Follow
Chapters
Share
After His Mistress Claimed Pregnancy, I Took Control Novel Cover

After His Mistress Claimed Pregnancy, I Took Control

The morning sun spilled across the Calcutta marble of my kitchen island, casting long, sharp shadows over the pristine surface. Ten years. A decade of my life, distilled into the slow simmer of a red wine reduction and the precise chopping of fresh rosemary. Tonight was our tenth wedding anniversary, and I was playing the role I had perfected over three thousand, six hundred and fifty days: the flawless, devoted wife. My phone buzzed against the stone. An unknown number. I wiped my hands on a linen towel and tapped the screen. The image loaded instantly in high definition. It was a photograph, deliberately framed and lit by the muted glow of a hotel bedside lamp. Dorian was asleep, his jaw relaxed, his bare chest exposed above a tangle of white sheets.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The morning sun spilled across the Calcutta marble of my kitchen island, casting long, sharp shadows over the pristine surface. Ten years. A decade of my life, distilled into the slow simmer of a red wine reduction and the precise chopping of fresh rosemary. Tonight was our tenth wedding anniversary, and I was playing the role I had perfected over three thousand, six hundred and fifty days: the flawless, devoted wife.

My phone buzzed against the stone. An unknown number.

I wiped my hands on a linen towel and tapped the screen. The image loaded instantly in high definition. It was a photograph, deliberately framed and lit by the muted glow of a hotel bedside lamp. Dorian was asleep, his jaw relaxed, his bare chest exposed above a tangle of white sheets. Resting possessively against his collarbone was a manicured hand. Beside him, a young woman with sharp cheekbones stared directly into the camera lens. Her eyes were defiant, triumphant, daring me to shatter.

I didn't drop the phone. I didn't scream. The woman who might have collapsed into a weeping mess had died a year ago, on the quiet afternoon I realized Dorian’s beloved "family friend," Azariah, was actually a ghost from his past he was still financially and emotionally sustaining. This young girl in the photo? She wasn't the disease. She was just a symptom of the rot I already knew existed beneath my husband's polished exterior.

I set the phone face-up on the marble. I reached out and adjusted the silver salt and pepper shakers, nudging them until they were perfectly parallel with the edge of the counter. I looked at the clock on the wall. I gave myself exactly sixty seconds. I watched the red second hand sweep in a continuous, silent circle, feeling the cold, hard logic replacing the last fragile remnants of my grief. When the hand reached the twelve, I picked up the phone.

First, I called my attorney. Then, I called my sister.

"Hope," I said, my voice as steady as the ticking clock. "I need you to come over."

"What did he do?" Hope asked. Even over the line, I could hear the familiar, dangerous shift in her tone—the retired MMA fighter stepping back into the ring.

"He got sloppy."

By three o'clock that afternoon, the audacity I saw in the photo arrived on my front porch. The doorbell chimed, a cheerful, melodic sound that felt entirely out of place when I opened the heavy oak door.

She was younger in person. Early twenties, wrapped in a trench coat that cost more than her rent, radiating the chaotic energy of a woman who thought she was holding a winning hand.

"Katherine," she said, leaning her weight against the doorframe, skipping any pretense of an introduction. "We need to talk. You need to step aside and accept that it’s over. He loves me."

I didn't invite her in. I kept my hand on the brass doorknob, feeling the cold metal against my palm. In the pocket of my cardigan, my phone was already recording.

"You have a very high opinion of your own permanence," I said, my voice barely above a whisper.

Her confidence faltered for a fraction of a second, her brow furrowing. She had expected weeping. She had expected a screaming match. She hadn't prepared for a void.

"I'm not leaving until you listen to me," she snapped, her voice rising, echoing off the vaulted ceiling of my foyer. She took a step forward, crossing the threshold.

"That is a mistake," I said, pulling my phone from my pocket. The red recording icon blinked rhythmically. "You are now trespassing on private property. You have threatened me in my home. My neighborhood security is already en route, and my legal team has a copy of the explicit material you sent me this morning, which constitutes cyber-harassment."

