
Divorced And Pregnant: The Ex-Wife's Revenge
Clara's husband of three years walked into their penthouse with two lawyers.
He threw a divorce agreement on the table, demanding she sign away all her assets. If she refused, he would bankrupt her family and send her mother to federal prison.
He did it all for his new girlfriend, Corinne. After stripping Clara of everything, Kane stood by while Corinne publicly humiliated her, stepping on her fingers and mocking her misery. When Kane suspected Clara might be pregnant, he dragged her to a private clinic. He forced her onto an examination table and ordered a deeply invasive medical check-up, treating her like absolute garbage just to ensure she wasn't carrying his heir.
Lying on the cold medical bed in a thin paper gown, Clara's heart completely shattered. She didn't understand how the man who once promised her forever could turn into such a ruthless monster. She was indeed pregnant, but she knew if he found out, he would steal her baby and destroy her completely.
With the help of a tech-genius friend, Clara faked a negative test result and escaped his clutches. The next day, she walked into their company, threw a bold "I QUIT" note right in the mistress's face, and walked away. Touching her belly, Clara swore she would return to make them pay for every single thing they had done.
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Chapter 2
The high-end jewelry buyer was a universe away from the cold street she had just fled. It was all low lighting, hushed conversations, and the soft clinking of expensive glassware. Clara found a small, shadowed counter in the corner and slid her item across the velvet.
It was a small diamond ring she had bought for herself, long before Kane. Barely half a carat, set in a thin platinum band. Modest. Almost forgettable. She had purchased it with her first paycheck, five years ago. It had been with her through everything. Now, it felt as heavy as a tombstone on her finger.
She slipped it off and placed it on the dark wood of the counter. The diamond caught the dim light, throwing tiny, mocking sparkles.
"Excuse me," she said, flagging down the appraiser as he passed. Her voice was hoarse, scraped raw. "I'd like to sell this."
The appraiser, a man with a meticulously waxed mustache and disdainful eyes, gave her a slow, deliberate once-over. He saw her simple navy dress, her disheveled hair, the desperation clinging to her like cheap perfume. His lip curled slightly. "We're not a pawn shop for distressed socialites, madam."
The casual contempt in his voice was like a slap. Humiliation burned hot in her cheeks. But she was too tired to care anymore.
She needed money. She needed to leave this city. Leave him.
"Please," she said, her voice even lower, threaded with a quiet, broken calm. "I don't need an appraisal. Just give me what you can."
She wasn't sure how she had ended up here. After leaving the penthouse, she had walked for what felt like hours through the freezing Manhattan night. The February wind cut through her dress like a blade, but she couldn't feel the cold. Her body was still moving, but her soul felt like an overloaded machine, whirring and sparking, on the verge of collapse.
Then she had passed a liquor store. She went in. Bought a small bottle of whiskey. Stood on a street corner, twisted off the cap, and took a long swallow. The burning liquid seared her throat, and her stomach lurched violently. She took another swallow. Then another.
She wanted to go numb. To forget those storm-gray eyes. To forget the way he had said "You're a means to an end" — not with anger, not with cruelty, just with flat, disinterested finality.
She had already drunk most of the bottle. Now, her thoughts felt like cotton soaked in water — heavy, blurred. She could barely remember walking into this store. All she knew was that she had been running, all night, from the tower of light behind her.
The appraiser opened his mouth to refuse her, when a high-pitched, familiar laugh cut through the store's quiet murmur.
"Well, well. Look what we have here."
Clara's blood ran cold. She would know that voice anywhere.
Corinne Rush, draped in a blood-red dress that clung to her surgically perfected curves, stood at the entrance. And clinging to her arm, looking down at her with a possessive smile, was Kane.
Corinne's eyes locked onto Clara. A look of theatrical shock crossed her face. "Oh, my goodness! Is that Clara?" she exclaimed, her voice loud enough to turn heads. The low hum of conversation faltered.
She glided toward the table, pulling a reluctant Kane with her. Her gaze dropped to the small, modest ring on the counter. Her lips curled into a knowing, contemptuous smile. "Oh, darling, are you... selling your jewelry?"
She reached out and poked the ring with a manicured nail, as if it were a dead insect. "This doesn't look like anything Kane would buy. Too... cheap. But I suppose it suits you."
Flashes erupted from across the room. Paparazzi. Of course. They were always lurking where the Spencers went.
Clara's face went white. She snatched her hand back, trying to palm the ring and hide it from view. It was the last thing she had that was truly hers.
Corinne was faster. She leaned forward and pressed her hand down on top of Clara's, her long, manicured nails digging into Clara's skin. The pain was sharp and real.
"Don't be shy," Corinne whispered, her voice a venomous hiss meant only for Clara. "Down to your last pennies, are you? Selling cheap trinkets? How pathetic."
Something inside Clara snapped. The haze of alcohol was ripped apart by a surge of pure, unadulterated rage.
Kane stood a few feet away, his arms crossed, watching the scene unfold with a look of bored indifference. He made no move to stop Corinne.
"You're pathetic, Clara," he said, his voice laced with disgust. "Making a scene like this."
Clara's hand trembled. She reached for a crystal water glass on the counter, her only thought to wipe the smug, triumphant smirk off Corinne's face.
But Corinne was a master of this game. As Clara's hand moved, Corinne let out a small, frightened gasp and threw herself backward, stumbling dramatically. She landed perfectly in Kane's waiting arms, a damsel in distress.
The store erupted in gasps. The camera flashes became a blinding strobe. From every angle, it looked like the crazy, drunk ex-wife had just tried to assault the new girlfriend.
Two burly security guards materialized at her side. They grabbed her arms in a bruising grip.
"Get her out of here," Kane ordered, his voice like ice.
They dragged her, stumbling, through the crowded showroom and shoved her out the revolving doors. She fell hard onto the cold, damp pavement, the rough concrete scraping her knee through her dress.
The sound of laughter and the swell of music followed her out before the door swung shut.
A few feet away, gleaming under the streetlights, lay her little ring. It had rolled to the edge of a sewer grate.
She crawled toward it, her vision blurry with tears of rage and humiliation. As her fingers brushed against the cold metal, a heavy boot came down on her hand. A passerby, oblivious, had stepped right on her.
A cry of pain escaped her lips, but it was drowned out by a sob that turned into a hysterical laugh.
She pushed herself up, ignoring the throbbing in her hand, and plunged her fingers into the grimy gap of the sewer grate. She could feel the ring, cold and unforgiving.
Just as she closed her fingers around it, a wave of dizziness washed over her. Her stomach lurched violently. She collapsed to her knees on the curb, dry heaving again, the spasms more intense than before.
Suddenly, a swarm of flashbulbs exploded around her. Corinne's assistant had tipped off the paparazzi, and they were circling like vultures, cameras clicking, shouting questions about the 'drunk ex-wife'. In the chaos, Clara's phone was knocked from her grip, skittering across the pavement into the dark.
She scrambled on all fours, but the wall of photographers closed in, blinding her.
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9.4
Michael Carter is an undercover FBI agent on a mission to take down ruthless mafia king Fernando Ramírez-the man he believes killed his sister. But getting close to Fernando means playing a dangerous game, one where seduction and power blur the lines between enemy and lover.
When Michael uncovers a shocking truth, his thirst for revenge turns into a fight for something far more dangerous-his own heart. Now, torn between duty and desire, he must decide: destroy the man he swore to take down or surrender to the one thing he never saw coming.
Love has never been more lethal.

