Follow
Chapters
Share
He Chose A Fake Heir Over His True Wife Novel Cover

He Chose A Fake Heir Over His True Wife

My husband studied the fertility report on his desk with the same cold precision he used to order executions. On our fifth anniversary, he didn't give me diamonds. He checked his Rolex and delivered the sentence that ended my life. "Your genetic profile is defective, Catarina." He didn't just ask for a divorce. He pressed a button on his intercom, and a woman walked in. She was loud, chewing gum, and wearing a dress that was too tight. "This is Aria," Alex said, his voice flat. "She is a vessel. She will carry the heir your body cannot produce." He claimed it was just business, that she would be exiled once the child was born. But at my birthday gala, when Aria tripped into a champagne tower, the truth shattered along with the glass. I was the one bleeding, a jagged shard slicing my arm. But Alex didn't look at me. He threw his body over her. He cradled his mistress, screaming for a doctor to check the baby, while I stood there with blood dripping onto the marble floor, completely invisible. I watched him give his own blood to save her in the clinic later that night. I saw the way he looked at her—not like a vessel, but like a prize. He thought I would stay. He thought I was the obedient Mafia wife who would raise his mistress's child to save the family image. So when he handed me a stack of papers to "protect the assets," he was too arrogant to read them. He didn't notice the header read *Decree of Divorce*. While he was busy buying baby clothes for a child that didn't even exist, I wiped my identity from the servers, signed the papers he blindly authorized, and boarded a one-way jet to Paris. By the time he realizes his "heir" is a fraud, I will already be a ghost.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 9

The private hangar at JFK acted like a wind tunnel.

The air stung with the sharp scent of jet fuel and burnt rubber.

I stood in the shadows of the terminal building, hugging my coat tight against the chill.

My jet was waiting.

It was a small Gulfstream, fully paid for by the settlement.

But there was another jet on the tarmac.

The DeLuca jet.

Alex was standing at the bottom of the stairs, barking into his phone.

"Get the best doctors to Como! Now!"

He was flying to Italy.

He was flying to meet the fabricated emergency of his fake pregnant mistress.

Suddenly, he turned.

He saw me.

For a second, suspicion flashed in his dark eyes.

"What are you doing here?" he shouted over the roar of the engines.

He walked toward me.

My heart hammered against my ribs like a trapped bird.

If he knew...

If he knew I was leaving forever...

He would drag me back.

He would lock me in the tower.

I forced a smile onto my face.

It was the best performance of my life.

"Seeing off Cousin Sofia," I shouted back, keeping my voice steady.

"She's flying back to Rome."

Alex stopped.

He looked at my bag.

It was small.

Unassuming.

He nodded. He bought it.

He was so consumed by his own drama, he couldn't see the truth standing right in front of him.

"I have to go to the West Coast," he yelled, gesturing vaguely.

"Meeting."

Another lie.

We were standing five feet apart, screaming lies at each other.

"Okay," I said.

"Safe flight."

He checked his Rolex.

He stepped forward and pressed a quick kiss to my cheek.

His lips were cold.

"Back soon," he said.

"Love you."

He turned and ran up the stairs to his jet.

The door sealed shut.

I watched his plane taxi down the runway.

I watched it lift off into the grey sky.

He was chasing a ghost.

My phone buzzed in my hand.

The screen lit up with a message.

Consigliere: Transfer complete. ID active. Have a good life, Ms. Jensen.

I looked at the phone.

I looked at the contact name: Alexander.

I didn't just delete the contact.

That wasn't enough.

I popped the SIM card out of the side.

I snapped the plastic in half.

I walked to a trash can near the terminal entrance.

I threw the phone in.

Without looking back, I walked across the tarmac to my jet.

I climbed the stairs.

The flight attendant smiled at me.

"Welcome aboard, Ms. Jensen."

I sat in the leather seat.

I buckled the belt.

The engines roared to life.

We accelerated.

Faster.

Faster.

The wheels left the ground.

I looked out the window at the shrinking city of New York.

It was a cage of steel and glass.

And I was finally on the outside.