Follow
Chapters
Share
Merry Christmas, Ex-Husband Novel Cover

Merry Christmas, Ex-Husband

"He gave his mistress diamonds. He gave his wife an apron. He didn't know his wife owned his company." Clara spent three years playing the role of the perfect, submissive housewife. She hid her identity as the heiress to the global Sterling Empire to support her husband, Lucas, building his company from the ground up with her secret investments. She cooked, she cleaned, and she waited for him to love her. But on Christmas Eve, Lucas shatters her world. At a lavish family gala, he publicly humiliates Clara by gifting a priceless ruby necklace to her evil stepsister, Bella, while throwing a cheap maid's apron at Clara along with divorce papers. "You're fired as my wife," he laughs. "I need a woman with class, not a servant." Clara signs the papers without hesitation. But she doesn't leave empty-handed. She takes her dignity, her freedom... and her money. The next morning, Lucas wakes up to frozen bank accounts, repossessed cars, and a new CEO taking over his company. He rushes to the boardroom to beg the mysterious investor for mercy. But when the CEO's chair swivels around, he sees the woman he threw out in the snow. "Hello, Lucas," Clara smiles, wearing the diamonds he could never afford. "Ready to beg?"
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The kitchen smelled like rosemary and burnt dreams.

I pressed the fresh bandage against my thumb, the third burn mark I'd collected in two days of Christmas preparations. The turkey sat golden in the oven, its skin crackling with promise, while I stirred the cranberry sauce with my uninjured hand. Steam rose from the pot, fogging my glasses and making the world blur around the edges.

"Clara!" Mother Helen's voice cut through the kitchen like a blade. "This gravy is too thick. And why does the stuffing smell like sage? I specifically said no sage."

I bit back my response, focusing instead on the rhythmic motion of stirring. The wooden spoon felt heavy in my grip, my shoulders aching from hours bent over the stove. "I'll thin the gravy, Mother Helen. The stuffing—"

"Should have been made my way from the beginning." Her sharp eyes surveyed my work with the precision of a food critic. "Lucas deserves better than this amateur hour."

The front door slammed, followed by the familiar sound of Lucas's laugh—but not alone. A higher, musical giggle accompanied it, sending ice through my veins despite the kitchen's warmth.

"We're home!" Lucas called out, his voice carrying that particular brightness he reserved for special occasions. Or special people.

I wiped my hands on my apron, the fabric stained with two days of cooking battles, and stepped into the hallway. Lucas stood there in his charcoal wool coat, snowflakes melting in his dark hair, looking like something from a holiday catalog. Beside him stood a vision in cream cashmere and red lipstick—Bella, his stepsister, though the way she clung to his arm suggested nothing familial about their relationship.

"Clara," Lucas said, his nose wrinkling slightly as I approached. "You smell like... cooking."

The words hit me like a slap. Two days. Two days I'd spent crafting his perfect Christmas dinner, burning my fingers on his favorite dishes, and he recoiled from the evidence of my effort.

"I've been in the kitchen," I said quietly, suddenly aware of the grease stain on my sweater, the flour dusting my sleeves.

"Obviously." Bella's voice was honey over glass. "Lucas, maybe we should give Clara some space to... freshen up before dinner?"

She said it with such practiced concern, her manicured hand still resting on Lucas's forearm. The diamond bracelet on her wrist caught the hallway light—a bracelet I'd never seen before, though something about its elegance seemed familiar.

"Good idea." Lucas shrugged out of his coat, not meeting my eyes. "The smell is pretty overwhelming."

Mother Helen appeared from the living room, her face transforming from disapproval to delight at the sight of Bella. "Oh, my dear! You look absolutely radiant. Doesn't she, Lucas?"

"Beautiful as always." His voice carried a warmth that hadn't touched our conversations in months.

I watched them move into the living room like a choreographed dance, Bella's laughter tinkling as Lucas helped her with her coat. The cashmere slipped away to reveal a dress that probably cost more than my monthly grocery budget—deep emerald silk that made her skin glow and her blonde hair shine like spun gold.

"Clara, don't just stand there," Mother Helen snapped. "The turkey needs checking."

