
Neglected Wife: Hidden Heiress's Cold Revenge
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I stood in the pouring rain at my father-in-law's funeral, the heels of my black pumps sinking into the mud. I was Mrs. Vargas, the wife of New York's most powerful billionaire, yet I was standing at the edge of the crowd like a forgotten statue.
Ten feet away, under the dry shelter of the family tent, my husband Hayes held another woman against his chest. It wasn't me he was whispering comfort to; it was Felicity, his late brother's widow and childhood sweetheart.
The humiliation didn't end at the cemetery. Hayes moved Felicity and her son into our home, relegating me to the guest wing while she took over the primary suites. He watched silently as her son smashed the only photograph of my deceased parents, then demanded I apologize for "scaring" the boy with my reaction. When Felicity's negligence ruined a twelve-million-dollar family heirloom, Hayes had the audacity to ask me to use my own savings to buy her a "consolation" engagement ring. He treated me like a parasite, never realizing I was a brilliant scientist with a hidden fortune and three patents to my name.
I realized then that our three-year marriage was a hollow farce. Hayes had never even touched me, claiming he wanted to "remain pure" for his memory of Felicity. I was nothing more than a business merger, a smudge on the lens of the perfect family portrait he was building with another man's widow.
The breaking point came during a lethal blizzard. Hayes promised to accompany me to my family's mandatory gala-a tradition where my absence meant a death sentence. But at the last second, he stood me up to stay home and tend to Felicity's stubbed toe. Left alone to face the wrath of the Santos Matriarch, I was forced to kneel in the freezing snow as punishment until my lungs began to fail and my vision blurred.
Just as the darkness started to take me, a black Maybach smashed through the iron gates. My exiled brother, the man the world calls "The Wolf," stepped out of the storm to reclaim what Hayes had discarded. Hayes thought I was a helpless doll who couldn't survive a day without his trust fund, but he's about to find out what happens when you let a Santos daughter freeze.
Neglected Wife: Hidden Heiress's Cold Revenge Chapter 1
The rain at the cemetery was not a drizzle. It was a deluge, a vertical sheet of gray water that turned the manicured grass of the private burial ground into a slick, treacherous mud pit. Eliana Heath stood at the very edge of the gathering. The heels of her black pumps sank into the softened earth, anchoring her in place like a statue forgotten by its sculptor.
She held her black umbrella with both hands. Her knuckles were white, the skin stretched tight over the bone. The wind tugged at the canopy, threatening to invert it, but she did not adjust her grip. She did not move. She watched the mahogany casket of Harrison Vargas being lowered into the ground.
Around her, the whispers of New York's elite were louder than the rain.
She heard them. She always heard them.
Poor thing.
Just a trophy.
Look at her, standing there like a mannequin while her husband holds another woman.
Eliana's eyes shifted. Ten feet away, under the shelter of a massive tent reserved for the immediate family, stood Hayes Vargas. He was not looking at the grave of his father. He was looking down at the woman weeping against his chest.
Felicity Branch.
Felicity looked fragile. She wore a black dress that was tastefully modest yet perfectly tailored to suggest vulnerability. Her blonde hair was damp, plastered to her cheeks in artful disarray. She sobbed into the lapel of Hayes's expensive suit, her small hands clutching the fabric as if he were the only solid thing left in the world.
Hayes's arm was wrapped securely around her waist. His hand rubbed her back in slow, soothing circles. He whispered something into her hair, his expression etched with a pain and tenderness that Eliana had not seen directed at herself in three years of marriage.
Eliana felt a physical coldness that had nothing to do with the weather. It started in her stomach, a heavy, leaden weight that pulled her internal organs downward. It spread to her fingertips, making them numb.
She was the wife. She was Mrs. Vargas. Yet she stood in the rain, unshielded, while her husband comforted his childhood sweetheart, a woman who was not just a friend, but family. Felicity was the widow of Hayes's older brother, William, who had died in a boating accident only months prior. No one talked about that today, though. Today was about Felicity's grief for her "second father," Harrison. The tragic widow, losing both husband and father-in-law in one year. It was a narrative the tabloids loved, and Hayes was playing his part as the protective surviving brother a little too well.
The service ended. The priest closed his bible. The crowd began to disperse, a sea of black umbrellas moving toward the line of waiting limousines.
