
The Phantom Wife He Cannot Save
I handed my terminal brain cancer diagnosis to my billionaire husband, hoping for a shred of comfort.
Instead, he sneered, accused me of faking it for a better divorce settlement, and told me to die quickly.
Heartbroken, I turned to my sister, a top surgeon, who promised to save my life.
But on the operating table, my soul was ripped from my body as I watched her inject me with a lethal drug.
She didn't just murder me. She harvested my organs, forged my medical records to claim I was a hysterical liar who ran away, and went straight to my penthouse to take my place.
She looked at my blank organ donation consent form and smiled.
"Don't worry, he'll sign."
And he did. My husband welcomed her into our bed and announced their grand wedding, while my own mother celebrated my disappearance as a chance to secure his wealth.
I hovered in the air, screaming silently.
Why did my own flesh and blood slaughter me to steal my life? Why did the man I loved hate me so much that he'd happily marry my killer?
As my husband stood by the window, daring my runaway self to show up at their wedding, my spectral heart turned to stone.
I decided not to fade away. I would stay right here as a ghost, and watch their monstrous charade burn to the ground.
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Chapter 1
The heavy mahogany door to the study felt cold under Aracely's palm. Her fingertips were white from the pressure, her other hand clutching a single sheet of paper—a diagnosis that had become her entire world.
Inside, Keenan didn't look up. He sat in his leather chair, a fortress of calm, his voice a low, steady murmur of French as he finalized a merger on the screen in front of him. The keyboard clicked with a metronomic rhythm, each tap a dismissal.
She took a breath that didn't quite fill her lungs. "Keenan, I'm sick."
Her voice was a thread of sound, nearly lost in the vast, silent room.
The clicking stopped. He didn't turn, but a small, humorless smile touched his lips. He swiveled the chair slowly, his eyes sweeping over her as if she were something unpleasant he'd found on the bottom of his shoe.
Aracely stepped forward, her hand shaking as she placed the diagnosis on the polished expanse of his desk. The red stamp from the oncologist's office looked like a smear of blood on the crisp white paper. Glioblastoma.
He glanced down at it. One look. Then, with a flick of his wrist, he sent the paper skittering off the desk. It fluttered to the floor, a wounded bird.
He stood, his height casting a shadow over her. The scent of his expensive cologne, a scent she used to love, now felt suffocating. The mistrust between them had festered since a graduation party years ago, when Keenan had seen her talking to an old friend named Felix Riddle and had drawn his own dark conclusions. He had never let it go.
"To get a better deal in the divorce settlement," he said, his voice dangerously soft, "you'd even invent a terminal illness?"
Tears blurred her vision, but she shook her head, trying to form words. "The headaches... the nausea..."
He cut her off, his patience gone. He snatched his phone from the desk, his thumb jabbing the screen. He dialed his family's lawyer and hit the speakerphone button.
A cold, professional voice filled the room. "Mr. Ross."
"Walk me through the asset forfeiture clause again," Keenan commanded, his eyes locked on Aracely's.
The lawyer's voice was relentless, a sterile recitation of legal terms that all meant the same thing: she would leave this marriage with nothing. Not her gallery, not her savings, not an ounce of dignity. Each word was a nail hammered into her coffin.
Her heart felt like it was being squeezed by an invisible hand. She couldn't breathe.
Keenan ended the call. He looked down at her, his face a mask of pure, unadulterated disgust. He leaned in close, his breath warm against her ear, but his words were shards of ice.
"If you want to die," he whispered, "do it quickly. Don't waste my time."
That was it. The tiny, flickering light of hope inside her went out. The cold that followed was absolute, a deep, internal winter from which she knew she would never recover.
