
She Vanished: His World Froze Over
My husband, Christopher Kramer, was Manhattan's most notorious playboy, famous for his seasonal affairs with nineteen-year-old girls. For five years, I believed I was the exception who had finally tamed him.
That illusion shattered when my father needed a bone marrow transplant. The perfect donor was a nineteen-year-old named Iris. On the day of the surgery, my father died because Christopher chose to stay in bed with her instead of taking her to the hospital.
His betrayal didn't stop there. When an elevator plunged, he pulled her out first and left me to fall. When a chandelier crashed, he shielded her body with his and stepped over me as I lay bleeding. He even stole my dead father's last gift to me and gave it to her.
Through it all, he called me selfish and ungrateful, completely oblivious to the fact that my father was already gone.
So I quietly signed the divorce papers and vanished. The day I left, he texted me.
"Good news, I found another donor for your dad. Let's go schedule the surgery."
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Chapter 3
Emily Porter's POV:
The next morning, I walked into the gallery I managed, a place that had been my sanctuary for the past four years, and handed my resignation to my boss, Clara.
"Emily? What is this?" she asked, her eyes wide with shock as she took the crisp envelope from my hand.
She had always been more of a friend than a boss. She knew about my father, about the transplant.
"I'm leaving, Clara," I said, my voice quiet but firm. "I'm leaving the city."
"But... your father's surgery? Is everything okay?"
A fresh wave of pain washed over me, but I pushed it down. "He's gone, Clara. He passed away."
Her face fell. "Oh, Emily. I'm so, so sorry." She came around her desk and wrapped me in a hug. "What about Christopher? Does he know you're quitting? He loves how much you love this place."
"We're getting a divorce," I said, pulling away gently. The words felt foreign on my tongue, like a language I was just learning to speak.
The stunned silence that followed was broken by the sympathetic murmurs of my colleagues who had overheard. They gathered around, offering condolences and expressing their disbelief.
"But Christopher adores you," one of them, a young intern named Sarah, said. "He's always sending you flowers, picking you up in that fancy car... He's the perfect husband."
I didn't bother to correct her. What was the point? The illusion was all they had ever seen.
I quietly packed the few personal items from my desk into a small box-a framed photo of me and my dad, a mug he'd given me, a collection of poetry he loved.
As I was about to leave, a commotion near the front window caught my attention.
"Wow, speak of the devil," Sarah whispered, pointing outside. "He's here."
My body went rigid. There, parked at the curb, was the unmistakable gleam of Christopher's black Bentley.
I took a deep breath, steeling myself, and walked out of the gallery for the last time. I didn't look back.
I walked to the car and pulled open the passenger door.
The sight that greeted me was so grotesquely intimate that it stole the air from my lungs. Iris was curled up in the front seat, her head nestled against Christopher's shoulder, her eyes closed as if she were sleeping. She was like a little kitten, seeking warmth and protection.
The sound of the door opening made them both jump. Iris's eyes fluttered open, and a mask of panicked innocence immediately fell over her features.
"Emily! I... we were just..." she stammered, scrambling to sit up straight.
"It doesn't matter," I said, my voice devoid of emotion. I got into the back seat, the leather feeling cold and alien.
"What's with the box?" Christopher asked, his eyes flicking to the cardboard container on my lap. "Spring cleaning?"
"I quit," I said simply.
He frowned. "Why? We can talk about it later. I've booked a table at Le Bernardin. I ordered all of your father's favorite restorative dishes. Thought we could pack some up for him."
The mention of my father, so casual, so utterly oblivious, was a physical blow. A white-hot rage, followed by an icy wave of grief, crashed through me. I bit the inside of my cheek until I tasted blood, just to keep from screaming.
I said nothing, just stared out the window as the city blurred past.
At the restaurant, in a private, opulent room, Christopher was the perfect host to the wrong guest. He fussed over Iris, placing a napkin on her lap, making sure her water glass was always full, ordering a special, non-alcoholic cocktail for her.