Hayes guided Felicity toward the lead car, the extended Lincoln with the Vargas family crest on the door. He shielded her head with his hand, ignoring the rain soaking his own shoulders.
The driver, a man named Thomas who had always been kind to Eliana, opened the rear door. Hayes helped Felicity inside. He leaned in, ensuring she was settled, before straightening up.
He looked around then, as if suddenly remembering he had brought someone else.
His eyes found Eliana.
He gestured vaguely for her to come. It was the kind of gesture one used for a trailing pet.
Eliana closed her umbrella. The mechanism clicked, a sharp sound that seemed to sever something inside her chest. She walked to the car. Thomas held the door open, his eyes downcast, embarrassed on her behalf.
Eliana did not get in the back.
She saw Felicity sprawled across the leather seat, occupying the center, dabbing her eyes with Hayes's handkerchief. Hayes was already climbing in beside her.
Eliana opened the front passenger door.
"Mrs. Vargas?" Thomas asked, surprised.
"I prefer the view," Eliana said. Her voice was steady. Flat.
She slid into the front seat and closed the door. The interior of the car smelled of wet wool and Felicity's cloying, floral perfume. It was suffocating.
The partition between the front and back was open. Eliana could hear Felicity's hitched breathing.
"Oh, Hayes, I don't know what I'm going to do," Felicity whimpered. "Leo is going to be so lost without Grandpa Harrison. First William, now this... he has no male figures left."
Hayes's voice was low, a rumble that vibrated through the seat frame. "You aren't alone, Felicity. I promised William, and I promised you. I am here. I'm not going anywhere."
Eliana stared at the rain streaking the windshield. The wipers slapped back and forth. Slap. Slap. Slap. A rhythmic countdown.
She watched her own reflection in the side mirror. She looked perfect. Not a hair out of place, her makeup sealed with setting spray, her expression vacuous. The perfect doll Hayes believed he had married.
"Hayes," Eliana said.
She did not turn around. She spoke to the windshield.
The murmuring in the back stopped.
"What is it, Eliana?" Hayes asked. His tone shifted instantly. The tenderness evaporated, replaced by the weary impatience of a man dealing with a tedious obligation.
"The funeral is over," she said. "We need to discuss the divorce."
The car swerved slightly. Thomas corrected the wheel, his hands tightening on the leather.
Silence filled the cabin. It was heavy, pressurized silence.
Then, Felicity let out a small, shocked gasp.
Hayes let out a short, incredulous laugh.
"Eliana, seriously? Now?" He sounded disgusted. "My father is barely in the ground. Felicity is having a panic attack. And you choose this moment to pull one of your stunts for attention?"
Eliana watched a droplet of water trace a path down the glass. It wasn't a stunt.
"I am not playing games, Hayes. I am serious. Your father passed. The merger is secure. Your responsibility is back."
She could hear the rustle of fabric as Hayes shifted, likely leaning forward to glare at the back of her head.
"My responsibility? You mean Felicity?" Hayes's voice rose. "Have some respect. She is grieving. She is my brother's widow. You have everything you could possibly want. You live in a mansion, you have an unlimited allowance, you do nothing all day but shop and plan parties. Do not threaten me with leaving. We both know you can't survive a day without the Vargas trust fund."
Eliana looked down at her hands. They were resting on her lap, still and composed. He really believed that. He believed she was a parasite.
She didn't correct him. She didn't scream that she had three patents pending under a pseudonym. She didn't tell him that her "shopping trips" were meetings with pharmaceutical developers.
She just nodded.
"Fine," she said.
The word hung there.
"See?" Hayes said to Felicity, his voice dropping back to that soothing register. "She's just upset because I didn't hold her hand. She'll get over it."
The car turned through the massive wrought-iron gates of the Vargas estate. The gravel crunched under the tires.
When the car stopped, the front door of the mansion opened. Martha, the head housekeeper, stood there with two maids.
Hayes got out first. He turned and extended a hand to Felicity, helping her descend from the vehicle as if she were made of spun glass.
Leo, Felicity's five-year-old son, ran out of the house. He was dressed in a miniature suit, holding a toy airplane.
"Daddy!" Leo shouted.
He slammed into Hayes's legs.
Hayes did not correct the boy. He never did. He reached down and scooped the child up, balancing him on his hip.
"Hey, buddy," Hayes said, kissing the boy's cheek.
