
HER BILLIONAIRE'S SECOND CHANCE.
Nadia escaped her cold marriage to billionaire Julian Ashford, but when his grandmother's will leaves everything to his firstborn child, he discovers she's seven months pregnant.
Suddenly, the husband who ignored her for six years wants her back, but Nadia has changed, and she's no longer the woman who waited for his attention.
As secrets unravel and empires collapse, she must decide if some love stories deserve a second chance, or if they need to be destroyed first.
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Chapter 4
Marcus was waiting in my office when I returned from Brooklyn.
"Heard about the baby," he said, feet propped on my desk like he already owned it. "Congratulations, cousin. Didn't think you had it in you."
I walked past him to the bar cart, poured myself two fingers of scotch. It was barely noon, but I needed something to wash away the look on Nadia's face when I'd threatened her with lawyers.
"Get your feet off my desk."
Marcus laughed but complied. "Touchy. I'm just here to offer my support during this difficult time. Grandmother's death must be hard on you."
"Cut the act. What do you want?"
"Just checking in on family." He stood, straightening his tie. "Making sure you understand the situation. That baby needs to be born within the Ashford family. Legitimate. Legal. No complications."
"I'm aware."
"Are you?" Marcus moved closer, his smile sharp. "Because from what I hear, your ex-wife hates your guts. She's not going to make this easy. And if that baby is born after your divorce is final, if there's any question about custody or legitimacy, the board won't accept it. Too messy. Too risky."
"The board answers to the majority shareholder," I said.
"Which will be me in four months if you can't produce an heir." He checked his watch, mimicking my own nervous habit. "Clock's ticking, Julian. Better figure out how to win back a wife you never wanted in the first place."
He left, and I drained my scotch in one swallow.
My phone buzzed. Mitchell.
"She's not going to agree to shared custody," I said before he could speak.
"Then we file anyway. Establish paternity, push for court-ordered visitation. Once the baby is born-"
"She'll fight me on everything." I set down my glass, staring at the city below. "And she should. I was a terrible husband."
Silence on the other end. Mitchell wasn't paid to comment on my personal failures.
"There's another option," he finally said. "Reconciliation. If you can convince her to give the marriage another chance, the inheritance is clean. The baby is born legitimate, you maintain control, everyone wins."
"Except Nadia."
"She gets financial security. A father for her child. The Ashford name. That's nothing."
It was nothing. Nothing compared to what I'd put her through. But Marcus was right about one thing-the clock was ticking. In eight weeks, that baby would be born. In four months, I'd lose everything if I couldn't prove legal parentage and custody.
"Set up a meeting with the board," I said. "I need to know exactly what they'll accept."
I hung up and pulled out my laptop, searching for something I should have looked for years ago. Nadia Laurent. My wife. The woman I'd married and never bothered to know.
Her social media was sparse. A few photos from charity events, always smiling that polite smile that never reached her eyes. I scrolled back further, before our marriage. There she was laughing with friends, paint splattered on her face at some art gallery. Another photo of her covered in flour, baking with an older woman who must have been her mother.
She looked happy. Alive.
I kept scrolling. Found her college thesis posted on an academic site. "The Ethics of Transactional Relationships in Modern Society." I clicked it open, skimming the abstract. It was about arranged marriages, business partnerships disguised as romance, the human cost of treating people like assets.
She'd written it the year before we got married.
She'd known exactly what our marriage would be, and she'd married me anyway. Because her father was dying and needed the money. Because she'd sacrificed her own happiness for family.
Just like I was asking her to do again.
My phone rang. Unknown number.
"Mr. Ashford?" A woman's voice, professional. "This is Dr. Sarah Chen from Brooklyn Methodist. I'm Nadia Laurent's OB-GYN."
My pulse quickened. "Is she alright? The baby."
"They're both fine. But Ms. Laurent listed you as the father on her medical forms, and I'm calling to inform you that she's been scheduled for an emergency appointment tomorrow morning. There's been some elevated blood pressure readings that we need to monitor."
