
He Regrets After The Countdown To Our Divorce
They say when life throws you a lemon, you should turn it to a lemonade, even though some things weren't just intentional.
"For the next three years, you will work under my son, Anthony. You will obey him unconditionally and assist him in developing the first humanoid robots. It's all stated in the contract."
Melissa, a brilliant first-class robotics engineer, signs a binding contract to save her only sister who urgently needs surgery. Not only must she work for Anthony-the arrogant CEO of the Morgan Group-but she must also marry him.
Throughout the contract, Anthony treats her like a lowlife, belittling her at every opportunity and even stealing credit for her achievements, convinced she would never dare to leave. But as the three years draw to a close, her supposed knight in shining armor, Josh, shows up as he promised.
Will Melissa walk away from Anthony, reclaim her freedom, and rekindle the spark with Josh? Or will Anthony realize too late just how much he stands to lose when the countdown to their divorce begins?
And what if there was more to the accident that left Melissa's sister in need of surgery-and forced Melissa into this contract?
If you want to feel first hand what it means for a lady to possess her possession, then get over here!
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Chapter 2
Melissa's POV
"Per the contract, I built Morgan Group into a tech powerhouse. But its growth is fragile. This is a ten-billion-dollar deal locked in stability for the next decade," I explained to our latest clients, my tone professional yet calm. The polished conference room lights reflected off the glass table.
A small thought flashed through my mind, Although Tony wouldn't admit it, this is one thing I'll always be proud of. Something I can finally beat my chest for.
"Yes, ma'am," one of the men across the table said with a respectful nod. "Everyone in this field knows how good you are. That's why our boss sent us here."
I smiled faintly, used to hearing words like that. Compliments like these had become routine, almost mechanical, from first-time clients. Still, they meant something. They reminded me of the one thing Tony could never take away-my competence.
I leaned forward slightly to pass a document, and then afterwards to read and sign the final section.
Just immediately, my phone buzzed on the table. One glance at the screen, and my chest tightened and I noticed that the caller was Tony.
A chill ran through me. I didn't even have to think and so I grabbed the phone immediately. The last time I missed his call during a signing, he'd accused me of "flirting with clients." I could still remember the blow that followed and the taste of my own blood as I tried to explain.
He never listened.
I pressed the phone to my ear. "Hello..."
His voice exploded before I could finish. "King's Presidential Villa! Get your worthless ass over here right now, you bitch!"
My throat went dry. The clients exchanged confused glances, and I forced a smile that didn't reach my eyes. "Excuse me, please," I murmured, turning slightly away.
"Tony," I whispered, careful not to let my voice shake. "I'm in the middle of an important signing. Can this wait just a little? I'll meet..."
"Disobeying my orders, bitch?" His voice rose even louder, venom seeping through every word. "If you're not here in ten minutes, consider yourself dead meat."
The line went dead before I could respond.
For a moment, all I could hear was the faint buzz of the fluorescent light above me. My mind scrambled to make sense of it-why he'd called, what could possibly be so urgent but deep down, I already knew it didn't matter. When Tony said ten minutes, he meant it.
I took a deep breath, forcing my heart to steady. It must be something important, I told myself, though I knew that was wishful thinking. Still, I couldn't risk testing his patience now. The contract of all of these had a clause that has stuck to my mind in the past three years-obedience without conditions. And Tony loved using it to remind me of my place.
But then, that familiar whisper of hope pushed through the fear. Just three more days, I reminded myself. Three more days, and this nightmare will end and I'll finally walk away.
A throat cleared in front of me, dragging me back. One of the clients shifted in his seat. "Everything okay, Mrs. Morgan?"
I forced a nod, the corners of my mouth lifting into a tight smile. "Yes, of course. I apologize. That was... urgent."
"Should we proceed?" another asked, politely but with a flicker of irritation.
I wanted to-God, I wanted to finish this deal.but my mind was already racing through traffic routes, calculating time. From here to the villa was a seven-minute drive, maybe less if I sped. He'd already given me ten minutes.
My pulse drummed against my throat.
"I'm sorry," I said finally, closing the folder in front of me. "Something unexpected came up. We'll need to reschedule and then the HR will reach out to you soon."
Before anyone could respond, I was already standing. Their disappointed faces blurred as I gathered my files and phone, whispering a quick "thank you" before hurrying out. The elevator doors closed behind me, and only then did I let out a shaky breath.
Three days, I repeated to myself. Just three more days.
The drive to King's Presidential Villa felt longer than it should have. My grip on the steering wheel was tight and my knuckles pale from the pressure. The car stereo hummed quietly, but my thoughts drowned out the music.
Every red light felt like a countdown. Every passing second, I imagined what his face would look like, which would probably be tense, furious and ready to explode.
When I finally arrived, the guards recognized the car immediately and waved me through to the reserved parking.
As I stepped out and went towards his usually reserved space here at the Kings presidential Villa, the sound of faint music floated through the hall. I followed the noise quietly, my heels clicking against the marble floor. With each step, the voices grew louder and of course his voice among them.
"Everyone praises Melissa," Tony was saying, his words slurred slightly. "Even my mother treats her like royalty. But deep down, she knows everything she has is because of me. I'm the only one that truly matters in the Morgan group of companies!"
I paused by the doorway, my stomach twisting. That was a typical Tony-bragging, drunk on attention and self-importance and to think that it was almost predictable.
I should've turned around. But instead, I pushed the door open.
The smell of alcohol hit me first. Then the sight of Tony in a tailored suit, laughing too loud, tossing bundles of money into the air like confetti. The people around him cheered, their glasses raised, feeding his ego.
My heart sank. So this was why he'd called me here-so I could watch his little show.
I took a small breath, trying to keep my tone calm. "I'm here," I said finally, my voice low but steady.
He turned, eyes narrowing. For a moment, I thought maybe-just maybe-he'd say something civil. But instead, a sharp sting exploded across my cheek.
The force threw me slightly off balance. I stumbled back, catching myself against the edge of a wall. The crowd went quiet, their laughter dying into awkward silence. Someone gasped and some others whispered.
A single tear slipped down my face, uninvited. I wasn't even sure if it was from pain or from the humiliation that came with it.
Tony smirked, his tone dripping with disdain. "Took you long enough. Did you crawl here like the snail you are?"
I blinked rapidly, trying to hold back more tears. The room blurred for a moment, but I forced myself to stand tall. I'd been through worse. I wasn't going to crumble here, certainly not in front of them.
I checked the time on my phone, my voice trembling just a little. "I was four minutes late."
His expression darkened. "Four minutes too long."
He turned back to his friends, laughing as if nothing had happened, leaving me standing there with my cheeks burning, heart pounding and dignity slowly bleeding out of me.
I pressed my palm gently against my face, feeling the warmth of the slap seep into my skin. Inside, my thoughts whispered the same silent prayer they always did:
Just three more days, Melissa. Three more days, and you'll finally be free. It wouldn't last forever.
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7.5
Lena Hart never imagined marriage would be reduced to a signature on paper.
To protect her family and save what little she has left, she signs a contract with Ethan Blackwood, a powerful CEO whose world is ruled by control, status, and ambition. For him, the marriage is nothing more than a strategic move to secure his position at the top.
There are rules. There are boundaries. And there is no room for love.
Thrown into a cold, high society marriage she never wanted, Lena endures humiliation, loneliness, and a husband who sees her as part of a deal, not a woman. But as cracks begin to form in Ethan's carefully built walls, the contract that bound them starts to feel dangerously fragile.
Because some marriages may be signed in power...
but love has a way of rewriting the terms.

