
His True Love, My Stolen Baby
When I discovered my husband's safe combination was my stepsister's birthday, my world tilted. Inside, I found the blueprint for how he planned to erase me. He would claim my unborn child for his true love.
The postnup was cold and calculated: billions in assets, all designated for Kaleigh. Not a penny for me, his wife of ten years.
He tore up the divorce papers I offered, threatening to use his power to take my baby. Kaleigh showed up at my door, taunting me, calling me a "convenient placeholder."
She wanted to raise my child as her own.
I realized I wasn't just a wife. I was a surrogate. A fertile womb he married because his true love was barren. Our entire marriage was a grotesque lie designed to produce an heir for them.
Then, an anonymous email landed in my inbox. It contained a recording of my husband calling me his "incubator."
That's when I knew I couldn't just leave. I had to die.
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Chapter 3
Aurelia POV:
I returned to my small apartment, the silence a stark contrast to the cacophony of Jacob' s rage. The air still thrummed with the echoing crash of glass. Yet, despite the violence, my heart felt strangely light, a heavy weight finally lifted. I had spoken my truth, made my stand.
The following morning, a package arrived. My heart, usually a steady drum, lurched unpleasantly. It was a thick envelope, official-looking. Inside, I found the divorce papers I had signed, now ripped into tiny, indistinguishable fragments. My signature, once a mark of closure, was now just another piece of shredded paper, mocking my resolve. Jacob's retaliation.
A cold wave of nausea washed over me, stronger than any morning sickness I'd experienced. My body began to shake, not from fear, but from a profound disgust that settled deep in my bones. This was his answer. He wouldn' t let me go. He wouldn' t let us go.
Just as I crumpled the ripped papers in my hand, my phone buzzed with an unfamiliar number. A text message. My heart pounded, a frantic bird trapped in my chest. I hesitated, then opened it.
`He's heartbroken. Really. It's almost sweet how lost he is without you. But don't worry, I'm here now.`
The message was from Kaleigh. I hadn't heard from her in weeks, not since I discovered her name on that postnup. Her return, after all this time, was a cruel twist of the knife. I remembered her casual texts from years ago, always phrased to seem innocent, yet subtly hinting at her presence in Jacob's life. "Jacob just dropped by my gallery, so sweet!" or "He helped me move this huge sculpture, so strong!" Always just a little too much, a little too intimate.
Over the past few months, as my pregnancy progressed, her social media posts had become more frequent, more ostentatious. Pictures of lavish dinners, private jet trips, exclusive events-all with Jacob subtly in the background, or his hand conspicuously placed on her arm. She was flaunting their connection, rubbing it in my face, secure in her position as his idealized love. Each post was a deliberate jab, a reminder of what I was losing, or rather, what I never truly had.
Then, another message from Kaleigh. This time, a voice note. My finger trembled as I pressed play.
Kaleigh' s voice, saccharine and soft, filled the small room. "Oh, Jacob, darling. Don't be so upset about Aurelia. She was never really you. Just a… a convenient placeholder, isn't that what you called her? Nobody understands you like I do."
A male voice, Jacob's, deep and weary, mumbled something incoherent in response.
Kaleigh giggled, a sound that grated on my nerves. "See? He knows it's true. He always comes back to me, Aurelia. Always."
My stomach churned. I squeezed my eyes shut, wishing I could unhear it. But it wasn't over.
Another text. This time, a photo. It was a selfie of Kaleigh, her head resting on Jacob' s shoulder. He was asleep, his face looking peaceful, unguarded. In the frame, his bare left hand was visible, stretched out on the plush sheets. No wedding ring. The picture was taken in a bed that looked suspiciously like mine, in our bedroom.
Beneath the photo, a caption: `Some things are just meant to be. He finally took off the ring. Took him long enough. Baby steps, right?`
The world swam. A wave of profound nausea, cold and acidic, rose from my stomach. I stumbled to the bathroom, clutching my mouth, and wretched violently into the toilet. The bile burned my throat, but it was nothing compared to the burning shame and fury that consumed me. The physical pain was a welcome distraction from the searing emotional agony.
I gazed at my reflection, my face pale, eyes bloodshot, hair disheveled. I was a ghost, a hollowed-out version of the woman I used to be. The woman who had loved Jacob Dickerson, the man who had so coldly and systematically dismantled her life.
