
I Was Just A Silent Wife, Until I Toppled His Empire
I spent three years playing the mousy, supportive wife to tech mogul Julian Vanderbilt, fixing his code and hiding my past as an elite special ops captain. Everything shattered at our anniversary gala when I saw my mother's heirloom emerald necklace hanging around the neck of Julian's mistress. When I confronted him, Julian didn't even look up from his drink, telling me to stop being "territorial" because I was too plain to wear such jewelry anyway.
The humiliation peaked when he refused to attend my parents' military repatriation the next morning, choosing an investor brunch with his mistress instead. I stood in our penthouse watching him dote on her, realizing I had used my parents' death benefits to build a throne for a man who treated me like disposable trash.
I couldn't understand how the man I had quietly saved from a burning yacht years ago could be so blind to the warrior standing right in front of him. He had no idea that the very empire he bragged about was built entirely on my technology and my sacrifice.
I didn't argue; I simply went to the safe and pulled out my black beret and my high-level security credentials. As I revoked his admin access and watched his billion-dollar world begin to glitch, I walked out to meet the military honor guard. It was time to remind Julian Vanderbilt exactly who he had married-and exactly how much it was going to cost him to lose me.
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Chapter 1
The emerald lay against her throat like a bruise.
It was a deep, vibrant green, the color of old moss and envy, suspended on a platinum chain that caught the recessed lighting of the penthouse living room. I knew that stone. I knew the weight of it. I knew the specific imperfection on the back of the setting, a tiny scratch made by my father's pocketknife the day he gave it to my mother before his second deployment.
"It brings out your eyes, Seraphina," Julian said.
His voice was a low hum, a sound that used to vibrate against my own chest in the dark. Now, it was directed entirely at the woman sitting on the velvet ottoman, her chin tilted up, exposing the long, pale column of her neck.
I stood in the shadow of the hallway, my hand gripping the cold plaster of the wall. My fingers were numb. Not the kind of numbness that comes from cold, but the kind that comes from a lack of blood flow, as if my heart had simply decided it was too tired to pump all the way to the extremities.
Seraphina Frost laughed. It was a practiced sound, light and airy, designed to make men feel witty and powerful. She touched the stone with a manicured fingertip.
"It's exquisite, Julian," she cooed. "Are you sure? It looks… heavy with history."
"It was just gathering dust in a safe," Julian said, his back to me. He adjusted the clasp at the nape of her neck, his fingers lingering on her skin. "It deserves to be worn by someone who shines."
My stomach contracted, a violent, physical spasm that nearly bent me double. That necklace wasn't gathering dust. It was the only thing I had brought into this marriage. It was the only thing I had left of Mary Sterling, the woman who had stitched wounds in a burning tent in Aleppo while shrapnel rained down.
I stepped out of the shadows.
"Julian."
The name tasted like ash.
He didn't startle. He turned slowly, his expression shifting from adoration to a weary annoyance that hit me harder than a slap. It was the look one gives a persistent solicitor or a dog that won't stop whining.
"Jade," he said. "I didn't hear you come in. We're busy."
"That necklace," I said. My voice was steady, too steady. It was the voice of a soldier reporting a casualty count. "It's my mother's."
Seraphina turned, her eyes wide with a feigned innocence that made my teeth ache. "Oh! Jade. I didn't know. Julian said it was a family heirloom."
"It is," I said, walking further into the room. The carpet swallowed the sound of my footsteps. "My family. Not the Vanderbilts."
Julian sighed, running a hand through his perfectly styled hair. "Don't start this, Jade. Not tonight. We have the gala tomorrow. Seraphina needs something to wear that matches the brand image. You know you don't wear jewelry like this. You'd just… look awkward."
"Awkward," I repeated.
"It's a statement piece," he explained, as if speaking to a slow child. "It requires a certain… presence. Seraphina is the face of the new campaign. It's a prop, essentially. Don't be so territorial. It's unbecoming."
Territorial.