Back in the kitchen, I basted the turkey with mechanical precision, my hands shaking slightly. Through the doorway, I could hear their conversation, punctuated by Bella's musical laugh and Lucas's responses—more animated than he'd been with me in weeks.

"Remember when we used to sneak cookies from your mother's kitchen?" Bella was saying.

"You mean when you used to get us both in trouble?" Lucas's laugh was rich, genuine. "Some things never change."

"Oh, but some things do." Her voice dropped to something almost intimate. "We're not children anymore."

The timer buzzed, saving me from hearing his response. I pulled the turkey from the oven, the bird perfect despite Mother Helen's earlier criticism. The skin was golden-brown, the meat would be tender and juicy. It was exactly what Lucas had requested.

But as I carried the platter to the dining room, setting it on the table I'd spent an hour decorating with holly and candles, I felt invisible. Lucas and Bella sat close together on the sofa, their heads bent over his phone, sharing some private joke.

"Dinner's ready," I announced.

They looked up as if surprised to find me there.

We gathered around the table—the same table where Lucas and I had shared quiet dinners when we were first married, where we'd talked about our dreams and future. Now it felt like a stage set for someone else's play.

"Everything looks wonderful, Clara," Bella said with that same practiced sweetness. "You've worked so hard."

Lucas carved the turkey with efficient strokes, the knife gliding through meat that fell apart at his touch. Perfect. Just as I'd planned.

"Before we eat," he said suddenly, setting down the carving knife, "I have an announcement."

The room fell silent. Mother Helen leaned forward expectantly. Bella's eyes sparkled with something that might have been anticipation—or knowledge.

"I wanted to thank everyone for being here tonight," Lucas continued, his voice taking on that formal tone he used for business presentations. "Christmas is about family, about the people who matter most in our lives."

He reached into his jacket pocket, and my heart began to pound. A small velvet box appeared in his palm—the kind of box that held promises and endings in equal measure.

"So I prepared something special," he said, his eyes finding Bella's across the table. "For someone who's always been special to me."

The candlelight flickered across the velvet box, casting dancing shadows on the white tablecloth. The turkey grew cold on its platter, forgotten. My hands gripped my napkin until my knuckles went white.

"Lucas," I whispered, but my voice was lost in the sudden roar of silence.

He smiled—that devastating smile that had made me fall in love with him five years ago—and held the box like it contained the future itself.

