Follow
Chapters
Share
Ex-Husband's Vicious Lies Novel Cover

Ex-Husband's Vicious Lies

Valentine's Day. I'd been looking forward to it for weeks, planning a special dinner for Drake despite our tight budget. Maybe this would be the night things would finally feel normal between us again. Our apartment was small but I'd made it home, or tried to. I straightened the throw pillows on our secondhand couch for the third time that morning, adjusting them until they looked just right. Drake had left early for work, kissing my cheek absently on his way out. That fleeting touch still lingered as I moved around our space, cleaning and organizing the way I always did when anxiety twisted through my stomach. "Tonight will be different," I whispered to myself, running my hand along the kitchen counter I'd scrubbed until it shone. The trash under the sink was nearly full, and I tugged the bag free, tying it closed. As I lifted it, something slipped from a tear in the side—a crumpled ball of paper.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

The studio apartment felt emptier than its tiny dimensions should allow. I sat cross-legged on my bed—the only furniture besides a rickety table and mismatched chair—staring at the divorce papers I'd placed on my nightstand. Final. Official. Over. The words had lost their meaning after two weeks of repeating them to myself like a mantra.

My phone vibrated with a notification. Another shift available at Pete's Bar tomorrow night. I accepted it immediately, adding it to my already packed schedule—morning shifts at Rosie's Café, evening shifts at Pete's, weekend inventory work at the corner store. Sleep had become a luxury I couldn't afford, both literally and figuratively.

When I closed my eyes, Drake's words echoed: "You were a useful fool."

A knock at my door startled me. My landlord, probably, wondering about next month's rent. I'd have it—barely—if I took every extra shift offered this week.

I opened the door to find my neighbor Clara, her expression sympathetic.

"You haven't been outside today, have you?" she asked, shifting uncomfortably.

"No time," I attempted a smile. "Three jobs, remember?"

She handed me her phone, open to a social media page. "I thought you should see this before you run into them somewhere."

My stomach plummeted as Drake's face filled the screen—smiling, champagne glass raised, his arm around Emmy Gray. Her hand rested on his chest, a massive diamond catching the light.

"She couldn't wait to post it everywhere," Clara said gently. "I'm so sorry, Olivia."

I stared at the ring—the one Drake had claimed he couldn't afford when we were together. The one I'd worked double shifts hoping to help him save for. The caption read: "Finally official with my soulmate! #WorthTheWait"

"Thanks," I whispered, handing back the phone. After Clara left, I slid down against the closed door, wrapping my arms around my knees as silent tears tracked down my face.

---

Two weeks later, I balanced four plates along my arm at Rosie's, forcing a smile that didn't reach my eyes. The lunch rush was always chaotic, but today seemed especially brutal after another sleepless night.

"Order up for table seven!" Eddie called from the kitchen.

I delivered the plates to a group of businessmen, then turned to find a woman watching me from a corner booth. She was in her fifties, with shrewd eyes and a tailored pantsuit that screamed professional. She'd been there for over an hour, nursing a single cup of coffee while typing occasionally on her laptop.

As I approached to offer a refill, she closed her computer. "Olivia Turner?"

I tensed. "Yes?"

"My name is Margaret Collins." She gestured to the seat across from her. "I'd like to speak with you. It's important."

"I'm working." I gestured vaguely at the busy café.

"I can wait until your shift ends."

Something in her calm certainty made me uneasy. "What's this about?"

Instead of answering, she reached into her bag and pulled out a photograph, placing it face-up on the table.

A little girl with auburn hair and a gap-toothed smile stared back at me. My breath caught in my throat. "Where did you get this?"

"You recognize it?"

"That's... me. From the foster home. Before the Turners adopted me." I hadn't seen this photo in over twenty years. "How did you—"

"I work for Augustus Grant," she said, watching my reaction carefully. "He's been looking for his sister for a very long time."

I almost laughed. Augustus Grant was Seattle's wealthiest businessman, his name on half the buildings downtown. "There's been a mistake."