The color drained from her face, leaving her sharp cheekbones looking hollow.

Behind her, the estate's security golf cart crunched onto the gravel driveway. Hope’s black SUV pulled in right behind it. My sister stepped out, cracking her knuckles, her eyes locked on the girl like a predator tracking a very small, very foolish mouse.

"I think it's time for you to leave," I told the girl, watching her chest heave in sudden, panicked breaths. She scrambled backward, nearly tripping over her own expensive heels, before security escorted her off the property without another word.

At seven o'clock, the front door opened again.

"Katherine? Darling, I'm home."

Dorian’s voice was warm, coated in the practiced velvet of a man who believed his own lies. I listened to his footsteps in the hall. I heard the brief pause—the inevitable moment where he checked his reflection in the hallway mirror, adjusting his tie, ensuring his mask was flawlessly in place.

I carried the plates into the dining room. The candlelight flickered, casting a golden glow over the perfectly plated dinner and the crystal wine glasses.

Dorian walked in, his face breaking into a dazzling, perfect smile. He crossed the room and pressed a kiss to my cheek. His hand rested on my shoulder, a heavy, familiar weight.

"Happy anniversary, my love," he murmured. "Ten years. Can you believe it?"

"It feels like a lifetime," I replied smoothly.

I looked at him—really looked at him. The tailored suit, the silver watch I had bought him, the charming crinkles around his eyes. For a decade, I had poured my intelligence, my ambition, and my youth into building this man. He thought he owned me. He thought I was blind.

I smiled, picking up my wine glass. The crystal felt cool and solid in my grip. I wasn't going to divorce him. A divorce would let him walk away clean. No, I was going to keep him right here, in this beautiful, perfect house, until I had dismantled his life piece by piece.

"To us," I said, the rim of the glass touching my lips.

"To us," Dorian echoed, entirely unaware that he was already a dead man walking.

