Follow
Chapters
Share
Love's Betrayal, Fortune's Irony Novel Cover

Love's Betrayal, Fortune's Irony

I gave up my art scholarship to put my boyfriend, Armand, through law school. I worked three jobs and even took a knife for him, believing his promise that we would build an empire together. But the day he became a star lawyer, I found him kissing his client, Cassandra, in the snow. The shock caused a miscarriage. When I tried to end my life, he brought his mistress to my hospital bed to call me a lunatic. He then used my family to blackmail me, forcing me to play the perfect wife while he flaunted his affair. For years, I was his broken trophy, a testament to his power. He had the career I funded, the woman he chose, and complete control over my life. But on the night his mistress held me at knifepoint on a skyscraper rooftop, she didn't kill me. She turned and plunged the knife into Armand's chest instead. And as his legal wife, I inherited everything.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

Ellie POV:

Barton's eyes, usually warm and filled with laughter, were now pools of icy contempt as he faced Armand. The air in our small living room grew thick with unspoken history, with shared memories twisted into bitter resentment. Armand, for his part, stood impassive, a statue of polished marble in our humble doorway.

"Get out," Barton growled, his voice low and dangerous, a tremor running through his frame. "Get out of my sister's house, Armand."

Armand didn't move. He simply stared at Barton, a ghost of a smile playing on his lips. "I just want to talk to Ellie."

My father, his face pale and etched with worry, stepped forward, placing a trembling hand on Barton's shoulder. "Barton, calm down. Let's just hear what he has to say."

My mother, her eyes red-rimmed and fearful, pulled me behind her, a protective shield against the man who had once been like a son to her. "You've said enough, Armand. Just leave us alone. Please."

This wasn't how it used to be. Not with Armand and Barton. They had been inseparable. Three kids from the Rust Belt, bound by poverty and a shared dream of escape. Armand, the brilliant outlier, had always been sharper, more observant than us. Even then, he possessed a quiet intensity, a wisdom beyond his years. I remembered him as a boy, his eyes holding a depth that both fascinated and unnerved me. It was only much later that I understood the source of that unnatural maturity: a childhood steeped in trauma, witness to his own mother's suffering, a silent battle that ended when she died, leaving him an orphan.

Barton was a year ahead of Armand in school, and I was a year behind both of them. We were a unit, a three-person army against the world. When Armand and Barton both received acceptance letters to state universities-full scholarships, a golden ticket out-it should have been a celebration. Instead, it plunged our families deeper into despair. The scholarships covered tuition, but living expenses, books, food… it was an impossible sum for our working-class parents. My father had just lost his factory job, and Armand' s relatives, who grudgingly took him in, made it clear they wouldn't spare a dime.

I found Armand hunched outside his uncle' s crumbling house, the tattered remains of his acceptance letter scattered like fallen snow at his feet. His aunt' s shrill voice cut through the humid summer air, a venomous litany of how he was a burden, how they couldn't afford a "college boy." She threatened to throw him out, to make him understand his place. He knelt there, taking every word, every insult, his head bowed, his shoulders shaking with silent sobs. He didn' t fight back. He didn't even look up.

My heart ached for him. I walked up to him, my own scholarship letter burning a hole in my pocket. "Armand," I whispered, my voice barely audible. "Do you… do you want to go to college?"

He finally looked up, his eyes bloodshot and swollen. "More than anything, Ellie," he choked out, his voice raw. "But I can't. It's impossible."

Something in his shattered gaze, in the sheer desperation of his longing, snapped something inside me. I made a decision then, one that felt both inevitable and insane. I went home and told my parents I was dropping out of art school. My scholarship, my dreams of painting, of creating beauty – they vanished in that moment. My parents screamed, they cried, they begged. But I was unyielding. The pain in their eyes was a knife in my gut, but I couldn't unsee Armand's face.

I dropped out.

We moved to the city. Armand and Barton started classes, and I started working. I took on anything I could find: waitressing, cleaning, night shifts at a convenience store. My hands were always chapped, my feet always aching. Every dollar I earned went towards their textbooks, their ramen noodles, their meager rent. I lived on coffee and the fierce belief that I was doing the right thing.

Then came the day Armand received his first academic scholarship. He took me to a fancy Italian restaurant, a place I' d only ever seen from outside. He ordered for me, explained the dishes, his eyes shining with an almost childlike excitement. After dinner, as large, soft snowflakes began to fall, he took my hand. His fingers were warm, strong.

"Ellie," he said, his breath misting in the cold air. "I will never forget this. You gave me a chance when no one else would. I promise, I'll give you everything you've ever dreamed of. We'll build an empire together."

His words, spoken under the gentle fall of snow, were the most beautiful poetry I had ever heard. I believed him with every fiber of my being.

