Ex-Husband's Empire Crash Novel Cover

Ex-Husband's Empire Crash

9.1 / 10.0
I stared at my phone, coffee forgotten beside my half-eaten avocado toast. My thumb froze mid-scroll as the Instagram video played on repeat. There was Cameron—my husband of three years—laughing as he casually took the water bottle from his personal trainer Madison Rivers, pressing his lips where hers had just been. The morning light streaming through our penthouse windows suddenly felt cold against my skin. Three years. Three years of separate glasses, separate utensils, separate everything. Three years of watching him wipe down doorknobs after I touched them. Three years of believing my husband suffered from severe germaphobia. I replayed the video, searching for some explanation. Maybe it wasn't his bottle.

Ex-Husband's Empire Crash Chapter 1

I stared at my phone, coffee forgotten beside my half-eaten avocado toast. My thumb froze mid-scroll as the Instagram video played on repeat. There was Cameron—my husband of three years—laughing as he casually took the water bottle from his personal trainer Madison Rivers, pressing his lips where hers had just been. The morning light streaming through our penthouse windows suddenly felt cold against my skin.

Three years. Three years of separate glasses, separate utensils, separate everything. Three years of watching him wipe down doorknobs after I touched them. Three years of believing my husband suffered from severe germaphobia.

I replayed the video, searching for some explanation. Maybe it wasn't his bottle. Maybe I was seeing things. But no—there was Cameron, his perfect white teeth flashing as he tilted his head back, Adam's apple bobbing as he drank deeply from Madison's bottle before handing it back with a lingering touch of their fingers.

Something inside me cracked. Not dramatically, not all at once, but like ice forming a spiderweb of fractures before the final break.

I set my phone down with trembling hands and stared out at the Manhattan skyline. The city I'd called home since our wedding day suddenly felt foreign, as if I were seeing it through someone else's eyes. Perhaps I was. Perhaps I'd never truly seen anything clearly when it came to Cameron.

---

I waited for him in our dining room that evening, the floor-to-ceiling windows reflecting twin images of me in my silk blouse and tailored pants. I'd dressed carefully, armor against what was coming. The sunset painted Manhattan in gold and shadow, but inside our glass fortress, I felt only cold.

When Cameron walked in, loosening his tie with practiced elegance, he didn't immediately notice my stillness. He poured himself a scotch, the amber liquid catching the light.

"I saw something interesting today," I said, my voice steadier than I expected.

He glanced up, one eyebrow raised. "Oh?"

I slid my phone across the glass table. The video played silently between us.

Something flickered across his face—surprise, then irritation, then nothing at all. That nothing terrified me more than any anger could have.

"You've never once," I whispered, tears threatening, "in three years, shared a glass with me. You wipe down doorknobs. You sleep facing away. You—" My voice broke. "You told me it was germaphobia."

Cameron set down his glass with deliberate care. "And you believed me."

Four words. Four simple words that demolished everything.

"Why?" The question tore from my throat. "Why marry me if you found me so... repulsive?"

He sighed, as if my question was tedious, an inconvenience in his otherwise perfect day. "Don't be dramatic, Sophia. It was never about you personally."

"Then what was it about?" I demanded, tears now flowing freely.

"What do you think?" He gestured around our penthouse. "The Chen family fortune. Your father's connections. The dowry." He shrugged. "Business."

I stared at him, this stranger I'd shared a home with, this man I'd bent myself into impossible shapes to accommodate. "You never loved me."

It wasn't a question.

"Love is a luxury, Sophia." Cameron's voice was almost gentle, which somehow made it worse. "Some of us can't afford to indulge in it."

I sat there, feeling the final pieces of my marriage—my life—crumble around me. The worst part wasn't the betrayal. It was the realization that I'd betrayed myself by ignoring every sign, by making excuses for his coldness, by believing I wasn't worthy of more.

---

The next morning, I sat across from Harper Liu in her sleek office overlooking Central Park. Sunlight glinted off her glasses as she slid the divorce papers toward me.

"Are you certain about this, Sophia?" she asked, her voice kind but professional.

I nodded, pen already in hand. My signature flowed across the page with surprising steadiness.

"What about your personal belongings?" Harper asked.

"I took what matters." Just a suitcase of clothes, my grandmother's jade pendant, and my dignity—what was left of it.

Later, I stood outside the study door in the penthouse for the last time. I could hear Cameron on the phone, his voice animated as he discussed some deal. I slipped the divorce notice under his door and watched the paper disappear into the shadow beneath.

As I turned to leave, I heard his voice falter mid-sentence. The paper had been seen.

I didn't wait to hear more. Some endings don't need witnesses.

As the elevator doors closed on my old life, I pressed my forehead against the cool metal and whispered to myself, "What happens when a woman stops accommodating and starts demanding?"