I looked at the man I had loved for three years. The man whose startup I had quietly funded with the blood money the government sent me after the funeral. The man whose code I had fixed while he slept, whose panic attacks I had breathed him through.
"Tomorrow," I said, ignoring his insult, "is the arrival."
Julian blinked. "Arrival of what?"
The air left the room.
"My parents," I said. "The repatriation. Their remains are landing at JFK at 0800 hours. You promised you would drive me."
Julian checked his watch. He didn't even look at me. "Tomorrow morning? I can't. We have the brunch with the investors, and then Seraphina has fittings for the evening. Send an assistant."
"They are my parents, Julian."
"They've been dead for three years, Jade," he snapped, finally meeting my eyes. His gaze was cold, devoid of the warmth I had starved myself to earn. "They aren't going anywhere. A box of bones doesn't care if I'm there or not. Stop using your tragic backstory to manipulate me into skipping work. It's pathetic."
Seraphina made a small, sympathetic noise. "Julian, maybe you should go. She seems… unstable."
"She's fine," Julian dismissed, turning back to Seraphina. "She just wants attention. Jade, go check on the catering list for the brunch. Make sure they didn't include peanuts; Seraphina is allergic."
I stood there for a long moment.
The pain in my chest had stopped. It hadn't faded; it had simply crystallized into something hard and sharp, lodging itself between my ribs. The hope-that pathetic, whimpering thing that had kept me cooking his meals and fixing his bugs and enduring his mother's sneers-gave a final twitch and died.
"Take it off," I said softly.
Julian stiffened. "Excuse me?"
"The necklace," I said. "Take. It. Off."
"Go to your room, Jade," Julian warned, his voice dropping an octave. "You're embarrassing yourself."
I looked at the emerald one last time. It looked wrong on her. It looked like a lie.
"You're right," I said. The sudden calm in my voice made Seraphina frown. "I have things to prepare."
I turned and walked away. I didn't slam the door. I didn't cry. I walked to the master bedroom, past the framed photos of our wedding day. In the picture, Julian was smiling, looking at me as if I were the only person in the world. It was a perfect performance, I realized now. A mask he had worn until he no longer needed the audience.
I opened the safe in the back of the closet.
Inside, there were no jewels. There was a stack of files. A black beret. And a thick folder stamped with the Department of Defense seal.
My phone buzzed in my pocket. A secure text message.
COMMAND: Bird is inbound. C-130 wheels down at 0800. Honor Guard ready. Welcome home, Ghost.
I looked at the text. Then I looked at the empty side of the bed where Julian hadn't slept in weeks.
"Welcome home," I whispered to the empty room.
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8.1
I was the "fallen princess" of New York, living in a charcoal silk cage while paying off my father’s millions in debt with my own body. My owner was Braxton Kensington, a man who looked at me with the same cold interest he gave a fluctuating stock graph.
One morning, a New York Times alert shattered the silence: Braxton was getting engaged to a billionaire socialite in the merger of the decade. When I demanded my freedom and the five-million-dollar severance promised in our contract, he just smirked and pointed to the fine print.
"In a court of law, an engagement is just an intention," he whispered, gripping my chin until it bruised. "Until I sign that marriage license, you belong to me."
He flicked a black AmEx at my feet like I was a tragic charity case, ordering me to buy a dress for his engagement gala. To save my dying mother from eviction, I took a secret translation job, only to realize my client was his new fiancée, Caroline. She dragged me to Braxton’s office to humiliate me, and after he hid me in a secret room to avoid a scandal, he branded me a "security risk" and froze every cent I had.
I stood in a CVS with my last sixty dollars, swallowing a Plan B pill dry while watching a news report about Braxton demolishing my family’s last legacy. He didn't just want my body; he wanted to erase my entire existence and leave me with nothing.
The cruelty was breathtaking, but Braxton forgot that a woman with nothing left to lose is the most dangerous player in the game. I reached out to the only man he truly feared—his billionaire half-brother and the boy whose heart I broke years ago, Ansel Neal.
"Coffee isn't enough," Ansel replied to my message in seconds. "Dinner. Our old spot. 8 PM."
As I walked into the club to meet Braxton's greatest rival, I knew the game wasn't over. I was just changing the rules.

