Follow
Chapters
Share
Never fake a divorce with your hidden billionaire wife Novel Cover

Never fake a divorce with your hidden billionaire wife

I married Kevin Fort when he had nothing but debts, grief, and a famous last name that everyone wanted to tear apart. I gave him everything I had—my savings, my trust, my loyalty, even the babies I lost while he promised he would love me forever. So when he begged me to sign a “fake divorce” to protect us from his company’s financial crisis, I believed him. Then I came home early. I heard another woman in my bed… wearing my robe… while my husband laughed and called me “that stupid woman.” Worse, the woman he betrayed me with wasn’t just his secretary. She was the mother of his hidden child. Overnight, my perfect marriage turned into a humiliation broadcast across New York. Kevin thought I was powerless. He thought I would take the cheap settlement, cry quietly, and disappear. He was wrong. Because I’m not just Lena Fort. I’m Lena Black—the hidden heiress of a billion-dollar empire. And while Kevin scrambles to save the company I helped build, another man steps out of the shadows. Vincent Koldin has watched me for years, waiting for the day I finally see the truth. Cold, powerful, and dangerously patient, he offers me exactly what I need: revenge. Kevin wanted a fake divorce. Now he’s about to lose everything for real.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

The phlebotomist tied the rubber strap above my elbow and asked me to make a fist.

"Pump twice for me, sweetheart."

I pumped twice. The vein came up like a blue rope under the lamp.

"Small pinch."

The needle went in. I watched the dark line start to fill the tube and thought, very clearly, *that is going into her*. Into the woman who walked down my staircase three hours ago in my birthday robe.

I did not pull my arm back. I sat there and let it run.

"You're doing great. Squeeze the foam ball every five seconds."

"Okay."

The ball was blue. It had a smiley face stamped on it, and one of the eyes had rubbed off, so it looked like it was winking at me. I squeezed it. My fingers felt far away.

The door swung open and Kevin came in without knocking. He didn't look at the needle. He looked at the bag.

"How much have they got."

"Four hundred mils," the phlebotomist said. "We'll need another draw in two hours. Maybe a third before morning if her platelets keep dropping."

"Another two."

"Mr. Fort, your wife is — "

"Whatever it takes."

She glanced at me. I kept my eyes on the smiley ball.

"Sir, that's not how it works. She needs four hours minimum between — "

"Then space them out. But she stays."

The phlebotomist's mouth went thin. She left to get a juice box, and Kevin sat down on the rolling stool beside my chair, close enough that his knee touched mine.

I looked at his knee. His suit pants. The dark smear on the cuff that had dried to brown.

"Kev."

"Yeah, baby. Yeah."

"Was it real."

"What."

"The divorce. Tuesday. Was it a paper one. Like you told me."

His knee jerked back from mine half an inch.

I didn't lift my head. I watched the bag fill. The plastic was warm where it pressed against my forearm and I focused on that small heat because if I looked up at his face now I was going to come apart in this chair with a needle in my arm.

"Lena. This isn't — we shouldn't do this here."

"Was it."

"She's dying in the next room."

"Was it."

A silence. The kind that has its own weight. The blood pump on the IV cart made a small mechanical click every two seconds and I counted four clicks before he answered.

"Lena. Ruby is fine. It's not what you think."

*Ruby is fine.*

That was the sentence he picked. Not *I love you*. Not *I can explain*. Not even *I'm sorry*. He picked the one about her, and he picked it without thinking, the way a person reaches for the rail when they slip on ice.

I pressed the foam ball so hard the rubber squeaked.

"Get out."

"Baby — "

"Get out of this room, Kevin."

He stood up. He stood there for another second, the way a man stands when he's deciding whether the lie he's about to tell is worth the breath. Then he walked across the hall and into Trauma 3 and pulled the door not quite shut.

I sat with the needle in my arm and a tear running down the side of my nose and into the corner of my mouth. It tasted like salt and copper. I had bitten my lip raw at the top of the staircase and I had not stopped bleeding in three hours.

Through the gap in the door, I heard her voice.

"Kev. Kev, come here."

"I'm here. I'm here, baby."