7.6
Johana walked half a mile through a brutal blizzard just to secure a tutoring job with the elite Black family.
But the very night she was hired, she received a terrifying call from the ER—her quiet roommate, Hazelle, had been drugged and severely traumatized at a Hamptons party.
When Johana rushed to the hospital, she didn't find the police. Instead, she found a team of ruthless billionaires erasing the crime.
Leading them was Dalton Black, the cold, arrogant older brother of her new student.
Within minutes, Dalton's fixers wiped the hospital's security footage, deleted all digital evidence, and forcefully transferred Hazelle to a locked private psychiatric facility.
"We are ensuring her privacy."
Dalton's voice was devoid of emotion, treating the horrific assault like a minor PR glitch.
His friends mocked Johana's powerlessness, while Dalton authorized a blank check to pay for the private ward, effectively burying the scandal and buying their silence.
Johana stood in the sterile hallway, trembling with a mix of despair and absolute rage.
How could they destroy an innocent girl's life and simply pay to make it disappear? Why was the truth so easily erased by money?
She had no wealth, no connections, and no proof, but she refused to be a victim of their cover-up.
Staring directly into Dalton's intimidating, icy blue eyes, Johana made a vow.
"I don't want your money. I will find out what you monsters did to her."
She thought the billionaire heir would crush her on the spot, but instead, he watched her walk away and quietly ordered his assistant: "Find out everything about Johana Neal."