7.8
Anna Williams never imagined her life would collide with Alexander Knight-the cold, ruthless CEO feared across industries. When fate pushes her into his path, she discovers that power and wealth come with dangerous chains. Bound by a contract she can't escape, Anna must navigate his world of secrets, betrayal, and a passion that burns hotter than she ever dreamed. But behind his icy exterior lies a man scarred by trust and haunted by loss.
Will she be able to melt the billionaire's heart, or will she remain just another possession... claimed by the CEO?

8.9
"All I want is your body for a night. Give it to me, and I'll see to it that your mother survives. That was the proposal. cold, ruthless, and unstoppable. It was never intended for Scarlett Boone to come into contact with the underworld. But when hope was evaporating and her mother's life was in jeopardy, desperation drove her to take a risky risk and kiss a stranger in the dark. Everything changed on that one kiss. The unidentified individual? Fearsome Mafia Don Jaxon Creed was a cold-blooded billionaire who was accustomed to getting his way. And he wants Scarlett immediately. Just one evening. Not a thing. However, both of them are unwilling to confront some things that are buried deep in their history. Jaxon's demand for one night turns into a hazardous addiction as his obsession grows. Additionally, the price of that night might be higher than any of them had anticipated when lust and treachery clash. It was a desperate bargain. a passion from which neither can break free. and a history that has the power to destroy everything. Will one careless evening burn them both to ashes or spark something genuine?

8.3
My ex-boyfriend who had faked his death suddenly came back to life, with a pregnant lifesaver by his side.
"Emma, these past years, I owe my survival to Sarah's companionship, which allowed me to come back to see you. From now on, the three of us will live together," James declared confidently, looking at me. "I will register my marriage with Sarah, but I can have a wedding with you, as a form of compensation."
I stared at him in disbelief.
I, the esteemed eldest daughter of the my rich family, reduced to being his third wheel?
If he was tired of being a rich heir, I could certainly help him get back to his roots as a pauper.

9.2
SYNOPSIS:
Before meeting Elliot Winter, Michelle's life was a routine of beatings from her drunk dad and juggling part-time jobs. He was handsome, loaded, and had a smile that could melt ice.
There was also a twenty-year age gap between them, Michelle didn't care because their relationship was the only ray of sunshine in her rather bleak world. And when he popped the question she was more than happy to say yes. Michelle thought she had found her happily ever after, but she couldn't have been more wrong. With each year that passed Elliot became more of a stranger and less of the man she had fallen for, neglecting her and looking the other way when his mother treated her poorly, that was until the day their 5th anniversary rolled around, she caught him in bed with her sister.
Her love is replaced by hate, a swooning affection now burning rage. Well, two could play that game. That night, she dials her stepson's number with a single text that will change their lives forever.
'I need you tonight'

9.3
Ginny was chained to a concrete pillar in an abandoned warehouse, bleeding and betrayed by the two people she trusted most.
Her fiancé, Brant, and her adopted sister, Coretta, had just slashed her face open. Brant coldly admitted she was nothing but a disposable key to a vault, right before he tossed a lighter onto the gasoline-soaked floor.
As Ginny burned alive in the roaring inferno, the heavy iron doors were violently smashed open. Bedford Parks—the notoriously ruthless, germaphobic "monster" of Silicon Valley whom Ginny had always feared—charged straight into the flames. Ignoring the blistering heat, he shielded her charred body with his own. A massive steel beam collapsed, snapping his spine.
"I love you."
He coughed up blood, whispering his final words against her blackened skin before dying to protect her.
Hovering as a ghost, Ginny's soul screamed in agonizing realization. She had spent her life terrified of Bedford, yet he was the only one who truly loved her, while her supposed family laughed at her gruesome murder.
Suddenly, a blinding white light swallowed the warehouse.
Ginny gasped for air, opening her eyes to find herself sitting in the back of a luxury Maybach. She was eighteen again, wearing the humiliating clown makeup Coretta had tricked her into wearing on the day she was brought back to the wealthy Steele estate.
Ginny stared at her reflection, her dark eyes turning cold and sharp.
This time, she would tear her betrayers apart piece by piece, and she would protect her "monster."