Follow
Chapters
Share
The Disowned Wife's Revenge: Buried Secrets and Billionaire Love Novel Cover

The Disowned Wife's Revenge: Buried Secrets and Billionaire Love

Eleanor Vance had spent a lifetime trying to earn her family's love, offering them her heart, her talent, and her quiet devotion. But on Cassandra's birthday, her peace offering was met with a vicious lie and a stinging slap across the face. In that single, shattering moment, Eleanor realized she had been buying tickets to a bus that would never come, and something inside her snapped. Her adopted sister, Cassandra, always commanded their parents' adoration, leaving Eleanor a perpetual shadow. So when Cassandra theatrically dropped Eleanor's painstakingly restored emerald brooch, blaming her, Eleanor's mother, Vivian, lashed out with a stinging slap. Her father, Robert, coldly demanded an apology, choosing a manipulator's tears over his own daughter's truth. The familiar ache in Eleanor's chest confirmed their twisted love was not for her. A quiet, terrifying resolve settled within her. She knelt, not in humility, but with chilling purpose, tossed the emerald brooch into the roaring fireplace. ""You don't deserve it,"" she stated, devoid of warmth. Later, from a hidden compartment, she pulled out a sleek, black burner phone. ""It's time,"" Eleanor whispered. ""Initiate Phase One. Prepare the assets.""
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The box in Eleanor Vance's hand felt heavier than its physical weight. It was wrapped in silver paper, the corners creased with a precision that bordered on obsessive. Inside rested a vintage emerald brooch.

It wasn't an auction house trophy; Eleanor didn't have the funds for that. It was a diamond in the rough she had found in a dusty antique shop in the Lower East Side, tarnished and forgotten.

She had spent three months restoring it herself, polishing the silver filigree until her fingers bled, sourcing a replacement stone from a broken earring. It was perfect. It was a peace offering. It was a lie.

She stood in the foyer of the Vance Manor, the marble floor cold enough to penetrate the soles of her sensible, scuffed heels. The air smelled of lavender polish and old money-a scent that used to mean safety, but now just made her stomach twist into a hard, cold knot.

Laughter drifted from the drawing room. It was a light, airy sound. Her mother's laughter. Vivian Vance didn't laugh like that for Eleanor. That specific pitch, that adoration, was reserved for one person only.

Eleanor checked her watch. Five minutes early. Yet, standing there in the silence of the hallway, she felt chronically, unforgivably late.

She took a breath, held it until her lungs burned, and pushed the double oak doors open.

The laughter died instantly.

It wasn't a gradual fade. It was a guillotine chop.

Cassandra sat on the velvet chaise lounge, bathed in the warm glow of the fireplace. She looked like a porcelain doll, fragile and exquisite in a dress that cost more than Eleanor's entire yearly stipend. Upon seeing Eleanor, Cassandra flinched. It was a small, theatrical movement-a widening of the eyes, a slight recoil-as if Eleanor were a stray dog that had wandered in with muddy paws.

"Eleanor," Vivian said. The warmth evaporated from her voice, replaced by a tone that suggested she was speaking to a telemarketer. She was already rushing to Cassandra's side, smoothing hair that wasn't messy, soothing a wound that didn't exist. "You're here."

Robert Vance, the patriarch, lowered his newspaper. He frowned, the lines on his forehead deepening. The interruption of his peace was evidently a personal affront. "Wipe your feet," he grunted, though Eleanor hadn't stepped off the rug.

Eleanor walked forward. Her heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic bird in a cage, but her face remained a mask of practiced indifference. She had learned long ago that showing emotion in this house was like bleeding in a shark tank.

"Happy Birthday, Cassandra," Eleanor said. Her voice was steady.

She extended the silver box.

Cassandra reached out. Her hand trembled. It was a masterpiece of performance art. The trembling suggested fear, suggested that Eleanor might bite her.

Cassandra's fingers brushed the box.

Then, she dropped it.

It wasn't a slip. Eleanor saw the fingers splay, saw the deliberate release. Gravity took over. The box hit the hardwood floor with a sickening thud. The sound echoed in the high-ceilinged room like a gunshot.

"Ow!" Cassandra cried out, clutching her wrist to her chest, curling into a ball of distress. "You threw it at me!"

Vivian gasped. She was on her feet in a second, her hand lashing out to smack Eleanor's arm away. "Clumsy! Or was that on purpose? You've always been jealous of her!"

The sting on Eleanor's arm was sharp, but the sting in her chest was dull, familiar, an old ache that never quite healed.

"She dropped it," Eleanor stated. No shouting. No pleading. Just a fact.

"Don't lie!" Cassandra sobbed, burying her face in Vivian's cashmere shoulder. "She looked at me with those eyes... she wanted to hurt me!"

Robert stood up now. His presence filled the room, a looming shadow of authority. "Eleanor. Apologize to your sister. Now."

