
Too Late, Mr. Husband, She's Hope
Eliana, once a billionaire heiress, had given up everything to become the perfect ordinary wife for Dustin, meticulously erasing her elite past for him. She cooked, cleaned, and mastered the art of espresso, pouring all her energy into their quiet life. But as she brought him his coffee, she found a bottle of bright pink nail polish and a delicate shark-bone bracelet on his desk, jarringly out of place, instantly shattering her carefully constructed world.
Dustin’s cold dismissal stung, yet her corporate upbringing kept her questions silent. Then, her phone buzzed with an anonymous text: "He likes my taste," followed by a photo. It was a woman's pink-nailed hand, intimately on Dustin's thigh in his car, his Patek Philippe watch with its tell-tale scratch mocking her—a watch she had nearly ruined her health to buy him. The elaborate birthday dinner she’d spent hours preparing burned, filling the kitchen with acrid smoke as her marriage turned to ash.
Slumped on the freezing floor, a chilling clarity replaced her despair. She clutched the unopened pregnancy test, once a symbol of hope, now a cruel joke. Then, from Dustin's study, came a rare, indulgent laugh. He was on speakerphone with his mistress, Jami, promising her the bracelet, and then, the poisoned blade: "Her? She can't even remember what date it is. She just sits at home all day studying broken recipes." Today was Eliana's 30th birthday, forgotten and weaponized against her.
The sorrow evaporated, replaced by cold, absolute resolve. Eliana stepped out from the shadows, her hand flat against the heavy wood, and shoved the mahogany door open with a resounding thud.
"Is that so? I didn't realize my recipes were so boring."
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Chapter 3
Eliana Vance POV:
I sat on the kitchen floor for I don't know how long. The biting chill of the marble slowly seeped through my thin pajama pants, freezing my skin. It was that bone-deep cold that finally snapped me out of my paralysis.
I hated the cold. When I was seven, my father locked me in the wine cellar for failing a piano recital. I spent twelve hours shivering in the dark. The cold had always been my trigger, but right now, it was the only thing keeping me awake.
I pressed my palms flat against the wall and pushed myself up. My legs were completely numb from being curled up for so long. I stumbled forward, my knee hitting the cabinet door, before I finally caught my balance.
I walked over to the sink and cranked the cold water faucet all the way open. I cupped my hands, caught the freezing water, and splashed it violently onto my face.
The icy shock made me gasp. Water dripped down my chin, soaking the collar of my shirt. I slowly lifted my head and looked at the woman in the mirror above the sink. Her eyes were bloodshot, her skin pale and sickly, but the hollow despair in her gaze was rapidly hardening into something sharp. Something dangerous.
I turned away from the sink and walked out of the kitchen. I moved through the dim, quiet living room, heading straight down the hallway toward the master bathroom.
I pushed the heavy glass door open and walked straight to the vanity. I crouched down and pulled open the bottom drawer.
It was full of backup toiletries, extra toothpaste, and hotel soaps. I reached all the way to the back, my fingers brushing against the cold wood, until I found what I was looking for. I pulled out a small, rectangular white cardboard box.
It was an unopened pregnancy test. The edges of the cardboard were frayed and soft from how many times I had picked it up and rubbed it over the last week.
I looked down at the box in my hands. My fingers curled around it, squeezing so hard my knuckles turned a stark, bone-white.
I had wanted a family so badly. I wanted a loud, chaotic, loving home to fill the silent void of my own childhood. A mother who stayed, a father who didn't view his children as corporate assets.
My period was ten days late. I had planned to take the test tonight, wrap it in a little gift box, and give it to Dustin over the Wellington steak. I thought it would be the ultimate birthday surprise.
Now, this potential life inside me wasn't a blessing. It was a cruel, sickening joke. A chain that would tie me to a man who was fucking someone else in his car.
I took a deep, shaky breath. My fist closed tighter around the box. The cardboard buckled and crunched under my grip.
I lifted my hand, ready to throw the crushed box directly into the bathroom trash can.
