
Divorcing The Ruthless Billionaire Husband
9.2 / 10.0
Share
Averie spent hours preparing a perfect third-anniversary dinner for her billionaire husband, Jarett Sharp.
Instead of celebrating, she received an anonymous photo of him intimately holding another woman.
When Jarett finally arrived, he didn't even look guilty.
"Candida. It's okay. Don't be scared. I'm on my way."
He simply took a call from his mistress, shoved Averie aside, and walked right back out the door.
That same night, Averie's father suffered a massive heart attack.
The hospital demanded a half-million-dollar deposit before they would operate.
But when Averie frantically tried to use the emergency medical trust card Jarett had given her, it was declined.
Jarett had deliberately frozen her access to the funds just hours earlier.
While she begged his assistant on the phone, Jarett refused to be disturbed, busy wrapping his expensive coat around his mistress in the hospital garden.
Averie collapsed in the hallway, realizing the man she loved was deliberately letting her father die.
In the end, a childhood friend stepped in to pay the bill and save her father's life, while her billionaire husband later pinned her to their bed, throwing a check at her and reminding her he had bought her for three million dollars.
Averie didn't shed a single tear.
She slowly ripped his check into pieces, left her massive diamond ring on the dresser, and walked out into the cold New York night with nothing but her old suitcase.
She pulled out her phone and dialed her old ballet professor.
She wasn't just going to leave Jarett Sharp. She was going to destroy him.
Divorcing The Ruthless Billionaire Husband Chapter 1
The scent of pan-seared steak, rosemary, and garlic filled the vast Park Avenue penthouse. Averie Fletcher made one last adjustment to the silver candlestick, its flame dancing and casting a warm glow across the perfectly set table for two.
Three years. Tonight marked three years since she had become Mrs. Jarett Sharp.
She smoothed the silk of her dress, a nervous habit, and glanced at the clock on the wall. 8:30 p.m. He was an hour and a half late. It wasn't unusual, but tonight, she had allowed herself to hope.
Her phone vibrated against the linen tablecloth, a jarring buzz in the quiet room. Her stomach tightened. She didn't want any interruptions.
But the message was from an unknown number, and it made the air leave her lungs in a sharp, painful rush.
It wasn't a name she recognized. It was just a string of digits, impersonal and cold.
Her fingers felt like ice as she stared at the glowing screen. A message notification. A photo attached. Every instinct screamed at her not to open it, to throw the phone across the room and pretend it never happened.
But she couldn't.
She drew a shaky breath and tapped the screen. The image loaded, crisp and damning.
It was a woman's hand, nails painted a flawless, blood-red. The hand rested intimately on the chest of an expensive, custom-tailored suit. Averie's heart stopped. She knew that suit. It was the one Jarett had worn this morning.
But it was the ring on the woman's fourth finger that stole the breath from her body. It wasn't a wedding band. It was a massive sapphire, surrounded by diamonds, an heirloom she had only ever seen in old photographs of Jarett's grandmother. The Sharp matriarch ring. And as the details sharpened, she recognized the woman. Candida Peck.
The background was a blur of sterile white sheets. A hospital.
The sound of a key in the front door made her flinch.
Jarett Sharp stepped inside, his tall frame filling the doorway. He was loosening his tie, a gift bag from a luxury brand dangling from his fingers. He saw her, then his eyes took in the elaborate dinner, the candlelight. A tired smile touched his lips, but it didn't reach his cold, gray eyes.
"Sorry, I'm late."
Averie didn't say a word. She couldn't. The betrayal was a physical weight in her chest, making it impossible to breathe, let alone speak. She simply raised her phone, turning the screen toward him.
His gaze dropped to the photo. The smile on his face vanished, replaced by a flash of annoyance. Not guilt. Not surprise. Just the cold irritation of being inconvenienced.
"Who sent you this?" he asked, his voice sharp. Then he seemed to realize it was her device, not his.
Averie found her voice, but it was a stranger's. Brittle and trembling with a rage so deep it felt like it was freezing her from the inside out. "Happy anniversary, Jarett. It looks like you already celebrated."
As if on cue, his own phone began to ring, its sharp tone slicing through the tense silence. The name on his screen was a confirmation she didn't need. Candida.
He glanced at the call, then back at Averie, his expression hardening. He made a move to answer it.
"Don't you dare," she whispered, a raw plea. She lunged forward, her hand reaching for his arm. "Not tonight, Jarett. Not on our..."
He shoved her away.
The movement was casual, dismissive, but the force sent her stumbling backward. She collided with the edge of the dining cart, the impact rattling a crystal vase. Red roses, the ones she'd bought this morning, spilled across the floor, their petals scattering like drops of blood on the white marble.
Jarett had already answered the phone, his voice a complete transformation from the cold man who had just pushed her. It was low and gentle, full of a tenderness she had never, not once, heard directed at her.
"Candida. It's okay. Don't be scared. I'm on my way."
He walked past her, toward the coat closet, completely ignoring the mess of flowers and her, standing pale and trembling by the ruined dinner. She could hear him murmuring reassurances into the phone.
He emerged with an overcoat, shrugging it on as he headed for the door. He didn't even look at her.
"Jarett Sharp," she called out, her voice shaking but loud enough to make him pause. "If you walk out that door tonight..."
He stopped, his hand on the doorknob. He turned his head just enough to look at her over his shoulder. His eyes were devoid of any emotion except a clear, cold warning. A warning that told her she was nothing.
Then he turned back, opened the door, and was gone.
Continue Reading
Divorcing The Ruthless Billionaire Husband of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6Chapter 7 Ch. 7Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