"Did you call him."

"Who, sweetheart."

"Johnson. Did you call Johnson. He's going to be scared. He always knows when something's wrong with me, you know that — "

"Hey. Hey, listen to me."

Kevin's voice did a thing then. It went soft the way a hand goes soft on the back of a child's head. I had heard him use that voice exactly twice in five years, both times to a dog.

"Johnson's fine. I didn't tell him Mommy got hurt. He's at the house with Maria. He had spaghetti for dinner and he asked for you, and I told him you were working late, and he went to bed at eight without a fight. Okay? He's okay. You don't worry about Johnson. Johnson is taken care of."

*Mommy.*

*Maria.* The housekeeper at the Hamptons place. *Our* housekeeper.

*Spaghetti for dinner.*

The phlebotomist came back into my room with the juice box and stopped in the doorway. I think my face must have been doing something, because she set the juice box down very carefully on the tray and said, in a voice you use with horses, "Honey. Honey, breathe for me. Slow."

I couldn't.

The room narrowed. The lamp above my head went too bright and then too dim and the smiley face on the blue ball doubled itself, then tripled, then slid sideways off the ball entirely. My ears filled with a sound like water under a bridge. My free hand had gone to my mouth at some point and I bit down on the meat of my thumb because if I made the sound that was building in my throat the entire ER would hear it.

A child.

A child old enough to ask for spaghetti. A child old enough to know when his mother was hurt. A child named Johnson, which was not a name you gave a baby last week. That was a name a kid had carried for years. Four. Five. Six.

Six.

Kevin and I had tried for two and a half years. I had lost the one in Capri at six weeks. I had lost a second one in our bathroom last March, alone, while he was *at the office*, and I had wrapped the towel around myself and called him and he had said *I'm in a meeting, baby, I'll be home as soon as I can*, and he had come home at midnight smelling like a perfume that was not mine.

Maria. The Hamptons house. *Spaghetti for dinner.*

I made a sound. I don't know what shape it had. The phlebotomist's hand was on my shoulder and she was saying something about pulling the needle, and I shook my head, and she pulled it anyway, and pressed cotton hard into the crook of my elbow.

"Sit. Drink the juice. Sit, honey. Sit."

I sat. I drank nothing. I did not cry, exactly — what came out of me was something dry and wrong, my whole chest folding in on itself like a paper bag with the air sucked out, and my hands were shaking so badly that when I tried to pick up the juice box I knocked it off the tray and it rolled under the chair.

I don't know how long I sat like that.

Long enough for the cotton at my elbow to soak through. Long enough for the blue smiley ball to roll off my lap and onto the floor and stop, winking at me, against the leg of the IV cart.

When the shaking dropped from a full-body tremor down to just my hands, I stood up.

I walked past Trauma 3 without looking at the door.

The corridor outside the ER had a row of plastic chairs and a vending machine that hummed at a pitch that hurt my teeth. I pulled my phone out of my coat pocket. The screen lit my face up blue in the dark glass of the machine and I saw myself for one second — hair stuck to my temple, a smear of dried blood at the corner of my mouth, eyes I did not recognize.

I scrolled past Kevin. Past Sophia. Past my mother, whose number I had never deleted in eleven years.

I stopped on the contact saved as **DAD**.

I had not used it in seven years.

Three rings. Four. On the fifth, a voice came on the line that had not gotten any older.

"Lena."

He had not even said *hello*. He had picked up and known.

I opened my mouth. Nothing came out. I tried again, and my throat made a small click, and then I heard my own voice, low and very even, like it belonged to a stranger standing two feet behind me.

"Dad."

"I'm here, sweetheart. I'm here."

"That thing you said. About the company. About me coming home and taking it over."

A pause on his end. One breath.

"Yes."

"I'm saying yes."