8.9
Adela stood outside the private room, holding the obsidian necklace she had spent three months hand-crafting for her boyfriend.
But through the cracked door, she heard Juston laughing with his friends, calling her a stupid, obedient pawn and her art "garbage."
After she shattered the necklace and walked out into the freezing rain, Juston texted her a far more horrifying truth.
Her own family didn't just hate her-they had actively tried to kill her.
Two years ago, her brother Kayden intentionally slipped deadly shellfish into her food at a gala, sending her into anaphylactic shock.
Worse, her parents had covered up the attempted murder as a simple kitchen mistake, all to protect the family name and elevate her adopted sister, Kara.
Adela collapsed on the wet pavement, suffocating under the weight of the ultimate betrayal.
She had spent her entire life begging for their love, secretly working as the anonymous designer keeping their failing company afloat, only to realize she was nothing but a disposable tool.
She had absolutely no one, and nowhere to go.
Just as the storm threatened to swallow her whole, a sleek black Maybach pulled up to the curb.
Harmon Holland, the ruthless Wall Street billionaire she was originally arranged to marry, stepped out into the rain.
He didn't offer her pity. Instead, he handed her a legal document.
"Marry me, Adela. For one year."
She took the pen. This time, she wouldn't be an obedient pawn; she would be their executioner.

