Follow
Chapters
Share
I Was Just A Silent Wife, Until I Toppled His Empire Novel Cover

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.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The rain at JFK wasn't a drizzle; it was a deluge.

The sky was the color of a fresh bruise, heavy and low. I stood on the tarmac, the water soaking through my trench coat, plastering my hair to my skull. I refused the umbrella the ground crew offered. I needed to feel this. I needed the cold to remind me that I was still biological matter, still alive, despite the numbness spreading from my core.

The C-130 Hercules taxied to a halt, its four propellers cutting through the rain like giant knives. The ramp lowered with a mechanical groan that sounded like a beast in mourning.

Twelve men in dress blues marched down the ramp. They moved as one organism, their steps splashing in unison on the wet concrete. They didn't look at the private jets parked nearby. They didn't look at the skyline of New York. They looked only at me.

And they saluted.

It was a sharp, violent snap of hands to brows.

I straightened. My spine, curved for three years under the weight of being "Julian's mousy wife," snapped into a line of steel. I raised my hand. The muscle memory was instant. My fingers aligned perfectly with the brim of an invisible cap.

Two flag-draped coffins were carried out.

My mother. My father.

The silence on the tarmac was absolute, heavier than the roar of the engines had been. I walked forward. My hand touched the wet fabric of the flag covering the first coffin. It was rough, synthetic, and freezing cold.

"I've got you," I whispered. "I'm here."

My phone rang. The shrill, cheerful ringtone Julian had set for himself cut through the sacred silence like a scream.

I pulled it out. Julian Calling.

"Where the hell are you?" his voice barked before I could speak. "Mother is at the manor, and the florists delivered lilies. You know she hates lilies. Fix it."

I looked at the coffins. I looked at the soldiers standing at attention, tears mixing with the rain on their stoic faces.

"I'm busy," I said.

"Busy? Doing what? Buying groceries? Get to the manor. Now."

I hung up. Then, I opened the settings and blocked the number.

The ride to the Vanderbilt estate was silent. I sat in the front seat of the hearse, not the back. When we turned into the long, gravel driveway of the estate, I saw the cars. Bentleys, Rolls Royces. The brunch was in full swing.

The hearse stopped at the iron gates. A security guard I didn't recognize stepped out, hand raised.

"Delivery entrance is around back," he shouted over the rain.

"Open the gate," I said, rolling down the window.

"Mrs. Vanderbilt? Look, Mr. Vanderbilt said no interruptions. You can't bring… that… in here. It's a party."

"Open the gate," I repeated. My voice was low, but it carried the same frequency as the hum of a drone before a strike.

The guard hesitated, looked at my eyes, and flinched. The gates swung open.

We drove up the main drive. The black hearse was a scar on the perfectly manicured landscape. We pulled up right to the front steps, blocking the view of the garden where Victoria Vanderbilt held court under a massive white marquee.

The music stopped. The chatter died.

Victoria came rushing down the steps, her champagne glass sloshing over her hand. She was wearing white, of course.

"What is this?" she shrieked. "Jade! Have you lost your mind? Get this death-mobile out of my driveway! We have guests!"

Julian appeared behind her, Seraphina clinging to his arm. He looked furious.

"I told you to handle the flowers, not bring a funeral to my brunch," Julian hissed. "Do you have no shame?"

I stepped out of the car. The rain hit me instantly, but I didn't feel it. I signaled the driver. The back opened. The soldiers-who had insisted on escorting the bodies to the final resting site-began to unload the coffins.

"No!" Victoria screamed, rushing forward. She grabbed the arm of a Marine. "Put that back! You are not bringing dead bodies into my house! It's bad luck! It's disgusting!"

The Marine didn't move. He looked at her like she was a speck of dust on his boot.

"Stop it," I said.

Victoria turned on me. "You ungrateful little gutter rat. You think because you married my son you can pollute our ground with your trash? Your parents were mercenaries who died for a paycheck! Take them to the dump where they belong!"

The world went silent.

The blood roared in my ears. The three years of biting my tongue, of lowering my head, of apologizing for existing-it all evaporated.

I took two steps.

My hand moved faster than thought. It was a tactical strike, open-palmed, fueled by the torque of my hips and the rage of a thousand silent nights.

Crack.

The sound was like a gunshot.

