
My Husband's Betrayal, My Brilliant Rise
After six brutal months, I returned to my Seattle villa, my sanctuary. An unsettling quiet, then a cloying mix of cheap vanilla and baby talc hit me. Pink slippers, a cookbook, and a blonde hair on Nathan's hoodie screamed betrayal.
Unwashed baby bottles and a note from "M" to "feed the baby" confirmed my dread. A baby's cry led me to Misty, holding a baby with Nathan's exact curls. She claimed Nathan called me his "bankrupt ex-wife," my clothes gone, wedding photos crumpled, and his loving text proved his calculated fraud.
Nathan burst in, spewing gaslighting lies, despite finding a deed transfer for *my* house. His blame—that I was a "cold work machine"—only solidified my resolve. My husband used my money, home, and trust to build a new life, systematically trying to erase me. He didn't just cheat; he tried to steal everything. A venture capitalist doesn't just walk away from a hostile takeover.
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Chapter 5
Elena POV:
The Uber glided to a halt in front of the Hotel Sorrento.
A bellboy in a crisp uniform immediately rushed forward, holding a massive black umbrella over my head as he opened the car door. I stepped out, the wet pavement reflecting the warm, vintage lights of the hotel exterior.
I had booked this exact hotel five years ago to celebrate my first massive Wall Street bonus. It was a symbol of my independence, the place where I realized I didn't need anyone to survive. Tonight, I needed that reminder.
I walked straight to the front desk. My posture was rigid.
"The highest-tier executive suite you have available," I said. My voice was completely flat, devoid of any inflection.
As the receptionist typed into her computer, my phone screen lit up on the black marble counter. It was Nathan. Again. It was the fifteenth call in the last twenty minutes.
I picked up the phone, flipped it over, and placed it face down on the cold marble.
The receptionist handed me a gold keycard. I took it, gripped the handle of my suitcase, and walked to the elevators alone.
When the metal doors slid shut, I looked at my reflection in the mirrored walls. My red lipstick was still perfectly applied. My hair was sleek. But my eyes looked hollow, haunted by a bone-deep exhaustion.
I swiped the keycard and pushed open the heavy wooden door to the suite.
I didn't turn on the overhead lights. I just clicked on a single, dim floor lamp in the corner of the living room. The room was cast in heavy shadows.
I walked over to the massive floor-to-ceiling window. Outside, the Seattle rain was washing over the glittering city skyline in relentless sheets.
The silence of the room pressed against my ears. The adrenaline that had carried me out of the villa finally evaporated.
My knees gave out.
I slid down the cold glass of the window until I hit the carpet. I pulled my knees to my chest, buried my face in my hands, and let out a choked, ugly sob. My chest heaved violently. The pain of the betrayal tore through my ribs, sharp and suffocating.
I sat there in the dark, crying until my throat was raw.
But I only allowed myself ten minutes. Not a second more.
I forced my hands flat against the carpet and pushed myself up. My legs shook, but I stood straight.
I walked into the marble bathroom and turned the faucet to freezing cold. I cupped the icy water and splashed it over my face, washing away the tears and the ruined makeup. When I looked up into the mirror, the vulnerability was gone. My eyes were sharp, lethal, and focused.
I walked back into the living room, opened my suitcase, and pulled out my laptop. I set it on the mahogany desk and flipped it open.
I picked up my phone. I went into the settings and silenced Nathan's number. I didn't block him. Blocking him meant losing a paper trail of his harassment, and I needed every piece of evidence I could gather.
I opened the web browser and typed in Instagram. I searched for the name *Misty*.
It took me less than two minutes to find her. Her account was completely public. It was a digital shrine to vanity, filled with endless photos of designer bags, luxury hotel rooms, and expensive dinners.
I started scrolling down. I dragged the timeline back a year and a half. Back to the exact time I was drowning in the paperwork for a massive pharmaceutical merger.
I clicked on a photo of a candlelit dinner at a Michelin-starred restaurant.
I zoomed in on the bottom right corner of the image. Resting on the white tablecloth, holding a wine glass, was a man’s hand.
Wrapped around his wrist was a limited-edition Patek Philippe watch.
My chest went cold. I had bought that exact watch for Nathan for our fifth wedding anniversary.
I hit the screenshot shortcut. I saved the file and coldly renamed it *Evidence 1*.
I kept scrolling. Six months further back. A photo of Misty in a tiny pink bikini, standing on a pristine beach in Hawaii.
The caption read: *Thanks to my Mr. M for taking me to see the ocean. Best week ever!*
I stared at the background of the photo. Leaning against a palm tree, right behind her, was a custom-painted blue and silver surfboard. Nathan’s surfboard.
My fingers hovered over the keyboard. During that exact week, Nathan had told me he was attending a closed-door, intensive startup bootcamp in Silicon Valley with no cell reception.
My heart went completely numb. I wasn't angry anymore. I was a machine. I mechanically screenshotted the image, categorized it, and dropped it into a folder.
I scrolled up to a post from three months ago. It was a mirror selfie.
Misty was wearing a silk robe, posing with duck lips. But the background wasn't a hotel. It was my master bathroom.
Lined up perfectly on the marble counter behind her, deliberately placed in the frame, was my entire collection of La Mer skincare.
She had been standing in my bathroom, using my things, mocking me in plain sight while I was working myself to the bone across the world.
I slammed the laptop shut. A violent cramp seized my stomach, twisting my insides into a knot.
I took a deep, shuddering breath. I picked up my phone. I needed to see the core of the rot. I needed to see the money.
I stared at the bank icon on my phone screen and mutters to myself, "Let me see just how many people you've been feeding with my money."
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7.7
Eva Brooks, a 25-year-old woman, was set up by her best friend. Her fiancé broke up with her and demanded compensation for allegedly cheating on him.
Eva had a one-night stand with the richest CEO in Dominic City, Ethan Owen. He was arrogant and offered her a job as his secretary.
As his secretary, Ethan couldn't shake his fondness for Eva. He became obsessed with her, worrying that she was cheating on him.
He broke up with his fiancée to become engaged to Eva, but will his fiancée let him go? Will Eva accept a relationship with her boss?