But right at that moment, a sound drifted down the hallway.
Laughter.
My arm froze mid-air. I stopped breathing. I tilted my head, straining my ears to catch the sound again over the hum of the air conditioning.
It came from the direction of the study. It was Dustin's voice. He wasn't yelling at a developer or barking orders at an investor. It was a low, relaxed, incredibly indulgent chuckle. A sound he hadn't made in my presence for over two years.
I shoved the mangled pregnancy test box deep into the pocket of my pajama pants. I stepped out of the bathroom, my bare feet making absolutely zero sound on the hardwood floor. I crept down the hallway like a ghost, keeping my back pressed against the wall.
The mahogany door of the study was still cracked open. A sliver of blue light from the monitors spilled out onto the floorboards.
I pressed my cheek against the doorframe and peered through the narrow gap.
Dustin was leaning all the way back in his expensive ergonomic chair. His noise-canceling headphones were resting around his neck. He was holding his phone flat in his palm. It was on speakerphone.
A woman's voice drifted out of the speaker. It was high-pitched, whiny, and dripping with artificial sweetness.
"When are you going to bring me that bracelet? I'm dying to wear it." It was Jami. The girl from the photo.
Dustin laughed again. It was a dark, throaty sound. He reached out and picked up the shark-bone bracelet from his desk, dangling it from his index finger.
"No rush, greedy girl. I'll bring it over to your place later tonight." His tone was thick with flirtation and promises.
I stood in the dark hallway, my stomach violently rolling. My fingernails dug so deeply into my palms that I felt the skin break. Three years ago, to secure his first round of angel investment, I had accompanied him to a dinner and drank liquor until I vomited blood in the alleyway. He had held my hair back, using that exact same gentle, coaxing tone to tell me everything would be okay.
Jami's voice whined through the speaker again. "But won't your boring wife be nagging you to stay home tonight?"
Dustin let out a harsh, dismissive sneer. The warmth in his voice vanished instantly, replaced by utter contempt.
"Her? She can't even remember what date it is. She just sits at home all day studying broken recipes."
The words hit me like a physical blow to the chest. It was a poisoned blade, sliding perfectly between my ribs and twisting.
Today was my thirtieth birthday. He hadn't just forgotten it. He was actively using my domestic servitude—the very life I chose to support him—as a punchline to entertain his mistress.
My hand plunged into my pocket. I grabbed the crushed pregnancy test box and squeezed it until the plastic inside snapped.
I closed my eyes. I took one long, agonizing breath in, and let it out slowly. The violent trembling in my limbs stopped. The devastating sorrow evaporated, leaving behind a cold, absolute clarity.
I stepped out from the shadows. I placed my hand flat against the heavy wood.
"Is that so? I didn't realize my recipes were so boring."
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7.8
Andrea was trapped in a suffocating marriage with billionaire Gregory Morse, forced to live as the pathetic substitute for his dead fiancée.
When armed intruders broke into their estate in the dead of night, she called her husband in pure terror.
"Stop playing these cheap, attention-seeking games," Gregory sneered with disgust, and hung up the phone.
She barely escaped with her life, but the cruelty only escalated. At the family mansion, his dead fiancée's sister deliberately scalded Andrea's hand with boiling tea. Instead of defending his wife, Gregory publicly humiliated her, ordering her to clean up the mess while calling her a stray dog.
That night, hiding in the dark wine cellar, Andrea overheard a chilling confession.
Gregory admitted to his brother that he knew Andrea was completely innocent of the car crash that killed his fiancée. He knew she had been framed.
Why did he marry her? Just to use her as a psychological punching bag to vent his twisted grief. He watched her suffer every single day, treating her like disposable trash, while violently threatening anyone who showed her an ounce of kindness.
He thought she was just a useless, helpless shadow who would quietly endure his torment forever.
He had no idea that behind her submissive facade, she was secretly Madame Lan, the apex predator of the global fashion world. And now, she was ready to burn his empire to the ground.