"What does that mean?"
"It could be nothing, or it could be early signs of preeclampsia. We're being cautious given that she's in her third trimester." Dr. Chen paused. "She mentioned you two are separated. I'm calling because if this develops into a serious condition, you should be prepared. Preeclampsia can require early delivery."
Early delivery. The baby is coming sooner than expected.
"What time is the appointment?" I asked.
"Nine AM. Mr. Ashford, I should tell you, Ms. Laurent specifically asked me not to call you. But as the listed father, you have a right to medical information. I thought you should know."
She hung up, and I sat frozen. Nadia was sick, possibly seriously, and she didn't want me to know. Didn't want my help. Would rather risk her health than deal with me.
I looked at the business card I'd left on her coffee table, remembering the threat I'd made. I'll bury you in legal fees.
What kind of man threatens a pregnant woman?
The kind of man who loses everything, apparently.
I grabbed my keys and headed for the elevator. My assistant called after me, something about a meeting with the Tokyo investors, but I ignored her. For once, the company could wait.
I drove back to Brooklyn, rehearsing what I'd say. An apology, maybe. An offer to help with medical bills. Something that didn't make me sound like a complete monster.
But when I got to her building, I sat in my car for an hour, staring at her window. What right did I have to show up again? To demand entry into a life I'd rejected?
My phone buzzed. A text from an unknown number.
Stop sitting outside my building. You're scaring my neighbors.
I looked up. Nadia stood at her window, phone in hand, watching me.
I got out of the car.
She met me at the door, arms crossed over her stomach. "What now, Julian?"
"Your doctor called me," I said. "About your blood pressure."
Her face went pale. "She had no right."
"I'm listed as the father. She had every right." I took a breath. "Let me come to the appointment tomorrow. Please. Not as your husband or your enemy. Just as someone who wants to make sure you're both okay."
"Why should I trust you?"
"You shouldn't," I admitted. "I haven't given you any reason to. But I'm asking anyway."
She studied my face for a long moment. "One appointment. You sit quietly, you don't make demands, and you leave when I ask you to. Agreed?"
"Agreed."
She started to close the door, then stopped. "Julian? Why does your grandmother's will matter so much? You're already rich. Already powerful. Why do you need the company?"
I could have lied. Should have lied. But something about the way she looked at me, tired and pregnant and still somehow stronger than I'd ever been, made me tell the truth.
"Because it's all I have," I said. "And without it, I'm nothing."
Her expression softened, just slightly. "That's the saddest thing I've ever heard."
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8.6
As the eldest daughter of the Sharp family, I was treated worse than a stray dog, while my younger sister Seraphina was their precious princess.
When the family needed someone to marry a dying billionaire heir, they naturally chose me to take her place.
To force my consent, my brothers held a peanut butter sandwich to my face—knowing it was a lethal allergy—while dangling my EpiPen just out of reach.
On speakerphone, my own mother sighed in annoyance.
"Let her die. It might be for the best."
I choked out an agreement just as my throat closed up. But the forced engagement broke my sacred mystical vow, causing me to violently cough up my own lifeblood.
Seeing the blood, Seraphina dramatically fainted. My brothers instantly carried her to the hospital, stepping over my dying body and leaving me to bleed out on the cold marble floor.
I had to use a forbidden blood rune, draining my last ounce of strength, just to survive the night.
Even the mystical Order I served offered no comfort, calling only to demand I secure ten billion dollars for them or forfeit my soul for eternity.
Abandoned by my blood family and my spiritual master, I was completely alone, left with nothing but a broken body and a ticking clock.
But they made one fatal mistake: they let me live.
I turned to the dying heir they forced me to marry, a man plagued by a dark curse only I could cure.
"I will be your wife, and I will save your life," I told him.
In exchange, I would use his unimaginable wealth and power to make everyone who threw me away pay the ultimate price.

