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A Substitute Wife's Billion-Dollar Revenge Novel Cover

A Substitute Wife's Billion-Dollar Revenge

Elena Miller spent three years trying to be the wife Adrian Blackwood didn't know he had. She was the one who saved his company from a lawsuit no one knew about. The one who took a car to the hip so he wouldn't. The one who picked up his blood pressure medication every month for three years and placed it on his nightstand without a word. She was eight weeks pregnant the night he made her kneel in his garden, in the pouring rain, picking up the broken pieces of a necklace another woman had given him. When he was done with her, he handed her a dirty handkerchief and told her to throw it away. By the next morning, she'd lost the baby on his kitchen floor while he checked on the woman he'd been waiting twelve years for. By the end of the week, she'd signed the divorce papers with two words in the settlement column: "Net zero." She walked out of his life with nothing. She came back owning everything. Because Elena Miller was a name she'd borrowed. Her real name is Elena Vance, and the little girl who saved his life in a snowstorm twelve years ago — the one he's owed his every breath to ever since — wasn't the woman he kept in his bed for the past decade. It was the woman he kept on her knees.
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Chapter 2

I started vomiting at three in the morning.

Not the quiet kind — no, this was animal, sharp and uncontrollable, dragging me out of a shallow fever-sleep and onto the cold tile before I could even open my eyes fully. My knees hit the bathroom floor with a dull thud and I clung to the porcelain rim as wave after wave emptied my stomach and left me shaking, my forehead pressed against the seat. When the retching finally eased, I stayed where I was on all fours, palms flat against the slick tiles, breathing in the sour, metallic smell of my own sickness.

The ache in my abdomen made itself known. Dull. Dragging. Low and insistent. I pressed my palm to the spot, holding my breath, counting seconds, searching for a rhythm that might tell me something.

There was blood.

It had started last night, after I'd come in from the rain, after my knees had bled and my hands had frozen and I had left seventeen silver links scattered in the mud. Not much. Not yet. But enough to keep me awake, staring at the ceiling, measuring time by the frequency of new drops.

The child was still there. I could feel it. Or I was telling myself I could. I wasn't sure which scared me more — the idea that it might be gone, or the sickening thread of relief that moved through me at the thought. If it ended now, would that be mercy? Would I finally be free?

I recoiled from myself.

I got to my feet slowly. Washed my face. Looked in the mirror. The woman staring back at me was gray-skinned, lips cracked, eyes bruised with sleeplessness and fever. I tried to imagine what Adrian would say if he saw me now. The answer came easily: Don't look like that in front of Sophia. It's bad luck.

At seven, my phone buzzed. Pharmacy reminder.

Adrian's blood pressure medication was due for refill today. Six months ago, after the last lawsuit that had put him in the ER with chest pains, his doctor had said daily pills were non-negotiable. He had never remembered on his own. For three years, every refill, every reminder, every capsule down his throat — me. Always me.

I stared at the phone, thumb hovering over the screen.

I imagined not going. Letting him remember for once. Letting him be responsible for himself, even if just for a day. The thought tasted sour and dangerous, but I let myself linger in it. I set the phone face-down on the table.

But I couldn't do it.

Couldn't let the day end with him dizzy, or worse, and know I could have stopped it. Not out of love. Out of habit. A sick, clinging habit that felt more like addiction than devotion. Three years as his wife, and the thing I had perfected was making his life run so smoothly he would never even have to notice me.

I called the pharmacy. My voice came out flat and practiced. "Yes. Please get it ready. I'll be there soon."

———

The city pressed in, gray and wet.

I left the house without makeup, hair slicked back, last night's raincoat buttoned up over pajamas I hadn't bothered to change. The air outside was cold — the kind that prickles the skin and seeps down into the bone. I didn't bring an umbrella. Didn't think of it until the first cold drop hit my cheek, and by then it was too late.

At the airport — because he had told Daniel, on the phone in the bedroom last night, that he was personally going to meet Sophia's flight — I bought a cheap plastic umbrella from a stand by the door. The kind that folds like tissue and leaks at the seams.

