
Ex-Husband's Denial: Wife Reclaims Her Shattered Life
Fiona prepared a candlelit anniversary dinner, scallops glistening on porcelain, champagne chilling beside a "Three Years" card—her secret pregnancy swelling beneath her silk dress.
The doorbell rang, but it was just a delivery. Then Emmanuel called: his ex, Carley Marshall, crashed her car. He blew off their night.
Cramps hit like a vise. She collapsed, blood soaking her gown, screaming into the phone: "I'm losing the baby!" Emmanuel scoffed, "Fake ploy for attention," and hung up—Carley's voice cooed in the background.
Paramedics rushed her to ER for emergency D&C. The baby was gone. Audrey saved her life. Emmanuel sent lilies with a card: "Stop dramatizing."
She signed divorce papers. He laughed it off, contested everything, froze her out of hotels and clubs. Dragged her from the St. Regis by force, dumped her sobbing on a rainy sidewalk with her suitcase in puddles—Gus drove off without looking back.
He thought she was manipulating him, playing jealous games for attention. But she'd truly carried his child, bled out alone while he comforted Carley. How could he not believe her, even after the hospital proof? Why twist her agony into lies?
Now blacklisted and broke, Fiona clutched her grandfather's antique restoration tools. No more begging—she'd expose his cruelty, rebuild from the ashes, and make him regret ever underestimating her.
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Chapter 1
Fiona adjusted the position of the seared scallops on the porcelain plate. Her hands trembled slightly, a fine vibration that traveled from her fingertips up to her wrists. She pressed her palm flat against her abdomen, feeling the smooth silk of her dress beneath her fingers, and then the firm, hidden secret beneath that. A smile touched her lips.
The dining table gleamed under the soft light of the chandelier. Two crystal flutes stood sentinel beside an ice bucket holding a bottle of Dom Pérignon. A small, square card sat next to it. "Three Years," it read in elegant gold script. Three years of a marriage that felt more like a business transaction, but tonight, that was going to change.
The doorbell rang.
Fiona's heart leaped. She wiped her hands on a kitchen towel and hurried toward the foyer, her heels clicking against the marble floor. He was early. He actually remembered.
She pulled the door open, her smile already wide.
It wasn't Emmanuel.
The doorman stood there in his brass-buttoned uniform, holding a flat, unmarked cardboard box. "Delivery for you, Mrs. Meyers."
Fiona's smile faltered. She took the box, the cardboard feeling heavy and cold. "Thank you."
She closed the door and leaned against it, staring at the box. No return address. No name. Just a plain brown wrapper. She set it on the console table, the excitement draining out of her like water from a cracked basin.
Her phone buzzed in her clutch.
She pulled it out. The screen lit up with the contact name: Emmanuel.
Relief flooded her, hot and sudden. She swiped to answer, pressing the phone to her ear. "You're early! I was just-"
"Fiona." His voice cut through the line, sharp and impatient. Background noise buzzed behind him-car horns, sirens, the murmur of a crowd.
"Emmanuel? Where are you?"
"I'm outside the hospital." He sounded breathless, but not with concern for her. "Carley was in a car accident."
Fiona froze. The name hit her like a physical blow to the sternum. Carley Marshall. The Hollywood starlet. His college girlfriend. The woman who existed in the periphery of their marriage like a ghost that refused to stay dead.
"Carley?" Fiona repeated, her voice hollow. "What does that have to do with-"
"It's bad, Fiona." His tone was clipped, authoritative. "The paparazzi are swarming. I have to be here."
"Today is our anniversary." The words came out small, pathetic even to her own ears.
"Are you serious right now?" The impatience in his voice curdled into disgust. "A woman's life is hanging in the balance. This isn't about you."
"But I-"
"I'll be home when I'm home. Don't wait up."
The line went dead.
Fiona stood in the silent foyer, the phone still pressed to her ear. The dial tone buzzed, a harsh, rhythmic sound that matched the sudden, hollow thud of her heart.
She lowered the phone. Her fingers were numb.
She walked back to the dining room on unsteady legs. The scallops were getting cold. The champagne was sweating in the bucket. The card with "Three Years" written on it seemed to mock her.
She reached for her champagne flute, meaning to take a drink, anything to wash down the bitter taste in her throat. Her hand shook violently.
The crystal slipped.
It hit the edge of the table and tumbled to the floor. The stem snapped, sending shards of glass skittering across the marble.
"Damn it," she whispered.
She crouched down, her dress pooling around her knees. She reached for the largest piece of glass, her vision blurring for a second.
Then the pain hit.
It started as a cramp, a dull ache in her lower back that wrapped around to her abdomen like a tightening vice. She gasped, pulling her hand back.
