Follow
Chapters
Share
Ex's Betrayal, New Love's Rise Novel Cover

Ex's Betrayal, New Love's Rise

I hummed softly as I sketched out the menu for our anniversary dinner, my fingers tracing the elegant script I'd been practicing for weeks. Four years with Marcus deserved something special, something that reflected the depth of what we shared—or what I thought we shared. The dining room table was covered with my plans: swatches of burgundy and cream table linens, printouts of recipes I'd been perfecting, and a detailed timeline ensuring everything would be flawless. Marcus deserved perfection. We deserved perfection. "Seared scallops with champagne beurre blanc," I murmured, adding it to the menu. His favorite. I'd spent three weekends practicing until each scallop had the perfect golden crust. The specialty saffron I'd ordered from an obscure online vendor had finally arrived yesterday—the final ingredient for the risotto that would accompany the main course. My phone buzzed with a reminder: I needed to confirm our dinner reservation at Lumière, the intimate French bistro where we'd celebrate before coming home for the private dinner I was planning.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

I didn't attend the party, but I didn't need to. It was everywhere—splashed across Instagram stories, Facebook updates, and Twitter feeds. Marcus Hartwell and Sophia Reynolds, beaming under crystal chandeliers, her left hand strategically positioned to showcase the diamond that glittered like a small planet on her finger. The diamond that should have been mine. The diamond that was never meant for me.

"We're so excited to share our joy and our future baby with all of you," Marcus announced in the live stream, his arm wrapped possessively around Sophia's waist. "When you know, you just know."

I watched from my hotel room, fingers trembling as I clutched my phone. Four years versus four months. That's all it had taken for him to replace me, to upgrade to the newer model. The comments scrolled by, a blur of congratulations and heart emojis. No one mentioned me. No one seemed to remember that just two weeks ago, I had been the woman by his side.

I shut off my phone and looked around the sterile hotel room that had become my temporary shelter. Boxes of my belongings were stacked against one wall—the carefully curated life I'd built with Marcus reduced to cardboard containers labeled in my neat handwriting. Clothes. Books. Kitchen. Memories.

Three days after I walked out, I'd returned to our apartment while Marcus was at work. I packed methodically, taking only what was undeniably mine, leaving behind the furniture we'd chosen together, the artwork we'd collected, the life we'd constructed. I left my key on the counter alongside a note with just three words: "The bet's off."

My phone buzzed again—another notification. I ignored it. Instead, I opened my laptop and began the systematic dismantling of my digital presence. Instagram: deactivated. Facebook: deleted. Twitter: gone. LinkedIn: updated to remove any mention of Los Angeles. It was surprisingly easy to disappear, to erase the digital footprints of Isabella Chen, the woman who had loved Marcus Hartwell for four devoted years.

I sold what furniture I'd brought to the hotel through an online marketplace, meeting strangers in parking lots to hand over pieces of my past. With each transaction, I felt lighter, untethered from the life that had collapsed around me.

"You sure you want to let this go?" a woman asked as she loaded my vintage reading chair into her truck. "It's beautiful."

"I'm sure," I replied, pocketing the cash. "I'm traveling light these days."

The money from selling my possessions sat in a new bank account—one Marcus had no knowledge of. It wasn't much, but it was mine. Untainted. A foundation for whatever came next.

Three weeks after the breakup, I stood outside the Los Angeles Culinary Institute, clutching an acceptance letter that had arrived with surprising speed. The accelerated pastry program would consume six months of my life, filling my days with flour, sugar, and precise measurements—a world where following the recipe guaranteed results, where there was comfort in the chemistry of baking.

"Welcome to LACI," said the admissions counselor, handing me a pristine white chef's coat with my name embroidered above the pocket. "Classes start Monday."

That weekend, I volunteered at the Westside Women's Center, kneading bread dough alongside women who were rebuilding their lives after various catastrophes—domestic violence, homelessness, addiction. Their stories made my heartbreak seem almost trivial by comparison.

