Follow
Chapters
Share
Betrayed Wife's Escape Novel Cover

Betrayed Wife's Escape

The leather chair in James Morrison's office felt cold beneath me as I shifted uncomfortably. The family lawyer had summoned me for what I thought was a routine meeting about my grandfather's estate. The morning sunlight streamed through the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting long shadows across his polished mahogany desk. "I've finalized all the paperwork, Ms. Hayes," James said, sliding a thick folder toward me. "Congratulations are in order. You're now the sole heir to the Hayes fortune." I blinked, momentarily stunned. "I'm... a billionaire?" "Indeed." His thin lips curved into what might have been a smile. "Just over twelve billion, according to our latest valuation." My grandfather had been wealthy, but I'd never imagined...
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

I couldn't sleep that night. Ethan's words echoed in my mind like a cruel mantra: "You were a family obligation... a business arrangement." The fake marriage certificate lay on my nightstand, a constant reminder of the seven years I'd spent loving a man who had been living a lie.

Morning light filtered through the curtains as I dragged myself from bed. My body felt heavy, my mind foggy. The nausea that had plagued me for weeks returned with a vengeance, sending me rushing to the bathroom.

This wasn't just emotional distress. Something was wrong.

I called Dr. Rebecca Chen, our family physician since I was a child. Her office was a sanctuary of sorts—the one place where I felt safe from the lies that had become my life.

"Summer," Dr. Chen greeted me with warm concern as I settled onto the examination table. "You look pale."

"I've been feeling off for weeks," I admitted. "Fatigue, nausea..."

She nodded, her experienced hands checking my vitals. "Any chance you could be pregnant?"

The question hung in the air between us. Pregnant. The one thing Ethan and I had wanted for years but never achieved.

"I don't think so," I said softly. "We've tried for years without success."

Dr. Chen's expression remained neutral as she conducted the examination, but I caught the slight widening of her eyes when she checked the test results.

"Summer," she said gently, "you're approximately two months pregnant. And... there are two heartbeats."

The world seemed to stop. "Two?"

"You're carrying twins," she confirmed, her voice softening. "Congratulations."

Twin babies. Our babies. The news should have filled me with joy, but instead, a cold dread settled in my stomach.

Dr. Chen must have noticed my reaction because her expression grew serious. "Summer, there's something else we need to discuss. Your blood work shows significant anemia—worse than usual."

"From the transfusions," I said automatically.

She nodded, her eyes concerned. "Giving blood regularly for years has taken a toll on your health. And now with the pregnancy..."

"The transfusions for Ethan," I clarified, still processing her words. "To save his life."

"Yes," Dr. Chen said, looking confused. "Didn't you know? You've been his donor since childhood. Your rare blood type has kept him alive all these years."

My head spun with this new revelation. I had known about the transfusions—had willingly given my blood whenever Ethan needed it—but I'd never realized it was me specifically who had saved his life.

"I need to tell him about the babies," I said suddenly, rising from the examination table.

I found Ethan in his home office, reviewing documents with a distracted expression.

"Ethan," I said from the doorway. "I have something important to tell you."

He barely glanced up. "Can it wait? I'm preparing for tomorrow's announcement."

"Announcement?"

"About Lauren and me," he said dismissively. "We're finally going public with our marriage."

My heart pounded against my ribs. "Ethan, I'm pregnant."

That got his attention. His head snapped up, eyes narrowing. "That's not possible."

"Dr. Chen confirmed it today. Twins. Two months along."

Something flickered across his face—shock, perhaps even a moment of softness—before his expression hardened again.

"Lauren is pregnant too," he said coldly. "Three months along. My son."

The room seemed to tilt beneath me. "Your son?"

"Yes," he said, rising from his desk. "My real family. Lauren and I have been planning this for months."

"What about us?" I whispered.

"There is no us," Ethan said, his voice devoid of emotion. "There never really was. Summer, you need to accept reality. If you're pregnant—and I'm not convinced you are—you should consider your options."

"You mean terminate?"

"I mean be practical," he said, turning away. "I already have a family to think about."

I left his office numb with shock, my hand instinctively moving to my still-flat stomach.

Three days later, I sat in a coffee shop, staring blankly at my untouched latte. The bell above the door chimed, and Lauren swept in like she owned the place.