The cramp intensified, shifting from an ache to a sharp, tearing sensation. It felt like something was ripping inside her, violently and without mercy.
Fiona braced her hands on the floor, her breathing turning shallow. "No," she whimpered. "No, no, no."
She tried to stand, to get to the couch, but her legs felt like they were filled with wet sand. She pushed herself up halfway, sweat breaking out across her forehead and dripping down her back, soaking through the expensive silk.
Her knees buckled.
She hit the floor hard, her hip striking the marble. The impact sent a jolt of pain up her spine, but it was nothing compared to the agony in her belly. It was a tidal wave, crushing her from the inside out.
She curled into a fetal position, clutching her stomach. "Please," she cried out to the empty room. "Please, no."
She felt a gush of warmth between her legs. It was hot, too hot, and it soaked through her underwear, running down her thighs.
Fiona rolled onto her back, her eyes wide with terror. She looked down.
The pale champagne-colored silk was stained a deep, dark red. The blood was spreading, a blooming flower of crimson against the delicate fabric.
A scream tore from her throat, raw and primal.
She scrambled for her phone, her fingers slick with her own blood. She grabbed it, smearing red across the screen. She hit redial.
Pick up. Pick up. Pick up.
The line rang once. Twice.
"What now, Fiona?" Emmanuel answered, his voice laced with heavy irritation.
"Emmanuel." She sobbed, the words catching in her throat. "Help me. Please. The baby-"
In the background, she heard a soft, trembling voice. Carley. "Thank you so much for coming, Emmanuel. I was so scared."
Emmanuel ignored the voice on his end, focusing on the phone. "What kind of sick game are you playing?"
"It's not a game!" Fiona shrieked, the pain ripping through her again. "I'm bleeding! I'm losing the baby!"
"A baby?" He let out a short, cold laugh. It was a sound completely devoid of humor. "You think I'm stupid enough to fall for that? Using a fake pregnancy to compete for attention with a woman who is actually hurt? That's low, even for you."
"It's real! I swear to God, Emmanuel, I'm dying-"
"You're pathetic."
The line clicked dead.
Fiona stared at the phone. The screen went black.
She hit redial again.
The automated voice answered immediately. "The number you are trying to reach is currently powered off."
A wave of agony crashed over her, so intense it stole her breath. She dropped the phone. It landed with a soft thud on the marble, the screen facing up, smeared with her fingerprints.
She reached out, her hand trembling, trying to grab the leg of the dining table. Her fingers scraped against the wood, but she couldn't get a grip. Her hand slipped, leaving a bloody smear on the polished surface.
Her vision started to tunnel. The edges of the room grew dark.
She turned her head, her cheek pressed against the cold floor. Her eyes focused on the ice bucket. The bottle of Dom Pérignon sat inside, untouched, the condensation running down its sides like tears.
The light in the room seemed to fade.
On the wall above the table, the antique clock ticked. The minute hand clicked past the twelve.
Midnight.
The anniversary was over.
Fiona's eyes fluttered closed, the silence of the apartment swallowing her whole.
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9.7
Clarissa rushed into a crowded nightclub for one simple reason: to save her wildly drunk best friend.
But her ruthless billionaire husband, Giovanny, was watching from the VIP room. After effortlessly ruining a man just for grabbing her wrist, Giovanny punished Clarissa for breaching their public image contract with an impossible curfew.
When she inevitably arrived back at his penthouse late, he didn't just yell. He forced her to her knees by his bathtub to wash his back, making her watch an explicit, humiliating video as punishment.
A sudden family medical emergency dragged them to his parents' estate. Still in her soaked, transparent dress and his misbuttoned shirt, Giovanny's mother caught them. She joyfully assumed they had been passionately intimate.
Instead of clearing her name, Giovanny pulled Clarissa close and lied to his mother's face.
"We are working very hard on the family's future, Mother."
He locked her in the guest suite, tossed a sheer silk nightgown on the bed, and literally shattered the tablet holding their "no-contact" prenuptial agreement. He then slapped a file against the window—he had secretly bought all her father's toxic debt.
Clarissa was terrified. They were supposed to be business allies bound by a strict contract. Why was he suddenly acting like a predator determined to own her body and soul?
"Give me an heir, or your father goes to federal prison," he whispered.
Stripped of all choices, Clarissa picked up the white silk. She would surrender tonight to save her family, but as his shadow swallowed her, she made a silent vow to survive this monster, and one day, tear his empire to the ground.