"Do you remember a stuffed elephant named Ellie? Or a music box with a dancing ballerina that played 'Swan Lake'?"

The coffee pot nearly slipped from my hand. No one knew about Ellie. She'd been taken from me when I entered the system. And the music box... fragments of memory flickered—someone winding it for me, gentle hands, a soft voice singing along.

"Who are you?" I whispered.

"Someone who's spent seven years tracking down Olivia Grant." She placed a business card on the table. "Mr. Grant would like to meet you. Today, if possible."

---

The Grant mansion sprawled across the hillside overlooking the Sound, more palace than home. Margaret led me through security gates and a front door that could have fit my entire apartment inside it.

"Wait here," she said, leaving me in a foyer larger than Rosie's Café.

I stood frozen, taking in marble floors and sweeping staircases, feeling painfully out of place in my waitress uniform. This was a mistake. I didn't belong here. I should leave before—

"Olivia?"

I turned to see a tall man with dark hair threaded with silver standing in a doorway. Augustus Grant looked exactly like his photos in business magazines, except for his eyes—wide and disbelieving as they locked on my face.

He took one step forward, then another, moving as if in a trance. "It really is you," he whispered.

Before I could respond, he crossed the distance between us and grasped my shoulders gently, searching my face with desperate intensity.

"You have her eyes," he said, his voice breaking. "Our mother's eyes."

Something inside me trembled in recognition. Then, to my astonishment, Augustus Grant—the titan of industry, the man whose name commanded respect throughout Seattle—fell to his knees before me, his shoulders shaking with silent sobs as he clutched my hands.

"I never stopped looking," he whispered. "Not for one day."

