
Signed The Papers: Watch Me Shine Now
For six years, I was the perfect, obedient wife to billionaire Hartwell Ware, enduring his coldness because I thought my love could eventually thaw his heart.
Then, my friend sent me a photo. Hartwell was at the airport, tenderly holding the waist of his first love, Eveline Craig.
He came home smelling of her synthetic rose perfume, accused me of stalking him, and coldly demanded a divorce.
His lawyer handed me a thick settlement agreement. It offered astronomical alimony and luxury properties, but it came with a humiliating ten-page non-disclosure agreement.
He wanted to buy my silence. He wanted to strip me of my rights to our son and gag me permanently, just so he could parade his new life with Eveline without any PR backlash.
Even now, he still thought I was a gold digger who had orchestrated a media scandal to trap him into marriage.
I stared at the man I had worshipped for two thousand days. My six years of desperate devotion had been nothing but a humiliating, one-sided delusion.
Hope was finally dead, and with it, my tears had completely dried up.
He expected me to cry, to beg, to negotiate for more millions.
Instead, I snatched the pen, crossed out the massive alimony, and signed my name on the dotted line.
"I am taking the basic child support, and not a single red cent more."
Leaving my five-carat diamond ring on the marble table, I walked out the door with nothing but my old suitcase.
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Chapter 1
The harsh glare of the desk lamp cut through the darkness of the Upper East Side penthouse.
Faith Owens sat hunched over the massive marble island in her study. She dug the heels of her hands into her eyes, trying to rub away the gritty exhaustion. Her neck ached with a dull, throbbing rhythm.
She picked up her drafting pencil, forcing her focus back to the architectural blueprints spread out before her.
The sudden, violent vibration of her phone against the marble shattered the dead silence of the room.
The screen lit up. Quinn Baxter.
Faith picked it up. The heavy, thumping bass of a nightclub bled through the speaker before Quinn even spoke.
"Faith." Quinn's voice was breathless, sharp with an urgency that made the hairs on Faith's arms stand up. "Are you sitting down?"
"I'm working," Faith said, her voice raspy from disuse. "What's wrong?"
A sharp intake of breath hissed through the receiver. "My friend just got back from Paris. She was at JFK arrivals ten minutes ago. She sent me a picture."
Faith's heart skipped a beat. A cold, heavy stone dropped into the pit of her stomach. Her fingers tightened around the metal barrel of her drafting pencil.
"What picture, Quinn?"
"It's Hartwell," Quinn spat, the name dripping with venom. "He went to the airport. He picked up Eveline Craig."
The air in Faith's lungs vanished.
The pencil in her hand jerked. The graphite tip snapped, tearing a jagged, ugly black line straight across her meticulous floor plan.
A soft ping echoed from the phone. Quinn had sent the image.
Faith's hand shook so violently she could barely pull the phone away from her ear. The blue light of the screen washed over her pale face.
The photo was grainy, zoomed in from a distance, but the subjects were unmistakable.
Hartwell. Her husband of six years.
He was wearing his custom charcoal Tom Ford suit. His broad shoulders were angled downward, protective and intimate. His large hand rested firmly, possessively, on the small of a woman's waist.
It was a gesture of tender devotion Faith had never, not once, received in two thousand days of marriage.
Leaning into his chest, looking up at him with a fragile, flawless smile, was Eveline Craig. The perfect New York socialite. The woman Hartwell had always loved.
A wave of pure, physiological nausea crashed over Faith.
Acid burned the back of her throat. She clamped her free hand over her mouth, her stomach convulsing.
The phone slipped from her sweaty palm. It hit the marble countertop with a sickening crack.
The sound echoed off the high ceilings of the empty, cavernous penthouse. No one came running. No one asked if she was okay. She was utterly alone.
"Faith?" Quinn's voice was a tinny yell from the dropped device. "He's a piece of trash. Do not let him do this to you anymore. You have to end this dead marriage."
Faith swallowed the bile in her throat. She picked up the phone with numb fingers.
"I know," she whispered.
She pressed end.
The silence rushed back in, suffocating and absolute. Faith turned her head, staring out the floor-to-ceiling windows at the glittering, indifferent skyline of Manhattan. The isolation swallowed her whole.
She slid off the high stool. Her legs felt like water. She had to grip the edge of the cold marble island just to keep from collapsing to the floor.
Slowly, she forced herself to walk.
Down the long, shadowed hallway. Past the priceless art she wasn't allowed to touch. She stopped in front of the heavy oak doors of the master suite.
She pushed them open. The air inside was sterile and freezing.
