
His Pregnant Wife's Billionaire Retribution
My husband tore my ultrasound report to shreds at a gala, publicly declaring me barren to protect his mistress. I was visibly pregnant, but he erased me, our child, and my truth with a single, cruel lie. So I faked my death and disappeared.
Five years later, I returned, no longer a fragile wife but a hardened salvage expert with a fortune.
I walked into a high-stakes auction where Emerson was the top bidder.
I let my son, his spitting image, make the first move.
Then, I stepped from the shadows and calmly raised my paddle.
"Seven hundred fifty million."
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Chapter 1
My husband tore my ultrasound report to shreds at a gala, publicly declaring me barren to protect his mistress. I was visibly pregnant, but he erased me, our child, and my truth with a single, cruel lie. So I faked my death and disappeared.
Five years later, I returned, no longer a fragile wife but a hardened salvage expert with a fortune.
I walked into a high-stakes auction where Emerson was the top bidder.
I let my son, his spitting image, make the first move.
Then, I stepped from the shadows and calmly raised my paddle.
"Seven hundred fifty million."
Chapter 1
Gabriela POV:
The sound of the ultrasound report tearing was sharper than any gunshot, ripping through the hushed elegance of the Hamptons gala. Every eye in the ballroom turned to Emerson McGuire, my husband, as he shredded the flimsy paper with a theatrical flourish. White confetti of my unborn child' s first image fluttered onto the polished marble floor.
My breath hitched. The air in the room thickened, pressing down on me.
"My wife, Gabriela," Emerson' s voice boomed, rich and controlled, yet laced with a chilling contempt, "has regretfully informed me of her… condition." He paused, letting the words hang, a poison in the air. "A condition, sadly, which means we will never have children."
My throat closed. My stomach clenched. He was lying. Lying about my fertility. Lying about our baby.
A ripple of sympathetic murmurs swept through the crowd. They believed him. Why wouldn't they? He was Emerson McGuire, the tech titan, the golden boy. And I was just… his wife.
I felt their pity, cold and unwelcome, wash over me. It stung worse than any accusation.
His gaze found Isolde Jarvis across the room. She stood there, a vision in pale silk, her face a mask of fragile concern. Her eyes, however, held a flicker of something triumphant, a dark satisfaction she couldn't quite hide from me.
Emerson crossed the distance in a few long strides. He cupped Isolde's face, his thumb gently wiping away a tear that hadn't quite fallen. "My dear Isolde," he murmured, his voice softening with a tenderness he hadn't shown me in months, "always so sensitive. Don't worry about this mess."
She leaned into his touch, a picture of delicate sorrow. "Oh, Emerson," she whispered, her voice barely audible, "I just wish you could have everything you ever wanted." Her eyes, over his shoulder, met mine. It was a cold, calculating stare that dared me to defy her.
My heart hammered against my ribs, a desperate bird trapped in a cage. I was standing there, visibly pregnant, holding my belly protectively, while my husband publicly declared me barren. He was protecting her. Always her.
A slow, burning realization ignited in my gut. My existence, my very essence as a woman, was being weaponized against me. The life growing inside me, a miracle I cherished, was being painted as a fabrication, a symbol of my failure. It wasn't just about the lie; it was about the humiliation, the erasure of my truth.
Isolde's fake grief was a performance, perfected over years. She knew exactly which strings to pull, which buttons to push, to turn Emerson into her puppet. And I, the inconvenient truth, was merely a casualty in their twisted game.
The crowd' s pity morphed into whispers. Their judgment pricked at my skin. I was not just infertile; I was a liar. An embarrassment. A woman who had failed to give her powerful husband an heir.
Emerson' s eyes, when they finally landed on me again, were devoid of any real emotion. Just a cold, hard assessment. "Gabriela," he said, his voice carrying just enough for those nearby to hear, "I think it's time you retired for the evening. You clearly aren't feeling well."
He didn't wait for a response. He simply turned back to Isolde, drawing her closer as if to shield her from the spectacle I had supposedly created. The message was clear: I was a problem, a public relations disaster, to be swept away.
I felt the burning humiliation spread through my body, a fire consuming me from the inside out. My hands, trembling, went to my belly, a silent promise to the tiny life within. They thought they had broken me. They thought they had won. But this wasn't the end. This was just the beginning of a different story, one they wouldn't see coming.
I met Isolde's gaze again. This time, there was no fear in my eyes, only a nascent, terrifying resolve. Her smirk faltered. She knew, somehow, that something fundamental had shifted.
I turned and walked out of the ballroom, head held high, the shredded pieces of my future still dancing on the floor behind me. I didn't look back. There was nothing left for me there but ashes and lies. I reached the yacht, the expensive vessel that was supposed to be a symbol of our shared future, and stepped aboard. The cool night air hit me, a shock against my burning skin. I knew, with chilling clarity, that I would never set foot on land as Gabriela McGuire again.
"He will regret this," I whispered, my hand stroking my swollen abdomen. "They both will."
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7.2
I am a resident surgeon, secretly married to Dr. Barrett Walters, the Chief of Cardiothoracic Surgery. It was a transactional marriage; he paid my mother's mounting medical bills, and I was his secret, obedient wife in the dark.
But at the hospital, he was a cold-blooded tyrant who deliberately made my life a living hell. During a major medical conference, he viciously tore apart my successful surgical repair, looking me dead in the eye as he called me incompetent in front of all my colleagues.
The humiliation didn't stop there. With his tacit approval, the senior residents bullied me, assigning me every brutal night shift. When his beautiful, wealthy heiress "girlfriend" visited the ward, he publicly mocked my background to make her smile.
"Some people get in through the back door. They're not fit for the front lines."
Even when I was forced to work as a secret banquet waitress to cover the medical copays he ignored, he found me, ruined the job out of pure possessive jealousy, and then fined my meager resident salary the very next morning just to show his absolute control.
I endured his punishing kisses and cruel rebukes, sacrificing my dignity just to keep my mother alive. But I couldn't understand why he had to destroy every shred of my peace. If he wanted the perfect heiress, why did he refuse to let me go?
Staring at his cold, controlling eyes in the stairwell, my exhaustion finally overpowered my fear. I was done being his victim, and it was time to tear up this contract.