"Summer," she said with false warmth, sliding into the seat across from me. "I thought we should talk."

She placed her phone on the table between us, screen up. Photos appeared—Ethan in a tuxedo, Lauren in white. Their wedding day.

"We've been married for four years," she said, her voice dripping with satisfaction. "Not seven like your fake ceremony."

"You knew," I whispered.

"Of course I knew." She leaned forward, her perfectly manicured nails tapping against her phone. "Did you really think Ethan would choose you over me? I saved his life."

"No," I said quietly. "I did."

Her smile faltered for just a moment before returning, sharper than before. "Ethan has been giving you fertility medication for months," she said venomously. "Those vitamins he insisted you take? They were designed to prevent pregnancy."

The cup trembled in my hand. "What?"

"To make sure you could never give him children," Lauren continued, her eyes gleaming with malice. "And now that you're carrying his bastards—"

"They're his children," I said firmly.

Lauren's laugh was cold. "Ethan will never acknowledge them. They'll be nothing but a reminder of his obligation to you."

As she gathered her things to leave, she leaned close, her voice a whisper against my ear.

"If you're smart, you'll get rid of them now. Because no matter what happens, those babies will never be part of our family."

She left me sitting there, her words burning in my ears as tears blurred my vision.

You may also like

Abandoned by Unfaithful Husband Novel Cover
8.0
The Lincoln Center glittered like a diamond against Manhattan's night sky. Through the floor-to-ceiling windows, the city lights winked at us, as if sharing in the celebration of Aurora Tech's most ambitious product launch to date. I smoothed the lapels of my white tailored suit, the one Alexander had called 'too severe' this morning. Too severe for the wife of a tech mogul, perhaps, but perfect for the co-founder who had poured three years of her life into developing the neural interface technology we were unveiling tonight. I caught my reflection in the polished chrome of a nearby pillar—my dark hair swept into a sleek chignon, pearls at my throat, the heirloom from my grandmother that Alexander always dismissed as 'old-fashioned.' The woman staring back at me looked confident, successful. If only she knew how hollow I felt inside. "Isabella, darling, you should be closer to the stage," Ava Chen, our marketing director, whispered as she passed by with a tray of champagne flutes. "It's your night too." I smiled tightly. "Alexander prefers to take the spotlight. I'm fine right here." The truth was, I'd grown accustomed to the shadows.
After My Husband Chose His Mistress Over Our Baby Novel Cover
9.6
The rain lashed against the floor-to-ceiling windows of our Manhattan penthouse, blurring the city lights into streaks of weeping gold. I smoothed the fabric of my dress, my fingers trembling slightly. On the marble kitchen island, the Beef Wellington—Spencer’s favorite—sat cooling, a centerpiece for a celebration that felt fragile even before it began. I touched the velvet box in my pocket. Inside lay the positive test, a plastic stick that had turned my world into something terrifying and beautiful. A baby. A chance to fix the cracks in the foundation of our marriage. The front door clicked open. My breath hitched. Spencer strode in, shedding his soaked trench coat without looking at me.
Betrayal in the Marriage War Novel Cover
7.9
My hands trembled as I raised the paddle again. "Two million dollars," I called out, my voice steadier than I felt. The auction room, with its polished mahogany and crystal chandeliers, suddenly seemed airless. "Two million one hundred thousand," a silky voice countered from the back of the room. I turned, already knowing who I'd see. Giselle Silva sat there, legs crossed elegantly, a mocking smile playing on her perfectly painted lips. She hadn't even bothered to raise her paddle—just called out the bid as if buying a coffee. "The bid is at two million one hundred thousand," the auctioneer, Elena Rodriguez, announced. Her eyes flickered between us, sensing the tension crackling in the air. I swallowed hard.
Disposable Wife: He Married A Nobody? Think Again Novel Cover
8.9
In the third year of marriage, she uncovered a cruel truth-her husband had treated her as nothing more than a pawn in his medical research. Their union was a sham, and his real wife was his childhood sweetheart all along. Evelyn walked away without hesitation. Soon after, she learned she was the daughter of the nation's richest man-and had unknowingly married the continent's most powerful tycoon. Her ex waited for her to beg, only to discover her new status and rising influence. As he pleaded in regret, her new husband pulled her close and declared, "She's mine now."