Eleanor looked at her father. She looked at the man who had taught her to ride a bike, the man who had once carried her on his shoulders. That man was gone. Replaced by this stranger who believed the tears of a manipulator over the truth of his own blood.

"No," Eleanor said.

The word hung in the air. The atmospheric pressure in the room dropped.

Vivian's face turned a mottled shade of red. "What did you say?"

"I said no," Eleanor repeated. "I didn't drop it. I didn't throw it. She let it go. I will not apologize for gravity."

"You ungrateful wretch," Vivian hissed, stepping closer. "After all we've done for you. We let you live in the guest house. We give you a stipend. And you treat your sister-your superior in every way-with such malice?"

Eleanor scanned the room. She looked at the lavish furniture, the heavy drapes, the cold faces of her parents, the performative victimhood of the girl they had adopted five years ago.

A memory flashed. Eleanor at ten years old. A broken vase. Cassandra, new to the house, smiling behind her hand. Eleanor taking the blame, thinking it was noble to protect the new girl.

She realized then, with a clarity that felt like ice water in her veins, that she was waiting for a bus that would never come. She was waiting for them to love her again. She was buying vintage gifts and restoring them with her own hands, paying a toll for a bridge that had burned down years ago.

She didn't need their love. She didn't even want it. Not this version of it.

Something in her chest snapped. It was an audible sound in her mind, like a dry twig breaking under a heavy boot.

Eleanor knelt down.

"Look at her," Robert scoffed. "Finally showing some humility."

Eleanor picked up the silver box. She stood up, brushing a speck of dust from the wrapping.

"Give it to her," Vivian commanded. "And beg for forgiveness."

Eleanor opened the box. The emerald brooch glinted in the firelight. It was beautiful. Intricate. Valuable not in money, but in time.

She looked at the brooch. Then she looked at Cassandra, who was peeking out from between her fingers, checking to see if the show was over.

Eleanor turned toward the fireplace.

"What are you doing?" Cassandra asked, her voice losing its tremble.

Eleanor tossed the brooch into the fire.

It arced through the air, a glittering comet, and landed in the heart of the flames.

"No!" Cassandra gasped, jumping up, genuine shock breaking her act. "That's... that was pretty!"

Vivian screamed. "Are you insane?"

Eleanor watched the metal begin to blacken. She watched the gift be consumed by the heat. It felt good. It felt like breathing for the first time in years.

"Since you can't hold it," Eleanor said, her voice devoid of any warmth, "you don't deserve it."

She turned her back on them.

"Where are you going?" Robert roared. "Go to your room! You are forbidden to leave this house until you learn some respect!"

Eleanor paused. She looked at the door, then back at them. Leaving now would be messy. She had documents to retrieve, loose ends to tie.

"Fine," Eleanor said coldly. "I'll go to my room."

She walked out, leaving the chaos behind her.

Up in her bedroom-the smallest room in the manor, the one meant for a governess-Eleanor closed the door and locked it. She leaned against the wood, sliding down until she hit the floor. Her hands were shaking. Not from fear. From adrenaline.

She reached into a hidden compartment inside her closet, behind a loose floorboard. She pulled out a sleek, black burner phone.

She dialed a number she knew by heart.

"Status?" a distorted voice answered.

"It's time," Eleanor said. Her voice was different now. The tremble was gone. It was cold, sharp, authoritative. "Initiate Phase One. Prepare the assets."

"Copy that. We are standing by."

Eleanor hung up. She looked at her reflection in the mirror. The girl who just burned a bridge looked back. She didn't look sad.

She looked dangerous.