The vending machine kicked over to a new cycle and the hum dropped half a tone. Down the corridor, a door clicked open and a pair of shoes started walking toward me on the linoleum, slow, then faster, and I knew without turning my head that the cuff of those pants had a dried brown smear on it.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

Ex's Bet on Reconciliation Fails Novel Cover
8.0
Six years after Colten Rice ended our engagement, I returned home from my studies. During that time, Colten had just divorced Joanna Carpenter, the woman he thought was perfect for him. I overheard someone asking him, "Melina's back. What's your plan?" I'm Melina. Colten replied with a tone of certainty, "I got divorced, and she came back right away. What plan could I possibly have?" Another voice added, "She was pretty keen on Colten back in the day. She must've come back to give it another go." Colten made a wager with his friends that within a week, I'd be on his doorstep, pleading for a reconciliation. A week later, the news arrived—I was married. I even sent him an invitation to my daughter's birthday party. ============================== I caught sight of Colten Rice at "The Crestview" restaurant, a favorite spot for the city's affluent crowd.
His Broke Ex-Wife Has a Billionaire Best Friend Novel Cover
9.0
Ivy Sable gave Ryker Caldwell everything — her inheritance, her twenties, her blind faith in a man who swore she was his forever. In return, he gave her a prenup that left her bankrupt, a mistress installed in their penthouse, and divorce papers served on the same day his company IPO'd with her family's money. Homeless, penniless, and publicly humiliated, Ivy has nothing left. Except a flash drive full of secrets that could destroy Ryker's empire — and a childhood best friend who just returned to Austin after a decade away. Caspian Wren is no longer the quiet boy who shared his lunch with her in sixth grade. He's the founder of Wren Capital, a billionaire with a reputation for dismantling companies that cross him. And he's been waiting a very long time to come home. As Ivy and Caspian plot Ryker's downfall, the line between revenge and something far more dangerous begins to blur. But Ryker Caldwell isn't going down without a fight — and he's about to discover that the wife he threw away was the only thing keeping his house of cards standing.
After My Husband Chose His Mistress Over Our Drowning Daughter Novel Cover
8.7
Aleena was playing by the lake when she accidentally drowned. Diego watched coldly as our daughter struggled in the water. Not being able to swim, a sudden large wave had knocked Aleena's life jacket off. My five-year-old daughter was frantically splashing her hands on the water's surface, barely keeping herself afloat. I was in tears, desperately pleading with the man in front of me, "Diego, you're a swimming instructor. Please, save our daughter! She's about to drown..." Diego looked at me and Aleena with disdain before standing up. "You've been married to me for so long and still haven't learned to swim. Two helpless people." I thought he was finally going to rescue our daughter, but instead, he walked away. "Aleena is just too timid.
I Bankrupted Him Novel Cover
8.3
My ex-boyfriend who had faked his death suddenly came back to life, with a pregnant lifesaver by his side. "Emma, these past years, I owe my survival to Sarah's companionship, which allowed me to come back to see you. From now on, the three of us will live together," James declared confidently, looking at me. "I will register my marriage with Sarah, but I can have a wedding with you, as a form of compensation." I stared at him in disbelief. I, the esteemed eldest daughter of the my rich family, reduced to being his third wheel? If he was tired of being a rich heir, I could certainly help him get back to his roots as a pauper.
I Donated My Eye to the Man Who Betrayed Me Novel Cover
8.5
The cathedral's soaring arches had never felt more suffocating. I stood at the altar in my custom Vera Wang gown, the delicate lace catching the light that streamed through stained glass windows. Five hundred of Manhattan's elite filled the pews behind me, their whispers barely audible beneath the string quartet's rendition of Pachelbel's Canon. "Are you ready?" Benedict whispered, his fingers warm against mine. His eyes—my eyes, really, since I'd donated my cornea anonymously to save his sight—sparkled with what I thought was love. I nodded, unable to speak past the lump in my throat. Five years of devotion, of helping him rebuild his Wall Street empire from nothing after the accident that had taken his sight. Five years of believing we were building something unbreakable. "I love you," I whispered back, the words carrying all my hopes for our future. The minister smiled benevolently.
Married by Contract Novel Cover
8.2
Zarah never imagined marrying a stranger-especially a cold billionaire with a dark past. Forced into a contract marriage to save her sick mother, she agrees to one year without love. But secrets, jealousy, and forbidden feelings begin to blur the rules. When the contract ends... will love survive?