
My Ex-Husband's Regret: The Billionaire's Return
I had just been brutally fired from my corporate firm, stripped of my career and dignity in a matter of minutes.
Before I could even process the loss, I was handed a brown envelope that shattered my reality. My billionaire sister, who had ruthlessly cut me out of her life fifteen years ago, had committed suicide.
She left behind a fifteen-year-old son I never knew existed, a $300 million trust, and a $3 million stipend for me to act as his guardian. But her suicide note contained a terrifying, desperate warning scrawled in tearing ink.
"DO NOT INVESTIGATE MY DEATH. Accept what I've given you. Protect my son. Forget I existed."
I met the boy, Elon. He crashed his bike into me on the street, bleeding and crying, begging me not to abandon him. Pity and fifteen years of guilt overwhelmed me. I sat in the sprawling office of her elite estate lawyer and signed my life away to protect this innocent, grieving child.
Why did my sister suddenly reach out after a decade and a half of cold silence? What kind of monster was she running from that drove her to such a desperate end? I thought I was honoring her final wish by taking the boy in.
But as the elevator doors were closing, I caught their reflection in the polished steel.
My terrified, weeping nephew stopped crying instantly. He turned and exchanged a chilling, imperceptible nod with the lawyer.
That silent look said everything. The first move was complete.
I hadn't just inherited a child. I had walked straight into a meticulously planned trap.
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Chapter 5
The subway car smelled like sweat and perfume and something sweet rotting in a corner.
Anderson gripped the overhead bar, knuckles white, feeling every vibration through his palm. The train screamed into the station, brakes shrieking, and his headache flared in sympathetic response. He swallowed bile.
Too many bodies pressed against him. A woman's elbow dug into his ribs. A man's briefcase knocked against his knee. The air was thick, unbreathable, recycled through lungs and vents and the grimy pores of the city itself.
He closed his eyes.
DO NOT INVESTIGATE MY DEATH.
The words floated behind his eyelids, Elianna's handwriting deteriorating into desperation. What had she been afraid of? Who had she been running from? The questions circled like vultures, picking at the edges of his composure.
The doors opened. Anderson stumbled onto the platform, gasping, and made for the stairs.
The studio occupied the fourteenth floor of a building that tried too hard to look expensive. Anderson pushed through the revolving doors, nodded to the receptionist, and kept moving. He couldn't stop. If he stopped, he would think.
"Mr. Calhoun?" The receptionist's voice followed him. "You look-are you feeling alright?"
"Fine." He didn't break stride. "Late night."
The open floor plan hit him like a physical assault. Too many screens, too many voices, too many eyes tracking his progress toward his desk. He kept his gaze forward, focused on the small rectangle of space that belonged to him.
Luca Velez was sitting on it.
Anderson stopped. Three feet separated him from his own chair, his own computer, his own carefully organized client files. Luca had them spread across his lap, flipping through pages with deliberate slowness.
"Get off my desk."
Luca looked up. His smile was all teeth, the expression of a man who had been waiting for this moment. "Anderson. Rough night? You look like death warmed over. No-worse. Like death that got left out in the sun."
Anderson closed the distance. His hand shot out, snatched the files from Luca's grip. Paper rustled. A photograph fluttered to the floor.
"Touch my clients again," Anderson said, "and I'll have you in front of HR so fast you'll leave skid marks."
Luca raised both hands in mock surrender. He didn't stand. "Easy, tiger. I'm just the messenger. Raven's looking for you. Something about the Spence account." He leaned forward, voice dropping to a stage whisper. "She's not happy, Anderson. Not happy at all."
Anderson's jaw ached from clenching. "I'll handle it."
"Will you?" Luca stood, smoothing his jacket. He was shorter than Anderson, but he used his proximity like a weapon, invading personal space, forcing retreat. "Because from where I'm standing, you don't look like you're handling much of anything. When's the last time you slept? When's the last time you closed a deal?"
Anderson held his ground. "Get. Out. Of. My. Way."
Luca's smile flickered. Something colder moved behind his eyes. He stepped aside, but his shoulder caught Anderson's as he passed, a calculated collision that sent Anderson rocking back on his heels.
