Follow
Chapters
Share
Million Dollar Hush Money: I Want Divorce Novel Cover

Million Dollar Hush Money: I Want Divorce

The silence in Sterling Manor wasn't empty; it was heavy, pressing against my eardrums like deep water. I sat on the edge of the oversized velvet sofa, waiting for my husband to return from a "merger closing" that I knew was actually a hotel room. At 2:00 AM, a notification glowed on his forgotten work tablet: "You left your tie on my nightstand. I'll keep it safe for next time. - S." When Ethan finally walked in, he didn't look at me. He just smelled like Serena's signature sandalwood perfume and expensive scotch. He didn't apologize for the infidelity; instead, he transferred a million dollars into my spousal account and told me to go buy some jewelry to keep my mouth shut. I realized then that I wasn't a wife; I was an expensive placeholder. I left my ten-carat diamond ring on the foyer table and walked out into the freezing rain with nothing but a canvas duffel bag. But Ethan wasn't about to let his "ornament" escape so easily. He froze my credit cards, revoked my trust access, and used his billion-dollar influence to blacklist me from every architecture firm in New York City. He even tracked me down to a restaurant where I was playing piano for tips, throwing a stack of hundreds at me in front of his mistress. When I still refused to crawl back to the manor, he played his final, cruelest card. He leaned in and whispered that if I didn't return to his bed, he would stop protecting my brother from a prison sentence he had manufactured himself. I stood there shivering, realizing that every "favor" he'd ever done for my family was actually a shackle. He thought he could buy my soul, my talent, and my silence by holding the people I loved hostage. How could the man I once loved turn into a monster who viewed my life as nothing more than a line item on a balance sheet? I looked him straight in the eye, my voice as cold as the winter air outside. "Make the call, Ethan. Send him to jail. I'd rather visit my brother through plexiglass than spend another night sleeping next to you." I'm done being a victim. I've just walked into the offices of Azure Architects, the only firm in the city Ethan can't bully. I'm not just going to finish my degree; I'm going to help his biggest rival burn his empire to the ground.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 2

The morning sun filtered through the floor-to-ceiling windows of the breakfast room, casting long, geometric shadows across the mahogany table. The room smelled of freshly ground coffee and beeswax polish. It was a perfect scene, curated for a magazine spread, devoid of actual life.

Ethan sat at the head of the table, a copy of The Wall Street Journal snapped open in his hands. He was wearing a charcoal three-piece suit, his hair perfectly coiffed. A cup of black coffee sat near his right hand, steam rising in a delicate spiral.

Lily walked in.

She wasn't wearing the silk robe he preferred in the mornings. She was dressed in a structured beige pencil skirt and a crisp white blouse, her hair pulled back into a severe bun. It was the armor of a woman who had business to conduct.

Ethan didn't look up. He turned a page of the newspaper, the paper rustling loudly in the quiet room.

Lily walked to the side of the table. She didn't sit. She reached into her pocket and pulled out the Centurion Black Card authorized under her name. She placed it on the polished wood.

Click.

The sound was sharp, deliberate.

Ethan paused. His eyes didn't leave the stock market columns. "Is the limit insufficient? Call Spencer. He'll adjust it."

"I don't want the limit adjusted," Lily said. Her voice was steady, surprising even herself. "I saw the text, Ethan. On your tablet. And I saw the transfer."

Ethan finally lowered the paper. He looked at the card, then up at her face. His expression wasn't guilty. It was annoyed. It was the look of a man whose meeting had been interrupted by a triviality.

"We are not doing this before my coffee," he said.

"Is she worth a million dollars?" Lily asked. "Or is that just the price of my dignity?"

Ethan sighed, folding the newspaper and placing it on the table. He picked up his coffee, taking a slow sip. "Serena is the Executive Vice President of the firm. We were celebrating the acquisition of the d'Angelo account. The text was... a joke. Office banter. You wouldn't understand the dynamic."

"A joke about a tie in her bedroom?"

"It was my tie," Ethan said smoothly, without missing a beat. "I took it off during the strategy session because the room was stifling. She merely held onto it so I wouldn't leave it behind. It's efficiency, Lily, not infidelity."

"Efficiency," Lily repeated, the word tasting like ash. "Is that what we're calling it now?"