"You need to build up your strength," he told her, his voice laced with a tenderness that was once reserved only for me. "You're a hero, Iris."
She blushed, lowering her eyes. "It's nothing, Christopher. I'm just happy I can help."
I sat opposite them, an invisible ghost at their feast. I watched them, my heart a dead, heavy thing in my chest. I watched the way his eyes lingered on her, the way he laughed at her silly jokes, the way he brushed a stray crumb from her lips with his thumb.
"Emily, aren't you eating?" Iris asked, her voice laced with a cloying sweetness. She looked at Christopher, then back at me, a flicker of triumph in her eyes. "Are you mad at me? Because Christopher is being so nice?"
I looked at her, then calmly picked up my fork. "No," I said, my voice steady. "I'm not mad. Enjoy your meal."
I ate in silence, the exquisite food tasting like ash in my mouth.
Halfway through the meal, Christopher's phone rang. It was a business call he had to take.
"You two go on ahead to the car," he said, already distracted. "I'll be right down."
I stood up, grateful for the escape. Iris followed me out of the room. We walked in silence to the elevator.
The moment the polished brass doors slid shut, sealing us in the small, mirrored box, Iris' s demeanor changed. The shy, grateful girl vanished, replaced by a woman with a smirk on her face and steel in her eyes.
"He thinks you're boring, you know," she said, her voice dripping with malice. "He told me you're like a beautiful, perfect doll, but a doll is still just a thing. No fire. No passion. He's tired of it."
The words struck me, but I showed nothing.
"He says you're getting old," she continued, her eyes raking over me with contempt. "A flower that's starting to wilt."
Suddenly, the elevator gave a violent jolt, throwing us both off balance. The lights flickered, then went out, plunging us into absolute darkness.
Iris shrieked, a high-pitched, terrified sound, and grabbed onto my arm, her nails digging into my skin.
"It's okay," I said, my voice surprisingly calm as I fumbled for the emergency call button. "The elevator just stalled."
A crackling voice came through the intercom, muffled and indistinct. They were aware of the problem. They were sending someone.
But then, the elevator lurched again, this time with a sickening groan of stressed metal. It dropped a few feet, then stopped with a jarring thud.
Iris started screaming, a raw, primal sound of pure terror. "Help! Somebody help us! We're going to die!"
Another lurch. A longer drop. My own heart hammered against my ribs, but my mind was strangely clear. I braced myself against the wall, gripping the handrail until my knuckles were white.
"Christopher! Christopher, save me!" Iris wailed, collapsing into a sobbing heap on the floor.
Then, we heard it. Frantic footsteps outside. The sound of shouting. And a voice, cutting through the chaos, that made my breath catch.
"Iris! Emily! Are you in there?" It was Christopher.
"Christopher!" Iris screamed, her voice hoarse with tears. "Help me! I'm so scared!"
A maintenance worker's voice, strained and urgent, came through the broken door. "Sir, the main cable is frayed! It could snap at any second! We can only pry the door open enough to pull one person out at a time. You have to choose!"
The air in the elevator became thick, heavy, unbreathable.
Silence.
I could hear Christopher's ragged breathing just outside the door. I could hear Iris's desperate, hiccuping sobs. I could hear my own heart, a frantic drumbeat counting down the seconds of my life.
In the suffocating darkness, I waited for his answer.
And then it came. His voice, stripped of all emotion, was cold, clear, and utterly final.
"Save Iris."
My blood turned to ice.
The doors were wrenched open just enough for a person to squeeze through. I saw Christopher' s hands reach in, bypassing me completely, and pull Iris out of the darkness and into his arms. She clung to him, sobbing hysterically.
"It's okay, baby, it's okay," he murmured, stroking her hair. "I've got you."
He turned to the maintenance crew. "Now get my wife."
But as they moved to help me, a deafening screech of tearing metal filled the air.
The elevator plunged.