9.7
For three years, I endured being treated like a walking ATM and a maid by my husband's family, biting my tongue to keep the peace.
Then, my husband's buddy suddenly dropped off a nine-year-old boy at my front door.
The crumpled note from my husband casually explained it was his illegitimate son, blaming me for being barren and demanding I raise the kid as our own.
My mother-in-law was absolutely thrilled, parading the boy around as the true heir at the dinner table.
"Some trees just don't bear fruit, no matter how much water you give them," she sneered.
My brother-in-law cheered, and my drunk father-in-law demanded I cook a feast to celebrate.
They actually expected me to continue paying the mortgage, buying the groceries, and cleaning up their endless messes, all while raising the living proof of my husband's betrayal.
I looked at the parasites who had drained me dry for years, acting like they were doing me a favor by letting me stay in a house that my money paid for.
I didn't scream, and I didn't cry.
I simply called my lawyer to file for an immediate divorce, froze every single bank account and credit card they relied on, and drove off to my grandmother's secluded cabin in the woods.
Let them see how long they survive without my money.

8.5
I thought my boyfriend of two years, Cain, and I were building a future together.
But while he was away on a business trip, his lawyers kicked me out of our apartment into the freezing rain.
He texted me that it was over, claiming we "weren't from the same world."
I soon found out why. That very night, he was hosting a lavish engagement party, marrying Isolde Silvermane, a powerful billionaire heiress.
When I crashed the heavily guarded estate to confront him, he looked at me with absolute disgust.
"You were just a stepping stone. Did you honestly believe I could ever love someone so profoundly human?"
After I threw a glass of champagne on his custom suit, his face contorted with feral rage. He had his guards drag me away and lock me in a cold, metal cage in the cellar like an animal.
I had given him two years of my life, only to lose everything—my home, my dignity, my future—in a single night while he celebrated his new dynasty.
I had nothing left, but the burning hatred in my chest made me want to see his arrogant face crumble.
Then, the terrifying head of the Silvermane family—Isolde's brother, Lycan—unlocked my cage.
Instead of punishing me, he looked down at me with piercing silver eyes and offered a chilling deal.
"Be my personal assistant. From a position at my side, you will have a front-row seat to watch him grovel."
I accepted. It was time to make Cain regret the day he ever crossed me.

8.7
I woke up from a coma in the hospital, universally condemned as the vicious daughter who pushed the beloved fake heiress, Georgina, down the stairs.
My ruthless billionaire brother, Angelo, stood over my bed with cold eyes, ready to destroy me for hurting his precious sister.
But as I looked at him, a terrifying prophecy from my coma flooded my brain. Our entire family was doomed.
In the original timeline, Georgina would team up with corporate rivals to bankrupt the company, frame Angelo, and send him to federal prison, while our parents would abandon me to die miserably.
Lying there, I didn't dare speak. I just desperately cursed my idiot brother in my head.
"This stupid brother is still yelling at me for that fake heiress. He doesn't even know he's going to be framed and sent to prison next month!"
I just wanted to stay quiet, let them ruin themselves, and run away from this toxic family.
But strangely, Angelo didn't strangle me. Instead, his attitude took a shocking turn.
He abruptly fired the driver plotting to kill him, destroyed the abusive fiancé of a family ally, and publicly humiliated Georgina at a high-society gala.
He even shielded me from our abusive parents, declaring to the world that I was the only sister he would ever protect.
I was completely terrified and confused. Why was the tyrant brother suddenly acting like a protective beast?
It wasn't until he flawlessly crushed a massive corporate attack using the exact financial secrets I had just complained about in my mind that a horrifying realization hit me.
He could hear my inner thoughts!

9.2
I got pregnant from a one-night-stand.
I wasn't going to tell the father...
Until I walked into the office and found out he's my new boss.
Here's some advice: Don't sleep with your boss.
Here's some more: Don't sleep with your married boss.
And while I'm at it: Don't sleep with your married, dangerous, billionaire, completely-incapable-of-feeling boss, because all he's going to do is break your heart and your body and leave you to cry in the ashes.
But I've never been good at taking my own advice.
In my defense, I didn't know that Nikolai Zhukova was any of those things when we met.
I just thought he was the gray-eyed sinner in first class.
And when I started having a panic attack at the sudden turbulence, I thought he was the kind soul calming me down.
But Nikolai is the farthest thing from kind.
He's cruel, he's powerful, he's arrogant.
And now, according to the test in my hand...
He's the father of my baby.

9.3
Penelope's wedding day should have been perfect-until she found her best friend in her fiancé's bed.
Running from the ruins of her future, she fell into one night with a stranger whose touch felt like safety. No names. No future. Just escape.
Until two pink lines changed everything.
Years later, Penelope returns with twins, a stronger heart, and no plans to fall in love again. But fate traps her in close quarters with a ruthless billionaire... who happens to be the man from that unforgettable night. He doesn't know she's the bride who disappeared. He doesn't know the children are his.
Old enemies want revenge. Old secrets refuse to stay buried.
And the man who swore he would never love... kneels.