Follow
Chapters
Share
Husband Loses All for Student Novel Cover

Husband Loses All for Student

The grandfather clock in the hallway chimed three times, its somber tones echoing through our silent house. I'd been tossing and turning for hours, the empty space beside me growing colder as the night wore on. Rowan hadn't come to bed again. I wrapped my silk robe around my shoulders and padded down the hallway toward the soft glow emanating from his study. The door was ajar, and I paused before pushing it open, my heart already knowing what I'd find. Rowan hunched over his desk, his tall frame curved like a question mark, fingers flying across his keyboard. The blue light from his computer screen cast harsh shadows across his face, highlighting the sharp angles of his cheekbones and the dark circles under his eyes. Empty coffee cups littered the surface of his desk—three, no, four of them—alongside scattered papers covered in handwriting that wasn't his. "You're still up," I said softly, though it wasn't really a question. He didn't look up.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The grandfather clock in the hallway chimed three times, its somber tones echoing through our silent house. I'd been tossing and turning for hours, the empty space beside me growing colder as the night wore on. Rowan hadn't come to bed again.

I wrapped my silk robe around my shoulders and padded down the hallway toward the soft glow emanating from his study. The door was ajar, and I paused before pushing it open, my heart already knowing what I'd find.

Rowan hunched over his desk, his tall frame curved like a question mark, fingers flying across his keyboard. The blue light from his computer screen cast harsh shadows across his face, highlighting the sharp angles of his cheekbones and the dark circles under his eyes. Empty coffee cups littered the surface of his desk—three, no, four of them—alongside scattered papers covered in handwriting that wasn't his.

"You're still up," I said softly, though it wasn't really a question.

He didn't look up. "Obviously."

I stepped into the room, my gaze falling on a notebook with flowing, feminine handwriting. Zara Coleman. My stomach tightened as I recognized her personal notes, the same ones I'd seen her carrying at the university fundraiser last month. Post-it notes in the same handwriting dotted Rowan's computer monitor, some with academic references, others with personal reminders—"Don't forget to add the section on historical context!" followed by a small heart.

"You're working on Zara's paper again," I said, my voice steadier than I felt.

"She has a deadline." Rowan's fingers never stopped typing. "The conference submission is tomorrow."

"And what about your own research?" I asked, though I already knew the answer. For months, he'd been prioritizing her work over his own, over us.

"This is more important right now."

"More important than sleeping? More important than..." I swallowed hard. "More important than coming to bed with your wife?"

Finally, Rowan stopped typing. He turned toward me, his expression a mixture of annoyance and dismissal that had become all too familiar over our three years of marriage.

"You're being dramatic and needy, Adeline," he said, his voice cold. "This is critical for Zara's career, and by extension, for my reputation as her advisor."

"And what about us?" I asked, hating the tremor in my voice. "What about our marriage?"

Rowan sighed, running a hand through his disheveled hair. "My academic work is more important than your petty jealousies. Zara is my student, nothing more. I've explained this before."

"You stay up all night for her. You barely look at me anymore."

"Because she's doing meaningful work," he snapped. "Not everyone has the luxury of throwing money at charities to feel important."

The words hit like a physical blow. Three years of coldness, of dismissal, of watching him light up when Zara entered a room while barely acknowledging my presence—it all crystallized in that moment.

"I see," I whispered.

Rowan had already turned back to his computer, his attention once again fixed on Zara's paper. I stood there for several seconds, watching my husband choose someone else over me yet again, before quietly leaving the room.

I didn't sleep that night. Instead, I sat in our window seat, watching the sun rise over the city, a strange calm settling over me. By seven o'clock, I had showered, dressed, and made my decision.

David Morrison's law office opened at eight-thirty. His receptionist looked surprised to see me without an appointment, but David had been our family's attorney for years.

"Adeline," he said warmly, ushering me into his office. "What can I do for you today?"

I sat across from him, my hands folded in my lap to stop them from trembling. "I need to file for divorce."

David's expression shifted from surprise to concern. "Are you sure about this?"

"Three years," I said quietly. "Three years of coldness, of being dismissed and ignored. I've established foundations, funded his department, created charity projects at his university—all attempts to be closer to him. And last night, I found him at three in the morning writing papers for his graduate student."

David nodded slowly, his eyes kind. "I understand. We'll need to discuss your assets, the house—"

"I don't care about any of that right now," I interrupted. "I just need to sign whatever papers will start this process."

An hour later, I walked out of David's office with a strange lightness in my chest. The divorce papers would be delivered to our home that afternoon.

I found Rowan in the kitchen when I returned, nursing a cup of coffee and looking exhausted. Without a word, I placed my purse on the counter and waited for him to acknowledge me.

"Where were you?" he asked, not looking up from his phone.

"Filing for divorce," I replied simply.

That got his attention. He looked up, one eyebrow raised in disbelief, then actually laughed. "Very funny, Adeline."

"The papers will be delivered this afternoon."

Rowan's smile faded slightly, but the arrogance remained. "You're overreacting. Again."

