Follow
Chapters
Share
After My Husband Forgot Me for My Stepsister Novel Cover

After My Husband Forgot Me for My Stepsister

The lilies gave him away. I was standing at Andres's bedside when Madison walked through the door. White lilies, wrapped in brown paper, held against her chest like she'd rehearsed the pose. I watched his eyes find her over my shoulder. Something moved across his face — relief, warmth, a softness I hadn't seen in months — and then he looked at me. Really looked at me. Like I was a stranger. "Who are you?" Two words. Quiet, almost gentle. The kind of voice you use when you don't want to embarrass someone.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The lilies gave him away.

I was standing at Andres's bedside when Madison walked through the door. White lilies, wrapped in brown paper, held against her chest like she'd rehearsed the pose. I watched his eyes find her over my shoulder. Something moved across his face — relief, warmth, a softness I hadn't seen in months — and then he looked at me.

Really looked at me. Like I was a stranger.

"Who are you?"

Two words. Quiet, almost gentle. The kind of voice you use when you don't want to embarrass someone.

I didn't answer right away. I was still holding his hand. I could feel the warmth of it, the familiar weight of his fingers, and I stood there for one full second and let myself understand what was happening.

Then he turned toward the door.

"Baby." His voice changed completely. "You're here."

Madison made a sound — something soft and broken and perfectly performed — and crossed the room to him. She set the lilies on the nightstand. She touched his face. I stepped back to give her room, the way you do when you're a visitor and someone's family has arrived.

The doctor explained it to me like I was the one who needed help understanding. Retrograde amnesia. Not uncommon after a trauma of this severity. The brain protects itself. Certain memories may return in time, others may not. He said it all in the careful, measured tone of a man delivering bad news he has delivered many times before.

I nodded. I asked two questions. I thanked him.

The whole time, I watched Andres's hands.

He was lying against the hospital pillow, Madison's fingers laced through his, and his free hand kept moving to his wrist — to the cufflinks on his shirt, the ones the nurses had apparently let him keep because he'd asked for them specifically when he woke up. He straightened the left one. Then the right. Then the left again.

I had noticed that habit three years into our marriage. He did it when he was lying. Not when he was nervous — Andres was rarely nervous. When he was constructing something. When the words coming out of his mouth needed a little help staying upright.

I picked up my coat from the chair by the window.

No one asked me where I was going.

---

I sat in the parking garage for eleven minutes.

I know because I watched the clock on the dashboard. I didn't cry. I didn't call anyone. I just sat in the dark between two concrete pillars and let the full shape of it settle over me — not the pain of it, not yet, but the architecture. The structure. The way this had been built.

A car accident. Amnesia. Madison in the doorway with lilies she'd clearly bought before she got the call.

After eleven minutes, I drove home.

The house was quiet in the way houses get when the person who usually fills them is somewhere else. I walked past the kitchen, past the framed photos on the hallway wall — our wedding, a trip to Lisbon, a charity gala where Andres had his arm around my waist and his smile aimed at the camera — and I went into his study.

He had a filing system he thought was subtle. Nested folders inside nested folders, labeled with project names that meant nothing on the surface. I had never told him that I'd mapped it two years ago, on a quiet Sunday afternoon when he was at the office and I was looking for the insurance documents and found something else instead.

I found it again now.

The wire transfers were not hidden, exactly. They were just buried — routed through a subsidiary of Madison's company, then through a holding entity I didn't recognize, then into an offshore account with a Cayman address and a name that meant nothing. Twelve transfers over fourteen months. The amounts varied, but the pattern didn't.

I sat at his desk for a long time.

The betrayal had a shape now. It wasn't just a husband who had looked at me like a stranger. It wasn't just a stepsister with rehearsed lilies. It was a structure. A plan. Something that had been running quietly in the background of my marriage for over a year while I was standing in the foreground believing in it.

I closed the files. I made coffee. I let it go cold before I touched it.

Then I called Diana Reeves.

---

Diana had a corner office in Century City with a view that cost more per square foot than most people's apartments. She was fifty-two, precise, and had the kind of stillness that came from spending decades in rooms where a single wrong word cost someone a house. I had met her twice before, at events, and both times she had struck me as a woman who never said anything she hadn't already finished thinking.

She looked at the wire transfer records for a long time without speaking.

"How long have you had these?"

"Since last night."

She looked up. "And before last night?"

"I knew where to find them."

Something shifted in her expression — not quite a smile, but close. She set the papers down and folded her hands on the desk. "Tell me about the Malibu property."

I told her. My mother's estate, the beachfront parcel, the divorce settlement from Jon Parker that had never been fully resolved. The way the asset had been sitting in a gray area for years, technically tied to the Parker family holdings, technically accessible to anyone who knew where to look and had the right paperwork.