"We have deadlines, Lily. Real responsibilities." He set the cup down, the porcelain clinking against the saucer. "Stop acting like a jealous, paranoid housewife. It's unbecoming. You sound like a fishwife."

"I was weeks away from my final thesis defense at RISD," Lily said, her voice rising, trembling with the ghost of her past ambition. "I was the Pritzker Youth nominee. I was top of my class. I understand 'work.' I walked away from that podium, I left my degree unfinished because you said you needed a wife who could manage the estate renovation full-time."

Ethan let out a short, derisive laugh. "Unfinished is the keyword, isn't it? You were playing artist, Lily. You almost had a degree. Almost means nothing in the real world. What I do-what Serena does-that moves markets. That builds empires. Your little sketches wouldn't pay the electric bill for this room."

He stood up then. He was tall, six-foot-three, and he used his height as a weapon, looming over her, casting a shadow that swallowed her whole.

"And speaking of bills," Ethan said, his voice dropping to a silky, dangerous register. "Your father called the foundation yesterday. Again. He needs a bridge loan for that failing logistics company of his. Another two hundred thousand."

Lily felt the blood drain from her face. Her parents. Her Achilles' heel.

"I didn't know," she whispered.

"Of course you didn't. You live in a bubble I pay for." Ethan walked around the table until he was standing right in front of her. He reached out and tucked a stray strand of hair behind her ear. His touch was cold. "If you cause a scene, if you drag Serena's name-and by extension, the company's name-into the mud with your insecurities, the stock price will dip. If the stock dips, my mood dips. And if my mood dips, the Miller family funding evaporates."

He leaned in close, his breath brushing her ear. "Your only job in this life is to be Mrs. Ethan Sterling. To look good. To host dinners. To be grateful. Don't try to ad-lib your lines. You're not good at it."

Footsteps clicked on the marble floor of the hallway. Spencer, Ethan's personal assistant, appeared in the doorway, holding a tablet.

"Mr. Sterling, the car is ready. You have a conference call in ten minutes."

Ethan stepped back instantly, the mask of the charming CEO sliding back into place. He buttoned his jacket. "Thank you, Spencer."

He walked past Lily as if she were a coat rack. He paused at the door, glancing back over his shoulder. "We have the charity gala for the Met tonight. I had a custom piece sent over from Dior. The midnight blue silk. Wear it. And have the stylist do something about..." He gestured vaguely at her face. "You look tired."

Then he was gone.

Lily stood frozen in the dining room. The silence rushed back in, louder than before. She looked at the table. The newspaper. The half-drunk coffee.

Expensive ornament. That's what she was. A piece of decoration that talked too much.

She looked at the black card on the table. It gleamed under the chandelier light. It was the key to the world, to anything she wanted to buy. But it was also a leash.

Lily picked up the card. She walked to the trash can in the corner of the room and dropped it in.

She turned and ran up the stairs. She didn't go to the master bedroom. She went to the guest room closet where she kept her old things. She pulled out a duffel bag-a battered canvas thing she had used in college.

She bypassed the rows of Chanel, Dior, and Valentino. She grabbed two pairs of jeans, a few cashmere sweaters that didn't have logos, and her sketchbook. She went to the bathroom and swept her toiletries into the bag.

She stopped in front of the full-length mirror. Her reflection stared back-pale, eyes wide, lips trembling. But beneath the fear, there was a spark. A tiny, furious ember.

She zipped the bag. The sound was the loudest thing she had heard all day.