When the courier arrived, Rowan took the envelope with a dismissive shake of his head. He signed the papers without reading them, pushing them back toward me with a patronizing smile.

"There. Happy now? When you're done with this emotional outburst, we can discuss your donation to the department's new research initiative."

I took the signed papers without a word, tucking them into my purse just as the doorbell rang again. This time, it was Zara, her perfect smile faltering slightly when she saw me.

"Professor Spencer, I came to collect the paper," she said, looking past me to where Rowan stood. "Is it finished?"

"Just need to print it out," he replied, already turning away from me. "Come to my study."

I watched them walk away, Zara's hand brushing against Rowan's arm as they disappeared down the hallway, and knew with absolute certainty that I had made the right decision.

You may also like

Her Marriage Was A Lie, Her Happy Ending Wasn't Novel Cover
8.3
Three years into marriage, Rachael gave her all to Xander, even secretly using her newfound heiress fortune to save his struggling company. But the truth shattered her—her marriage certificate was fake, and his "childhood friend" was his real wife all along. When she confronted him, he shrugged her off with, "She's just a friend." Enough was enough. Rachael went back to her real family, soared in her career, and married Xander's rival. When Xander begged for another chance, her new husband pulled her close, flashing their marriage certificate. "She's already married—to me."
Love the disabled tycoon Novel Cover
8.1
She thought she was marrying the handsome second young master of New York's most powerful family. Instead, she got his older brother, a cold and wheelchair-bound tycoon who wants nothing to do with her. One wrong move, and her family loses everything. Trapped in a gilded cage with a husband who pushes her away at every turn, Giselle has no choice but to stay. She tells herself this is just survival. But the closer she gets to Reid, the more she realizes something about him doesn't add up. Beneath the ice, there are moments of unexpected warmth. Beneath the darkness, there are secrets he will kill to protect. What if the man who claims he cannot walk is hiding the truth?
Sold To The Devil I Ruined Novel Cover
7.2
Fitzgerald Woodard was the "stray" I used to torment in prep school, a boy I once paid to kneel in the mud for my amusement. Now, the tables have turned, and he’s the billionaire who bought my father’s debt, dragging me into his mansion as a "personal asset" listed in a contract I never read. He didn't just want the money back; he wanted to see me break. He stood over me in the rain and told me he owned the very machines keeping my father alive, and with one flick of his thumb, he could stop his breathing forever. The nightmare escalated until I didn't recognize myself. He forced me to eat cold soup off the floor like an animal and gripped my hand over a heavy hammer, forcing me to crush a young guard's bones just to prove I was as much of a monster as he was. His childhood sweetheart, a nurse I once humiliated, stood in the shadows, whispering that I was nothing more than a used-up toy he was already bored of. I lay on the cold marble, shivering from a fever he refused to treat, realizing that the curse he placed on me years ago had finally come true. Every act of cruelty I had ever committed was being repaid with interest, and the man I once looked down on was now the only god I had left to pray to. Suddenly, he threw me out into the freezing night with nothing but rags on my back and a shattered phone. The hospital called with an ultimatum: fifty thousand dollars by noon, or they pull the plug on my father’s life support. Standing barefoot on the biting asphalt, I watched his black SUV disappear into the dark. I have nine hours to save the only person I love, and only one way to get the money. I have to go back and kneel before the devil I created.
Sugar Daddy Vampire Novel Cover
8.0
Not for readers under 🔞 Broke and desperate, a young woman accepts an arrangement with a dangerously alluring billionaire who hides a supernatural secret, he feeds on desire. As their relationship deepens, she's pulled into a shadowy world of power, luxury, and manipulation. When enemies begin targeting her reputation, her business, and even her life, a second powerful figure steps into her orbit, one who is just as tempting, and far more unpredictable. Torn between loyalty, temptation, and survival, she must navigate supernatural dangers, human betrayal, and a rising storm of desire that threatens to consume everything.
The Billionaire One Night Lie  Novel Cover
8.2
Framed. Disowned. Forgotten. Thira Calderon lost everything in one night-her reputation, her family, and the man she loved. Five years later, she returns to New York with three secretive little geniuses and a high-powered job at a billionaire's company. What she doesn't know? Her new boss, Riven Dax, might be the man she's spent years trying to forget. What her kids know? He might just be the dad they've been searching for. "He has Kai's eyes." "And Niko's ears." "Let's get proof," Elara whispers. "Real proof." And three kids determined to uncover the truth their mother's too afraid to ask.
The Mafia's Nanny (SPG)  Novel Cover
8.4
Marimar Oquendo crosses paths with the hot son of a deceased famous actress, who appears to be suffering from a mental illness but understands her pain and desires. She works as his personal nanny, babysits him, and gradually falls for him. She then realizes that he is far more dangerous than she believed, especially since he has suddenly returned to his genuine and normal personality. He was totally out of her league when she discover that he was Lev Dmitri Romanov, the Romanov Mafia's grim reaper-a murderer and mafia billionaire. What will happen to her after she runaway from the man while being pregnant of their child? Will she be able to forget that she had once been the Mafia's nanny?