Diana was quiet for a moment. Then she reached for her notepad.

"I'm going to need the original settlement documents. And everything you have on Pinnacle Ventures."

"I'll have them to you by morning."

She nodded, already writing. "Evelyn." She didn't look up. "How long has he been moving assets?"

I thought about the cufflinks. The lilies. The eleven minutes in the parking garage.

"Long enough," I said, "that he thought he was finished."

Diana wrote something down. Outside her window, the city spread out in every direction, bright and indifferent and full of people running their own quiet schemes.

I picked up my coffee. It had gone cold, the way I liked it.

I had work to do.

You may also like

Caught In His Web of Manipulation Novel Cover
7.5
My genius boyfriend, Colten, was my savior. I was the "slow" girl he single-handedly tutored into NYU. He built my entire academic future, and I thought our love story was a fairytale. But after I found another woman's birth control pills in his bag and caught him in lie after lie with his lab partner, Addisyn, I finally left him. The price was brutal: I failed every class and faced expulsion. Desperate to save myself, I went back. I played the part of his sweet, obedient girlfriend, using his tutoring to ace my retake exams while secretly planning my escape to a new program. The day my transfer was approved, he ambushed me with a public proposal. In front of a cheering crowd, he got on one knee with a diamond ring, ready to trap me in his perfect life forever. "Will you marry me?" he asked, his voice full of triumph. But before I could answer, a different woman stepped forward. It was Addisyn, and her hand was resting on her pregnant belly.
Divorce After Wedding Fiasco Novel Cover
8.8
My husband, Clark, usually has a quiet demeanor and isn't fond of lively gatherings. Yet, this time, he insisted on being the best man at a friend's wedding. When we arrived, I noticed the bridesmaid was his first love, Raven. Not only did he link arms with her for a toast, but during the ceremony, he also caught the bouquet and pretended to propose to her on one knee. I felt a wave of bitterness, tears welling up as I sought an explanation. His response was dismissive: "It's just a bit of fun between the best man and bridesmaid at weddings. Don't take it so seriously." "We just wanted to make up for missed chances, and you're overreacting?" He was quick to address old regrets with Raven, yet conveniently forgot the wedding ceremony he owed me for seven years. In the past, I might have let it go, but this time, I felt utterly drained. "You've never held a wedding, so you might not get it," Clark remarked, glancing at me in the rearview mirror. "It's just normal for the best man and bridesmaid to have fun at a wedding.
LOVE BEYOND THE SCANDALS  Novel Cover
9.3
Blurb: Elara Monroe was the beautiful woman behind billionaire Sebastian Kingsley’s rise. From his confidant, to being his lover, and his secret weakness. On the very night she was supposed to become his wife, Elara was staged, and dragged into a devastating scandal that ruined her reputation, all she had built over the years. The media wasted no time in crucifying her, even investors fled. And Sebastian, the only one who would have stood with her, but under pressure from his family and the board, publicly disowned her. Heartbroken and disgraced from the betrayal, Elara disappeared. Five years later, she returns, but this time, not as the fallen woman they mocked, but coming into power as the mysterious CEO of Aurelia Holdings, a powerful company, threatening to acquire Kingsley Group. She's not just elegant, she's ruthless, and this time, emotionally untouchable, having only one goal in mind: revenge. But will their second meeting spark forgotten emotions? Will their love bloom beyond scandals? Female Lead: Elara Monroe Age: 27 years old Height: 5’7 tall Appearance: She's graceful and striking, with of course, a sharp cheekbones they looked chiseled, and an elegant posture that commands attention Eye Color: Hazel Background and Backstory: She was orphaned at a young age, raised under sponsorship programs, and through life lessons, she built success through intelligence and discipline. Was occe engaged to Sebastian, but later framed for corporate power struggle, and publicly disgraced. Strengths: Extremely intelligent, emotionally disciplined, a strategic thinker, and very resilient in difficult situations. Ambition: To reclaim her dignity and through her comeback, dismantle the system that destroyed her Weakness: She has deep trust issues and unresolved love for Sebastian Male Lead: Sebastian Kingsley Age: 30 years old. Height: 6’2 tall Appearance: He's tall, has commanding features, possess a cold billionaire aura Eye Color: Steel blue Background and Backstory: He is the heir to Kingsley Group, was raised from a very young age to protect legacy above emotion. And during a scandal involving Elara, his fiancee, he chose reputation over love and lives with regret afterward. Strengths: He's a visionary leader, strategic in closing deals, deeply loyal beneath his flaws Ambition: To save his empire from Elara's wrath, and earn her forgiveness Weakness: Fear of being involved in scandal, guilt, emotional restraint even when dying