You may also like

A Debt in Red Novel Cover
8.0
When gifted cellist Vivienne Aurel inherits her late father's catastrophic $4.2 million debt, she expects to lose everything. She doesn't expect the debt to be bought by Caspian Vane, the most feared private equity magnate in New York. Caspian doesn't want to ruin her; he wants her to work exclusively for him as the artistic director of his new cultural foundation for eighteen months. Forced into his world under a binding agreement, Vivienne prepares to fight against a cold, transactional cage. But as the intense, quiet proximity between them begins to blur the lines of their contract, she discovers a terrifying truth: the man who now owns her future has been watching her from the shadows long before she ever knew his name.
BADASS COLLEGE GIRLS Novel Cover
8.6
She slapped the devil. He smiled. And then she burned his world down. --- At Roses College, love isn't romance—it's warfare. Where billionaire bloodlines buy silence and reputations are currency, Senorita Leo doesn't just rule—she owns. Heiress to an empire built on her mother's razor-sharp ambition, she glides through marble halls like a queen surveying her kingdom. Because that's exactly what she is. Her commandments are carved in stone: Never love. Never kneel. Never lose. Then Cassian "Sugar" Langford explodes into her perfect world like beautiful chaos incarnate. Italy's secret prince. Sin wrapped in Armani. A heartbreaker trained to destroy girls exactly like her. When she humiliates him with a slap heard across campus, he makes the cruelest bet of his privileged life: Seduce the Ice Queen. Make her fall in love. Then shatter her soul in front of the entire school. But what happens when the hunter becomes the hunted? One drugged assault he stops. One bullet he takes for her. One kiss that rewrites the rules of war. Suddenly, the boy playing with her heart is the same one willing to die for it. Then the real game begins. Because buried in their blood-soaked family histories lies a secret that could destroy them both. The tragedy that forged her into a weapon? His family lit the match. The brother she mourns? Still breathing. The love she's learning to trust? Built on a foundation of lies. When betrayal cuts deeper than desire and vengeance tastes sweeter than surrender— Who survives when two empires go to war? --- ⚡ Enemies-to-lovers with lethal stakes ? Royal revenge meets soulmate destiny ? A bet that becomes an obsession ? Dark academia where love is the deadliest lesson** --- ⚠️ Contains: Morally gray MMC, unhinged FMC, family secrets that kill, and a romance so toxic it's addictive.
Betrayed Bride's New Life Novel Cover
9.6
The afternoon sun streamed through the stained glass windows of Château Marmont's chapel, casting rainbow prisms across my $15,000 Vera Wang gown. Two hundred guests filled the pews behind me, their whispered conversations creating a gentle hum of anticipation. I stood at the altar, my hands trembling slightly as I held Roman's, gazing into his dark eyes that had captivated me for three years. "Do you, Lauren Franklin, take Roman Bishop to be your lawfully wedded husband?" The officiant's voice seemed to echo from a great distance. My heart hammered against my ribs as I opened my mouth to say the words I'd dreamed of saying since Roman first proposed on the beach in Malibu. "I do—" A voice, clear and haunting, cut through the sacred silence like a blade. "I'm going under and this time I fear there's no one to save me..." The melody of Lewis Capaldi's "Someone You Loved" filled the chapel, but it wasn't coming from the hired string quartet. My blood turned to ice as I recognized the voice—Reina Garcia, my childhood friend, rising from the third row like a specter from my past. Gasps rippled through the congregation. Roman's hands went rigid in mine, his eyes widening as he turned toward the sound.
Ex-Husband's Late Apology Novel Cover
8.7
Six months ago, everything changed. I remember the night Adonis came home late from the foundation gala, his eyes distant in a way I'd never seen before. He'd always been passionate about his work at the Manhattan Disability Rights Foundation, but this was different. This was the look of a man who'd found something—or someone—that captured him completely. "There's a new volunteer," he said, loosening his tie as he stood by our bedroom window, gazing out at the Manhattan skyline. "A college student named Xiomara Bailey. Trinity, you should have seen the sacrifice she made." I set down my book, already feeling the first whisper of unease. "What kind of sacrifice?" He turned to me then, and I saw something in his face I couldn't quite name. Admiration? Fascination?
Falling for the Disgraced Heir Novel Cover
7.5
Brandon Hughes had it all-wealth, status, power-until a single scandal stripped him of everything. Julia Bailey never believed in fairy tales; juggling three jobs just to survive, she had no time for spoiled heirs. When Brandon crashes into her life-literally-she finds herself stuck with a penniless man who knows nothing about survival. But Brandon isn't just another jobless troublemaker. He's the disowned heir of the Hughes Corporation, hiding a secret identity that could change Julia's life forever. Torn between betrayal and desire, Julia must decide: should she trust the disgraced heir who turned her world upside down, or side with James Whitmore, the ambitious lawyer who promises her stability but hides dangerous secrets of his own? A story of love, betrayal, redemption, and the revolution of two hearts.
Rising From Ashes: My Masked Runway Comeback Novel Cover
7.1
I sat in the emergency room corridor, pressing a soaked bandage against my heavily bleeding arm. I had texted my husband of three years, billionaire Efford Thornton, begging him to come. He did come, but he walked right past me as if I were a piece of furniture. When the doctor finally brought the last bag of O-negative blood in the city to save my life, Efford's assistant intercepted it. Efford coldly ordered the blood to be sent to the VIP wing for Aletha Chase. "Mrs. Chase is pregnant with the Thornton heir," he declared flatly. "The priority is non-negotiable." As I watched my life-saving blood being carried away, he handed me a divorce agreement and an NDA. If I dared to expose his affair, he would immediately cut off the funding for my grandmother's dementia care, leaving her to rot in a public ward. He then turned his back, leaving me to bleed out in the hallway. For three years, I had given up my career and my identity to be his perfect, compliant wife. I couldn't understand how the man who once looked at me like I was his whole world could now literally watch me die just to protect his mistress. But he forgot one thing. The submissive wife he married was just a ghost. I wiped the blood from my hands, dug out the leather half-mask I had hidden away years ago, and made a call. It was time for the legendary runway model "Phoenix" to rise from the ashes and burn his empire to the ground.