Victoria spun a full hundred and eighty degrees and collapsed onto the wet gravel. Her champagne glass shattered.

Julian froze. The guests gasped. Seraphina's hands flew to her mouth.

Victoria sat up, clutching her cheek, her eyes wide with shock. She wasn't hurt, not really. She was just… stunned. She had never been touched by consequences before.

"You…" she sputtered. "Julian! She hit me!"

I stood over her. I felt tall. I felt huge.

"Get up," I said. My voice wasn't loud, but it carried across the lawn. "And get out of my way."

"Julian!" Victoria screamed. "Throw her out! Divorce her! Make her pay!"

I looked at Julian. He was staring at me as if I had grown a second head.

"Don't bother," I said to him. "I'm already gone."

I turned to the Marines. "Take them to the private plot. The one I bought. Not the Vanderbilt mausoleum."

"Yes, Ma'am," the lead Marine barked.

I walked past Julian, brushing his shoulder. I didn't look back at the woman in the mud or the man in the suit. I followed the flag.

You may also like

Breaking Free from His Betrayal Novel Cover
8.0
After three years of a hollow marriage, Isabella discovers her billionaire husband, Gabriel, has been leading a double life with his first love. Devastated by his cold betrayal and the realization that their union was a sham, she chooses to walk away. Stripped of her illusions, Isabella seeks a fresh start far from his shadow. However, Gabriel soon realizes the depth of his loss, sparking a tense pursuit as she fights to reclaim her independence.
Discarded Heiress: Reborn from Mafia Prison Novel Cover
7.6
Seven years ago, my fiancé, Don Dante Moretti, sent me to prison to take the fall for my adopted sister, Chiara. He called it a gift—a way to protect me from a worse fate. Today, he picked me up from prison only to abandon me at my family's estate. His reason? Chiara was having another one of her "episodes." My parents then informed me I'd be staying in the third-floor storage room, so as not to disturb the fragile girl who stole my life. They celebrated her "recovery" with a lavish dinner party, while I was treated like a ghost. When I refused to join, my mother hissed that I was ungrateful, and my father called me jealous. They assumed I couldn't understand their venomous whispers. But prison was my university. I learned Spanish. I understood every word. It was then I realized I wasn't just a sacrifice; I was disposable. The love I once felt for all of them had turned to ash. That night, in the dusty storage room, I logged onto an encrypted channel I'd set up years ago. A single message was waiting: "The offer stands. Do you accept?" My hands, scarred and steady, typed back, "I accept."
Divorce & A 20-Year Freeze Novel Cover
8.5
After a grueling five-year marriage, a woman finally divorces her cold, billionaire husband. To escape the pain, she enters a specialized cryogenic facility and is frozen for twenty years. When she awakens, she finds herself in a transformed world, still young while her former husband has aged. As she attempts to navigate this new era and reclaim her life, their paths cross once more, forcing them to confront the unresolved secrets of their past.
Fiancé Replaced Me with Junior Novel Cover
9.0
After three years of devoted support, my fiancé chose his junior over me, treating our long history as a burden. He discarded our relationship for a fresh spark, leaving me to face the ruins of our shared future. However, a powerful billionaire enters my life, offering a chance to reclaim my worth. As I rise from the betrayal, my ex-fiancé realizes his mistake, but I am no longer the woman he can easily reclaim. I will find a love that truly honors me.
I Demanded Divorce While Saving His Mistress' Mother Novel Cover
8.4
After three years of a cold, neglected marriage, a devoted wife finally reaches her breaking point. Despite her loyalty, her billionaire husband remains fixated on another woman. In a final act of selflessness, she saves the life of his mistress's mother, using the moment to demand a clean break. As she walks away from the toxic union to reclaim her dignity, her husband begins to realize the true value of the woman he is about to lose forever.
Our Little Cupid: The Tycoon's Child In My Arms Novel Cover
9.7
After being forced out of her marriage because she could not have children, Allison's heart broke into pieces. She left for a sleepy town, hoping to find peace and mend her wounds. One day, she stumbled upon an abandoned baby boy and chose to raise him alone. Four years slipped by. One morning, a fleet of luxury cars rolled up to her modest house. A well-dressed man stepped out, holding a card. "Here's two million. Take it for raising my son." With a sly grin, the man replied, "Then both of you come home with me." Allison drew the child close. "He's my family. I will not let him go!"