
The Unwanted Wife Is A Zillionaire Heiress
On the anniversary of her son's death, Audrey stood in the freezing cemetery for two hours, waiting for her husband.
Instead, his best friend showed up, claiming her husband was tied up with their daughter's emergency. But on her way home, Audrey caught sight of her husband, their daughter Willow, and another woman walking together.
She followed them to a luxury apartment that perfectly replicated her and her husband's humble first home.
Through a crack in the door, she watched her husband passionately kiss the woman.
She watched his best friend hand the mistress expensive gifts.
And she watched her own daughter happily eat cake and say, "Thank you, Mommy Kelsey."
When Audrey returned to her empty mansion, her daughter threw a massive tantrum, screaming that she wished Kelsey was her real mom.
The cruelest part was realizing the mistress was using Audrey's joint credit card to buy Willow's affection.
Her husband, her daughter, and her trusted friend had formed a flawless circle of betrayal. They were playing a happy family while she mourned her dead child alone. She had signed a brutal prenuptial agreement giving up everything for love, only to be treated like a pathetic joke.
But they didn't know the quiet, accommodating housewife was actually the hidden heir to the thirty-billion-dollar Carlisle empire.
Audrey left her diamond ring on the counter alongside a divorce settlement, activated her inheritance, and walked out.
"First step," she told her proxy. "We bleed his stock dry, and we dismantle his legacy piece by piece."
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Chapter 4
Audrey's back slammed hard against the cold wall of the hallway. She kept her hand clamped tightly over her mouth, her chest heaving as she dragged in silent, ragged breaths through her nose.
Her legs felt like water. She wanted to run. She wanted to sprint back to the elevator and disappear.
But a sick, masochistic urge forced her to stand up straight. She pushed herself off the wall and moved back to the two-inch gap in the doorway. She needed to see it all. She needed to let the reality burn away every last shred of hope she had left.
She looked past the sofa, taking in the details of the living room.
The cream-colored rug. The arched brass floor lamp standing in the corner. The abstract oil painting hanging directly above the marble fireplace.
Audrey's breath hitched.
It was an exact replica. The furniture, the layout, the color palette-it was a flawless recreation of the tiny, rundown apartment in Brooklyn she and Colton had shared during their first year of marriage, before the money, before the coldness.
He hadn't just bought this woman a luxury apartment. He had rebuilt the purest, happiest memories of Audrey's life and gifted them to someone else.
A single, hot tear broke free, sliding down Audrey's cheek. She let out a silent, bitter laugh.
The sound of running water echoed from the open-concept kitchen inside the apartment. The faucet was turned off with a sharp squeak.
A man walked out of the kitchen area. He was wearing a casual gray sweater, holding two crystal wine glasses filled with dark red wine.
He turned around and handed one of the glasses to Colton.
Audrey's eyes locked onto the man's face. The hallway spun.
It was Jerry Barrera.
The same man who, just three hours ago, had stood in the freezing cemetery, handed her a coffee, and told her to take the divorce money and leave.
Jerry raised his wine glass in the air, a wide, genuine smile on his face.
"Happy birthday, Kels," Jerry said warmly. He pointed to a small, wrapped box sitting on the coffee table. "I brought that custom mug you wanted from Milan. Had my assistant track it down."
A high-pitched ringing sound erupted in Audrey's ears, drowning out the jazz music.
Her husband. Her daughter. Her only trusted friend.
It was a complete, flawless circle of betrayal. They had all known. They had all sat around this velvet sofa, drinking wine, laughing, while she sat alone in a massive, empty mansion, crying over a dead child and a dead marriage. She was the punchline to a joke she didn't even know she was part of.
Inside the apartment, Kelsey suddenly stood up.
"Oh, I forgot!" Kelsey said, her voice bright. "The florist said they left the morning delivery out in the hall."
She slipped her feet into the slippers and started walking directly toward the front door.
The ringing in Audrey's ears vanished, replaced by a massive spike of adrenaline. Pure, animalistic panic flooded her system.
She spun away from the door. She didn't run toward the elevator-it would take too long to arrive. She darted to the left, toward the heavy metal door marked with a glowing red EXIT sign.
She grabbed the handle and yanked it open.
The metal hinges let out a sharp, high-pitched squeak.
Audrey threw herself into the dark, concrete stairwell and let the heavy door swing shut behind her, catching it at the last second to prevent it from slamming.
At that exact moment, the double doors of suite 507 were pulled wide open.
Kelsey stepped out into the hallway. She looked left, then right. The corridor was completely empty. The only sound was the faint hum of the building's ventilation system.
Kelsey frowned slightly. She looked down at the floor.
Just outside her door, on the pristine cream carpet, were two small, dark puddles of melting snow, left behind by Audrey's boots.
Kelsey stared at the water for a second, her brow furrowing. Then, she shrugged, bent down, and picked up a massive box of imported white roses sitting against the wall. She stepped back inside and pushed the door firmly shut until the lock clicked.
Inside the stairwell, Audrey was running.
Her high heels slapped against the raw concrete stairs, the sound echoing loudly in the narrow shaft. She gripped the metal railing, practically throwing herself down flight after flight. Her lungs burned, and her legs shook with every impact.
She burst through the ground-floor exit door and ran straight out into the freezing Manhattan snow.
She didn't stop running until she reached the open-air parking lot. She yanked open the door of her Volvo, threw herself into the driver's seat, and slammed the door shut.
The silence of the car wrapped around her.
Audrey gripped the steering wheel. She opened her mouth, and a raw, guttural scream tore from her throat. She screamed until her vocal cords felt like they were bleeding, hitting the steering wheel over and over again until her palms were bruised and numb.
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7.1
I waited a year for my mate, Alpha Justin, to return from the border war. While he was gone, I used my ten-million-dollar dowry to keep his crumbling pack afloat and buy life-saving elixirs for his mother.
But when he finally walked through the door, he reeked of another female's scent.
He brought back Gamma Brenna and a Royal Decree, coldly announcing she would be his "Co-Luna."
His family, who survived entirely on my wealth, immediately turned on me. They mocked me for being a wolfless orphan since my father and brothers were slaughtered defending the kingdom.
"You're just a fragile woman who belongs hidden away," Justin told me.
They demanded I accept this humiliation, step aside for his new warrior mate, and continue funding their luxurious lifestyle. Justin even arrogantly offered to sleep with me just once to give me a pup as a "consolation prize," declaring his heart and body belonged entirely to Brenna.
They thought my ruined pack meant I had no backing. They thought I was a pathetic victim who would cling to their scraps and accept a polluted mate-bond just to avoid being cast out into the woods as a Rogue.
They had no idea I had already visited the Alpha King.
I wasn't going to cry, and I certainly wasn't going to share my mate. I packed up every last cent of my ten million dollars, secured a Royal Severance Decree, and prepared to watch their arrogant pack starve to death.