7.3
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."

8.6
For years, Elvera lived as the despised charity case in the cramped Wright household.
When she caught her foster sister Donita straddling her fiancé, they didn't even panic. Instead, they loudly framed Elvera for stealing a diamond necklace to justify kicking her out.
Her foster parents immediately sided with the cheaters, screaming at her to pack her trash and starve in the gutters. Only her dying foster brother tried to sneak her his medical savings, but the family violently shoved him away, mocking him as a walking corpse.
Standing in the freezing Brooklyn wind, Donita and Crockett followed her outside just to laugh. They waved a crisp twenty-dollar bill in her face, mocking her biological family as a bunch of unemployed street thugs.
They really thought she was going to freeze to death on the pavement with nothing but a faded backpack.
But then a roaring, matte-black supercar pulled up.
The man who stepped out wasn't a street thug; he was her real brother, an FBI task force commander.
He effortlessly snapped Crockett's shoulder out of its socket, put Elvera in the passenger seat, and drove her straight to a sprawling billionaire estate in the Hamptons.
Sitting by the fire in her biological parents' palace, watching them casually display an eight-million-dollar sculpture she had secretly designed, the head butler suddenly walked in.
"Sir, the fake heiress has returned from Europe."
Elvera took a slow sip of her coffee. The real game was finally about to begin.

8.0
After years of a freezing, loveless marriage, my billionaire husband Israel finally threw me out to make room for his new lover, Ayla.
Before I even packed my bags, he ordered a crew to shred the Dogwood tree in our backyard and pour thick concrete into the crater, claiming it was a symbol of my infidelity.
He didn't know that buried beneath those roots was the urn containing the ashes of our unborn baby.
Stripped of everything, I tried to rebuild my shattered life by securing a supporting role in an indie film.
But Israel bought the entire production studio just to cast Ayla as the lead, demanding I act as her pathetic stepping stone.
When I refused, he cornered me on set with a sickening audio recording.
"We want one million dollars. This will ruin Karen forever."
It was my own parents. They had forged my medical records, planning to sell a story to the tabloids that I was a violent, delusional schizophrenic.
Israel smiled coldly, threatening to lock me in a padded room on an involuntary psychiatric hold unless I signed an unpaid contract to serve Ayla unconditionally.
My own flesh and blood had sold me out to a ruthless monster for cash.
Staring at the extortion contract, the last shred of desperation and love in my chest burned away into cold, gray ash.
To survive a monster, you have to become one.
I picked up his pen, violently signed my name, and prepared to rip his precious Ayla to shreds on camera.

7.8
For three years, Elena endured a husband who barely acknowledged her, a mother-in-law who treated her like hired help, and a sister-in-law who sneered that she was nothing but a golddigger. All the while, her husband, Damien, pined after his "perfect" ex, like his own wife didn't exist.
Until the day Elena had enough.
She signed the divorce papers, packed a single bag, and vanished.
Damien was certain she'd come crawling back within a week. But the woman they all dismissed? Turns out Elena is a billionaire heiress, the CEO of the very empire Damien has been desperate to partner with and the one now signing his paychecks.
Oops.
Now Damien is spiraling, realizing too late what he lost. But Elena has choices she never had before. Like her childhood best friend, an NFL star who's been in love with her all along.
So who will it be?
The ex-husband who finally woke up?
The best friend who never left?
Or has Elena finally decided she's done with men who don't deserve her?

7.0
Elliana and her six-year-old daughter Clara were trapped in a horrific, bloody car crash.
A private medical helicopter bearing her husband's family crest touched down on the wet asphalt, but the paramedics ran straight past her crushed SUV.
They rushed to the sleek sports car that had rear-ended them.
Sitting inside were her husband Devontae's mistress and her daughter, suffering from nothing more than a minor scratch and a panic attack.
Trapped under twisted metal, Elliana dialed her husband's number with bloody fingers, begging him to save their dying child.
"Stop being so dramatic, Elliana," Devontae snapped impatiently over the phone. "I am sick of you using Clara to play the victim. Kyle needs to get to the hospital immediately."
He hung up, and the helicopter lifted off into the night sky, leaving Elliana and Clara in the absolute dark.
Elliana watched her daughter's tiny hand drop lifelessly.
In absolute despair and suffocating hatred, she dropped a lighter into the pooled gasoline, letting a wall of fire consume them both.
As the flames blistered her skin, she felt a profound, agonizing injustice.
She had hidden her brilliant talents and played the submissive, perfect wife just to protect his fragile ego, but her endless sacrifices had only bought them a fiery grave.
Why did her devotion end with her child bleeding to death in the cold rain while the mistress flew away to safety?
Opening her eyes, Elliana violently gasped for air in her massive velvet bed.
She stared at the glowing date on her phone screen.
It was exactly six months before the crash.
The phantom pain in her crushed legs reminded her of the hell she had just crawled back from.
She got out of bed, her eyes as cold and sharp as broken glass.
This time, she would send them all to hell first.