Follow
Chapters
Share
The Wife He Regrets Losing  Novel Cover

The Wife He Regrets Losing

I thought I had it all, love, a husband, a life I built for us. But Alex betrayed me in ways I never imagined. And then Cassy returned, the woman from his past, the girl he once loved, right before our marriage fell apart. I was still his wife when it happened, still trusting him, still believing in us. Yet our marriage crumbled, and I was left to pick up the pieces of a life he no longer seemed to care about. Then he discovered the truth, the real me, the woman I was meant to be all along. Suddenly, Alex wanted me back, fighting for the love he thought he lost. But can I trust him after everything? Or is this just another lie waiting to break me?
Chapters
Share

Chapter 5

Emma's POV

The morning I was discharged from the hospital, Uncle Richard was already waiting at the entrance before I even made it to the reception desk to sign my release forms. He stood near the door in a quiet charcoal suit, hands clasped, waiting for me with the kind of patience that didn't feel like waiting at all. It felt like anchoring.

"Ready?" he asked when I reached him.

I nodded. I didn't trust my voice yet.

The drive was quiet. I sat in the back seat with my hands folded in my lap and watched the city blur past the window. Buildings. Traffic lights. People going about their ordinary lives with no idea that somewhere in a moving car a woman was rehearsing the hardest and most necessary thing she had ever done.

I had asked Uncle Richard to make one stop before we went to his house. He hadn't asked why. He simply nodded and changed direction.

I already had the papers.

I had called a lawyer from my hospital bed two days before my discharge, my voice low so the nurse wouldn't hear. Susan had helped me find someone discreet and efficient.

The papers had been drafted, reviewed, and delivered to the hospital by the following morning. I had read every line slowly, carefully, the way you read something you want to be absolutely sure about. Then I had signed my name in full.

Emma Carter-Mercer.

Uncle Richard waited in the car. I walked to the front door of the Mercer home alone, with an envelope in my hand. The house looked exactly as it always had from the outside. Neat. Imposing. Completely indifferent to the things that happened within its walls.

I let myself in with the key I had not yet returned.

The first person I saw was Cassy.

She was draped across the living room sofa like she owned it, which of course she now believed she did, a magazine open in her lap and a glass of juice on the side table. She looked up when I walked in and something moved across her face. Surprise first. Then that slow, familiar smirk.

"Oh," she said, setting the magazine down. "You're back."

"I'm just here to collect my things," I said. My voice was calm. I had practiced that too.

She tilted her head and studied me the way you study something you no longer consider a threat. "Take your time," she said sweetly, and turned back to her magazine.

I went upstairs and found the guest room exactly as I had left it the night Christine sent me outside into the rain. My sketchbooks were still stacked on the small desk. My few clothes were in the wardrobe. A pair of slippers sat beside the bed I had cried myself to sleep in more nights than I could count.

I pulled my suitcase from under the bed and opened it on the mattress.

I didn't rush. I folded each piece of clothing slowly and deliberately, pressing the creases flat with my palm the way my mother once taught me.

There was something meditative about it. With every item I placed in that suitcase I felt a layer fall away, the version of Emma who had cooked in silence, who had carried shopping bags for another woman, who had stood in the rain and called it love.

I packed my sketchbooks last. I held the top one for a moment, running my thumb across the cover. These had survived everything. They would come with me into whatever came next.

I zipped the suitcase, straightened up, and took one slow look around the room. Bare walls. A narrow bed. A window that looked out onto a garden I had tended for years and never been thanked for. I felt nothing for the room. That surprised me. I thought I would feel more.

I picked up the suitcase, tucked the envelope under my arm, and walked out without looking back.

Alex was at the bottom of the stairs.

He must have heard me moving around because he was standing in the hallway with his arms crossed, his expression unreadable in the way that used to make me anxious and now made me feel absolutely nothing. Cassy had appeared from the living room and stood slightly behind him, leaning against the doorframe with her arms folded and that permanent smirk in place.

Christine was nowhere to be seen, which was almost a mercy.

Alex looked at the suitcase, then at my face and at the envelope.

"What is that?" he asked.

I walked down the last few steps and held the envelope out to him. "Divorce papers," I said. "I have already signed my portion. You just need to add yours."

He didn't take it immediately. He stared at it the way you stare at something your brain is refusing to process.

"Emma." His voice dropped. "You're not serious."

"I am completely serious, Alex."

"You can't just" He pushed off the wall and took a step toward me. "We are married. You can't walk out of a marriage because things got a little difficult."

A little difficult.

I almost laughed. I thought about the slaps. The guest room. The shopping bags. The rain. The hospital bed. The baby I lost alone without a single person in this house knowing or caring.

"Take the papers, Alex," I said quietly.

"Emma, listen to me." He reached out and put his hand on my arm. His eyes were urgent in a way I hadn't seen in years, but I understood now what I didn't understand before. It wasn't love making his eyes urgent. It was ego. It was the shock of losing something he had always assumed would stay. "Just put the bag down and we can talk about this. Whatever you need, we can fix it."

"There is nothing to fix," I said. "We are done."

I removed his hand from my arm gently but firmly, the way you remove something that no longer belongs to you.