You may also like

After My Husband Saved His Mistress, I Faked My Death Novel Cover
8.1
I smoothed down the front of my dress for the fifth time, checking my reflection in the hallway mirror. One year. Three hundred and sixty-five days of marriage to a man who still felt like a stranger in our bed. The dining room glowed with candlelight, casting shadows across the intimate table I'd spent hours preparing. Jasper's favorite wine breathed in crystal glasses, and the beef Wellington sat perfectly golden on fine china—his favorite, not mine. Nothing about this marriage had been about what I wanted. "Mrs. Spencer?" Our housekeeper appeared in the doorway, her expression carefully neutral. "The dinner will get cold." "He'll be here," I said, more to convince myself than her. "He promised." At eight-thirty, the front door finally opened.
Bound by Vows: Ruthless Desires. Novel Cover
8.6
"Y–You're a sick bastard" He laughed softly, grip loosening from my hand slightly and with eyes will fixed on me, cleaned the spittle slowly with his other hand and licked it. I gulped, a weird heat blooming at the sight of this. Seriously? I bit the bottom of my lips. There's no way I'm getting excited from this... "Delicious" he mused "Let's have you spit on something else with that cute mouth" ___ Alessia Ferraro, tossed as a sacrifice into a marriage with Mafia Lord, Cesare Marchetti in an attempt to save her family must figure out a way to clear her father's name and satisfy this craving Monster. Cold, dominant and possessive, Cesare hates the fact that he's been forced into a marriage with the daughter of a traitor based on a vow his father made. He vows to break her, but she refuses to bow... even as his touch awakens some cravings beyond her control. Will this fire of passion ignite something else, or will the dangers lurking the Shadows fuels it to burn them and leave them dead in their ashes?
Delicious Reptilian Meat Novel Cover
7.6
Have you ever eaten "Reptilian" meat? My grandfather said he had. Creatures that looked exactly like us on the outside, but were fundamentally different on the inside. Extremely dangerous, yet incredibly delicious. Before he died, my grandfather left behind a notebook. The first page read: "Reptilian look exactly like humans, but human instinct can tell them apart." The moment my cousin Braden returned for my grandfather's funeral, my gut told me: he wasn't human!
He Gave Our Baby Away Novel Cover
9.5
At our engagement party, everything spiraled out of control because Rayne Russell, Axl Lane's childhood friend, and I wore the same Victorian-style dress. Axl publicly tore my dress to shreds and pushed me into the fountain. "You've got a heart of stone. I've agreed to marry you, yet you still want to humiliate Rayne," he said. Climbing out of the fountain, drenched, I watched Axl signal to the group of hooligans outside the door. "They're yours now. Have fun, do whatever you want." Surrounded by the thugs, I begged Axl for mercy, but he only shielded Rayne's eyes, saying, "Don't look, it's not worth it." A week later, he finally remembered me and came with chocolates in hand: "As long as you stop causing trouble, we can still have our wedding." I looked at him, expressionless: "But Axl, I don't want to marry you anymore." He seemed surprised by my words, and seeing that I had no intention of taking the chocolates, he thrust them into my arms. "Still upset? I only meant to scare you that day. Those guys wouldn't dare touch anyone associated with me." "Besides, this whole mess is your fault.
My Brother's Best Friend's One-Night Rule Novel Cover
9.0
The moment she swiped her keycard and the door clicked open, she was hauled inside by a pair of strong arms. Before she could even gasp, his mouth crashed against hers in a searing, hungry kiss. Finally, after four years of agonizing silence—four years of pining since she was eighteen—she was finally with him. The man who had been her silent obsession, her brother’s best friend, was finally hers. They lost themselves in a feverish blur of skin and shadows, a desperate release of all the tension she had carried for years. But the afterglow didn't last long. As she lay there, breathless and whispering about a "next time," the air in the room suddenly turned frigid. He pulled away, his expression hardening into an impenetrable mask. He didn't just want her to stop talking; he wanted her gone. Standing by the bed, he coldly laid out his three unbreakable rules: No sleepovers. No woman ever spends the night in his bed. No repeats. He never touches the same woman twice. Complete secrecy. No one—absolutely no one—can ever find out. That included her older brother, his best friend. The realization hit her like a physical blow. To him, this wasn't a dream come true; it was a mistake he wanted to erase. Overwhelmed by a wave of shame and heartbreak, she realized he wasn't the hero of her story—he was just a jerk. Tears blurring her vision, she scrambled for her clothes and bolted from the room, leaving her four-year crush behind in the wreckage of his rules.
My Husband and My Son Fed My Birthday Cake to the Maid Novel Cover
8.2
I baked my own birthday cake at six in the morning. I iced it at lunch. I wrote my own name in buttercream because no one else would. When I came home, the maid was carrying it to the trash. My husband's college ex sat in my chair. My son called her Mommy Vivian and said I chew too loud. I carried him for nine months. I almost lost him in my sixth. I have a scar across my abdomen that Adrian has not looked at in three years. My seven-year-old son told me tonight to eat in the kitchen with the help. The next morning, he cut the protection cord I sewed into his shirt the night he was born. He gave the silk to her. She wore it as earrings at breakfast. On Saturday, the Hart family assigned me the servant's table. They will kneel. They will beg. I will not turn back.