I was about to find out.

Continue Reading

Ex-Husband's Empire Crash of Contents

Ch. 1 Ch. 2 Ch. 3
Ch. 4
Ch. 5
Ch. 6
Ch. 7
Ch. 8
Ch. 9
Ch. 10

You may also like

New Release Novels

Entangled Fates : The Alpha's Reluctant Mate Novel Cover
8.2
“This game of yours is barbaric. How dare you make me play it?” Her anger boiled over again as she realized that it was his own fault because she was sore, tired, and bleeding. She could have died if not for that son of a bitch. “You'd better pull your finger out, Karenina, and talk to me in a more ladylike manner,” Xavier warned. She lowered her hand, but she wouldn't back down. What he had done was beyond unacceptable. “Why did you leave me to fight those werewolves if all that senseless bloodshed was to find a mate? I'm a hybrid, half-wolf! Obviously I shouldn't be there,” she said furiously. “I have my reasons,” he replied nonchalantly. “Damn it!” she clutched his fur again to vent her frustration. ****************************************************************** Karenina Mason, a headstrong and independent young woman, is not just an ordinary human-she is a rare hybrid with a powerful lineage. Unknowingly, she becomes entangled in a perilous game of political intrigue, where the coveted prize is to become the mate of the enigmatic and all-powerful Alpha of Westwood. Karenina resists this unwanted destiny, but fate seems insistent on thrusting her into this union. In her vulnerable state, Karenina finds herself surrounded by adversaries, and her once-trusted friends remain beyond her reach. Forced to rely on Xavier Westwood, a mysterious and captivating figure with his own hidden agenda, Karenina is drawn into a world of danger and desire. As they navigate the treacherous path together, an intense attraction grows between them, unraveling long-concealed secrets that should have remained locked away-secrets that may unleash powers too volatile to control.
He Saw My Soul, Not My Scars Novel Cover
9.4
My husband, Jeremiah, let me die from an allergic reaction because he couldn't pause his video game. He dismissed my kidnapping as a prank and refused to come to the hospital when I was miscarrying our child. But the final straw came when he ordered doctors to carve skin from my body for his mistress's minor burn. He thought he had broken me, but he was wrong. I exposed his affair, took his company, and left him with nothing. Years later, he crashed my wedding to another man, begging for a second chance. "Elena lied to me! She manipulated me! It was always you, Celina!" I looked at the monster who had destroyed my life, my family, and my child. Then I picked up a wine bottle and smashed it over his head.
His Love, My Hell, Her Justice Novel Cover
8.8
My wedding day was ruined by a crazed woman named Isolde, who claimed my husband, Ezekiel, was her soulmate from a past life. Then, after a car accident, Ezekiel faked amnesia, siding with her and putting me through hell. He let Isolde murder my mother, forced me to face my deepest fears, and poisoned me in public. When I finally had Isolde arrested, Ezekiel's revenge was swift and brutal. He kidnapped me and, in a final act of cruelty, snapped the neck of my puppy, Muffin-the only comfort I had left. He thought he had broken me, that he had destroyed every last piece of my soul. He was wrong. He had just unleashed a monster. Now, from the shadows, I will dismantle his empire, ruin his life, and make him pay for every tear I shed. My revenge has just begun.
Just like the evening breeze leaves no trace Novel Cover
9.7
Chapter 1 It was their seventh wedding anniversary. Carolyn found the divorce agreement in Roger’s nightstand. The pages were covered in scribbles and corrections, as if he’d agonized over them for years. *"If, during the marriage, I fall in love with another person, I voluntarily relinquish all assets and leave with nothing. Asset details as follows…"* His first impulse had been to walk away empty-handed. But the asset section told a different story—a mess of revisions. First, he’d crossed out the property he intended to give her. Then, the fifty million earmarked for her was scratched out and replaced with five hundred thousand. Finally, as if in penance, he had written a single line. *"Better to have Carolyn leave with nothing. No choice, Catherine is pregnant."* … Carolyn sank onto the bed, disbelief washing over her. On the agreement, Roger’s signature was clean and decisive, without a hint of hesitation. And the document had been drafted seven years ago—the very year they married. That year, Roger had been willing to give up everything for her. Yet every year after, he had crossed out another piece of their shared life. Now, seven years later, the one leaving with nothing would be her. Her phone buzzed abruptly. A message from Roger. *"Urgent business. Won't be back."* She called, only to find his phone already switched off. Another notification flashed—a screenshot from a friend. Catherine, the student she sponsored, had posted on social media. *"Wow, got praised! To commemorate my first period without a leak, the big boss said we should celebrate properly!"