
He Posted He Hated Me, So I Married A Billionaire
He Posted He Hated Me, So I Married A Billionaire Chapter 1
The post had 847,000 likes.
I read it three times, each time hoping the words would rearrange themselves into something that made sense. Something that wasn't what I thought it was.
They didn't.
*"Real talk, married men: anyone else physically repulsed by their own wife? I gag every time I have to kiss mine. Drop a 👍 if you feel seen."*
The username was LiamTalksReal. His podcast handle. The one with 200,000 subscribers. The one I had helped him build, sitting beside him on weekends editing audio files while he called it *our* project.
My phone slipped.
I didn't try to catch it. It hit the hardwood floor and the screen cracked straight across the middle, a jagged fault line splitting the post in two. But the glow remained. The words remained. 847,000 likes and counting, and the top comment read: *bro same, mine looks like she hasn't slept since 2019 💀*
Liam was asleep beside me.
He was actually asleep. On his back, one arm thrown over his face, breathing slow and even like a man with absolutely nothing wrong in his life. The bedroom smelled like his cologne and the takeout containers we hadn't thrown away yet, and outside the window, thunder rolled in low and heavy over the city.
I sat there in the dark for a long moment.
Then I kicked him.
Not a nudge. Not a gentle tap. I pulled my knee back and drove my foot into his thigh, hard enough that he lurched sideways with a grunt and grabbed the mattress like he was falling.
"What the—" He surfaced from sleep angry, the way he always did, blinking at me with red-rimmed eyes and a face creased from the pillow. "Ivy, what the hell—"
"Read it." I held the cracked phone up in front of his face. My hand was steady. I was surprised by that. Inside I felt like something was curdling, some slow chemical reaction turning everything sour. But my hand was perfectly, terribly steady.
He squinted at the screen. Pushed it away. Ran a hand through his hair with that particular irritated roughness that I had once found endearing and now made my stomach turn.
"Oh for God's sake, Ivy." His voice was thick with sleep and contempt in equal measure. He reached for the blanket, dragging it back up toward his shoulder. "It's just content. Stop being so dramatic and let me sleep."
*Just content.*
I stared at the side of his face. The jaw I had kissed. The ear I had whispered into. The man I had co-signed a mortgage with eighteen months ago because he said we were building something together.
"Eight hundred thousand people read that you gag when you kiss me." My voice came out quieter than I intended. Almost calm. "Eight hundred thousand people, Liam."
"It's a bit. It's engagement bait." He turned onto his side, away from me. "The algorithm rewards authenticity. You know how this works."
"Authenticity." The word tasted like something rotten. "So it's authentic."
He rolled back over then, and I saw the shift happen in real time—the sleepiness burning off, replaced by something sharper and uglier. Liam had two modes when cornered. Deflect, or attack. He was done deflecting.
"You know what?" He sat up, and suddenly he was filling the space, his voice climbing. "This is exactly the problem. I am out there grinding every single day, trying to grow something that actually pays our bills, and you want to sit here at two in the morning making me feel like a criminal for doing my job."
"Your job is telling strangers you're disgusted by your wife—"
"My job is *content creation*, and if you had any idea what it takes to stay relevant, you would understand that sometimes you say provocative things to drive conversation!" He was fully awake now, gesturing with both hands, and I recognized this too—the way he expanded when he was angry, took up more room, made the air feel thinner. "Do you have any idea what our mortgage costs? Do you actually look at the numbers, or do you just let me carry that?"
There it was.
The mortgage. He always found his way back to the mortgage.
The apartment was in both our names, but the down payment had come from my savings—three years of it—and somehow that had transformed, in the alchemy of Liam's grievances, into a weight he alone was bearing. The joint account we shared, the one I deposited my salary into every month, the one that auto-paid the bills: somehow that was also his burden. His sacrifice.
I felt it then. Not anger. Something worse—a suffocating, airless despair, like standing in a room where the walls had been quietly moving inward for months and you'd only just noticed.
I was tied to him. Financially knotted, legally bound, my name on the same deed as a man who had just told nearly a million people that touching me made him sick.
"I support you," I said. My voice was very quiet now. "I have always supported you."
"Then *support me* and stop making everything into a crisis at two in the morning!" He threw himself back against the pillow, yanking the duvet over his head with a finality that was almost theatrical. From underneath it came one last, muffled verdict: "God, you are exhausting."
The room went still.
I sat there for another three seconds. Four. Five.
Then I got up, grabbed my jacket from the chair, and walked out.
I didn't slam the door. I closed it with a soft, deliberate click that felt more devastating than any slam could have, and then I was in the hallway, and then I was in the elevator, and then I was outside.
The rain hit me immediately. Cold, driving, the kind that soaks through a jacket in seconds and plasters your hair flat against your face. I walked without direction, just away, my broken phone dark in my pocket, my chest doing something strange and tight that wasn't quite crying.
The street was empty. Of course it was—it was two in the morning and the sky was coming apart. The city lights blurred and fractured through the rain, smearing orange and white across the wet asphalt, and I stood at the corner of our block thinking, *I have nowhere to go.* My name was on that mortgage. My things were in that apartment. My life was in there, braided so thoroughly through his that I couldn't picture pulling one thread without unraveling everything.
Headlights swung around the corner.
They were blinding—high beams on a vehicle moving too fast for the wet road—and I stumbled back a step as the black Maybach hit its brakes hard, tires cutting a sharp sound through the rain. It stopped less than two feet from where I was standing.
I blinked. My heart was slamming.
For a moment, nothing moved. The rain hammered the hood of the car, the engine idled low, and the headlights pinned me in place like something caught.
Then the door opened.
A man stepped out. Long legs first, custom leather shoes meeting the wet pavement without hesitation, like the rain was an inconvenience he had simply decided not to acknowledge. He straightened to his full height, and even in the dark, even through the downpour, there was something about the way he stood—still and contained and radiating a kind of pressure that had nothing to do with volume—that made the air feel different.
He looked at me.
Not the way people usually looked at a soaking wet woman standing in the middle of the road at two in the morning. Not with concern, or irritation, or the particular urban wariness of someone who wanted to avoid involvement.
He looked at me like he was cataloguing something. Like he was making a decision.
The rain fell between us.
And somehow, standing there drenched and hollowed out and tied by paperwork to a man who found me repulsive, I felt the absurd, irrational sensation that whatever came next had already been set in motion long before this moment.
That this stranger in the rain was not an accident.
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