inside. Supporting Characters: Ivy Hart: Elara’s loyal and trustworthy assistant and confidante while building her empire. Marcus Kingsley: Sebastian’s cousin and CFO Board members, journalists, and elite socialites Villains Vivian Clarke: Sebastian’s overbearing and manipulative ex-fiancée A senior member of the board in Kingsley Group board member who planned Elara’s downfall Exposition: Elara Monroe was once living at the center of power and promise, standing whereost women dreamt to be, right beside Sebastian Kingsley as both his lover and trusted partner. Their relationship wasn't made open, but thriving quietly behind closed doors, hidden from the eyes of the public, and corporate world. As Sebastian worked day and night, and prepared to inherit the Kingsley empire, Elara supported him not just with loyalty, but also with her brilliance, believing love was enough. However, internal rivalries brewed behind closed doors at Kingsley Group. Senior board members who had watched Elara closely, feared her growing influence and questioned her humble origins. When confidential company information was found leaked to rival company, suspicion was easily pinned on her. The media seized the narrative, and without delay, painted Elara as an opportunist who only had the mission of infiltrating Kingsley family only for a hidden for personal gain. Sebastian, who would have defended her, was pressured by his family, down to investors, and an unforgiving public, so he chose silence instead of defending the only woman that mattered to him. His failure to stand by her when she needed him the most, shattered Elara’s faith in love and justice. Within days, she did not only lose her reputation, she lost her career, her prospects, and down to her engagement. She was left broken and humiliated, and with that, Elara disappeared from the elite world, leaving Sebastian who then ascended the throne of power alone, the one she built with him, but burdened by guilt. She was left with wound that never healed. Inciting Incidence: Five years later, the Kingsley Group, which was among the biggest empire, faces an unexpected crisis, which was when an aggressive multinational corporation makes the move of launching a hostile takeover. Sebastian couldn't take it lightly, so he enters an emergency board meeting, fully prepared to fight an unknown enemy, only for him to meet the greatest shock of his life, that the company’s CEO is Elara Monroe. She didn’t just return.
My Fiancé Chose His Mistress Over Our Future Novel Cover
9.1
Ivy’s wedding is a week away when she finds fiancé Jonah has made 217 calls to “trauma-bonded” Lily, the woman who once took a bullet for him. Cake tastings, therapy and their anniversary trip are all aborted so Jonah can rush to Lily’s side; Ivy ends up flying to Tofino with best friend Maya while Lily posts selfies in Jonah’s hoodie. The bride-to-be realizes the wedding is a battle she has already lost.
Peace After Pain: My Unwritten Blueprint Novel Cover
8.3
The algorithm knew my fiancé was cheating on me before I did. It led me, five days before my wedding, to a secret Instagram account. My maid of honor was wearing my wedding dress. The account was a shrine to her three-year affair with my fiancé, Arden. They had crafted a perfect narrative for their followers: they were tragic soulmates, and I was the cold, calculating villain keeping them apart. The comments were full of hate for me. But the final twist of the knife was seeing that my best friend, Dallas, had "liked" a comment wishing I'd have an "accident" and break my leg again. I had saved his life. My family had saved hers from ruin. Why this elaborate, public cruelty? On my wedding day, I was a no-show. Instead, as the elite of New York society watched, the ballroom screens lit up with a presentation I' d prepared, exposing every photo, every text, and every single lie.
Reclaiming the Empire Novel Cover
9.2
At the family banquet welcoming the return of the true daughter, my wealthy adoptive parents publicly announced that I should transfer the shares in my name to the "wronged" true daughter. All the guests praised my parents for their fairness and congratulated the true daughter on her hardships finally coming to an end. Relatives gathered around to persuade me. "You enjoyed twenty years of wealth that should have belonged to her. Giving up the shares is the right thing to do. You should know how to be grateful." My husband Javier Andrews, married to me for only half a year, also stepped forward and gently advised me. "Michelle, this originally belonged to your sister. Give it back to her. From now on, I'll take care of you." Everyone praised him for his deep affection and commended my adoptive parents for their justice, waiting for me to put on a show of sisterly love. Instead, I picked up the red wine from the table, walked over to the pitiful-looking true daughter, and smiling, poured the wine over her head. The entire room erupted in shock. My adoptive father, Kaiden Walsh, trembled with rage, pointing at me and cursing. "You ungrateful wretch!" Javier looked utterly disappointed. "Are you really that jealous of her? Do you have to make such an ugly scene?" I casually set down the empty glass and said lightly. "Ugly? I think this color suits her quite well."