I held the envelope out one more time. He still didn't take it. I placed it on the bottom step of the staircase where he would not be able to ignore it and picked my suitcase back up.

I walked to the front door.

"Emma." His voice cracked slightly on my name. He took two steps after me and I heard the desperation in his footsteps and for one fraction of a second something old and stubborn in my chest pulled toward it. The part of me that had spent years believing that if I just waited long enough, loved hard enough, he would finally turn around and see me.

But then I heard Cassy's voice behind him.

"Alex." Her tone was light and unbothered, the voice of a woman completely certain of her position. "Let her go. She'll come back when reality hits her."

I paused with my hand on the door handle.

I turned and looked at Cassy over my shoulder. She was watching me with that smirk still in place, one brow slightly raised, utterly convinced that she had won something. I looked at her for a long, quiet moment. I wanted to remember her face exactly like that. Smug. Certain. Completely unaware of who she was actually looking at.

"Goodbye, Cassy," I said.

I opened the door and walked out.

The sunlight hit me the moment I stepped outside, warm and immediate in a way that felt almost deliberate. Uncle Richard's car was parked at the end of the driveway. I could see his silhouette through the windshield, patient and still as always.

I walked down the path and did not look back at the house.Not once. I opened the car door, lifted my suitcase into the back, and slid into the seat. Uncle Richard glanced at me with quiet eyes that asked everything and said nothing. I buckled my seatbelt.

"All done," I said.

He nodded once and started the engine.

As the car pulled away my phone buzzed on my lap. Susan.

I answered.

"Well?" she said immediately.

"It's done," I said. "I left the papers on the stairs."

There was a brief silence and then Susan exhaled, long and shaky, the kind of breath that carries everything she hadn't said for months.

"Emma," she said softly. "I am so proud of you."

I pressed my lips together and looked out the window as the Mercer house disappeared behind me. I rested one hand absently on my stomach, a small unconscious gesture I didn't even notice I was making.

I didn't know yet what was coming. I didn't know something was growing inside me.

But for the first time in longer than I could remember, I was not afraid of finding out.