9.7
For three years, I played the role of a devoted, naive wife to billionaire Conrad Whitney. I hid my true identity and foolishly believed in our fairy tale.
Then he handed me a harsh divorce agreement, ordering me to sign and walk away with absolutely nothing. He was leaving me to marry Cindy, the fragile woman he claimed had saved him from a fire.
He expected me to cry and beg. Instead, he watched coldly as Cindy and her family illegally transferred my father's trust fund. When I confronted them at the hospital, Conrad shielded her, calling me a greedy, toxic viper. He mocked me, completely blind to the fact that Cindy was a fraud. He truly believed I was just a pathetic, useless housewife who would be utterly destroyed without his money and status.
I looked at the man I had actually dragged out of that burning debris with my own soot-covered hands. My trauma, my sacrifices, and my love had all been reduced to a joke by his sheer arrogance and a few fake tears from a manipulative liar.
I didn't shed a single tear. I calmly signed the papers, drugged his wine, and left a crumpled one-dollar bill on his unconscious chest with a sticky note mocking his terrible service.
Then, I picked up my encrypted phone. It was time for the world's top surgeon, Dr. Hades, to return, and for Conrad to finally see the god he had just thrown away.

9.6
Antoinette stood on the manicured church lawn, the blinding summer sun stabbing her eyes. The funeral service for her parents had just ended.
A hand wrapped around her trembling shoulder, carrying the sharp, cloying scent of Fabian Cash's cologne. It was the exact same cologne her fiancé wore the night he locked her in a burning house to die in her previous life.
Now, wearing a mask of sorrowful devotion, Fabian tried to drag her to his car to control her parents' massive life insurance payout.
When she shoved him away in pure nausea, his mother Eleanor immediately shrieked to the crowd, deploying her usual guilt trip.
"She's lost her mind! The girl has completely snapped!"
The townspeople whispered and pointed fingers, watching Fabian play the victim as he tightened his bruising grip on her wrist, claiming she was hysterical and needed to be locked away.
Antoinette stared at the mother and son who had conspired to steal her family's estate and end her life. The rage inside her felt like battery acid pumping through her veins.
They didn't care if she lived or died; they only cared about the money. How could she let them strip her of everything again?
She didn't hesitate. She swung with every bit of strength she possessed, slapping Fabian across the face in front of the entire town.
"The engagement is over," she announced coldly.
Then, she turned her back on her greedy ex-fiancé and walked straight toward the terrifyingly powerful billionaire Hiram Graves, ready to let the world burn.

9.1
On our fourth wedding anniversary, I prepared a perfect home-cooked dinner for my husband, Carlisle.
But the moment he walked in, he threw a marital settlement agreement right onto the table.
"Sign it. Celine is back. There's no place for you here anymore."
His mother and sister immediately marched in to supervise my packing, calling me a barren gold-digger and trying to smash my late mother's only keepsake.
I signed the papers and walked out into the freezing night, thinking the nightmare was finally over.
But the next day, a heavily edited video of a childhood friend helping me into his car went viral online.
Carlisle's PR team released a public statement branding me a cheating wife, completely destroying my reputation.
He let the world tear me apart, using my ruined name to play the victim and justify bringing his first love home.
I had sacrificed my own dreams and endured his family's endless abuse for four years, only to be discarded like trash and framed for the exact emotional cheating he had been doing all along.
Watching the vile comments flood my screen, my heartbreak hardened into pure, unbreakable ice.
I calmly picked up my phone and dialed my father's number.
"Dad, it's time. I want to come home and take over Mcneil Industries."

8.5
"Do you enjoy this? Ignoring me like I don't exist? Do you have any idea how humiliating this feels, waiting for you like some fool?"
After three years of a cold, loveless marriage, Selene Henderson finally gathers the courage to walk away from her distant billionaire husband, Sebastian Kingsley.
She's ready to file for divorce... until a tragic accident changes everything.
When Sebastian wakes up with no memory of the woman he once pushed away, Selene finds herself trapped in a marriage she was desperate to escape, this time with a man who suddenly looks at her like she's his whole world.
But can love born from broken memories survive the truth of their painful past?
Or will the secrets she's been hiding destroy them all over again?

8.2
Grace hid her identity as the heir to a multi-billion-dollar empire just to experience ordinary love, acting as a free, devoted assistant to her actor fiancé, Hayden.
But while delivering his coffee, she caught him cheating with a new actress in his dressing room.
Through the crack in the door, she heard the actress whine about Grace being a feelingless robot.
Hayden just laughed, not stopping his frantic movements.
"She is a shield. She is a boring, free assistant. That is all she is."
He bragged that their upcoming engagement was just a PR stunt to build his perfect boyfriend image, and he would dump her the second he didn't need her.
He thought he held all the power, completely unaware that every massive movie contract and endorsement he had was secretly funded by Grace.
The betrayal poured over Grace like ice water, freezing her heart completely.
She had fought her aristocratic family and lowered herself to serve a man who treated her like disposable trash.
The girl who believed in simple love died in that hallway.
Grace didn't cry or burst into the room. She calmly hit record on her phone, securing the evidence to trigger his morality clause.
Then, she dialed her billionaire mother.
"I made a bad investment. Now I am liquidating the asset."
She was going to artificially inflate his fame to the absolute peak, and when he finally thought he was untouchable, she would strip him of everything.