It was all a lie. From the very beginning. His "gratitude," his "loyalty," his fabricated love – it was all a smokescreen. He hadn't married me because he loved me. He married me because I resembled Kaleigh, because I was strong enough to help him rebuild his empire, because I was fertile enough to give Kaleigh the child she couldn't have. I was a convenient echo, a living shadow, a desperate substitute.
The tears came then, hot and stinging, burning paths down my ravaged cheeks. Not for Jacob, not for the shattered dream of our marriage, but for myself. For the fool I had been, for the decade I had sacrificed, for the innocent life I now carried, a life conceived under such a grotesque deception. I sunk to the floor, my breath ragged, hugging my knees, trying to hold myself together.
When the storm of tears subsided, a cold, clear resolve settled in its place. My hand, still trembling, typed a response to Kaleigh.
`Enjoy your victory party, Kaleigh. You can have Jacob. But you will never, ever have my child.` Send.
Almost instantly, my phone rang. Jacob. I stared at the screen, the name a toxic brand. I let it ring, then, with a decisive swipe, I blocked his number. Then Kaleigh' s. No more. No more poison. The silence that followed was a balm, a fragile peace I desperately needed. I took a deep, shaky breath, trying to calm my rapidly beating heart.
The next call I made was to a moving company. "I need to move my belongings," I told them, my voice firm despite the underlying tremor. "Immediately."
I walked through the apartment, picking up the few things that truly mattered. My architecture books, worn at the edges from years of study and practice. A small, framed photo of my mother, her kind eyes smiling at me. My sketchbooks, filled with designs that were uniquely mine, untainted by Jacob's influence. I packed only the essentials, the things that defined Aurelia Flynn, not Aurelia Dickerson.
The expensive gowns, the designer handbags, the diamond jewelry Jacob had given me-they lay untouched. They were tokens of a life that was never truly mine, relics of a false identity. I didn't want them. They felt heavy, suffocating.
On my dressing table, glinting under the pale morning light, sat my wedding ring. A thick platinum band, studded with diamonds. It had felt so heavy on my finger for ten years, a constant reminder of a promise that was never kept. Now, it felt like a shackle. I picked it up, cold and inert in my palm, and deliberately placed it on the marble countertop. It was a final, symbolic farewell to a love that had never existed.
The movers arrived a few hours later. They efficiently packed the boxes I had prepared. As the last box left the apartment, I took one final look around the space. It had been Jacob's idea to move into this grand apartment after our wedding, a penthouse with panoramic city views. I had tried to make it a home, but it had always felt like a showroom, cold and impersonal. Now, it was just an empty shell, a gilded cage I was finally escaping.
A profound sense of liberation washed over me, a breath of fresh air after years of suffocation. The weight of Jacob' s presence, his expectations, his lies, lifted from my shoulders. I was free. Free to breathe, free to be.
My new apartment was smaller, cozier, on the outskirts of the city. It had a tiny balcony overlooking a charming park. It wasn't opulent, but it was mine. It felt safe, a cocoon where I could finally heal and prepare for the arrival of my child.
I settled into a quiet routine, finding solace in the mundane. Long walks in the park, designing small, freelance projects from my laptop, reading books to my growing belly. The world outside Jacob's influence felt calmer, simpler, more real.
Then, a week later, another text message from an unregistered number. My heart pounded again, a familiar fear.
`Aurelia, you MUST answer my calls. Kaleigh is devastated. She loves that child. You can't just run away. That baby is ours. Don't you dare do anything foolish.`
Jacob. His words, delivered through the impersonal screen, were still laced with control, with an unsettling possessiveness over a child he saw as an extension of Kaleigh, not me. He was still seeing me as a vessel, a tool. The bitterness was a familiar taste in my mouth.
I deleted the message without a second thought. Then I blocked the number. The silence, this time, was absolute. A fragile shield, but a shield nonetheless. I would protect my child. And I would protect myself. I was done being a pawn in their twisted game.
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7.6
Daddy's Pet
7.6
I saw him first. I knew him first. I loved him first, but here he is being introduced to me as my new step-dad.
How could this happen? How could he end up married to my mother, the one person I can't possibly steal him from and yet...
Now that I'm no longer an eighteen year old child and he isn't my teacher, lines are beginning to cross.
What do I possibly do with this desire and guilt that keeps overlapping and why is it when I try my best to keep my distance he keeps pulling me in?
It feels so wrong and yet it feels so right, will I be able to ignore this longing or will I want him to hold me tight?