The world became a nauseating blur of motion. My stomach shot into my throat. The last thing I saw before everything went black was Christopher' s face, his eyes wide with a flicker of something I couldn't name. The last thing I heard was my own name, shouted in a voice I no longer recognized.
It was too late. It was always too late.
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8.4
Kathern was forced out of her sister's home by her abusive brother-in-law, who violently demanded she pay half the rent or get out.
To protect her sister from his rage, Kathern agreed to a six-month paper marriage with a stranger—an old woman's grandson, Bronson—in exchange for a simple apartment.
But her new husband treated her like a scheming gold digger from the very first second.
He showed up to City Hall in a cheap suit, shoved a brutal prenup in her face, and dumped her in a completely empty, dust-filled apartment.
"Just don't cause any trouble," he warned coldly, before leaving her alone.
When Kathern politely texted him to ask if he was coming home for dinner, he immediately blocked her number.
Kathern was furious and baffled. She didn't want a dime of his money, nor did she care about his boring middle-management job.
She had only agreed to this marriage for a place to sleep, yet this arrogant man treated her like absolute garbage.
Refusing to swallow the insult, Kathern immediately dialed his grandmother to expose his behavior.
She was going to build her own independent life, completely unaware that her "cheap corporate loser" of a husband was actually the ruthless billionaire CEO of the Vaughan empire.

7.8
Andrea was trapped in a suffocating marriage with billionaire Gregory Morse, forced to live as the pathetic substitute for his dead fiancée.
When armed intruders broke into their estate in the dead of night, she called her husband in pure terror.
"Stop playing these cheap, attention-seeking games," Gregory sneered with disgust, and hung up the phone.
She barely escaped with her life, but the cruelty only escalated. At the family mansion, his dead fiancée's sister deliberately scalded Andrea's hand with boiling tea. Instead of defending his wife, Gregory publicly humiliated her, ordering her to clean up the mess while calling her a stray dog.
That night, hiding in the dark wine cellar, Andrea overheard a chilling confession.
Gregory admitted to his brother that he knew Andrea was completely innocent of the car crash that killed his fiancée. He knew she had been framed.
Why did he marry her? Just to use her as a psychological punching bag to vent his twisted grief. He watched her suffer every single day, treating her like disposable trash, while violently threatening anyone who showed her an ounce of kindness.
He thought she was just a useless, helpless shadow who would quietly endure his torment forever.
He had no idea that behind her submissive facade, she was secretly Madame Lan, the apex predator of the global fashion world. And now, she was ready to burn his empire to the ground.

8.9
For seven years, I hid my MIT Ph.D. and my identity as a top haute couture designer to be the perfect, obedient wife to billionaire Cornelius Lambert.
But on our anniversary, while I waited at home with a cold dinner, I found him at a Michelin restaurant with his childhood sweetheart, Halle.
My seven-year-old son sat between them, laughing loudly.
"Mom is too boring. I wish Aunt Halle was my real mom."
Cornelius didn't defend me. He just smiled and affectionately ruffled the boy's hair.
When I finally packed my bags and left, I accidentally triggered an old AI robot prototype Cornelius had given me years ago.
A hidden recording played his voice from the very night he proposed.
"Why marry her? Because she's easy to control. Halle doesn't want to settle down yet, so Cassidy is just a perfect, temporary shield."
Later, when I caught them being intimate in a dark parking garage and snapped a photo, Cornelius watched with cold, dead eyes as his massive bodyguard shoved me against a concrete pillar.
My arm was torn open, blood dripping onto the floor, as they forced me to delete the evidence of his affair.
For seven years, I filed down every sharp edge of my brilliance for a man who saw me as nothing but a pathetic, disposable placeholder.
My heart turned to absolute ice. He thought I was just a weak, powerless housewife.
But he forgot who he was dealing with.
As his luxury car drove away, I pulled up the hidden command terminal on my phone and recovered the encrypted cloud backup of the photos.