"Raven wants the Spence mess handled by three," Luca called over his shoulder. "Don't screw it up."
Anderson watched him go. His hands were shaking again. He sat down, hard, and pulled open his desk drawer.
Kasper Hayes's business card sat in the tray where he'd left it. Heavy stock, embossed lettering, the weight of old money and older secrets. He pulled out his phone. A missed call and a voicemail from an unknown number sat in his notifications. The message was brief, professional. Kasper Hayes's office, regarding the estate of Elianna Barber. He picked up the desk phone and dialed the number back before he could second-guess himself.
"Hayes and Associates." A woman's voice, professional and bored.
"This is Anderson Calhoun. I need to speak with Kasper Hayes regarding the Elianna Barber estate."
A pause. Keyboard sounds. "Mr. Hayes has a cancellation at three PM. Can you make that?"
"Yes."
"Please arrive fifteen minutes early for paperwork. Goodbye."
The line went dead.
Anderson set the receiver down. His computer screen glowed with forty-seven unread emails, each one demanding attention, each one representing a problem someone expected him to solve. He clicked the first. The words blurred together, meaningless.
The glass door to Raven Stein's office slammed open.
"Calhoun!" Her voice cut through the ambient noise like a blade. "My office. Now."
Every head turned. Anderson felt the weight of their gazes, curious and predatory. Luca stood near the water cooler, watching, a smile playing at the corners of his mouth.
Anderson stood. Straightened his jacket. Walked.
Raven's office smelled like expensive coffee and stress. She stood behind her desk, arms crossed, a tabloid newspaper spread open before her. She didn't wait for him to sit.
"Explain this."
Anderson looked down. The photograph was grainy, clearly taken from distance, but unmistakable. Hailee Spence's husband, emerging from a hotel at 3 AM, a woman who was not his wife clinging to his arm.
"When did this hit?" Anderson asked.
"Six AM. The Post. Hailee's people have been calling every twenty minutes. She's threatening to terminate our contract, Anderson. She's threatening to tell everyone we knew about this and covered it up."
"Did we?"
Raven's eyes narrowed. "That's not the point. The point is containment. The point is making sure this doesn't become a story about our incompetence." She rubbed her temples, manicured nails digging into skin. "She's coming in. One hour. You will fix this, or you will find another job. Clear?"
"Clear."
Anderson turned. His mind was already shifting, compartmentalizing, building the framework of a response. Hailee Spence was a businesswoman first, a wife second. She cared about optics, about leverage, about the prenup she'd signed and the empire she'd helped build.
He could work with that.
The VIP reception room door opened as he approached. Hailee Spence stepped through, sunglasses covering half her face, an Hermès bag clutched in white-knuckled fingers.
Anderson straightened his spine and went to meet her.
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8.4
Kloe Guthrie dragged her crystal-encrusted wedding gown down the penthouse corridor, exhausted but ready to finally be alone with her new husband, Justen.
But as she passed the presidential suite, a familiar, cloying perfume stopped her. Through the cracked door, she saw Justen brutally thrusting into her cousin, Candyce.
"Like fucking a corpse with Kloe," Justen grunted, his voice thick with lust. "Worth it for the trust fund control, though."
Candyce giggled, mocking Kloe's pathetic gratitude.
Shattered, Kloe stumbled backward in the dark, only to be caught by Julian Larsen—Justen's billionaire best man.
Instead of offering sympathy, Julian trapped her against the wall. He forced her to listen to her husband's cruel mockery, then dragged her into the opposite suite, tearing off her wedding dress and dismantling her dignity piece by piece.
Everything she had believed for four years was a meticulously calculated lie.
She was nothing but a boring prop to the man she loved, a naive fool meant to be drained of her family's immense wealth and laughed at behind closed doors. The humiliation and betrayal burned through her veins like acid.
"You could cry," Julian whispered against her neck, his eyes predatory and dark. "Or you could make him regret he was ever born."
Instead of running from the man cornering her in the dark, Kloe looked at the destroyed remains of her life, grabbed Julian's collar, and pulled him in.
This time, she would make them all pay.