8.6
On the night of her third wedding anniversary, Isabella Hart discovered her husband in another woman's bed.
By morning, she was divorced.
Humiliated. Replaced. Erased.
After three years of loving a man who treated her like a shadow in her own marriage, Isabella walks away with nothing but her pride - and a secret she refuses to tell him.
But fate has a cruel sense of humor.
Hours after signing the divorce papers, she accidentally marries the most powerful and dangerously untouchable man in the city - billionaire CEO Alexander Laurent - in a legally binding contract mistake that cannot be undone.
Alexander needs a wife to secure his inheritance.
Isabella needs revenge.
What begins as a cold-blooded deal soon turns into something neither of them expected.
Because her ex-husband suddenly wants her back.
And this time... she's no longer the woman he threw away.
But when secrets unravel and the truth about that anniversary night comes to light, Isabella must decide-
Is this marriage her salvation... or her greatest mistake?

8.0
One night of reckless drinking to forget a cheating ex-boyfriend was supposed to be a fresh start. Instead, Elena wakes up with a bite mark on her neck she mistakes for a rough hickey and memories of a man who moved like a predator.
When she walks into her Advanced Law seminar, she's horrified to find her "beast" standing at the podium. Professor Alaric Blackwood is cold, professional, and lethal. But Alaric isn't alone. He's a triplet, and his brothers-the billionaire CEO and the outlaw biker president-can smell her on him. They are Lycan royalty, they are a unit, and they've decided she belongs to all of them.
Elena is thrust into a world of fangs and war, carrying a secret that will change the Lycan hierarchy forever

7.9
Fiona spent three years in a concrete cell, taking the fall for a hit-and-run accident caused by her billionaire husband's mistress.
When she finally got out and returned home, she found him throwing a lavish party, with the mistress on his arm wearing a gown Fiona had designed. Even worse, her own seven-year-old son pointed at her in disgust.
"Go away, bad woman!"
Her husband Cecil threw her out like a stray dog. To force her into submission, he trashed her belongings and cut off the life-saving medical funding for her mentor. Driven to desperation, Fiona snuck back into the mansion to retrieve her late mother's sapphire necklace. But the mistress caught her, ripped her own clothes, and screamed that Fiona was trying to kill her. Cecil didn't even hesitate. He violently shoved Fiona backward. Her head smashed against the sharp edge of a mahogany desk, and blood immediately poured into her eyes.
Lying in a pool of her own blood, Fiona watched the man she had sacrificed her freedom for wrap his arms protectively around the woman who ruined her life. He looked at her with pure, murderous disgust, as if she were the monster.
But Fiona didn't cry. Instead, a cold smile crept onto her face as her bloody thumb secretly pressed the emergency SOS button on her phone, snapping a clear photo of him standing over her shattered body.
"My husband just violently attacked me. I am bleeding from the head. I need help."
The police were already on their way. It was time to burn his empire to the ground.

9.1
I returned to the Reeves estate after five years in exile, not as the rightful heir, but as an outcast. My father had been dead for only a month, and my uncle Julian had already claimed his mahogany desk, his face tight with a greed he no longer bothered to hide.
Julian didn't even look up as he slid a check for a hundred thousand dollars across the wood. "A settlement," he sneered. "Sign the waiver, take your bastards, and disappear. We don't want you embarrassing the family name anymore."
One hundred thousand dollars for a legacy worth billions—it was an insult designed to draw blood. When my five-year-old twins, Leo and Mia, ran into the room, Julian looked at them with pure disgust, calling them vermin and ordering them out. He threatened that if I didn't sign, I’d be on the street in a week, stripped of the Reeves name and every penny of protection. Even the family lawyer looked away as he helped facilitate my ruin. I tore the check to shreds and walked out into a freezing deluge, shielding my children while the doors of my childhood home slammed shut behind us.
I spent years building a secret life as a high-level corporate fixer, yet when I crossed paths with Branson Reeves—the man who shared my son’s eyes—he treated me like a common gold-digger. He outbid me for the "Midnight Orchid" painting, the only piece of evidence that could bring Julian down, mocking my "thrift store" clothes while my children slept in a borrowed guest room. How could they all be so blind? How could a family be so ready to destroy its own blood for the sake of a ledger?
I was done hiding in the shadows. When Julian finally launched a hostile takeover to seize the entire empire, I walked into Branson’s penthouse, dropped my "poor niece" facade, and threw a decrypted file onto his desk.
"The game is over, Branson. Give me that painting, and I’ll show you exactly how to bury the man who thinks he's already won."