"First time baking?" asked Elena, a woman with tired eyes and gentle hands, as she showed me how to shape a proper boule.

"No," I answered, feeling the dough yield beneath my palms. "But it's the first time I'm baking for myself."

She nodded, understanding in her gaze. "That's always the hardest loaf to make."

As weeks passed, I fell into a rhythm. Mornings at the institute, learning the precise art of French pastry. Evenings volunteering, teaching other women the simple joy of creating something nourishing with their hands. The flour that dusted my clothes and fingernails became a badge of my transformation.

No one at either place knew about Marcus, about Sophia, about the public humiliation I'd fled. Here, I was just Isabella—quiet, focused, increasingly skilled with a pastry bag and a rolling pin.

It was during a Saturday class on wedding cakes that my phone vibrated with a text from an unknown number. I almost ignored it until I glimpsed the preview:

"Isabella, it's Adrian Sterling. I'm in LA for the weekend. Would you like to meet for coffee?"

My hands froze mid-piping, royal icing dripping onto the pristine workstation. Adrian Sterling. A name from another lifetime, from those quiet nights in Malibu when we were both broken in different ways.

I stared at the message, flour-covered fingers hovering over the screen, wondering how one reply might change everything.

You may also like

Betrayer Pays the Price Novel Cover
8.3
The morning sun cast long shadows across Oakridge Elementary's parking lot as I checked my watch for the third time. Payton's first day of school was running late, and I needed to make sure everything was perfect for her big day. "Mommy, do I look okay?" Payton tugged at her new uniform, her eyes bright with nervous excitement. "Perfect, sweetheart." I smoothed her hair and straightened her little collar. "You're going to have the best first day ever." As we approached the school entrance, a familiar sleek black shape caught my eye—my Tesla. The car I'd specifically told Miles not to touch this morning since I needed it for Payton's special day. My stomach tightened as I saw him standing beside it, one hand resting possessively on the door handle. But it wasn't Miles who made me stop dead in my tracks—it was the woman leaning against the car as if she owned it. Giana Lawrence. Her son Reece stood beside her, wearing a private school uniform that probably cost more than most people's monthly rent.
Divorce After Betrayal Novel Cover
8.1
The cold marble floor bit through my silk stockings as I knelt before the altar in our private chapel, five years to the day since Father's funeral. The diamond tiara—Mother's tiara—felt heavier than usual in my trembling hands, its faceted stones catching the weak afternoon light filtering through stained glass windows. Each crystal seemed to hold a memory: Father in his dress uniform, his medals gleaming with honor before the court-martial stripped away everything he'd built. "I'm sorry, Father," I whispered to the empty air, my voice barely audible in the sacred silence. "I should have listened to you about Dorian. I should have—" The chapel door burst open with such violence that the brass hinges shrieked in protest. I didn't need to turn around to know who had shattered this moment of grief. Dorian's footsteps echoed off the vaulted ceiling, each step deliberate and cold. "Still mourning that disgraced old fool?" His voice carried none of the warmth I'd once cherished, none of the tenderness that had convinced me to defy Father's wishes five years ago. I clutched the tiara tighter, its sharp edges pressing into my palms.
He Slept With His Assistant While I Watched From Upstairs Novel Cover
9.3
For five years, Emma played the perfect wife to Nathan Shaw—the arrogant CEO of TechFusion. Beautiful, submissive, and utterly dependent, she was everything he wanted her to be: a trophy to showcase, but never a threat to his ego. But when Nathan livestreams his affair with his stunning assistant during their fifth anniversary—publicly humiliating Emma in front of the entire company—he makes the biggest mistake of his life. Because Emma isn’t the clueless wife he thinks she is. She’s the mastermind behind TechFusion’s success, the silent force who built his empire from the ground up. And for five long years, she’s been gathering evidence, building alliances, and preparing for the moment he would finally cross the line. Now, with the help of a secret network of powerful allies, Emma is ready to execute Operation Reckoning. One by one, she will dismantle Nathan’s company, his reputation, and his life—until he has nothing left. But as she pulls the strings from the shadows, a chilling question remains: Does Nathan even know who he married?