She didn't scream. She didn't cry out. She simply bent down, her movements slow and deliberate, and picked up the crumpled diagnosis from the floor. She smoothed it out as best she could.
Then she turned and walked out of the study, her spine perfectly straight. Every step felt like walking on broken glass.
Back in the master bedroom, the mirror showed a stranger. A pale, gaunt woman with shadows under her eyes and hair that had started to thin from the medication—the medication her sister had assured her would help.
She pulled a cardboard box from the back of the closet and began to pack. Her movements were mechanical, detached. A silk blouse. A cashmere sweater. Four years of her life, folded into neat, meaningless squares.
Her fingers brushed against the silver frame on the nightstand. A picture from their wedding day. Keenan was smiling, a genuine, unguarded smile she hadn't seen in years. The sight of it was a physical pain.
She picked up the frame, turned it facedown, and dropped it into the trash can. It landed with a dull, final thud.
She pulled out her phone and dialed her sister.
"Cheyenne," she said, her voice eerily calm.
On the other end, Cheyenne's voice was a warm, professional balm. The voice of a surgeon. The voice of a savior. "Ara, honey, what did he say? It's okay. We'll get through this. I've already spoken to the hospital. We can get you in for surgery."
"Okay," Aracely said.
She hung up and walked to the floor-to-ceiling window, looking out at the glittering expanse of Manhattan. The city was alive, a vibrant, pulsing network of lights. Her world was gray ash.
From downstairs, she heard the familiar, sharp tone of her mother-in-law's voice and knew Genevieve had arrived for her weekly, unsolicited inspection of the household.
"Leo, I've told you not to go near that woman's room. She's not well in the head."
Aracely's feet carried her to her son's door. Her hand hovered over the doorknob, a silent ache in her chest.
Then she heard Leo's small, clear voice, parroting the words he'd been taught. "I don't know her."
Her hand fell to her side. Her nails dug into her palm, drawing blood. The small, sharp pain was a distant thing, an echo.
She turned away from the door, her gaze unfocused. A decision settled over her, cold and hard as stone.
She walked to her dressing table. Slowly, she twisted the diamond wedding band off her ring finger. It felt strange, leaving her finger bare and cold. She placed it on the cool marble surface.
Her phone buzzed. A text from Cheyenne.
Surgery scheduled for 7 a.m. tomorrow. They're ready for you.
Aracely typed back a single word.
Confirmed.
She pressed send.
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7.8
Alexis signed the divorce papers, leaving her with no assets, no alimony, and just the clothes on her back.
To forget her abusive husband Carlos, she got drunk and bought a high-end gigolo for the night with her last 800 dollars.
But the man she slept with wasn't an escort. He was Jarrett Hughes, a ruthless billionaire CEO.
And while she was gone, her ex-husband was busy destroying her entire life.
Carlos framed her with fake photos of her cheating to justify the penniless divorce.
Then came the real nightmare.
Carlos and her own aunt secretly drained her family's corporate accounts, driving her father to jump off a building.
At the hospital, her grieving mother blamed her for the tragedy, violently attacking her in the ER.
To top it off, her cousin Josie—who was secretly sleeping with Carlos—held her father's ashes hostage.
"Crawl on your knees and pick it up, or the ashes go in the river," Josie sneered, throwing cash into the freezing slush.
Stripped of her marriage, her father, and her dignity, Alexis sat bleeding in the snow.
She couldn't understand why the people she loved most had coordinated such a brutal slaughter against her.
But Carlos and Josie made one fatal mistake.
They didn't know the "gigolo" Alexis had accidentally bought was the most powerful man in New York.
Alexis looked at the towering billionaire standing behind her, a vengeful fire burning in her eyes.
"I need you to get my father's ashes back," she said, pulling him into a kiss right in front of her ex-husband. "I don't care what it takes."