7.7
It's common knowledge that Ethan married me only because I look like his first love.
Three years of marriage, and he never once slept with me, because he thought it would be a desecration of his first love.
On the surface, I was madly in love with him. In reality, I was blowing through his money like crazy and keeping a man on the side.
But now there's a problem.
The man I've been keeping… how does he look exactly like the richest man in New York? And even have the same name?

7.7
Isabella Moon walked away from her billionaire husband, Nolan Sinclair, with a broken heart and a secret growing inside her. She swore never to look back. For five years, she built a quiet life, raising her son in a small town, far from Nolan's cold world.
But secrets don't stay hidden forever.
When Nolan finds out he has a son, he stops at nothing to claim what's his. He wants to be a father. He wants Isabella back. But she refuses to let him break her heart again.
Now, he has to prove he's not the man she left behind. This time, he won't let her go.
But the past isn't done with them. Lies, jealousy, and the same woman who tore them apart once before are back to finish what they started.
Isabella and Nolan have a second chance at love. But will they take it before it's too late?

8.2
My son Leo had just died, and the silence in our cramped apartment felt like a physical weight crushing my chest.
Before I could even process the grief, my husband, Preston, kicked the door open and threw divorce papers onto the table.
Behind him stood Gloria, wearing a pristine cashmere coat and the diamond pendant Preston swore he had pawned to pay for Leo's hospital bills.
"Sign it," Preston said coldly. "You get nothing."
Gloria smirked, mocking me for failing to keep my sick child alive. When I tore up the papers in a blinding rage, Preston slapped me to the floor.
Then, my biological mother, Jerilyn, walked in. Instead of helping me, she pulled a serrated kitchen knife from her bag and plunged it deep into my stomach.
As I lay dying in a pool of my own blood, Jerilyn leaned in and whispered the devastating truth.
"I swapped you in the nursery. Gloria is my blood, and you belong in a Manhattan mansion. I can't let you ruin her life."
Until my lungs stopped working, I was consumed by a roaring, violent hatred. My own mother had traded my life of privilege for poverty, let my son die, and then murdered me to protect the fake.
Opening my eyes again, the dingy ceiling and the agonizing pain were gone.
I was sitting at a wooden desk, surrounded by the chatter of teenagers.
I was back in high school. And this time, I was going to make them pay.

9.4
Content Warning : This story contains mature themes and explicit content intended for adult audiences (18+) Reader's discretion is advised.
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An accidental act of heroism reshaped Sera's life entirely. She lost her sight saving the grandmother of a stranger. In return for her goodness, she was forced into marriage with the old woman's grandson, Lucian Vitale. He was a mysterious businessman with no interest in love, and as people whispered, colder than ice. Given her circumstances, Sera had no choice but to accept. She became his pretend wife, bound by contract. It was a kind of relationship she'd never imagined living.
Sera had never planned to fall for a man she'd never seen. But with every touch, every murmur from Lucian, she was slowly pulled under by longing and feelings that should never have taken root. In darkness, she learned to love-and to bleed.
Then came the day her vision returned. She heard a truth that shattered her world and tore at her heart. Frightened beyond reason, Sera ran and vanished. She carried a secret in her womb: the child of their passionate nights together.
Four years slipped by. A man stepped back into her life. Same voice, same scent, same way his hands found hers... but he did not know her. He had amnesia. Can Sera escape the man who once meant everything to her? Or is this fate's way of calling them back to settle what they began-in their beds, their hearts, and the secrets that still wait to be told?
Between lies, desire, and memories... will they choose each other still?

8.3
After four years of torture in a so-called “rehabilitation center,” I was finally released. My husband, Elliot, was waiting for me. He wasn’t there to save me; he was there to serve me divorce papers.
He and my adoptive family were convinced I was a liar. They believed my broken leg, my missing fingernails, and my scarred vocal cords were all part of an elaborate performance for attention.
"Still playing the cripple," he sneered, looking at my ruined body with disgust. He tossed a handkerchief at my bleeding hand so I wouldn’t stain the leather seats of his car.
Back home, my perfect adoptive sister, Elyse, confessed everything with a smile. She had paid the doctors to torture me, to break my bones, to destroy my voice.
When I lunged at her, my own mother called me an animal. My father prepared to sign me back into that hell permanently.
They saw my pain as a performance and her cruelty as innocence. When I was diagnosed with terminal lung cancer and had months to live, Elliot tore up the medical report, calling it my most pathetic lie yet.