
I Quit Being a Trophy Wife to Reclaim My Empire
My husband openly mocked me at a glittering gala, then touched another woman with the tenderness he once saved for me. That night, I ripped off the diamond necklace that felt like a noose, left my gilded cage, and vanished into the city. I was done being his trophy; I was ready to reclaim my life.
Elara Vance existed as Ethan Sterling's trophy wife, her brilliance suffocated by his glamorous, controlling world.
At a Met gala, Ethan's public flirtation with an intern and dismissive ""fix your face"" command shattered Elara. Her quiet ""No"" sparked defiance.
Elara abandoned her opulent life with a ""I quit"" note. Ethan froze her assets, expecting her return. Instead, Elara, using hidden crypto, plotted a return to academia as Ethan's desperate control escalated.
Injustice burned. Ethan saw only his reflection. His betrayal hardened into icy indifference, fueling a fierce resolve for freedom.
A symbolic snip of her long hair severed the past. Elara applied to Columbia, a scientist reclaiming her future from the gilded cage.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 3
Three days. Seventy-two hours of radio silence.
Ethan sat in his office, the leather chair feeling like a torture device. He stared at his phone. He had sent five texts.
Stop this.
It's not funny anymore.
I froze the cards. Call me if you want them unlocked.
Where are you?
Elara.
None of them had the "Read" indicator.
He couldn't take it anymore. He hit the call button for her primary number.
Beep. Beep. Beep.
"We're sorry, the number you have dialed is not in service."
Ethan froze. The phone slipped from his hand and clattered onto the mahogany desk.
Not in service.
She hadn't just ignored him. She had terminated the line.
A surge of fury, hot and blinding, rose in his chest. He stood up and swept a stack of files off his desk. They scattered across the floor like frightened birds.
"Fine!" he yelled at the empty office. "You want to disappear? Disappear!"
Elara was currently disappearing into the stacks of the New York Public Library. The internet at Harper's was spotty, and she needed bandwidth.
She was surrounded by journals. Nature. Cell. Science. She was reading everything Professor Finch had published in the last five years. Her brain, dormant for so long, felt like a rusted engine sputtering back to life. It hurt, but it was a good hurt.
She took notes in a spiral notebook, her handwriting cramping as she tried to keep up with her own thoughts.
Protein folding anomalies in CRISPR-Cas9 editing... The Sterling Sequence...
She paused. The Sterling Sequence. Ethan had donated the money for that lab. Her name wasn't on it. Just his. Even though she had anonymously patched the open-source kernel the lab used for their data modeling. She had done it from her "Sims server" late at night, ensuring the grant proposal data didn't collapse under its own weight.
She gritted her teeth and turned the page.
Ethan needed validation. He needed to feel like the winner. He drove to his country club in the Hamptons, even though it was a Tuesday.
He walked into the bar, expecting the usual reverent nods. Instead, he saw heads leaning together. Whispers.
Gavin, a hedge fund manager with too many teeth, clapped him on the shoulder. "Ethan! Heard you're a freeman. Bachelor life treating you well?"
Ethan forced a smile. It felt like stretching rubber. "Just a break, Gavin. Elara needed some... spiritual time. You know women."
"Right, right," Gavin winked. "My second wife did that. Cost me two million in the settlement."
Carter slid into the booth next to Ethan. He looked uneasy. He pulled out his phone.
"Bro, have you seen Instagram?"
"I don't check Instagram, Carter. I have a company to run."
"You should look." Carter turned the screen.
It was a search page for Elara's profile.
User Not Found.
"She blocked you," Carter said, his voice hushed. "And she deleted her account. Like, completely nuked it."
The table went silent. In their world, social media was currency. Deleting it was social suicide. Or a declaration of war.
Ethan felt the humiliation burn his ears. He gripped his scotch glass until his knuckles turned white. "She's dramatic," he spat. "She's trying to get a reaction."
"It's working," Gavin muttered into his drink.
Elara's laptop chimed. An email.
From: Department of Biological Sciences
Subject: Interview Invitation
Her heart stopped. It wasn't Finch.
Dear Ms. Vance,
Professor Finch is unavailable. However, Dr. Shang has an opening for a junior research assistant. Given the gap in your resume, you would need to start at the entry level. If you are interested, please come to Lab 4 tomorrow at 9 AM.
Junior research assistant. It was a demotion. She was qualified for PhD candidacy. This was grunt work. Washing beakers. Data entry.
She stared at the screen. Her pride warred with her reality.
She hit Reply.
I will be there.
That night, Ethan attended the Kensington Charity Auction. It was an event Elara loved. She had curated the catalog for it two years in a row. He went because he was convinced she would be there. She couldn't resist vintage jewelry.
He stood in the back, scanning the crowd. Every time he saw a slender back or chestnut hair, his heart jumped.
He tapped a woman on the shoulder. "Elara?"
The woman turned. She was older, with heavy makeup. "Excuse me?"
"Sorry," Ethan muttered, turning away.
The auctioneer began the bidding for Lot 45. A vintage sapphire necklace. Art Deco. Elara had circled it in the catalog weeks ago. She had said it reminded her of the ocean.
"Starting bid at fifty thousand."
"One hundred thousand!" Ethan shouted.
Heads turned.
"Two hundred!" someone else called.
"Five hundred thousand!" Ethan roared.
The room went dead silent. The necklace was worth maybe two hundred on a good day.
"Sold! To Mr. Sterling."
Ethan stood there, chest heaving. He thought, If I buy this, she has to come get it. She'll have to come home for this.
Serena appeared at his elbow. She was wearing a dress that was a little too tight, a little too revealing for the venue.
"Ethan!" She squealed, clutching his arm. "You bought it! For me?"
Ethan looked down at her. He looked at the necklace the assistant was boxing up. Sapphires. Deep, intelligent blue.
Serena's eyes were brown. Shallow.
"No," Ethan said coldly. "It's an investment."
Serena's smile faltered. She pulled back, her lower lip trembling. "But... I thought..."
"Don't think, Serena. Just look pretty."
He grabbed the velvet box and walked out, leaving her standing there.
Elara was standing in front of Harper's full-length mirror. She was wearing a thrifted blazer she had bought for five dollars and a pair of black slacks. She looked like a student.
"I can't do this," she whispered. "I've forgotten everything. The terminology. The protocols."
Harper walked in with two glasses of cheap wine. "You are Elara Vance. You won the National Bio-Olympiad with a fever of 102. You got this, genius."
He handed her the wine. She took a sip.
"Thanks, Harper."
"Just remember," he said. "You're not Mrs. Sterling anymore. You're just Elara."
Ethan drove past Le Bernardin. He slowed down. He saw a couple in the window, holding hands. The man was feeding the woman a bite of dessert.
He felt a physical blow to his gut. A pang of loss so sharp it nearly doubled him over.
He arrived at the penthouse. It was dark. He didn't turn on the lights.
He walked to the vanity table. He placed the sapphire necklace next to the empty velvet pouch.
"I bought it," he said to the silence. "Come and get it."
Nothing answered.
He sat on the edge of the bed and pulled up the security feed on his iPad. He rewound to three days ago.
He watched the grainy footage of the service elevator. Elara, wearing jeans and a hoodie, carrying a single duffel bag.
He zoomed in on her face. He expected to see tears. He expected to see fear.
Instead, her jaw was set. Her eyes were dry. She looked... determined.
For the first time, a sliver of ice pierced Ethan's arrogance. She didn't look like a woman running away. She looked like a woman marching to war.
You may also like