7.2
Genevieve woke up choking on her own blood, a fatal gash tearing through her abdomen. The memories of a primitive world crashed into her mind—she had transmigrated into the body of a sadistic beastman Mistress.
But the five powerful beastmen "mates" standing over her hadn't come to her rescue. They had come to watch their tormentor die.
"We should just leave her," Kameron sneered coldly. "The scavengers will clean up the mess."
Gilberto spat in disgust, while Angelo, a silver-scaled snake-man, trembled in pure terror at the sight of her. The original owner had whipped them, humiliated them, and driven another mate to suicide. Now, they were letting her bleed out in the mud, their eyes filled with undisguised loathing and satisfaction.
She was a top-tier apocalyptic survival expert, yet here she was, paying the ultimate price for a stranger's monstrous sins. It was a bitter, unacceptable irony to die helplessly in the dirt while her supposed protectors waited for her corpse to rot.
She refused to accept this ending.
Forcing a chaotic surge of energy through their shared Biological Link, she brought all five men to their knees in agonizing pain, commanding them to carry her back. In the dark cave, without a single scream, she plunged her bare hands into a fire and brutally cauterized her own gaping wound with searing ash. As the beastmen stared in horrified awe at the unbreakable soul now occupying the tyrant's body, Genevieve wiped the blood from her face and began to rewrite her fate.

9.2
She loved him until she lost herself.
Now, behind locked doors and shattered glass, she must learn to breathe again.
When she first met Lloyd, he was magnetic and intoxicating. The kind of man who turned every head when he entered a room, who spoke in promises sweet enough to taste. With him, she felt chosen, cherished, and safe.
But safety was an illusion, and love became a weapon.
And slowly, piece by piece, he dismantled her until nothing of the woman she once was remained.
Now institutionalized after a breakdown, she begins to piece together the brutal truth of what really happened in the shadows of their love story. Memories sting like open wounds: the manipulation disguised as tenderness, the apologies that blurred into threats, the desperate hope that tomorrow he'd be the man she fell for again.
Yet beneath the grief and the shame, a quiet rebellion stirs, a vow to reclaim her voice, her freedom, and her life. Because this is not just a story of how she fell apart. It is a story of how she rises.
Haunting, raw, and achingly intimate, Boys like him peels back the glittering mask of a toxic love affair to reveal the kind of darkness that hides in plain sight, and the unbreakable strength it takes to escape it.

7.6
To pay for her father's life support, Haleigh sold herself into a marriage with Fabian Blackburn, a ruthless billionaire in a deep coma.
But on her wedding day, she caught her boyfriend cheating with her stepsister, laughing about how they would steal the inheritance the second Fabian stopped breathing. Cornered and desperate, Haleigh secretly underwent IVF using her comatose husband's frozen sperm to secure the family trust.
Weeks later, a miracle happened. Fabian woke up.
But instead of gratitude, he treated her like trash. He threw annulment papers at her face, completely disgusted by the arranged marriage.
"If you try any dirty tricks to get pregnant, I will personally drag you to a clinic and have that bastard scraped out of you."
Terrified, Haleigh hid her positive pregnancy test and desperately tried to hack her way to enough cash to escape. But while using his computer, she accidentally opened a highly classified folder.
Inside was a medical file and a photo of a severely disabled girl who looked exactly like Fabian.
Before she could process it, Fabian walked in. Seeing the screen, his cold mask shattered into pure, unhinged madness. He lunged across the room, lifting her off the floor by her throat, completely ignoring her desperate gasps for air.
"Lock her in the basement," he roared to his guards. "No food. No water."
Curled on the freezing concrete, clutching her newly pregnant belly, Haleigh didn't understand what she had just seen that turned him into a murderous monster.
But she knew one thing: if she didn't escape this terrifying estate, both she and his unborn heir would die in the dark.