7.7
In the world of wealth and luxury, Henry Royals stands as a young billionaire who earns his fortune through hard work and determination, refusing to rely on his family's wealth.
At just 25 years old, he is hailed as the richest billionaire in Georgia. However, his single lifestyle becomes a constant source of annoyance for his mother, who is determined to see him settle down.
In an attempt to appease his mother and escape her nagging, Henry finds himself crossing paths with Dera Harold, a waitress at a popular bar he always visited of which he wants to clear his mind.
Faced with mounting pressure from his mother, Henry proposes a contracted marriage to Dera offering her a substantial sum of money in return.
Initially hesitant, Dera eventually agrees to the arrangement when she finds herself in desperate need of funds to pay for her mother's surgery. While her parents reside in Italy, Dera has come to Georgia to make a living for herself.
As the two embark on their contracted marriage, they find themselves bound by numerous rules and expectations.
The journey is not without its challenges, but over time, Dera begins to adapt and adjust to her new life.
The question remains: will Henry and Dera be able to adhere to the rules of their marriage for six months?

8.6
I woke up from emergency surgery to repair a torn retina, completely blind and alone.
The first phone call I received wasn't one of concern. It was my mother, furious that I had embarrassed our family by missing a business brunch.
Her next order was chilling.
"Go to your husband. Get pregnant. A Hartman heir is the only thing that will secure our trust fund."
My husband, Jakobe Hartman, is a man who views our marriage as a corporate merger. Our hundred-page prenup has a clause that strictly forbids any emotional entanglement. He was the last person I wanted to see me so helpless.
But then I stumbled blindly out of my room and crashed right into him. He found me weak and pathetic. He overheard my mother's abusive voicemail. He even listened in silence as I spun pathetic lies on the phone, pretending he was a doting husband just to get her off my back.
I expected him to walk away in disgust. Instead, he moved me to the penthouse suite and sent me home in an armored car. I dismissed it as a cold calculation to protect his public image.
I thought I was finally safe in my own apartment. I had no idea he was watching me on a live security feed, just moments after ordering the hostile takeover of my family's entire company.

7.3
They were jealous of her, her friends were jealous of her and set her up to make her be like everyone else.
Oma's perfectly planned world shattered when she discovered she was pregnant after a set up by her friends on the night of their school's sign out gala party. Before she had time to think of what to do, her father callously threw her out of the house into the rain with a warning never to return till she had found the father of her unborn child.
Frustrated and dejected, she found shelter in her best friend's family house, only to accidentally learn that the same friend and her boyfriend were the ones who betrayed her by setting her up for a one-night stand with an unknown guy. This realization broke her more and she made a life changing decision to leave for a city where she was not known with determination to begin a new life and live for her unborn child.
By a dramatic turn of event, she met Richard Jones, a billionaire corporate lawyer, whom she saved from an accident that could have taken his life. He admired her exceptional show of integrity and was drawn to her. What begins as a simple 'chase' and impulsive support and protection, blossomed into a serious friendship and eventual romance that will threaten the status, affluence and entire Richard Jones' existence.
Will Richard give up his inheritance for a girl he barely knew? Will her pregnancy serve as determent for finding true love and fulfilling her dreams?
Find out in this intriguing romance story.......

7.2
Stepping out of the women's correctional center, Karli took her first breath of freedom in three years.
But the luxury SUV waiting for her didn't bring her home. Instead, her adoptive parents tossed a prenuptial agreement onto her lap.
They demanded she marry a violently unhinged, disfigured man so their company could secure a massive commercial deal.
When she refused, her adoptive mother slapped her hard across the face.
The blow brought back the suffocating nightmare from three years ago—how they had drugged her, framed her for a crime she didn't commit, and sent her to prison just so her stepsister could steal her fiancé.
Now, to break her again, her adoptive father ordered his bodyguards to drag her into the estate's freezing, pitch-black basement.
"You can rot in the dark without food or water until you sign that paper!"
Sitting on the damp cement, bleeding and shivering, a white-hot fury burned away Karli's panic.
They had stolen her youth, her reputation, and her grandfather's inheritance. She would rather die than be their sacrificial lamb again.
She smashed the basement window with a hammer, dragged her bleeding body through the shattered glass, and sprinted blindly into the stormy night.
Under the flickering neon sign of a convenience store, she grabbed the sleeve of a terrifyingly cold stranger.
"Are you single? Marry me right now."
She just needed a legal marriage to escape her family, entirely unaware she had just proposed to the most ruthless billionaire in Chicago.

8.5
My father' s life depended on a $50,000 payment my billionaire husband could easily afford. But every dollar I spent was controlled by his chief of staff, Keri-a woman who hated me and managed my life through a humiliating expense app.
When my father was diagnosed with a rare leukemia, the doctors gave him one chance: an experimental treatment. The cost was exactly $50,000.
Keri rejected the request, citing "non-essential family health." My husband, Axel, told me not to be "so dramatic."
While I begged them to reconsider, my father died.
Hours after the hospital called, Keri posted a photo of her and Axel at a gala, celebrating a business deal. Her caption read: "#PowerCouple."
I left a comment.
"Inspiring how you celebrate wins on the day my father died because you withheld the $50,000 he needed. Your efficiency is unparalleled. Perhaps you'll find it equally efficient to process these divorce papers."