8.4
For twenty years, I lived as the adopted daughter of the wealthy Hill family.
But today, they forced me to sign a severance agreement and kicked me out so their precious biological daughter, Malia, could marry my fiancé.
To ruin me completely, they framed me for stealing Malia's engagement bracelet, threatening me with prison.
I calmly exposed the "sapphire" as cheap glass, then rolled up my sleeves to show the reporters my scarred, punctured arms.
For two decades, I wasn't a daughter. I was Malia's living blood and bone marrow bank.
They drained my health to keep her alive, even ordering doctors to ignore my failing organs just so she could attend a gala.
"Take this million dollars and shut your mouth," my adoptive father sneered, throwing a check at my feet.
My ex-fiancé looked at me with disgust, and Malia screamed that I was a crazy, vindictive liar.
They had stolen my life and my health, yet they still looked down on me like I was garbage.
I ripped the check into pieces and threw it in their faces.
Just as they ordered the butler to drag me out, a group of men in black suits shattered the chaos.
The heir of the untouchable Montgomery dynasty stepped through the door, ignoring the Hills' fawning, and handed me a DNA report.
I wasn't a disposable blood bag. I was the long-lost true heiress of old New York money.
And now, I was going to take back everything they stole from me.

9.7
For three years, I endured being treated like a walking ATM and a maid by my husband's family, biting my tongue to keep the peace.
Then, my husband's buddy suddenly dropped off a nine-year-old boy at my front door.
The crumpled note from my husband casually explained it was his illegitimate son, blaming me for being barren and demanding I raise the kid as our own.
My mother-in-law was absolutely thrilled, parading the boy around as the true heir at the dinner table.
"Some trees just don't bear fruit, no matter how much water you give them," she sneered.
My brother-in-law cheered, and my drunk father-in-law demanded I cook a feast to celebrate.
They actually expected me to continue paying the mortgage, buying the groceries, and cleaning up their endless messes, all while raising the living proof of my husband's betrayal.
I looked at the parasites who had drained me dry for years, acting like they were doing me a favor by letting me stay in a house that my money paid for.
I didn't scream, and I didn't cry.
I simply called my lawyer to file for an immediate divorce, froze every single bank account and credit card they relied on, and drove off to my grandmother's secluded cabin in the woods.
Let them see how long they survive without my money.

9.0
Carli followed an anonymous text to a dark garage, only to find her fiancé of seven years tangled with another woman in his Porsche.
She smashed his window, threw her engagement ring at his face, and walked away.
But the betrayal didn't stop there. Her own family sided with the cheater. Her father slapped her across the face so hard she bled, demanding she hand over her late aunt's trust fund.
"If you don't do exactly as you're told tonight, I will freeze every credit card in your name," her father roared.
Forced to attend the exclusive Gutierrez family gala, Carli watched her ex-fiancé parade his cheap mistress to humiliate her, while her stepsister tried to publicly ruin her.
Suddenly, a violent screech echoed as the massive crystal chandelier above them snapped from the ceiling.
In a split second of pure instinct, Vaughn shoved his mistress to safety and threw himself to the ground, completely abandoning Carli to be crushed.
Staring up at the plummeting glass, Carli felt the crushing reality that her entire life had been surrounded by monsters.
But the fatal impact never came.
A massive force yanked her into a hard chest, shielding her body entirely from the explosive shrapnel.
Carli opened her eyes to find Fletcher Gutierrez—the ruthless billionaire king of Wall Street and the masked stranger from her reckless one-night stand—bleeding heavily over her.
Feeling his warm blood on her hands, Carli knew the game had just changed.

8.1
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."

7.8
For three years, Elena endured a husband who barely acknowledged her, a mother-in-law who treated her like hired help, and a sister-in-law who sneered that she was nothing but a golddigger. All the while, her husband, Damien, pined after his "perfect" ex, like his own wife didn't exist.
Until the day Elena had enough.
She signed the divorce papers, packed a single bag, and vanished.
Damien was certain she'd come crawling back within a week. But the woman they all dismissed? Turns out Elena is a billionaire heiress, the CEO of the very empire Damien has been desperate to partner with and the one now signing his paychecks.
Oops.
Now Damien is spiraling, realizing too late what he lost. But Elena has choices she never had before. Like her childhood best friend, an NFL star who's been in love with her all along.
So who will it be?
The ex-husband who finally woke up?
The best friend who never left?
Or has Elena finally decided she's done with men who don't deserve her?