7.8
On their wedding anniversary, Emma saw her husband holding a pregnant woman in his arms.
The man who once promised her forever spoke without emotion. "She's pregnant. Let's get a divorce."
With her mother-in-law and the mistress scheming together, Emma cut all ties and left without a second glance.
After the divorce, she shed the image of a plain homemaker.
Genius doctor, jewelry designer, secret hacker, lost heiress-Emma stunned all as she reclaimed her life.
Her ex begged for another chance, but Emma, now holding the richest man's hand, simply smiled. "Who are you again?"

8.9
I gave up my family's billion-dollar fortune to build a company from scratch with my college boyfriend, Bryant. I fought my father for him, believing our love was the one thing I could count on.
Then his childhood sweetheart, Kiley, came back to town, and I discovered the devastating truth: I was never his true love, just a convenient stand-in he chose because my smile reminded him of hers.
He moved her into his office, let her humiliate me, and even bought her a custom wedding gown in my name, trying to pass it off as an anniversary gift when I found it.
The night he came home smelling of her perfume and used his dead mother's memory to manipulate me, something inside me finally broke.
"You're all I have left," he whispered, holding me tight.
He thinks I'm the same naive girl who fell for his lies. But with my own family's empire now on the brink of collapse, I've already accepted an arranged marriage. And before I go, I'm going to burn his entire world to the ground.

9.7
Isla Hart has one priority: survival. Drowning in bills and personal struggles, she needs money, fast. So when Lucien Cross, a powerful and emotionally distant CEO, offers her a lucrative deal to pose as his fiancée, she accepts. The rules are clear: no emotions, no attachments, and no complications. It's strictly business.
Lucien Cross has built his life on control. Wealth, power, and influence are effortless to him-but love is a liability he refuses to entertain. With a critical merger at stake, a fake engagement is just another calculated move. Isla is meant to be temporary, a convincing presence by his side until the deal is secured.
But proximity has consequences.
As Isla steps into Lucien's world, she begins to see beyond the cold exterior, the loneliness, the pressure of his empire, and the past he keeps buried. And Lucien, despite himself, finds his carefully ordered life unraveling. Isla isn't just playing a role anymore. She challenges him, softens him, and awakens feelings he never planned to have.
When the truth behind their engagement starts to surface and old secrets threaten Lucien's empire, the line between contract and reality shatters. Isla is forced to face the one thing she promised herself she'd avoid: love.
Now, with everything on the line, reputations, power, and hearts, Isla must decide whether love is worth the risk. Because this time, love was never in the contract. And the fallout could cost them both everything.