He was brilliant, of course. He excelled in law school, his mind a steel trap. Soon, we moved into a slightly larger apartment. He and Barton thrived. I watched them, my heart swelling with pride, convinced that our collective sacrifice was worth it.

But the real world was a cruel mistress. During his legal internship, Armand, fresh out of law school, faced the brutal hierarchy of the legal world. He wasn' t born with connections, with a network of powerful friends. He was told, subtly at first, then more directly, that a lawyer without a lineage was merely a clerk, a grunt. He dismissed it as arrogance, believing his talent would speak for itself. It didn't. He was consistently overlooked for challenging cases, stuck with menial tasks.

Then, a high-profile case landed on his desk, almost by accident. A notorious local "socialite," a rich kid with a history of trouble, was facing serious charges. No one else wanted it; it was a PR nightmare. Armand took it. He worked tirelessly, dissecting every detail, finding the obscure loopholes others missed. He got the rich kid off. A technicality, a legal sleight of hand. The outrage was palpable, the victim's family devastated. But Armand had done it. He had pulled off a miracle. He had proven them all wrong.

He walked out of the courthouse that day, his head held high, a new kind of confidence radiating from him. I waited for him, my heart bursting with pride. His career was finally taking off.

As we were leaving, a woman, her face contorted with grief and rage, lunged at him. She wielded a steak knife, a blur of silver in her hand. "You let him go!" she screamed, her voice raw with agony. "You let the monster who killed my son go!"

Before I could even think, before Armand could react, I instinctively threw myself in front of him. A searing pain ripped through my side, a hot, wet sensation spreading across my clothes. The world spun. I heard Armand's voice, a choked, terrified cry, like nothing I had ever heard from him before.

He cradled me in his arms as I bled, his face pale with terror. "Ellie? Ellie, no! Stay with me! Don't leave me!" he begged, his words tumbling out, desperate and incoherent. "Please, Ellie, don't leave me. I can't lose you. I can't."

I drifted in and out of consciousness. Days blurred into weeks. The doctors gave him grim diagnoses, one after another. He knelt by my bedside, his head bowed, his hands clasped in a silent prayer. He sobbed, sometimes quietly, sometimes with wrenching, gut-deep cries. He begged the nurses, the doctors, anyone who would listen, to save me.

When I finally woke up, truly woke up, he was there, his face haggard, his eyes swollen. He clutched my hand, his body shaking with relief, tears streaming down his face. "You're back," he whispered, pressing his face to my hand. "My Ellie is back."

For months after, he was haunted. Nightmares plagued him. I would wake to find him sitting bolt upright in bed, gasping for air, his body slick with sweat. He would cling to me, his arms wrapped around me like a drowning man, burying his face in my hair, whispering, "Thank God you're still here. Thank God you're still alive."

His love, then, felt real. Utterly, undeniably real.

That love, so fierce and consuming, was a memory I now held tight. A memory to counter the bitter hatred that now burned in my brother's eyes.