You may also like

After My Boss Forgot Our Three-Year Relationship Novel Cover
9.4
The fluorescent lights of the neurology wing hummed with a low, synthetic vibration that settled directly into my teeth. I kept my hands folded neatly over my purse, hiding the crescent-moon indentations my fingernails were carving into my palms. "Retrograde amnesia," Dr. Aris was saying, his voice a practiced, clinical murmur. "The trauma to the temporal lobe was significant. Based on our preliminary cognitive assessments, Mr. Grant is missing roughly thirty-six months of memory." Thirty-six months. Three years. The exact duration of my invisible imprisonment. I didn't gasp.
Be My Woman: A Billionaire's Redemption  Novel Cover
9.1
One night led to one mistake that changed everything. Liora-Belle Hart never expected the man she slept with on the worst night of her life to disappear without a trace. But when she discovered she was pregnant weeks later, the stranger was long gone—and so was her chance at answers. Determined to raise her unborn twins alone, Liora’s world shattered again the moment her twins were taken away from her at birth. She didn't get to even hold them or see what they looked like. She cursed him, despised him and vowed never to forgive him. 17 years later, the man she despised so much appeared at her doorstep with one request in mind. “Be My Woman.” She was never supposed to fall for him. She was never supposed to forgive him. And he was never supposed to fall in love with the woman he broke.
Bound By Contract: The Possessive CEO's Bride Novel Cover
7.6
Kaylee's family was drowning in debt, and her stepmother locked her inside a freezing bedroom. To save their bankrupt company, they decided to sell her off to a sixty-five-year-old man with a disgusting reputation. They cut off her allowance and confiscated the only precious keepsake her dead mother had ever left her. "Put on the engagement dress, or I will smash your mother's crystal box into a million pieces." Terrified of the old man, Kaylee risked her life by jumping out of the second-story window into a violent storm. She hit the muddy ground hard, twisting her ankle and tearing her skin on rusted iron gates as she escaped into the pitch-black night. Dragging her bleeding bare feet across the cold sand, her lungs felt like they were filled with broken glass. She didn't understand why she had to be the sacrifice for their endless greed, or how they could be so cruel as to hold her dead mother's memory hostage. She had absolutely nowhere to go, and the old man's cars were already pulling into the estate to claim her. Cornered by the blinding headlights of a motorcade on the beach, she threw herself at the feet of Ernest Blackwell, the most ruthless billionaire in New York. "Marry me! You need a wife, and I need a husband right now!" To buy her freedom and crush the family that sold her, she chose to sign a twenty-million-dollar fake marriage contract with the devil himself.
Divorced Wife's Secret Twins: Billionaire's Regret Novel Cover
8.8
I discovered I was pregnant with twins from my marriage to Ell Steele, the ruthless CEO of the Steele Group. But he saw me as a gold-digging nobody, unworthy of his heir. He stormed into our penthouse with his lawyer, slamming down abortion consent forms and a divorce NDA, offering five million to terminate and vanish. "You're not fit to carry my child," he spat, gripping my jaw. I refused the abortion, signed the zero-payout divorce to keep my company insurance for my dying mom's ICU bills, but stayed on as an admin assistant. Brittany, his mistress, spilled coffee on my reports, got me demoted to the dusty sub-basement sorting old files. She framed me for attacking her, security dragged me out, slamming me into doorframes that cramped my belly. Trapped in a sabotaged freight elevator, I nearly miscarried in the dark, gasping for air while Ell rescued me—only to find my prenatal pills and rage. At the gala, I warned Brittany the Angel's Tears necklace—Georgina's flawed design—was cracking. She accused me of theft; Ell ordered me stripped and searched publicly. It snapped anyway, shattering the diamond, but he blamed me, firing and blacklisting me on the spot. Beaten down, humiliated, body aching from their cruelty—how could my husband, who I once loved, destroy me without a shred of doubt? What made him so blind to my pain? Dragged from our home in the rain, a black Rolls-Royce Phantom pulled up. The butler bowed: "Madame Aura, your suite awaits." As Ell watched from his Maybach, I initiated the hostile takeover—time to bankrupt them all.
Escaping The Obsessive Billionaire's Cage Novel Cover
7.2
For three years, I was imprisoned by Anderson Hopper, the monster who forced me to watch my fiancé, Kendall, plummet into a freezing river. But when I saw the morning news, I realized Kendall wasn't dead. He had returned as Eben Gill, a ruthless tech billionaire. I risked my life to escape and find him, only to be met with eyes full of absolute hatred. He publicly humiliated me, dragged me to the exact bridge where he "died," and sneered at the C-section scar on my stomach. "Anderson Hopper's bastard," he spat, completely unaware that the baby was actually his—the very child Anderson had murdered in the operating room to break me. To make matters worse, Anderson used Kendall's dying mother as a hostage to force me back into my cage. I knelt on the freezing asphalt, begging the man I loved to just visit his mother, while he coldly ordered his driver to run me over. I had lost my baby, my freedom, and my dignity, all to protect him from Anderson's blackmail. Why was I the one being tortured and treated like a traitor? "Don't think your little kneeling stunt earned you my forgiveness." He whispered those cruel words before walking away without looking back. Staring at his cold, retreating figure, the last shred of my love finally turned to ash. That night, under the cover of a torrential storm, I bypassed the estate's laser grids and walked out into the dark.
I Gave Him My Kidney, He Gave Her My Children. Novel Cover
8.9
"Get this useless woman out of my sight," Liam sneered, his arm wrapped tightly around Maya's waist. I stood in the foyer of the home I built, clutching my left side where an eight-inch surgical incision still seeped blood into my bandages. Just seven days ago, I lay on a cold operating table, surrendering my kidney to save his life from terminal organ failure. But while I remained in a postoperative coma, his first love strutted into the ward, handed the chief surgeon a stack of cash, and forged her name on my donor certificate. Now, my five-year-old twins clung to Maya's skirt, glaring at me like I was a beggar. They dragged my suitcase down the stairs and kicked it onto the driveway. My fingers curled around the crumpled, blood-stained original consent form hidden inside my pocket.