MY EX-BOYFRIEND WANTS ME BACK Novel Cover
9.0
I never thought one broken promise could shatter my world twice. His name was Marcus. He swore he'd stay in touch when he left for that "year-long business trip." Three months later, silence. No calls, no texts, nothing. On my birthday, drunk and done with heartbreak, I went home with a stranger. One reckless night. I slipped out before dawn, leaving a fake name. No more men. No more drama. Then the perfect job fell into my lap: personal assistant to Victoria Langford, a young, filthy-rich heiress. Live-in position, great pay, exactly what my sick little sister and I needed. I moved in, ready for a fresh start. Until I walked into her mansion and saw him. Marcus. In her arms. My fiancé was her boyfriend. Rage burned through me, but I swallowed it. I needed this job. He begged forgiveness, fed me lies about a big contract, how he never stopped loving me. Weak, stupid, lonely. I fell back into him. Secret touches, stolen nights, right under her nose. Then everything exploded. I came home to blood and sirens. Marcus swore he didn't know what happened. But when the police started digging, he pointed the finger at me. How do I escape this? Who's the father of the child growing inside of me?
Pleasure Contract: The Mother the CEO Swore to Dominate Novel Cover
8.6
"Come on, Juliet... it's time to write a new story." After years trapped in an abusive marriage, Juliet Pierce finally runs. Alone, with two children and a suitcase full of trauma, she leaves behind the luxury - and George Monroe, the man she once loved - in search of a new beginning. The destination? Manhattan. The plan? Just survive. But everything changes on her first night working as a waitress at Paradise, an exclusive BDSM club where pleasure meets power. Afraid of being recognized, she wears a mask - a shield she desperately needs. And that's where she crosses paths with Noah Blake: billionaire CEO, relentless Dominant, and co-owner of the club. He sees her. He wants her. He has no idea who she really is... yet. Days later, Juliet applies for a position as Noah's assistant. This time, she's not wearing a mask - and he starts putting the pieces together. Juliet wants distance. Noah wants to tame her. "I do love a challenge," he says. Juliet is everything he never expected: funny, bold, intense - fragile on the outside, but with eyes that reveal how untamed she truly is. He wants her on her knees. She wants to prove she can love without losing herself. What begins as a dangerous arrangement becomes a quiet war between fear and desire, past and redemption. But Juliet's past is closer than she thinks. And when it resurfaces to haunt her, she'll have to choose: surrender... or fight for herself - and maybe, for the love of a man who swore he would never love. "It was in that moment I realized I was about to discover: Whether this would be a nightmare... or the best experience of my life."
Rejecting His Obsession Novel Cover
9.6
The cathedral's stained glass windows cast rainbow patterns across my white satin gown as I stood alone at the altar, my bouquet of white roses trembling in my hands. This was supposed to be the happiest day of my life—my fairytale ending with Ethan Sterling, the man who had pursued me relentlessly since our days at Columbia, promising me the world and everything in it. But something was wrong. Terribly wrong. The string quartet had played the wedding march twice now. The minister shifted uncomfortably beside me, checking his watch with increasing frequency. I scanned the sea of faces before me—hundreds of New York's elite in designer suits and couture dresses, diamond earrings catching the light as heads turned to whisper behind manicured hands. In the front row, William Sterling sat rigid in his tailored tuxedo, his expression a mask of controlled fury as he checked his phone for what must have been the twentieth time. Beside him, the rest of the Sterling family maintained their perfect postures, though I could see the tension in their tightly drawn smiles. My gaze drifted to the opposite side, where my parents looked so out of place among the opulence.