* In a nine-photo collage, Roger gazed at her, eyes crinkling with affection as he fastened a dazzling gemstone necklace around her neck. The post was tagged at a couples-themed hotel. Carolyn’s breath caught. He couldn’t remember seven years of marriage, of weathering storms together—but he could find the energy to celebrate Catherine’s… leak-free period. And that pendant… she’d seen it at an auction just last week. It was her mother’s lost heirloom. She’d been ready to bid when her bank card was frozen. She’d asked Roger why. A long time later, he finally texted back, telling her not to waste money on such impractical things. Clutching her bidding paddle, she’d sat helplessly in the auction hall. In the end, she resolved to sell one of her own designs to raise the funds. But someone on the phone swooped in with an unbeatable offer and took it. For weeks afterward, Carolyn hated herself—hated that she couldn’t protect her mother’s last keepsake. She never imagined the one who snatched it away was Roger. He knew exactly how much that pendant meant to her. Yet he gave it to Catherine. Even on their seventh anniversary, Roger had lied about being busy with work, while wining and dining the girl she’d sponsored. The anniversary gift he left her was a divorce agreement demanding she leave with nothing. Seven years of marriage. Seven years of infidelity. And Carolyn had known nothing. She’d even introduced the other woman to him herself. Catherine was the impoverished student Carolyn sponsored. The first time Catherine came to their home to give thanks, Roger found her intrusive and disliked her on sight. *"That girl has no manners. Tracked mud all over my cashmere rug."* *"If her grades aren’t up to par, cut the sponsorship."* Back then, Carolyn had teased him, saying not to be jealous—it was good the girl had a grateful heart. She never once suspected Roger and Catherine. For seven years, everyone in their circle believed Roger never played around. That he loved only Carolyn. But by their next meeting, Catherine had become Roger’s personal assistant. Roger explained, *"The girl’s had it tough. You’ve sponsored her for years. Giving her a job is just helping you out."* Carolyn had laughed it off. Now, hands trembling, she opened Catherine’s social media feed. Catherine had always hidden her posts from Carolyn. Now, she seemed desperate to flaunt everything. While Carolyn drank until her stomach bled to secure a deal for Roger, Catherine was using Roger’s card to buy her first Louis Vuitton. While Carolyn changed bedpans for Roger’s bedridden grandmother, Roger was taking Catherine to a perfume atelier for a blending class—calling it a business trip. Catherine had even complained online. *"Your wife is such a pampered princess. Can't handle the tiniest thing without you running back. Can she not live without a man?"* And Roger had replied beneath it. *"If she were half as independent as you, I’d have an easier life."* But that day… Carolyn’s mother had lost her battle with cancer. She’d cried until her heart felt shredded, scrambling to handle the arrangements. All the while, Roger kept checking his phone impatiently, eager to leave. Not for work, she realized now—but because he was desperate to get back to Catherine.
Mated To The Ruthless Blood Moon Alpha Novel Cover
8.6
Today was my father's grand second wedding, but for me, it was the anniversary of my mother's death. My new stepmother, Marley, who was only four years older than me, cornered me. To establish her dominance as the new Luna, she ordered her servants to force me to my knees and violently ripped my late mother's necklace from my neck. It was the only memento my mother had left me. Marley sneered, threw it to the ground, and shattered the gems. When I scrambled to pick up the broken pieces, she dug her high-heeled shoe into the back of my hand, mocking me as dirty trash. No one stepped in to help. My father was too busy celebrating his new marriage under the dazzling lights, completely erasing my mother's memory and leaving me to be abused in my own pack. My heart was full of grievance and despair. Why did my mother's lifelong devotion end with her grave desolate and her daughter humiliated? I swore I would never become a weak, discarded she-wolf whose life depended on a man. Desperate to escape the suffocating wedding, I ran outside and stumbled right into the chest of a terrifying stranger. "No one should ever touch what is precious to you." His golden eyes blazed with fury as sparks instantly shot through my veins. He was Kade Blackwood, the ruthless Alpha of the feared Blood Moon Pack—and my fated mate.
My Alpha Saved His Mistress Instead of Me Novel Cover
9.0
The pack run had been Marcelo's idea. He'd announced it three days prior at the weekly council meeting, his Alpha tone leaving no room for debate. A show of unity, he'd called it. A reminder that the Black Moon Pack moved as one body, one purpose. I'd watched him from my seat at the far end of the table—the Luna's chair, though I'd stopped feeling like a Luna months ago—and said nothing. Petra Voss had nodded approvingly. The other council members had murmured their agreement. Rosalina, seated closer to Marcelo than protocol allowed, had smiled that soft, adoring smile she always wore around him. I should have known then. The territory's northern river was swollen from early spring melt, the current fast and mean.
Chapters
Read now
Share