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

Accidental Seduction: The Priceless Pregnant Prey Novel Cover
9.5
My adoptive sister drugged me and sent me to a hotel for a fake audition, where a powerful stranger assaulted me in the pitch-black suite. When I escaped home, my fiancé, Ethan, and my entire family ambushed me. They threw staged photos in my face, accusing me of selling my body to a sleazy director. They called me a whore, stripped me of my trust fund, and threw me onto the street. But Ethan refused to let me go. He had me blacklisted from every job and even froze my only friend's bank accounts, trying to break me completely. Forced into a corner, I had no choice but to attend a high-society party as his date, where he and my sister made sure everyone in New York saw me as worthless trash. I couldn't understand the depths of their cruelty. Why would the very family who took me from an orphanage orchestrate such an elaborate plot to ruin me? But during a sudden blackout at the party, I ran straight into the arms of my attacker. When the lights came back on, I finally saw his face. He wasn't a director—he was Abraham Bush, the most ruthless billionaire in the country. And just as my ex-fiancé is about to strike me after discovering I'm pregnant, Abraham's men have surrounded the house.
After My Groom Abandoned Me, His Rival Married Me Novel Cover
7.9
I smoothed the seating chart across our dining table, tracing my finger over the calligraphy that had cost a small fortune. Three hundred guests, meticulously arranged to avoid family feuds and maximize networking opportunities for Mark. Seven years of my life had led to this moment—tomorrow, I would finally become Mrs. Sullivan. Our Manhattan apartment was a sea of wedding gifts, white tissue paper spilling from bags, elegant boxes stacked in corners. The dress—my dream dress—hung on the bedroom door, a cascade of ivory silk and delicate beadwork that had consumed three months' salary. "Perfect," I whispered, making a final adjustment to the chart. I pulled my sketchbook closer, adding a few details to my drawing of the Plaza Hotel's terrace where we'd exchange our vows. Architecture had always been my passion, but I'd set it aside when Mark needed me to help with his business. Tomorrow marked not just our wedding, but the beginning of my return to that dream.
BROKEN VOWS:- FALLING FOR MY MARRIAGE COUNSELOR  Novel Cover
9.6
"This is wrong. You're supposed to help me fix my marriage" "And yet here you are, squirming under my hands like you're begging me to break it" "You're too close... I can't think straight when you're this close" "Then stop thinking. Just feel." He leans in, his breath brushing against my lips. "Tell me to stop Lillian-and I will. But if you don't, I'm going to kiss and claim your body like I've imagined a thousand times on that chair" *~*~*~*~*~*~*~* When Lillian Calloway walks into marriage counseling, she's desperate-not just to save her crumbling relationship with her emotionally distant husband, but to hold together the image of a perfect life. Then she meets Dr Ronan Carter. Calm, devastatingly handsome and far too familiar for her comfort. Each session unravels more than just the crack in her marriage-it exposes desires she's locked away for years. Ronan makes her feel alive. And when the professional lines begin to blur, Lillian finds herself stepping on the edge of something forbidden. He's her counselor. She's his client. Falling for each other will cost them everything. But what if the biggest lie was the marriage they were trying to save?
Call Me Fake Heiress? Now I Bought My Ex's Company Novel Cover
7.4
I never expected to be branded a 'fake heiress' and a 'scheming bitch' on my own wedding anniversary. "Did you really think we'd never find out you faked the DNA test?" My mother's voice cut like a blade. "You've been impersonating our real daughter all along." The irony was suffocating. They were the ones who stormed into my peaceful life, insisting that I was their long-lost child-no proof needed. And now they dared to call me the fraud. "Since Camille has finally returned to where she belongs," my father declared coldly, "it's time for you to crawl back into whatever shadow you came from." Then came the final blow. My husband of five years didn't even hesitate. "I'll have the divorce papers drawn up immediately. Don't make this difficult, Mirena. You were never meant to be my wife." Overnight, I was discarded. The scandal of the city. The woman who stole a life that was never hers. But they forgot one thing: I never needed them. Before I was George Ashton's wife, I was Mirena Sterling-the Investment Queen. The woman who broke Wall Street records before she turned twenty-five. A racing champion. A tech prodigy. I walked away from all of it. Gave up my empire. My crown. My name. All for a man who threw me away like garbage the moment someone "better" came along. Big mistake. On the night they cast me out, soaking wet and humiliated, I ran into the last person I ever wanted to see. "Look at you now, Mirena," Alexander Pierce murmured, watching me with those piercing eyes. "The woman who once ruled the financial world. Reduced to this." He tilted his head. "And for what? Love?" A dark laugh. "Pathetic." My former rival. The man who spent years trying to beat me-and never once succeeded. Now he stood before me, a Wall Street titan, watching my downfall with hungry satisfaction. He thought he'd seen the last of me. He was wrong. The game was simple now: drop the dead weight, reclaim what's mine, and remind everyone why they feared my name. Within months, I was back. Every market moved when I breathed. Every headline screamed my return. The Sterlings came crawling, begging for mercy they'd never shown me. And George? He watched in horror as I bought his most prized company without blinking. The divorce he'd so eagerly signed? His greatest regret. "Mirena, please," he begged, groveling at my feet. "Give me another chance." I didn't even look at him. "Sorry, darling. I don't recycle trash." But what I didn't expect was him. Alexander Pierce dropped to one knee in front of me-the man who had once mocked my fall, now looking up with something raw and undisguised in his crimson gaze. "I knew you'd take back everything they stole," he said, voice low. "Now..." A slow, dangerous smile curved his lips. "Take me too."
Heartbroken; From Ruin to Being the Queen of Them All Novel Cover
9.3
After being betrayed by her husband too many times, the last betrayal broke her thread. Xanthe is back for revenge and she would even team up with her husband’s enemy if it meant getting it.
I Let Her Go, Now She's Unattainable Novel Cover
8.8
To repay a debt, Elliana hid her real abilities and married into a powerful family, quietly helping her husband conquer the business world. Three years later, he coldly announced, "She's back. We're getting divorced." Elliana dropped the act. No longer willing to pretend, she stepped out as a legendary healer, a supermodel, the head of a global conglomerate, a top luxury designer, and a master restorer. Her ex begged for forgiveness, but Elliana never looked back-she chose his far more impressive uncle instead. "You're just not worth it."