9.7
Gemma expected the tearing agony of the bullet wound that had just ended her life.
Instead, her trembling fingers met the cool, smooth friction of heavy silk.
She stared into the mirror. Her face was flawless, completely devoid of the jagged scar that had marred her cheek for the last five years.
It was exactly ten years ago. The day of her engagement party to the ruthless billionaire, Brion Hubbard.
In her past life, her "best friend" Katelyn convinced her to run away with a scheming scumbag.
Katelyn claimed Brion was a heartless tyrant who would ruin her. Gemma had foolishly believed those fake tears.
That choice led to her family's bankruptcy, her brutal disfigurement, and ultimately, a fatal bomb explosion.
The only person who tried to save her was Brion, his blood-soaked body shielding hers from the blast.
She even realized too late that the strawberry cream cakes she always made for him were full of dairy.
He wasn't leaving to cheat on her. He was locking himself in a medical bay, fighting fatal allergic shock, just to accept a tiny scrap of her affection.
Gemma had been so incredibly blind. Why did she trust the venomous snakes who destroyed her, while hating the man who died for her?
Hearing Katelyn frantically knocking on the dressing room door, urging her to run away again, a towering hatred surged through Gemma's veins.
This time, she wasn't going to run.
She was going to expose the traitors, take back her family's wealth, and claim the tyrant for herself.

9.6
I was the devoted PR manager and secret girlfriend of A-list actor Vance Sterling for three years.
Just minutes after he promised me a romantic dinner, I caught him sleeping with a wealthy Los Angeles socialite.
When I confronted him, he didn't apologize. Instead, he mocked my status, froze my bank accounts, and left me completely homeless on the rainy streets of the city.
Blacklisted in Hollywood and utterly destitute, I ended up having a reckless, revenge-fueled one-night stand with the socialite's ruthless billionaire fiancé, Jory Elliott.
But my nightmare had just begun. My younger brother accrued a half-million-dollar gambling debt with a brutal cartel, and they threatened to chop off his fingers.
Jory stepped in and paid the ransom, only for my brother to beg the billionaire for more gambling money, calling me a selfish bitch for not milking him dry.
Then, Jory threw a marriage agreement at my face.
"Act as my devoted wife for two years, and I will wipe the debt and give you ten million dollars."
I gave my youth to an actor who discarded me like trash, and my own flesh and blood only saw me as a walking ATM.
Did these powerful men really think my dignity was just another corporate asset to be bought and traded?
I looked into the cold, calculating eyes of the billionaire who thought he owned me.
I threw the contract right at his chest and stepped out of his Maybach into the freezing rain.
I would rather rot in the gutter than be a pet bought with a checkbook.

8.5
Aileen transmigrated into a dark, unfinished novel as the villainous, abusive wife of a powerful billionaire.
The moment she opened her eyes, her husband's calloused hand was crushing her throat, and her six-year-old stepson was pointing a box cutter at her face, screaming for her to die.
A cold system voice suddenly exploded in her brain, forcing a mandatory mission: save the villainous father and son, or face immediate death.
To survive the system's strict Out-Of-Character warnings, Aileen had to keep playing the role of the deranged, hateful wife.
She was despised by everyone. Her husband threatened to drag her to an asylum, and her terrified stepson scrubbed the floor with his own pajamas just to avoid her wrath.
Things escalated when the novel's original female lead publicly framed Aileen in Central Park, throwing herself onto the grass and clutching her pregnant belly.
"She pushed me. She tried to hurt the baby!"
Archer rushed over, shoved Aileen aside with absolute disgust, and looked at her with the eyes of a murderer.
Aileen felt a bitter wave of exhaustion. She had discovered the original owner's hidden antipsychotic pills; the woman wasn't just evil, she was severely mentally ill and completely broken by this loveless marriage.
Yet, no one cared, and her husband would always choose to believe his childhood sweetheart's fake tears.
Since everyone in this world was convinced she was an unpredictable lunatic, she decided to give them exactly what they expected.
Aileen turned her back on the ridiculous scene, a cold smile forming on her lips.
She was going to stage a massive, undeniable psychological breakdown, using her "insanity" as the perfect shield to play the system and rewrite her fate.