was a broke clinic doctor drowning in debt, so I took a confidential job to evaluate a billionaire heir's fertility.
I marched into the VIP ICU, pinned the struggling patient down, and injected a sedative. I finished the extraction and loudly declared to the family lawyer that the Holt heir was completely sterile.
But then, a chilling laugh echoed from the doorway.
The real heir, Jarrod Holt, the tyrant of Wall Street, stepped in. I had just sterilized his younger brother right in front of him.
Facing a decade in federal prison, I was completely at his mercy. To make things worse, my arrogant ex-boyfriend tried to publicly humiliate me, and my greedy uncle threatened to burn my dead mother's belongings for ransom. I was pushed to the absolute brink of ruin.
But instead of destroying me, Jarrod offered a terrifying lifeline. He bought out a Manhattan high-rise in five minutes just to ruin my ex, then handed me a marriage contract.
I was terrified and deeply confused. Why would this ruthless billionaire force a nobody into a fake marriage? He knew details about my past that no one should know. Did he discover my hidden identity as 'E', the underground surgeon the entire medical world was hunting for?
With my back against the wall, I signed the prenuptial agreement.
"I do," I whispered at City Hall.
He shoved his heavy, antique family ring onto my finger. It was supposed to be strictly business with absolutely no physical contact, but when his lips crashed violently onto mine, I knew I had just sold my soul to the devil.

9.0
Once a pampered princess, Alaina now clutched a deactivated American Express card, staring out at Central Park. Her family’s fortune was gone, her life, over.
Her family's Hamptons estate, a four-generation legacy, was seized by Dyer Capital. The name hit her: Hardin Dyer, the poor boy she’d once scorned, had returned.
Hardin marched in, serving a divorce agreement. He'd orchestrated her family's downfall for revenge, giving her 24 hours to vacate his property. Penniless, her father faced prison, needing $50 million. Her mother forced her to beg Hardin, who sneered, offering the money for her body. Alaina ripped up the contract.
Hours later, her father had a heart attack. Desperate, she became "Lexi," a club girl enduring humiliation. In the Viper Room, Hardin's lackeys demanded she lick whiskey off his shoe for $10,000. Hardin watched. Outside, her brother Ashton's hand was threatened for a $3 million debt. Spirit shattered, Alaina returned, knelt on broken glass, offering to sign. But Hardin declared her family "dead," offering $10 million for her body, commanding her to use her mouth.
In a furious act of defiance, Alaina threw whiskey in his face, snatched the check, and fled. Yet, when he finally took her, a searing, foreign pain and blood on the sheets revealed a shocking truth: he had never touched her three years ago. Why had he let her believe such a monstrous lie?

7.9
On my wedding day, my fiancé Connor received an urgent phone call.
He told me a D-list actress had broken her leg on set, then abandoned me right at the altar.
In my past life, I cried until my throat bled, begging him not to leave.
But my tears only brought endless humiliation. My mother and adopted sister mocked me, framed me, and forged my signature to steal my multi-million dollar trust fund.
They kicked me out of the family estate without a single dime.
I ended up freezing to death in the minus-twenty-degree New York blizzard, listening to my mother's voicemail telling me to die in the street as long as I didn't bleed on her carpets.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand why my own blood relatives hated me so much, yet treated an adopted daughter like a precious princess.
The only person who showed me any mercy—draping his wool coat over my frozen corpse and giving me a proper burial—was Connor's ruthless, untouchable uncle, Harding Snow.
Opening my eyes again, I was back in the bridal suite, right as Connor was rushing out the door.
This time, I didn't shed a single tear.
I let him run to his actress, then walked straight into the VIP room to face the most feared billionaire on Wall Street.
"The wedding proceeds as planned, but the groom's name changes to yours."

8.3
Hovering as a translucent soul in the freezing cemetery, I watched Corbin Mendez—the ruthless billionaire I had spent my entire life despising—violently smash open my tomb.
I thought he had come to desecrate my corpse. Instead, he collapsed to his knees, reverently kissed my dead lips, and swallowed a lethal bottle of pills without a drop of water.
In my past life, I was betrayed by my ex-fiancé, framed by my vicious step-family, and trapped in a suffocating marriage with Corbin. I thought he was a paranoid, abusive monster who only wanted to control me. I fought his madness every single day until I died sick, exhausted, and utterly defeated.
But watching him climb into my casket, wrapping his massive arms around my cold body to die beside me, my non-existent heart shattered.
Why hadn't I seen the truth? He wasn't a monster; he was a deeply traumatized man suffering from severe PTSD, and his obsessive love for me was his only tether to sanity.
The regret and agony tore my soul to pieces.
"My love, I'm too late."
Those were his last words before his heart stopped.
When I opened my eyes again, I wasn't floating in a dark tomb. I was lying in Corbin's bed, exactly two years in the past.
This time, I wouldn't run away. I would heal the broken beast who died for me, and I would personally put a bullet in everyone who ruined us.