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He Posted He Hated Me, So I Married A Billionaire Novel Cover

He Posted He Hated Me, So I Married A Billionaire

Ivy sacrificed everything for her husband’s dreams, only to discover a viral post detailing his absolute disgust for her. Broken but refusing to crumble, she discovers his ultimate betrayal with a younger woman. Enter Silas Kade—a ruthless, dangerously seductive billionaire who thrives in the shadows. He offers Ivy the ultimate revenge. The price? Her absolute surrender.
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Chapter 2

He moved before I could process what was happening.

One second I was standing in the rain, blinking against the headlights, and the next there was weight on my shoulders—heavy, warm, smelling of dark cedar and something sharper underneath, like smoke and expensive restraint. His coat. He'd pulled it off and dropped it over me in a single motion, the way you'd throw a blanket over a fire to smother it.

I grabbed the lapels to shove it back at him.

"I don't need—"

"Get in the car."

Not a question. Not even really a sentence. Just three words that landed like a hand on the back of my neck, and then his actual hand was at my elbow, and I was moving, and I didn't understand how I was moving because I hadn't decided to.

The car door was open. The interior was dark leather and silence and the low, expensive hum of climate control. I planted my feet on the wet pavement.

"I'm not getting in your car." My voice came out steadier than I felt. "I don't know you."

"You're standing in the middle of the road at two in the morning in the rain." He looked at me. Still that same look—cataloguing, assessing, like I was a problem he was deciding whether to solve. "Get in."

I pushed back against his grip. It was like pushing against a wall. Not aggressive, not rough—just immovable, this quiet, absolute solidity that made my resistance feel almost embarrassing. He guided me into the back seat with the same unhurried certainty you'd use to close a cabinet door, and then he was sliding in beside me, and the door shut, and the rain disappeared.

The silence was immediate and total.

I sat very still, dripping onto his leather seat, his coat still around my shoulders. My heart was going too fast. I was aware of how small the space was. How close he was. How he didn't say anything at all, just looked forward for a moment, then turned and looked at me with that same unnerving steadiness.

Up close, he was sharper than the dark had suggested. Late thirties, maybe. A jaw like something architectural. Eyes that didn't perform anything—no warmth, no threat, just attention, which was somehow worse than either.

His gaze moved to my throat.

Not my face. My throat.

I felt it before I understood what was happening—his hand, unhurried and deliberate, lifting toward me. I went rigid. His fingers didn't grab or grip. They simply rested, two fingertips against the side of my neck, right over the place where my pulse was hammering like something trying to escape.

He held them there.

Feeling it. The panic, the adrenaline, all of it broadcasting directly into his hand like a signal he was reading.

I should have slapped him. I should have screamed. Instead I sat completely frozen, because there was something in the way he did it—not possessive, not predatory, just terribly, clinically aware—that pinned me in place more effectively than force ever could have.

"You're not afraid of me," he said. It wasn't a question either. More like a finding.

"I'm afraid of plenty of things right now," I said. "You're just not at the top of the list."

Something shifted in his expression. Not a smile. More like the shadow of one, gone before it fully formed.

He lowered his hand.

"Ivy." My name in his mouth was strange—he said it like he'd already known it, like it was a file he was pulling up rather than a word he was learning. "You live three blocks from here."

My stomach went cold. "How do you know that?"

He didn't answer. He looked at me instead, and in the low light of the car I could see that he was making some kind of calculation behind those quiet eyes. Not malicious. Just—certain. The way someone looks when they already know the outcome of a conversation.

"Go back into that pathetic little house if you must." His voice was low, almost gentle, which made it worse. "But when you're ready to burn it down, you know who to call."

The words landed somewhere deep and specific, like he'd found a bruise I hadn't known I had and pressed it, not cruelly, just precisely. The apartment. The mortgage. Liam asleep under the duvet with his phone and his eight hundred thousand likes and his contempt wrapped around him like armor.

*Burn it down.*

I wanted to say something cutting. Something that would reestablish the distance between us, remind him that I didn't know him, that he had no right to look at me like he could see straight through the wet jacket and the cracked phone and the two years of slow erosion down to whatever was left underneath.

I didn't say anything.

He reached into his jacket. Pulled out a card—matte black, no texture, just a number in silver so understated it was almost invisible. He didn't hand it to me.

He tucked it into the fold of my jacket, just below the collar. His fingers were cold. They moved with complete deliberateness, grazing my collarbone on the way back—not accidental, not quite intentional, just there, a fact, like the rain and the cracked phone and everything else I couldn't undo tonight.

I didn't move.

He held my gaze for one more second, then looked forward.

"Take her home."

The driver pulled away without a word.

I sat in the back of a stranger's car, wrapped in a coat that smelled like cedar and something darker, watching the rain-blurred city slide past the windows. The card was warm now. Warm from being against his body, and then against mine.

I didn't look at it. I just held it between my fingers and felt the edges.

The car stopped in front of my building.

I got out. I didn't look back. I walked to the door, punched in the code, rode the elevator up in silence, and stood outside our apartment for a moment with my hand on the handle.

Then I pushed it open.

The lights were off. The takeout containers were still on the counter. Everything was exactly as I'd left it, which meant nothing had happened here, which meant the world had continued its ordinary rotation while mine had done something else entirely.

And then I heard it.

From the bathroom. The door cracked, light leaking underneath it—and Liam's voice, low and pressed down to almost nothing, the particular register he used when he was trying not to be heard. A laugh. Soft and sticky and intimate, the kind that doesn't happen on accident.

*That* laugh.

I stood in the dark hallway and listened to my husband laugh like that for someone who wasn't me, and I looked down at the black card in my hand, still holding the ghost of a stranger's warmth.

I closed my fingers around it.

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