You may also like

Beyond The Empty Altar, My Reign Novel Cover
9.1
I stood alone at the marble altar, the silence of the temple pressing against my eardrums. It was my Mating Ceremony, but the groom was missing. My phone buzzed with a notification: a livestream of my mate, Alpha Cain, skipping our union to welcome my sister, Eris, home. In the video, he held her like she was fragile glass, captioning it: "True power recognizes true power." When I returned to the Pack House, humiliated, I wasn't met with an apology. I was met with a slap from my mother. Eris, feigning a powerful "Alpha Aura," claimed my mere scent was poisoning her. To "save" her, my family locked me in my room. But the true betrayal came when I overheard their hushed whispers through the door. "Use Vera," my mother said, her voice chillingly practical. "She recovers fast. We can drain her blood weekly for Eris. She can stay as a servant to raise Cain and Eris's pups." My blood ran cold. They didn't just neglect me; they planned to harvest me like livestock. They thought I was the weak Omega they exiled to the North years ago to peel potatoes. They had no idea that in the North, I wasn't a servant. I was Commander V, a warrior forged in ice and blood. I reached under my bed and pulled out my black tactical duffel. "Screw the meatloaf," I whispered. I wasn't just leaving. I was going to war.
I Dumped My Cheating Fiancé and Married His Uncle Novel Cover
8.4
On the night before her wedding, Navia Harrison discovers her fiancé in bed with her step-sister-and worse, the two of them are already planning how to get rid of her after the marriage. Humiliated and consumed by hatred, Navia exposes their affair during the wedding ceremony itself, destroying both families' reputations in a single move. Then, she meets him. Leonel Crawford - the cold and dangerously powerful head of the Crawford family. Untouchable. Ruthless. A man no woman has ever been able to keep close. He's also her ex-fiancé's uncle. One impulsive proposal changes everything. "If you need a wife... marry me instead." "Honestly... we'd make a pretty good match."
Mated To The Clan's Rejected Beast Novel Cover
9.5
Carin survived a horrific escape pod crash only to wake up in the mud of an uncharted, barbaric alien planet. Before she could even process the pain of her fractured ribs, she was captured by towering, wolf-headed warriors who stripped her of her protective gear and threw her into a filthy slave pen. Because she lacked animal ears and a tail, the clan's arrogant elites mocked her as a repulsive deformity, beating her with spears and forcing her to shovel toxic dung in the deadly Blade Beast pens. The other female laborers violently bullied her and stole her only scraps of food, leaving her starving and defenseless in a brutal society where the strong preyed on the weak. "If you're unclaimed at the mating ceremony, they force you into the breeding program, and you'll be nothing but a vessel until you die." She was terrified, exhausted, and completely unequipped to survive this nightmare, but after a miraculous farming system suddenly awakened in her mind, she knew she desperately needed a powerful shield to protect her secret from the greedy tribe. During the chaotic mating ceremony, amidst the cruel laughter of the entire clan, she stepped directly in front of Brannon—a terrifying, sterile, mutant outcast despised by everyone—and boldly claimed the deadly warrior as her mate.
Red Moon Novel Cover
8.1
Blood Moon – Story Description Blood Moon is a dark, thrilling tale of forbidden attraction, supernatural rivalry, and the fine line between predator and prey. Set in the seemingly ordinary Silver Hollow College, the story unfolds in a world where vampires and werewolves secretly coexist alongside humans, each hiding their true powers while battling their own instincts, rival clans, and the pressures of legacy. In this shadowed world, every glance can hide a threat, every conversation can carry hidden meaning, and every full moon can unleash the beast within. At the heart of the story are Catrine Nella, a powerful young vampire, and Edwardo Zee, a disciplined yet conflicted werewolf. Catrine is sharp, cunning, and deadly, raised under the constant pressure of her ambitious step-sister who insists she feed on human blood to grow stronger. Catrine's natural talents in both magic and combat make her a force to be reckoned with, yet she struggles with morality, identity, and her own desire for control. Edwardo, on the other hand, is torn between his instincts as a wolf and the manipulations of his ruthless step-brother, who demands that he become a killer to claim alpha status. Edwardo wants to be a true alpha, not through bloodshed, but by protecting others and leading with honor-an ambition that sets him apart from his family and makes him both a target and a misfit among his kind. The story begins with a violent, electrifying encounter between Catrine and Edwardo in the forest during the full moon. Both are drawn by their own impulses-Catrine performing a vampire ritual, Edwardo struggling to control the wolf within-and the resulting clash is fierce, brutal, and unforgettable. This first meeting ignites a dangerous rivalry, with each recognizing the other's extraordinary abilities while also sensing something forbidden and magnetic between them. Though enemies by instinct and heritage, the connection they forge amidst conflict sets the stage for a tension-filled enemies-to-lovers narrative that drives the series forward. As the story unfolds, Silver Hollow College becomes a battlefield not just of physical strength but of intellect, cunning, and emotional power. Catrine and Edwardo test one another constantly-through subtle glances in class, tense encounters in crowded hallways, and increasingly dangerous confrontations in the forest. Each battle pushes them further, revealing vulnerabilities and strengths, and slowly transforms their relationship from animosity into fascination, grudging respect, and eventually, desire. Amidst this, both characters are confronted with the pressures of their families. Catrine's step-sister threatens her with weakness if she does not feed on human blood, while Edwardo's step-brother pressures him toward ruthless dominance, creating a constant tension that challenges their morality and tests the limits of their powers. At its core, Blood Moon is a story about choice and identity. It explores the struggle between instinct and conscience, power and restraint, hatred and attraction. It examines what it means to be strong-not just physically, but emotionally and morally-in a world where strength often comes at the cost of humanity. Through fast-paced action, supernatural intrigue, and the slow-burning, dangerous pull between Catrine and Edwardo, the story blends romance, suspense, and fantasy into a gripping narrative. It is a saga of blood and moonlight, of predators and secrets, of rivalry and passion, and of two young supernatural beings whose lives are forever intertwined by fate, desire, and the power of the Blood Moon.
Rejecting The Pack: I Need One Mate Novel Cover
8.2
In our beast world, females are treated as nothing more than precious breeding stock to keep the pack strong. As the pack's best Mender, I spent all my time focusing on my healing herbs, completely ignoring my maturity ritual. But tonight, the blind pack elder grabbed my wrist and delivered a chilling ultimatum. If I don't choose my mates by the next Full Moon, the Council of Elders will force a match and assign them to me. The threat is already suffocating. Arrogant, elite warriors like Caleb Quinn are pacing outside my door like starving wolves, stalking my porch and using pack business to corner me. At home, the reality of multiple mates is even worse. My mother has two mates—my father, the strongest Alpha, and my cold, intellectual step-father. Their toxic, murderous jealousy turns our house into a daily war zone. They literally unleash suffocating killing intent on innocent cubs just for hugging my mother. I am disgusted by this sick, possessive obsession. I refuse to let my life become a battlefield of jealous males fighting over who gets to guard my door, and I absolutely refuse to be forced into a harem by the Elders. So, I made a declaration that shocked my entire family and broke every pack tradition. "I will only ever take one mate." And to make sure none of those predatory warriors can touch me, I set an impossible trap. "Whoever wants me must defeat my father first."
The Fiancé's Warning, Her Second Chance Novel Cover
9.0
My fiancé, Jadon, proposed on the Fourth of July. It was the perfect moment I had dreamed of since we were kids. That night, he called me on FaceTime. But the man on the screen wasn't him. It was a version of him from five years in the future, his face hollow with regret. He laid out a horrifying timeline of betrayal. He was sleeping with my best friend and business partner, Kimberly. She would use his venture capital to steal my architectural firm. She would sabotage my father' s life-saving kidney transplant, leaving him to die. And she would maliciously cause a future pregnancy to end in tragedy, murdering our unborn child. My entire world-my love, my friendship, my future-was a lie. The two people I trusted most were plotting my complete ruin. This broken man from the future, desperate to atone, gave me a roadmap to escape. So I drove my car off a cliff and faked my own death, determined to rewrite the story they had written for me.