7.2
Elmore Thomas rushed into the emergency room, clutching his feverish seven-year-old son, Buddy, tightly to his chest.
When the privacy curtain was pulled back, the air in Elmore's lungs vanished. The attending physician standing under the harsh lights was his wife, Kendal—the woman everyone believed had burned to death eight years ago.
But there was no tearful reunion. Kendal looked at him, and her eyes froze into impenetrable ice. She treated him like a biohazard, strictly referring to him as the family member.
Worse, she didn't recognize Buddy. She comforted their crying son with the same gentle warmth she used to reserve for Elmore, completely unaware she was soothing the baby she thought had died.
Days later, Elmore watched from the shadows as she picked up another boy outside a prep school, her left hand flashing a massive diamond engagement ring.
When his butler accidentally recognized her, Kendal shielded her new stepson with pure disgust in her eyes.
"Tell that psychopath to sign the divorce papers immediately. I have a new family now."
The words 'new family' echoed in Elmore's skull, tearing him apart. For eight years, he had lived in a hell of guilt and madness, raising their son in the shadow of her ghost. How could she just erase their past? How could she give her tender smiles to a stranger and look at him with absolute revulsion?
Standing in a luxury ballroom, Elmore squeezed his hand until his crystal champagne flute shattered, thick blood dripping onto the rug. The murderous obsession in his dark eyes returned as he called his lawyer.
"Freeze her divorce application. Use every dirty trick in the book. She isn't leaving."