Eliana got out of the front seat. She opened a large black umbrella again, though the walk to the porch was short. She stood at the bottom of the stone steps, looking up at them.
The handsome billionaire. The beautiful, grieving widow. The adorable child.
It was a perfect family portrait.
Eliana was just the smudge on the lens.
"Martha," Hayes called out, walking up the steps with Leo in his arms and Felicity clinging to his elbow. "Have the staff prepare the East Wing master suite. Felicity and Leo will be staying there for the foreseeable future. She needs support right now."
Martha froze. Her eyes darted to Eliana.
"But... sir," Martha stammered. "The East Wing? That's... that's the primary guest suite next to your..."
"Just do it, Martha," Hayes snapped. "Eliana has been sleeping in the West Wing guest room for three years. It's not like it interferes with her space."
He didn't even look back at his wife. He walked through the double doors, carrying his new family into Eliana's home.
Eliana stood in the rain. The water splashed against her ankles.
She felt a strange sensation in her chest. It wasn't pain. It was the snapping of a tether. The final thread that had bound her to this farce of a marriage had just been cut.
She looked at Martha, who was staring at her with pity.
"Mrs. Vargas?" Martha asked softly.
Eliana closed her umbrella and shook off the water. She walked up the steps, her spine straight, her chin high.
"It's fine, Martha," Eliana said. "Do as he says."
She walked past the housekeeper and into the foyer. She didn't look at the grand staircase where Hayes had disappeared. She turned left, toward the West Wing, toward the exit.
"Whatever you say," she whispered to the empty hallway.
Continue Reading
Neglected Wife: Hidden Heiress's Cold Revenge of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6Chapter 7 Ch. 7Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
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7.6
I moaned out his name. "Damien, you are not trying hard to get me, yet .."
He smirked and whispered to my ears. "I like being hard, Not "trying" hard."
When Lila Sinclair's mother is sentenced to life in prison, her world collapses overnight. With nowhere else to go, she is taken in by Sebastian Blackwood, her mother's former lover. A powerful, reserved man who agrees to shelter her under strict conditions.
Lila is placed in his household... and into a life she never asked for, sharing a roof with two stepbrothers who change everything.
Damien is danger wrapped in charm...intense, controlling, and impossible to ignore. Ethan, on the other hand, is steady, kind, and grounding...the only place she feels safe when everything else feels like it's slipping away.
But Lila's situation comes with a hidden clause: her stay in the country is temporary. Within 365 days, her legal protection expires. To remain, she must marry one of the Blackwood heirs.
One house. Two brothers. Twelve months of blurred lines, buried secrets, and emotions she was never meant to feel.
As desire clashes with safety and passion wars with peace, Lila is forced into a choice that could secure her future...or destroy it completely.

8.0
When gifted cellist Vivienne Aurel inherits her late father's catastrophic $4.2 million debt, she expects to lose everything. She doesn't expect the debt to be bought by Caspian Vane, the most feared private equity magnate in New York. Caspian doesn't want to ruin her; he wants her to work exclusively for him as the artistic director of his new cultural foundation for eighteen months. Forced into his world under a binding agreement, Vivienne prepares to fight against a cold, transactional cage. But as the intense, quiet proximity between them begins to blur the lines of their contract, she discovers a terrifying truth: the man who now owns her future has been watching her from the shadows long before she ever knew his name.

7.9
One night of deception.
A lifetime of consequences.
A bond that cannot be broken.
Nadia Williams is an Omega living in the shadows of the pack she once called home.
Since her father's death, she and her mother, Estelle, have been treated as outcasts by her ruthless uncle, Alpha Edwards. When her mother is framed for theft, Nadia is forced into a deal with the devil.
To save her mother's life, she must become a virgin substitute for her cousin, Danielle.
Her aunt, Katerina, offers a devil's bargain to set her mother free: Nadia must spend one night in the bed of the most powerful man in the country, the billionaire; Alpha Conrad Bradley.
The catch?
She must swap places with her spiteful cousin.
Conrad demands a virgin bride to secure his royal bloodline, and Danielle, Nadia's cruel cousin, has already forfeited her purity.
What begins as a desperate night of passion in the dark spirals into a web of hidden identities and betrayal.
Nadia survives the night and disappears, hoping to bury the shame of the encounter forever.
But fate has a different plan.
Desperate for a fresh start away from her uncle's shadow, Nadia secures a high-level position at Bradley Group of Industries.