7.7
Rory stood on the witness stand, forced by her father into an impossible choice: secure her dying mother's medical funding, or save her innocent boyfriend.
She looked Corbin right in his trusting eyes and lied to the court, testifying that he was the one driving the car during the fatal hit-and-run, sending him to a maximum-security prison for ten years.
The betrayal destroyed him. Corbin's father died of a heart attack upon hearing the guilty verdict. Six years later, Corbin returned as a ruthless billionaire and systematically blacklisted Rory from every job in the city. He cornered her into singing at his private club, humiliating her by forcing her to drink scotch—knowing she was severely allergic—and making her throw away his promise ring just to earn a stack of cash.
"Remember this moment. This is only the beginning."
She endured his cruel revenge because she was hiding a desperate secret: she was raising his five-year-old daughter, Willa. But when Willa's congenital heart defect suddenly worsened, requiring an impossible one-million-dollar surgery, Rory realized Corbin's calculated blockade had left her completely trapped with no way to save their child.
Staring at the sterile hospital walls, the last shred of her guilt burned away, replaced by a cold, hard resolve. He had destroyed her career and backed her into a corner, but he was the only one with the money. Wiping her tears, Rory turned and headed straight for Vance Tower.

9.7
Giana woke up drugged and burning with fever in a luxurious hotel suite. Standing before her was Cornel Stark, the most ruthless billionaire in New York.
Memories of her past life stabbed into her brain. In that life, her adoptive family and her fiancé Gary had stolen her inheritance and left her to die a brutal, agonizing death.
She also remembered how fighting Cornel only made him more violent. So this time, she didn't scream.
She endured his brutal punishment, escaped the moment he let his guard down, and swallowed a Plan B pill on the freezing streets.
Returning to her adoptive family's mansion, she faced the people who had destroyed her. Her fiancé and her stepsister put on masks of fake concern, secretly mocking her.
Instead of throwing a useless tantrum like before, Giana deliberately threw herself down the steep wooden stairs.
She smashed her head against the marble floor, using her own blood to shatter their plans and win back her mother's trust.
She thought she had finally taken control. She was ready to crush the people who had betrayed her and live for herself.
But she didn't understand why the billionaire she had just escaped was suddenly turning her life upside down.
When she woke up in the hospital, her room wasn't filled with her family's fake tears, but an ocean of blood-red roses.
The heavy door swung open, and Cornel Stark walked in, his gray eyes locking onto her with a dark, predatory hunger.
"Remember this feeling, Giana. Every breath you take belongs to me now."

9.1
The heavy oak doors of the Crane estate splintered under the battering ram. Annetta was just putting her five-year-old daughter to sleep when the SWAT team stormed the nursery.
They told her that her husband, Major Alek Crane, was killed in action overseas. But instead of a hero's funeral, he was branded a national traitor, and the feds were seizing every penny of their wealth.
Lead investigator Issac Rocha dragged Alek's charred remains into the grand hall just to mock him. He stripped Annetta of her wedding band, confiscated her winter coat, and officially exiled her, her daughter, and her hostile mother-in-law to a freezing Appalachian death zone. In the federal holding cell, the extended family turned on Annetta, calling her a cheap commoner and leaving her to shiver on the concrete floor. They were dumped in an abandoned mining town with nothing but canvas jumpsuits to die in the snow.
Annetta knew Alek was framed in a ruthless political hit. Issac Rocha wanted them to rot in the mud and freeze to death, completely forgotten by the world.
"We are going to live, and we are going to burn Issac Rocha to the ground."
But Issac made one fatal mistake. He didn't know the quiet, submissive daughter-in-law had spent the last three years secretly building a military-grade doomsday bunker right in the heart of that very mountain. Stepping past the freezing mud, Annetta initiated the biometric scan, and the massive steel blast doors slowly swung open.

9.6
I was only three and a half years old, living in a damp basement and beaten daily by Enoch Pruitt with a heavy leather whip.
"Get up, you useless waste of space!"
He always told me I was a stray he had picked out of the garbage.
But during one brutal beating that nearly stopped my heart, time froze, and a glowing figure called The Chronicler appeared.
"You are not an abandoned orphan, Clare. You carry the blood of the highest gods."
He revealed that I was the stolen daughter of the ultra-wealthy Barrett family.
Then, he showed me the horrific ending of my previous life.
I had died right here on this bloody dirt floor.
My real parents and three brothers went completely insane with grief, turning into ruthless monsters who destroyed themselves and the entire world to avenge me.
Meanwhile, the Pruitt family kept torturing me, locking me in a woodshed and feeding me moldy bread.
The memory of my bones breaking and my real mother's agonizing screams crushed my chest.
Why did I have to suffer like an animal while my true family tore the world apart looking for me?
This time, I refused to die in the mud.
I accepted my divine blood, my eyes glowing gold as I summoned a bolt of purple lightning to strike my abuser.
I just needed to survive the night.
Because my real father's heavily armed convoy was already tearing up the mountain, ready to burn this hell to the ground.