8.8
Clara supported her boyfriend Leo for four years, paying his rent and buying his headshots while working dead-end extra gigs.
On his twenty-sixth birthday, she caught him in their bed with Veronica, a wealthy producer's daughter who constantly stole Clara's roles.
Leo mocked Clara as a "pathetic, poor stepping stone" who was just there until he got his foot in the door.
Veronica threatened to ruin Clara's career forever.
Clara dumped him, packed her bags, and impulsively entered a contract marriage with a cold stranger she met at City Hall.
But her nightmare wasn't over.
When her mother suddenly needed a $200,000 emergency brain surgery, Clara was forced to take a demeaning extra gig to survive.
There, Veronica and her starlet friend cornered Clara.
They mocked her cheap clothes, ridiculed her new wedding ring as fake glass, and intentionally poured scalding coffee on her feet.
"Well, maid, you better clean that up."
Veronica laughed, forcing Clara to her knees to wipe up the burning liquid while snapping photos.
Clara swallowed her burning humiliation, secretly recording their abuse on her phone.
She endured the pain, desperate for the $300 day rate to save her mother's life, feeling entirely crushed by their overwhelming wealth and power.
What she didn't know was that outside the soundstage, her new contract husband—the man she thought was just a struggling, broke tech worker—was sitting in a sleek black Maybach.
He watched his wife kneeling on the floor, and his dark eyes filled with a lethal, terrifying rage.

7.4
I was only fifteen when my venomous family orchestrated my doom by forcing me into an arranged marriage with mafia heir Javier Velasquez.
On our wedding night, Javier paraded strippers into our suite to show his absolute contempt, turning me into the ultimate joke of the underworld overnight.
But being a joke was a luxury compared to what came next.
Three years later, Javier needed to be a widower to marry into a heavily armed family and secure their backing for a coup.
He didn't grant me the mercy of a bullet.
Instead, he dragged me to an abandoned underground safehouse, locked me in the damp, rotting dark, and told the world I had been assassinated.
For six months, I starved in that dungeon, surviving only on the desperate hope that my family was safe.
Then, on the day of his lavish new wedding, a cruel maid kicked a plate of spoiled food onto my floor and delivered the final, fatal blow.
"Annabel is dead. Pined away and died of a broken heart two weeks ago."
My gentle mother was dead, all because she actually believed his lie about my tragic murder.
Driven by pure agony and an all-consuming hatred, I shattered crates of smuggled chemical solvents and struck a match, letting the roaring inferno turn their bloody wedding into my funeral pyre.
I thought the fire was the end.
But when I opened my eyes, the suffocating smoke vanished, replaced by the biting chill of a Long Island winter.
I was standing in the snow, back on the exact day my descent into hell began.
This time, the terrified girl was dead, and I would use their own ruthless rules to tear their empire apart.

9.0
Eileen woke up in a trashed hotel room, her head pounding with the pathetic memories of a despised Hollywood actress.
Outside the window, paparazzi were already screaming about her manufactured cheating scandal, but the real nightmare was waiting at her door.
Her paralyzed, billionaire husband, Carlisle Vinson, looked at her with pure disgust while his butler shoved a divorce settlement at her chest.
"Mr. Vinson is offering a severance package of fifty million dollars, provided you sign immediately and vacate the premises."
The original owner had left her an absolute mess.
Her trusted assistant had sold her room number to the press to frame her, and a playboy had scammed her out of her entire two million dollar life savings.
If she signed those papers and lost the Vinson family's protection, the breach of contract fees and her enemies in the industry would swallow her alive in days.
Eileen felt a cold fury override the original owner's lingering panic.
Why should she take the fall and be thrown out on the streets while the parasites who set her up lived out their wealthy fantasies?
She had died once, and she wasn't about to waste her second chance playing the victim.
Eileen slammed the heavy divorce folder shut right against the butler's chest.
"I'm not signing," she said with a terrifying, absolute calm.
She stepped behind her husband's wheelchair, ready to shield him from the cameras, secretly cure his dead legs, and make everyone who betrayed her bleed.