The arrivals hall was a blur of voices and fluorescent light, the smell of coffee and exhaust thick in the air. I tucked the little paper bag with Adrian's pills into my coat pocket, squeezing it so hard the corner creased. I told myself to drop it at his office. Or leave it with the driver. Or just — just anything except what I was about to do.

But I saw him before I could decide.

Gate B. Adrian stood near the sliding doors, suit jacket folded over his arm, posture perfectly straight. He was talking to a woman.

Not just any woman.

Sophia Hartley was smaller than I had expected. Impossibly poised. Her pale dress luminous in the artificial light, her hair a glossy, perfect wave. I watched him slip the jacket around her shoulders — the same jacket I'd saved for months to buy him last Christmas, the one from Bond Street, the one with the secret button I had chosen. He had never let me touch it. Not once. Not even to drape it over his own tired shoulders.

He laughed at something she said, bending down so their faces were close. It was a real laugh. The kind I had never managed to coax out of him in three years.

Something twisted inside me, sharp and clean as a snapped wire.

I stood there, ten meters away, under a leaking umbrella, water soaking my shoes. I clutched the medicine bag so tightly my knuckles ached. Sophia's eyes flicked past Adrian's shoulder and landed on me. She didn't recognize me, but she saw the bag. She leaned in, voice low, but I heard her clear as a bell.

"Honey. There's a woman over there. She's been staring for a while. Do you know her?"

Adrian turned.

Our eyes met.

For two full seconds we just looked at each other — me waiting, foolishly, for him to come over. To call my name. To take the medicine from my hand, or even just acknowledge I was there.

He didn't.

He turned back to Sophia, forced a small polite smile, and said, "No. No one important. Probably someone who recognizes me from the news."

Then he wrapped his arm around Sophia's waist and guided her toward the exit.

The medicine. The jacket. The years.

Left behind.

I stood in the middle of the concourse, the edges of the umbrella dripping steadily onto my feet. I thought, for one reckless second, about throwing the medicine away right there. Letting him deal with the fallout, just this once.

But I couldn't. I never could.

I walked to the nearest information desk and handed the bag to a woman in a crisp blue blazer.

"Could you please deliver this?" I pointed at Adrian's retreating back. "To Mr. Adrian Blackwood."

She gave me a practiced smile. "Of course. May I say who it's from?"

I smiled back. Lips numb.

"He just said it himself," I said. "No one important."

———

I went home. Made four dishes and a soup — not because I expected him to eat, but because stopping now felt like stepping off a ledge. I set the table. Lit a candle. Sat. Waited.

Nine. Ten. Eleven.

The candle burned out. The food cooled and congealed on porcelain plates. The house was silent except for the ticking of the kitchen clock and the distant, persistent rain.

At three, the door opened.

Adrian came in, the scent of Sophia's jasmine perfume clinging to him so thick it made my eyes sting. He glanced at the table without pausing.

"It's cold. Throw it out."

He didn't ask how long I had waited. Didn't ask if I had eaten. Didn't mention the appointment he had promised to go with me to — the one I'd pretended was a routine checkup, hiding the truth because I already knew how it would end.

He went into the study and closed the door.

I cleared the table, scraping each dish into the trash with mechanical precision. When I reached the last bowl of soup, I heard his voice through the not-quite-shut door. Low. Intimate. The voice of a man who had never once used that tone with me.

"I know, Sophia. The lawyer's drafting everything now. Three days, the papers will be ready. I should have done this long ago. I just — needed to be sure you were really coming back. Now that you are, nothing else matters. I love you, too."

The bowl slipped from my hands and shattered in the sink, porcelain scattering with a clean, final sound.

I stood there, watching the water run over the shards, watching my own hands — red, trembling, useless. I pressed them to my stomach, just to feel something solid.

The child was still there. I could feel it, for now.

But his father — his father would be gone in three days.

And nothing I had ever done would matter at all.

I didn't cry. I just stood there, listening to the water, the soft laughter from the study, and the steady, traitorous beat of my own heart — calmer than I ever thought possible.

Three days, I thought.

Three days to decide what kind of woman walks out of a house that was never hers.

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