9.5
The first clue my life was a lie was a moan from the guest room. My husband of seven years wasn't in our bed. He was with my intern.
I discovered my husband, Brendan, was having a four-year affair with Kiya-the talented girl I was mentoring and personally paying tuition for.
The next morning, she sat at our breakfast table in his shirt while he made us pancakes. He lied to my face, promising he'd never love another, just before I learned she was pregnant with his child-a child he'd always refused to have with me.
The two people I trusted most in the world had conspired to destroy me. The pain wasn't something I could live with; it was an annihilation of my entire world.
So I made a call to a neuroscientist about his experimental, irreversible procedure. I didn't want revenge. I wanted to erase every memory of my husband and become his first test subject.

9.5
For nine years, I poured my soul into proving I was worthy of my wealthy boyfriend, Clayton Wright. I endured his endless, humiliating "tests," sacrificing everything for a place in his world.
But at our engagement party, the final test was revealed. He stood by as his ex-girlfriend, Anjelica, framed me for shattering a priceless family heirloom.
"You manipulative bitch!" he snarled, slapping me across the face. He then ordered his bodyguard to force me to my knees, grinding them into the sharp, broken fragments of the watch.
As I bled on the floor, he pulled out his phone and gave a single command: demolish my childhood home, the last piece I had of my deceased father.
He destroyed my past and my dignity, yet minutes later, my phone buzzed with a message from him.
"The engagement is just for show. I'll still marry you. You're my destiny."
That night, clutching the last of my father's life insurance, I booked a one-way ticket and vanished. He thought he had finally broken his little project, but he had just unleashed a woman with nothing left to lose.

9.7
I was a top cardiac surgeon, trapped in a dead marriage with a ruthless billionaire.
One afternoon, he brought his mistress to my hospital, ordering me to perform her high-risk heart surgery.
When I refused and handed him our divorce papers, he violently tore them up and threatened to erase my name from the medical community.
Worse, I discovered they had a five-year-old surrogate son—bought and born the exact same year I bled out on an operating table, losing our baby.
The mistress mocked my trauma, calling me a barren piece of trash who couldn't give him an heir.
I slapped her across the face.
The next morning, the NYPD publicly handcuffed me in my own hospital.
She had framed me for attempted murder, claiming I injected her IV with a lethal dose of potassium.
My husband cornered me in the interrogation room.
"Just confess to me. I will throw enough money at the DA to make this entirely disappear."
I looked into his dark eyes and saw nothing but raw, unfiltered suspicion.
He actually believed I was a jealous murderer.
I swore I would rather rot in a concrete cell for the rest of my life than bow down to them.
Just as my childhood savior miraculously appeared to bail me out, my phone rang.
The mistress had gone into full cardiac arrest.
Only I had the surgical skill to save her.
I turned around, deciding whether to let the woman who ruined my life die, or pick up my scalpel.

8.0
My sister Rosalie always played the role of my gentle protector. On the night of my engagement, she insisted I take a secluded canyon road for my own safety.
In my past life, I didn't know it was a deadly trap. I fell for the staged ambush and the rival mobster, Julian, who took a fake bullet to "save" me.
Because of my blind trust, my entire Falcone bloodline was annihilated overnight. My father was beheaded, my brothers were gunned down, and my sweet little sister was left to die in a filthy alley. I was even brainwashed into betraying my new husband, Damien Moretti. I shot the only man who truly protected me right through the heart, just before Rosalie drowned me in a freezing lake, laughing as she confessed she was just a bastard child stealing my life.
When I opened my eyes again, I was back on the very night my nightmare began. I was trapped in a penthouse, a lethal drug melting my sanity, pinned beneath Damien. But after he brutally sweat the poison out of my veins, he didn't look at me with love. He handed me a Plan B pill with a gaze full of ancient, chilling hatred.
"Swallow it," he commanded, his voice a sheet of ice.
He remembers. The Dark Don remembers the past life where I murdered him. But this time, I won't be a pawn. I wiped the blood of my traitorous maid from my hands, ready to drag my fake sister straight to hell.

8.4
To save my toxic family's bankrupt company, I was sold for fifty million dollars to marry Arch Rush III, a notoriously ruthless and paralyzed billionaire.
Because of my severe face blindness, I couldn't even recognize my new husband. I was just a cheap, replaceable pawn. Yet, while my own parents physically abused me and treated me like livestock, my terrifying new husband actually protected me.
But entering the Rush family estate was like stepping into a snake pit. His aristocratic relatives mocked my cheap clothes and even tried to disfigure me with boiling tea.
To further humiliate me in front of a world-renowned neurologist, his grandmother pointed a bony finger at me.
"Go massage his muscles, this is your daily duty now."
Arch glared at me with a lethal warning, but I had no choice. Trembling, I pressed my hands into his thigh.
My heart instantly dropped. Beneath his expensive suit, there was no soft, withered flesh. The muscle contours were tight, dense, and incredibly firm.
How could a man completely paralyzed from the waist down have the legs of an athlete?
Before I could process the terrifying truth, my strong fingers dug into a nerve cluster. Under my touch, his "dead" muscle violently twitched.
The doctor dropped his pen in absolute shock, and I realized I had just accidentally exposed the ruthless billionaire's deadliest secret.