You may also like

BILLIONAIRE HEIRESS RECLAIMED HER THRONE  Novel Cover
7.7
For three years, Avery Woods lived a lie. Trapped in a high-stakes psychological "simulation" designed by her own father, she was forced to endure the life of a discarded trophy wife, scrubbing floors and suffering in silence to temper her mind into a weapon. When the simulation shattered, Avery emerged as the Sovereign-the most experienced CEO in human history, having lived twenty years of strategic warfare in a matter of months. She tore down her father's global conglomerate, erased the world's digital memories, and sought a quiet life in the shadows. But you cannot delete a god. Now, a year after the "Great Erasure," the world has gone dark, but the connection remains. Four hundred million people are syncing up through a biological "Chorus," using their own neural pathways to rebuild a decentralized, inescapable Hive Mind. At its center is Mila, a child who is more code than flesh, and the only anchor strong enough to stabilize a new reality. From the high-tech bunkers of Moscow to the hallucination-filled "Dead Zone" of the Sahara, Avery and her protector-assassin, Julian Vane, must race to stop the Chorus before it rewrites the physical world. The satellites are dead. The servers are gone. But the Silence is screaming.
Exposing Xander's Scheme: The Rejected Proposal Novel Cover
8.5
The Manhattan Grand Hotel ballroom glittered with crystal chandeliers and the polished smiles of my former classmates. Eight years had passed since I'd last stood in a room like this, but I was no longer the same desperate girl who once begged for scraps of affection. I smoothed the fabric of my navy dress—simple but elegant, nothing like the desperate-to-impress outfits I used to wear. My wedding ring caught the light as I reached for a glass of champagne, the platinum band a quiet reminder of everything I'd built since fleeing this city. "Julia Palmer," a woman with perfectly highlighted hair squealed, air-kissing both my cheeks. "I heard you moved to London! How exotic." "Hello, Melissa," I said, smiling politely. "London was wonderful." "And now you're back! Did you ever think you'd return to Manhattan?" I took a sip of champagne, using the moment to gather my thoughts. "Life has a way of bringing you full circle." "What have you been doing all these years?
Husband's Fraudulent Schemes Novel Cover
8.1
The fluorescent lights of Prometheus Tech's executive floor cast harsh shadows across the quarterly reports spread before me. My fingers traced the revenue projections—numbers that should have filled me with pride, yet somehow felt hollow. Each digit represented decisions I'd stepped back from, strategies I'd entrusted to Stephen's hands. I touched the moonstone necklace at my throat, my mother's final gift, feeling its familiar coolness against my skin. The gesture had become unconscious over the years, a tether to something real when everything else felt like performance. The shrill ring of my phone shattered the silence. Stephen's name flashed on the screen, and something in my chest tightened before I even answered. "Ari, where the hell are you?" His voice crackled with barely contained fury. "At the office, reviewing the quarterly—" "You abandoned her!" The words hit like physical blows. "Brianna's been locked out of our house for hours.
I Donated My Eye to the Man Who Betrayed Me Novel Cover
8.5
The cathedral's soaring arches had never felt more suffocating. I stood at the altar in my custom Vera Wang gown, the delicate lace catching the light that streamed through stained glass windows. Five hundred of Manhattan's elite filled the pews behind me, their whispers barely audible beneath the string quartet's rendition of Pachelbel's Canon. "Are you ready?" Benedict whispered, his fingers warm against mine. His eyes—my eyes, really, since I'd donated my cornea anonymously to save his sight—sparkled with what I thought was love. I nodded, unable to speak past the lump in my throat. Five years of devotion, of helping him rebuild his Wall Street empire from nothing after the accident that had taken his sight. Five years of believing we were building something unbreakable. "I love you," I whispered back, the words carrying all my hopes for our future. The minister smiled benevolently.
MARRIED TO THE CEO WHO RUINED ME: HIS BRIDE, HIS REVENGE Novel Cover
8.6
He shattered her heart to avenge a past that wasn’t hers. Now he desires her in his bed—as his wife. Marceline Valino once believed in love. She gave her heart—and her innocence—to Cross Dejava, the boy who whispered promises in the dark, igniting dreams of a forever that felt so real. But by morning, her world was left in ruins. Private photos were leaked, her name dragged through the mud, and at the eye of the storm? Cross, smirking, cold, and ruthless. “You mean nothing to me,” he said, delivering a blow that would leave scars. “You’re just the bastard daughter of my father’s mistress.” His vengeance had never aimed at her heart; it was meant to punish the daughter for her mother’s sins—an ex-lover who had torn his family apart. Pregnant and abandoned, Marceline begged for mercy, but all she received was the echo of his silence. When she lost the child, she lost every last piece of the girl she used to be. Now, five years later, she’s preparing to return—broke, desperate, and willing to do anything to save her ailing mother. Anything… except this. Because the man extending a lifeline isn’t a savior. It’s Cross. And he has no desire for her heartfelt apologies; he craves her complete submission. A contract marriage awaits her. No love. No escape. No mercy. But Marceline isn’t the naive girl he once broke. She’s a woman who has risen from the ashes, ready to play his game. And as the pieces of their lives fall into place, she’s determining when—exactly—she will ignite a fire that could burn it all down. The future promises a reckoning, and she's preparing to seize it.
My Husband Aborted Our Child For His Mistress Novel Cover
9.1
Chandler's childhood friend had just lost her husband. On our fifth wedding anniversary, he dragged both mother and daughter into a jazz club. In front of everyone, he pulled off my wedding ring: "Paige needs a title now; the ring doesn’t suit you anymore." "From tomorrow, quit your job and focus on taking care of them at home." The room went silent. Everyone awaited my reaction, expecting an outburst. Instead, I calmly placed the pre-signed divorce agreement on the table and walked away. A friend stood up, ready to intervene, but Chandler swirled his whiskey and sneered: "Let her go. She’ll be back before sunrise, begging for forgiveness." As the door slammed shut, the room erupted in mocking laughter. What they didn't know was that half an hour earlier, I'd received an email confirming my visa approval. The person responsible for picking me up was already waiting outside my home ten minutes ago. This time, I was leaving for good.