You may also like

After Husband's Double Wedding Novel Cover
7.8
I scrolled mindlessly through Instagram, sprawled across our king-sized bed in the Manhattan penthouse I'd helped Christopher afford. Ten years of my life invested in his dreams, his company, his success. The afternoon sun streamed through floor-to-ceiling windows that overlooked Central Park—windows I'd insisted on when we were house-hunting, because Christopher had been too busy closing another deal to attend the viewings. My phone buzzed with a text notification. Then another. And another. Mom: *Natalie, call me right now.* Dad: *Sweetheart, is this some kind of mistake?* Mom: *Are you okay?* Before I could respond, photos started flooding in. I squinted at the first image—an elaborate floral arch, white roses cascading down crystal pillars. The Plaza Hotel's grand ballroom, transformed into something out of a bridal magazine. I sat up straighter, a chill creeping up my spine.
After the Lab Betrayal, I Sought Revenge Novel Cover
9.1
The laboratory explosion had leaked crucial data, but as the project lead, I found myself unexpectedly calm, savoring a cup of instant noodles. Meanwhile, my boyfriend was in a frenzy, bombarding me with messages, urging me to return. In my previous life, I had come back to find my computer brimming with papers supposedly written by my "junior colleague." I was accused of being a plagiarist as she tearfully claimed I had stolen her research. My boyfriend testified against me, alleging I had a history of dishonesty. I was ousted from the team, and the online backlash invaded my personal life. I lost my job, spiraled into despair, and eventually succumbed to severe depression, ending my life. Yet they thrived, reaping profits from the vaccine developed using my research. Upon being reborn, I resolved not to repeat the same mistakes. Instead, I headed to the countryside to farm, eager to see if the habitual plagiarist could develop the vaccine without me. The moment I submitted my resignation, my boyfriend couldn't stay quiet.
BLACK TIE BILLIONAIRE Novel Cover
9.0
Scott grabbed Vivian's arm as she turned away from him. “Don’t you ever walk out on me like that again!” he said angrily. Vivian let her eyes settle on his hand for a few seconds before she yanked her arm away from his grip. Noticing that she missed his touch, she shook the thought away. “The only time you have the right to tell me what to do is during working hours, and the last time I checked…. No one is working right now." His eyebrow lifted, as if calling her bluff." Really?" he asked. One side of his lips curled up in a smirk. Vivian didn't care. She was finding it very hard to keep her mouth sealed tonight, and she didn't even try to stop herself." Yes. I am not your employee right now so I can do exactly as I please!” “That's funny?” He said, but there was nothing funny about the look in his eyes. His mouth hardened with lust. “Well, since we're going with that, it also means that I can do the same, right?” Without giving her a chance to respond, he grabbed her waist and he pulled her right up against him—so close that she could feel every hard muscle in his body. His body heat warmed her, and his palm settled at the base of her spine. She couldn't think straight… Not when he bent and nipped at her bottom lip, then sucked it, soothing and enhancing the sting before returning to devour her mouth. As if she was something he knew he shouldn’t have but couldn’t resist. “Let's stop playing games,” he said as he drove his mouth down onto hers. "We both want each other…. Why don't you come up with me so we can get this thing… whatever it is… over with?" _____________ ____________ Scott grabbed Vivian's arm as she turned away from him. “Don’t you ever walk out on me like that again!” he said angrily. Vivian let her eyes settle on his hand for a few seconds before she yanked her arm away from his grip. Noticing that she missed his touch, she shook the thought away. “The only time you have the right to tell me what to do is during working hours, and the last time I checked…. No one is working right now." His eyebrow lifted, as if calling her bluff." Really?" he asked, and One side of his lips curled up in a smirk." Well, since we're going with that, it also means that I can do the same, right?” Without giving her a chance to respond, he grabbed her waist and he pulled her right up against him—so close that she could feel every hard muscle in his body. “Let's stop playing games,” he said as he drove his mouth down onto hers. "We both want each other…. Why don't you come up with me so we can get this thing… whatever it is… over with?"
Escape from Heartless Husband Novel Cover
8.2
My daughter and the son of my husband's first love were in a terrible car accident. As the attending physician, my husband immediately decided to allocate the rare AB negative blood to Jireh. I swallowed my pride and, in front of everyone, knelt to beg him. His response was cold and calculated: "Marianna's condition is stable compared to Jireh's critical state. I have to prioritize the most severe case." At that moment, a few mysterious lines of text appeared before me: [The blood in storage could have saved both, but the male lead was so worried it wouldn’t be enough that he used it all on someone else’s child.] [After the daughter dies, the female lead soon ends her own life. Hang in there, everyone; there will be a time when this jerk will regret everything.] Seeing my daughter in grave danger, I ignored the nurse's protests and burst into the operating room. Trading two lives for genuine remorse was an ending I refused to accept. Logan looked shocked when I barged in, sweat beginning to gather on his brow. Without hesitation, he hurried over and slapped me hard across the face. “You’re being reckless!
He Thought I Would Silently Endure Novel Cover
9.1
On our fifth anniversary, I found my husband's secret USB drive. The password wasn't our wedding date or my birthday. It was his first love's. Inside was a digital shrine to another woman, a meticulous archive of a life he'd lived before me. I searched for my name. Zero results. In five years of marriage, I was just a placeholder. Then he brought her back. He hired her at our firm and gave her my passion project, the one I'd poured my soul into for two years. At the company gala, he publicly announced her as the new lead. When she staged an accident and he instantly rushed to her side, snarling at me, I finally saw the truth. He didn't just neglect me; he expected me to silently endure his public devotion to another woman. He thought I would break. He was wrong. I picked up my untouched glass of champagne, walked right up to him in front of all his colleagues, and emptied it over his head.
 Leaving The Cold-hearted Rich Alpha Novel Cover
8.0
I'm Nia Simons. For three years, I was Zane Lewis' mate, rich alpha, cold heart. "Can you spare cash for pads? I'm stuck at checkout," I begged once. He just stared: "Clean the car seat you ruined first." Later, I miscarried after freezing in a snowdrift, begging for cab fare. His reply? "Stick to the process." Vivian, his "blood kin," loved tormenting me. "Bark for me, and I'll give you money for your mom's grave," she sneered. I knelt, only for her to laugh: "Trash like you doesn't deserve cash." Zane saw it all, but said, "Apologize to her. Snowy's family-you're not." When my mom's ashes scattered in a storm , I snapped. "Sever the bond," I told Harold Lewis. He handed me 10% of the pack's shares: "You earned this." A year later, I'm in Favalon Town, acing college, with Cyrus-my tutor-by my side. Then Zane showed up, eyes red: "I know the truth-Vivian lied! You left college 'cause of cancer. come back?" I clung to Cyrus: "He's my intended mate. Zane, you broke me. Never again."