From Fallen Heiress to Bride Novel Cover
9.6
The shrill ring of my phone cut through the darkness, jolting me from a fitful sleep. 3:07 AM glowed on my bedside clock, casting an eerie blue light across my small Brooklyn bedroom. My heart immediately lurched into my throat—nothing good ever came from calls at this hour. I fumbled for my phone, nearly knocking over the glass of water on my nightstand. "Hello?" My voice was thick with sleep, but the adrenaline was already coursing through my veins. "Miss Harper." The formal, measured voice of Arthur Vance, my family's longtime lawyer, sent ice through my veins. "I regret to inform you that your father has suffered a massive heart attack. He's been rushed to Mount Sinai Hospital from the Hamptons estate. The doctors... they're not optimistic." My father.
When the moon sinks and the shadows are scattered horizontally and diagonally Novel Cover
9.5
Chapter 1 : Shadows Cast at Moonset** Seven years into their marriage, Kathleen knew her place in David’s world. To him, she was less a wife and more a convenient outlet—a bedmate for whenever the urge struck. After yet another passionless encounter, he absently nuzzled the top of her head. “If I haven’t found her by the time I turn thirty, I’ll settle down with you for good.” Kathleen knew exactly who occupied his heart: the little girl who had pulled him from the sea over twenty years before. He’d once confessed promising her, even then, that he would marry her when he grew up. For seven years, Kathleen had asked the same question—what if you never find her? For seven years, David had never answered. But tonight, she finally had the answer she’d longed for. A fragile hope fluttered in her chest, because after midnight, David would be thirty. She had thrown a lavish party at his estate on the outskirts of town. Now, in the castle’s top-floor suite, the frantic energy of their encounter had dissipated. In one hour, they would stand before that same castle, hand in hand, ready to face the future. Wincing at the soreness in her lower back, Kathleen leaned in and pressed a soft kiss to his Adam’s apple, her gaze hazy with lingering desire. “Wait for me.” An hour later, she stood in a shimmering fishtail gown, a pair of matching wedding bands clutched in her palm. *After tonight*, she thought, *we can finally leave the past behind and truly begin.* But when she turned, she saw David embracing another woman. The man who was usually so aloof he rarely smiled now held a look of wild, disbelieving joy, his voice trembling. “I finally found you!” The woman wore a simple white dress, her face a portrait of innocent alarm. Kathleen stood frozen, the warmth draining from her fingertips in an instant. It was Emily, the daughter of the Jiang family’s former housekeeper. She had lived in the household with her mother since childhood. Kathleen’s father had always treated her kindly, even sponsoring her overseas studies seven years ago. Their personalities had never meshed, resulting in a relationship of consistent, cool politeness. “Mr. David,” Emily stammered, shrinking back slightly, “you… you must have the wrong person.” David released her, his fingers gently tracing the jade pendant hanging from her neck. His voice softened, as if handling a priceless treasure. “This is the token I gave you when you saved me. Why did you never come find me?” Emily looked bewildered. “I… I had a high fever after nearly drowning as a child. I lost some memories. I don’t remember who gave me this pendant.” “It was me,” David said, his eyes blazing. “I told you back then, you would be my only bride in this lifetime.” The words were a knife, plunging straight into Kathleen’s heart. Emily’s gaze, however, drifted over David’s shoulder, locking onto Kathleen. “But Mr. David, you’re already married to Ms. Kathleen.” David turned. The tenderness in his eyes vanished, replaced by the detached coolness reserved for a stranger. “I told her before we married that my heart belonged to someone else. She made her choice.” A suffocating pain seized her chest, stealing her breath. She remembered seven years ago, when the Shen and Jiang families first broached the alliance. The first time she saw David, she’d fallen for those cool, distant eyes. Even then, he had stated plainly: he was waiting for someone. He would never love her. But she, stubborn and proud, had assured him, “I can wait. If you truly find her, I’ll step aside willingly.” She’d been too young, too confident, convinced that time and closeness would work in her favor. Just last night, he had held her and murmured, “Kathleen, let’s have a proper wedding.” Cradled in his arms, her heart had raced, believing she had finally grasped the moon. Now, he was saying his heart belonged only to Emily.