As Alpha Conrad unknowingly hires Nadia at his company, an undeniable connection sparks between them.
Conrad is haunted by the scent of the woman from that night-a scent that doesn't match his fiancée, Danielle, but seems to cling to his new, brilliant employee.
As they work side-by-side, Nadia finds an unexpected and beautiful second chance at a life she thought was lost.
Yet, buried secrets threaten to destroy everything.
When the Alpha discovers the woman he truly bonded with, the fallout will be legendary.

9.0
I died alone in the medical wing giving birth to our son.
"Tell her to calm down and stop the theatrics."
Those were the last words my mate, the Alpha, said about me while I bled out.
Instead of passing on, my soul was tethered to the packhouse. I was forced to watch my best friend Seraphina seamlessly step into my life, taking my baby and my husband before my body was even cold.
To secure her place, she planted my blood-soaked birthing blanket in the woods to frame me for faking my own kidnapping.
Ryker swallowed her lies completely. He refused to send a search party, telling the entire pack my disappearance was just a pathetic plea for attention and money.
As a helpless ghost, I watched Seraphina brainwash my one-year-old son into calling her his mother and teach him to joyfully trample my beloved garden.
"Bad mommy ran away. Don't love Kaelen."
Hearing my own child parrot those venomous words was a dagger to my soul.
Whenever anyone questioned my absence, Ryker fiercely defended her, dismissing the desperate warnings of my loyal friends and his own elders.
The man I loved and died for treated my memory like a malicious joke, grateful for an excuse to replace me while living with my murderer.
But when Seraphina's mask finally slipped, and the horrifying truth of my death crashed down on him, it was far too late.
Seeing him crumble in agonizing regret brought me no comfort.
I no longer wanted his love or his desperate apologies.
Now, I only wanted his absolute ruin.

8.9
I was tossed into a dark alley like rotting garbage, bleeding and grieving the child I had just lost.
When I was finally brought back to my fiancé Angelo's penthouse, instead of comfort, I was met with absolute disgust.
His family declared me "unclean" after the kidnapping. Angelo coldly announced he was burying the scandal by marrying my sweet, innocent cousin, Carissa.
When we were alone, Carissa stood over my bed, her voice dripping with venomous delight.
"My father arranged the kidnapping. And now, Angelo and I can finally be together."
Before I could react, she forced a silver letter opener into my hand, deliberately stabbed her own shoulder, and let out a bloodcurdling scream.
Angelo stormed in, struck me across the face, and gathered a sobbing Carissa into his arms, looking at me with absolute revulsion.
The family matriarch appeared at the door, her cold eyes sweeping over the scene before she gave a chilling order to the maids.
"Clean this up."
They pinned me down and brutally drove the blade directly into my chest.
I choked on my own blood, staring at the man who had promised me the world as he turned his back, calling my murder a "mercy."
As my heart beat its final agonizing rhythm, I made a silent vow to the shadows that if there was a next life, I would have my vendetta.
When I opened my eyes again, there was no blood, only the soft silk of my nightgown.
I had returned to the day before my eighteenth birthday.
This time, I wouldn't play the desperate victim. I was going to ally with the Devil of Chicago and burn them all to the ground.

8.8
Strapped to the cold metal table in the hospital basement, I begged my Fated Mate, Alpha Marcus, for mercy.
He ignored my tears. With a voice devoid of warmth, he ordered the doctor to inject liquid silver into my veins—a poison designed to dissolve the wolf spirit.
"Do it," he commanded. "If she remains a wolf, she is a liability. As a human, she can stay as an Omega."
I screamed as the silver acid ate through my soul, severing the connection to my wolf.
Marcus didn't flinch. He wasn't saving me from my burn injuries; he was clearing the path for his mistress, Rachel, and their secret illegitimate son.
Broken and wolfless, I was forced to watch him publicly claim his bastard child as the new heir.
He thought I was submissive. He thought I would quietly fade into the servant's quarters to be his charity case.
He didn't know I had cracked his safe and found the DNA tests proving his three-year betrayal.
On the morning of his wedding to Rachel, I smiled as I climbed into the car that would take me to my "exile."
Ten minutes later, my scheduled email exposing every lie hit the Council of Elders.
And while Marcus fell to his knees screaming at the sight of my burning vehicle, realizing he had destroyed his True Mate for a fraud, I was already gone.







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