7.1
After five years in a federal prison, framed by my stepmother and fiancé, I was finally released.
Instead of a welcome home, my stepmother tossed me a one-way ticket to Geneva and a threat: renounce the family name and disappear, or end up in the Hudson River.
When our limo was suddenly ambushed by military-grade SUVs on the highway, their cowardice almost got us killed.
I took the wheel, crashed the attackers, and saved their lives.
But the moment the danger passed, my stepmother tried to slap me, called me a psycho, and abandoned me on the desolate roadside.
My ex-fiancé later cornered me in public, trying to assert his dominance by grabbing my arm.
They still thought I was the broken girl they sent to a cage just so they could steal my dead mother's biochemical research.
I didn't feel heartbreak, only a cold, absolute certainty.
They threw me to the wolves, not realizing the federal penitentiary had burned away my capacity for mercy.
I hacked into the dark web and found out Dante Meltoni, the most dangerous Mafia Don in New York, was tearing the city apart to find a legendary underground doctor.
I am that doctor.
I walked straight into his heavily guarded fortress, pulled out a syringe, and saved his dying grandfather.
Then I looked the terrifying Don right in the eye.
"Marry me. And let me use your empire to wipe my family off the map."

7.8
I was three million dollars in debt, forced by my agent to star in a reality show as the brainless gold-digger who married a decrepit billionaire.
But right before the live broadcast, as I touched the tacky neon dress I was supposed to wear, a violent vision struck my brain.
I realized my entire life was a script, and I was just a villainous side character designed to make America's Sweetheart look like a saint.
My agent was secretly taking payouts from her PR firm to deliberately ruin my reputation with endless hate traffic.
If I followed his orders today, I would be torn apart by the internet, lose every contract, and eventually die alone in a cheap motel.
I couldn't accept that my every fake smile and stupid decision had been manipulated to destroy me just to elevate someone else.
Why should I let them sell me out and turn my life into a complete joke?
Looking at the ugly pink dress, I threw it straight into the trash.
"You are fired, and my lawyers will be in touch about your offshore accounts."
I poured a glass of freezing water over my head to wash away the heavy makeup and the helpless persona I had worn for years.
I kicked out my backstabbing agent, put on a pair of plain black leggings, and walked out to face the live cameras.
To hell with the script. Today, I was going to expose this fake PR marriage myself.

9.4
Prologue.
I've loved him as long as I can remember.
Hardin. My father's best friend. The man who seems untouchable, unlovable to every woman. But for me? He's everything.
Thirty-Five. Handsome. Calculating. Billionaire.
And yet, he remains single.
What could I do? I'm just Elena. Twenty-two years old. His best friend's daughter. Someone who shouldn't even think of loving him. So my first love became my hidden secret.
But now? I'm out of college, and I've vowed to chase my dream.
I joined his company, not for work, or for ambition. But for him.
To stay close. To make him fall for me.
Forbidden love is a dangerous game, but I'm willing to take the risk.
Will I succeed?
Will my love break through every rule and boundary?
I don't know.
But I'm ready to find out.

9.7
Life wasn't that good to Moriah as her groom decided against the marriage and left two hours before the wedding began. As if life hadn't been satisfied being cruel to her as it yet gave her another huge blow as she ended up marrying her sworn enemy. For her to salvage her reputation and that of her family, she has to walk down the aisle and marry the substitute groom. Walking down the aisle, she saw the man waiting for her. He was her archenemy, the billionaire business mogul, her fiancé's best friend, Ethan Miller. The blissful marriage she had been dreaming of with the love of her life turned into a nightmare.

7.7
I sat in a Louis XV-style chair that cost more than my entire education, picking at the peeling leather of my thrift-store handbag. Across the mahogany table, Council Bartlett didn't even look at me; he just checked his watch, treating our marriage like a corporate merger that needed to be finalized before the market closed.
To the world, I was a gold digger hitting the lottery, but I was actually a woman with a secret I guarded more fiercely than a state secret. I had one week to show a social worker a stable home with a husband, or they would take my four-year-old nephew, Leo, and put him back into the system forever.
The ink was barely dry on our marriage certificate when my world started to fracture. My aunt called, screaming for help as her drunk husband broke into her house, forcing me to leave my new "billionaire husband" in my cramped Queens apartment to handle a domestic nightmare with a baseball bat and pepper spray. When I returned, smelling of cheap whiskey and sweat, I found Council’s mother—the ice-cold Hortense—waiting on a video call. She didn't just want a business arrangement; she wanted an heir, and she’d already sent a box of fertility drugs to my kitchen counter to prove it.
I was living a lie in a tenement building, caught between a man who treated me like a line item and a social worker who viewed my life as a "phantom." Council was sleeping on my lumpy sofa, his expensive legs dangling off the end, while I locked the bedroom door every night. I didn't want his money; I just wanted my boy. But how could I survive a war where the enemy lived in a penthouse and the casualties were measured in custody hearings?
Just as Council saw me holding Leo and the "Ice King" finally began to thaw, his phone buzzed with an anonymous threat.
"I know you're faking it. Pay me 100k or the press gets the story."
The blackmailer was someone inside the Bartlett estate, and the "shield" I had built for Leo was about to become our cage.