7.6
I am the illegitimate, mute daughter of the wealthy Owen family, kept hidden in the attic like a shameful secret.
To save his failing company, my father decided to sell me off to a repulsive, predatory investor named Grossman.
At the family dinner, Grossman's sweaty hands roamed my bare legs while my half-sister Kaleigh intentionally spilled red wine on my dress, laughing as she watched me suffer.
When I grabbed a steak knife to defend myself, my father slammed his fist on the table.
"Sit down, or I will cut off the maintenance payments for your mother's grave."
My stepmother and sister sneered, treating me like a piece of meat meant to be sacrificed for their luxury. I was starved, locked away, and treated worse than a stray dog, all while my family paraded their high-society status to the world.
I couldn't understand why they hated me so deeply, or who really ordered the hit that killed my mother twenty years ago. The police reports were buried, and I was entirely powerless, trapped in a house of monsters.
But they didn't know that the night before, I had accidentally stumbled into the secret life of Burleigh Livingston—the ruthless, supposedly paralyzed billionaire who was faking his madness.
When Burleigh suddenly crashed our family dinner and threw a limitless Black Card on the table to outbid Grossman and buy me for the night, I didn't hesitate.
I grabbed the handles of his wheelchair, accepted his twisted deal, and prepared to use the devil himself to tear my family apart.

8.7
I was trapped in a greasy diner by my own mother.
She was forcing me to marry my abusive cousin because he had paid her twenty thousand dollars.
To escape, I used a contract marriage app and begged a complete stranger to marry me at City Hall that very day.
Ethan drove a cheap Ford and wore a plain suit. I thought he was just an ordinary guy needing a fake wife.
When my mother found out, she brought thugs to destroy my flower shop—my only home and livelihood.
To protect Ethan from her endless extortion, I shielded him and screamed that he was bankrupt and drowning in credit card debt.
My mother fled in disgust, and Ethan took me into his apartment for the night.
But out of trauma and habit, I locked my bedroom door, muttering that he must be old and desperate.
He stormed out into the freezing night, leaving me terrified that I had ruined my only lifeline.
I didn't understand why he was so furiously offended, completely unaware that my "broke" husband was actually the most ruthless billionaire in New York, and I had just trampled his massive ego.
The next morning, his face was a mask of ice as he dragged me back to City Hall to annul the marriage and get rid of me.
"Annulment. Now," he demanded.
But the clerk just popped her gum and slid a pink paper across the counter.
"State law changed. Mandatory thirty-day cooling-off period."

8.6
To save my father's failing workshop from ruthless loan sharks, I sold one year of my life.
I signed a fake marriage contract with Cameron Fox, an icy billionaire who needed a wife to pacify his sick grandmother. The rules were strict: it was purely a commercial transaction, with absolutely no physical contact and no emotional attachments.
Soon after, that cold hearted man seemed different to me. Wait, is he pursuing me?

9.5
I joined a brutal wilderness survival reality show, playing the perfect role of a pathetic, uneducated girl from a trailer park.
I needed the five million dollar prize to fund my revenge against the wealthy family that drove my father to his death.
I played everyone flawlessly. I outsmarted the arrogant contestants, ruined a corrupt restaurant owner, and secured enough food to guarantee my absolute victory.
But just as I was dominating the game, a massive black helicopter landed in our camp.
The show's new billionaire sponsor had arrived, and he immediately ordered his tactical guards to confiscate every ounce of food I had earned.
My hard-won advantage was wiped out in seconds. The other contestants cheered, pointing at my empty hands.
"Take that, you greedy bitch!"
But the real nightmare wasn't the stolen food or the sudden rule change. It was the man who stepped out of the chopper.
Glenn Ryan. The ruthless CEO from my past life as an elite heiress.
He took off his sunglasses, his dark eyes locking onto my muddy shoes and frayed flannel shirt with a terrifying, obsessive smirk.
Why was he here? Why did he instantly target me the moment I started winning?
He didn't just know my true identity.
He had bought this entire game just to hunt me down.