I looked at my lawyer with a bleeding arm and a cold smile.
"Let's go. Now, we have a weapon."

8.8
"I loved you with all my heart, but you betrayed me, cheating with me on her? Really?" Vionne Wallace said bitterly to her husband.
"Sign it! We are getting a divorce, I've come to realize Nora is the one for me. You can't even bore a child, barren woman." He said sharply, his void devoid of emotions
He could tell it all, he was in love with Nora, my own step sister.
Lene Wallace, was a fashion designer and also business administrator, she got married to the love of her life, Harrison Worthington
Just after 3 years of marriage, she couldn't give birth and the marriage started crashing, he cheated on her with Nora.
With a broken heart, she drank to stupor and had a one night stand with a powerful billionaire.
When her father found out, he was in support of Harrison and Nora, while he disowned her, giving everything he had to Nora.
She found out there was more to the one night stand man, when they met again.
He was her father's best friend
The one night stand was not just powerful, he had a connecting relationship with her father and her ex husband, he will get married to her and help her defeat them.
Will they come to fall in love? Or will she go back to her ex husband after this?

8.4
Juliette was an agriculture major desperately trying to get top-tier CRISPR potato data from Adrian Castillo, the untouchable physics genius and wealthy heir.
But to get it, she was dragged to a high-end shooting club, where Adrian suddenly lost all his legendary motor skills, shooting zeroes and acting like a helpless nerd.
His clumsy act made Juliette a target. Blair, a wealthy heiress, cornered her, mocking her mud-stained cargo pants and calling her a pathetic dirt-girl.
"If you lose, you leave this club and never speak to Adrian again."
Blair challenged her to a professional air pistol match. The crowd of elites laughed, waiting for the farm girl to humiliate herself.
Even worse, Adrian just stood behind her, pretending to be terrified of Blair and whispering that his sinuses would swell shut if Juliette didn't save him.
The mockery and judgment felt suffocating. Everyone thought she was just a desperate fangirl who didn't even know how to hold a gun.
But they didn't know the dark trauma she had buried years ago. And she didn't understand why Adrian, a man who could supposedly shoot a coin at eight hundred meters in a sandstorm, was deliberately playing weak to push her to the firing line. What was his sick endgame?
To secure her experimental fertilizer, Juliette finally stopped hiding.
She picked up the competition pistol, locked her perfect stance, and fired ten flawless shots.
108.5. Total, undeniable annihilation.

9.6
My hands shook as I stared at the pregnancy test: "Pregnant." My dream of a family, born from a lonely orphanage childhood, was finally coming true. Then, a woman's laugh on the intercom, followed by Holden's cold voice revealing I was just a "tool" he'd dump with a check.
The digital screen glowed, announcing the life growing inside me. After years in sterile orphanage rooms, I was finally going to build the complete home I always craved. I planned a romantic surprise for Holden, eager to share our news.
But then, a piercing static from the intercom panel shattered the quiet. A woman’s purr, Estella’s voice, cut through the air, asking Holden when he’d dump "that boring, common woman upstairs." Holden’s reply, flat and calculating, revealed I was merely a spotless tool to clean up his family's image, to be discarded after next month's charity gala.
My knees gave out. I collapsed onto the freezing tile, the pregnancy test now a disgusting joke. Holden’s footsteps approached, forcing me to hide the symbol of my shattered future deep in my makeup bag, dreading his discovery.
He later presented a brutal prenuptial agreement, ensuring I'd leave with nothing. At a family dinner, Estella, adorned with the diamond necklace Holden bought for his "future wife," publicly humiliated me by spilling wine on my gown, while Holden embraced her and coldly ordered me to clean myself up.
My tears stopped. The pathetic, frightened mask melted away, revealing a woman no longer naive, no longer controlled. Wiping away the ink of his false promises, I clutched my flat stomach, a silent vow forming. He thought I’d leave with a check and my shame, but I would make Holden Dalton learn what a real price was.