Faith walked straight into the massive walk-in closet. The space was aggressively divided. Hartwell's rows of dark, immaculate suits consumed eighty percent of the room.
Her eyes drifted to the far, dark corner.
Sitting there, gathering a thin layer of dust, was a battered twenty-inch suitcase. It was the only thing she had brought with her six years ago when she was forced into the Ware family.
The memory of that hotel room flashed behind her eyes like a strobe light. The dizziness. The drugs in her system. Waking up next to Hartwell with cameras flashing in her face.
He had looked at her with pure disgust, convinced she had orchestrated the entire scandal just to trap him for his money.
No matter how much she cried, no matter how much she begged him to believe she was a victim too, his only response had been a ruthless prenuptial agreement and six years of psychological torture.
Faith backed out of the closet.
She walked into the living room and sank onto the edge of the pristine white sofa. She pulled her knees to her chest, wrapping her arms around her shins, trying to hold her own body together.
She stared up at the antique grandfather clock against the wall.
Tick. Tick. Tick.
Two in the morning.
Usually, right now, she would be in the kitchen. Pouring a glass of room-temperature water, setting out two Advil on a napkin, waiting for the sound of the private elevator to announce her husband's return from a late business dinner.
But tonight, that man was wrapping his arms around another woman. Giving her the warmth he had starved Faith of for six years.
A broken, hollow sound scraped its way out of Faith's throat. It was a laugh that sounded like a sob.
The first tear fell, hot and heavy, splashing onto the back of her hand. Then another. And another.
She didn't wipe them away. She sat perfectly still in the dark, letting the saltwater track down her cheeks, mourning the death of her own pathetic, unrequited love.
Hours bled away.
The pitch-black sky outside the windows slowly bruised into a pale, ashen gray. The first sliver of dawn light pierced the glass, hitting Faith's swollen, red-rimmed eyes.
She uncurled her stiff limbs and stood up.
The agonizing vulnerability in her chest was gone. In its place was a cold, hollowed-out graveyard. For six years, she had begged, cried, and screamed, because deep down, she still harbored a pathetic, lingering sliver of hope. She had believed that if she just loved him enough, he would eventually see her. But that grainy photograph had been the key, unlocking the brutal reality she had refused to face. It showed her that these two thousand days had been nothing but a humiliating, one-sided delusion. Hope was finally dead. And with it, her tears had completely dried up.
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9.8
Four years ago, I was drugged on a luxury yacht and ended up pregnant with twins.
I raised them in secret, enduring my stepfamily's daily abuse, until the billionaire West family patriarch cornered us at the airport.
He instantly recognized my son's face—an exact replica of his ruthless grandson, Bernardo West.
My malicious stepmother and stepsister immediately leaked to the press that I was a delusional gold-digger using fake kids to trap a billionaire.
They wanted the West family to destroy me to save their own social standing.
Bernardo himself looked at me with pure disgust, demanding a DNA test.
"If you ever lie to me, I will take the children, and I will make you wish you were never born."
I didn't want his money. I was a victim of that night too, left with a crescent-shaped bite mark on my collarbone and zero memory of who set us up.
Why did someone drug us? And how could I protect my babies from a corporate predator who could crush me with a snap of his fingers?
But when the DNA test came back 99.9999% positive, I didn't cower.
I showed him the scar he left on me, looked the most dangerous man in the country right in the eye, and made my demand.
"If you want to claim your heirs, you have to marry me."

9.1
Alysia lay on the freezing operating table, moments away from donating her kidney to her brother's fiancée.
But as the anesthesia set in, a violent shock tore through her brain, awakening agonizing memories of a thousand brutal deaths across a thousand past lifetimes.
She suddenly realized her family's true plan. Her brother and his fiancée weren't just taking her organ; they were secretly plotting to declare her mentally unfit post-surgery to steal her entire trust fund.
When Alysia abruptly stopped the procedure and exposed the fiancée's kidney failure as the result of severe drug abuse, her family's reaction was chilling.
Her father didn't care about the truth or the law. He ordered his bodyguards to lock Alysia up until she agreed to the surgery, while her brother threatened to freeze her assets and seize her late mother's penthouse.
"You have no heart, Alysia. You don't deserve the Kent name," her aunt spat in disgust.
For lifetimes, she had kept her head down, taking the blame and sacrificing everything for a family that viewed her as nothing more than a disposable blood bag and a financial pawn.
The resignation that had clouded her eyes for so long vanished, replaced by the absolute, zero-degree cold of a glacier.
Ripping the IV from her hand and leaving her family in stunned silence, Alysia walked straight out of the hospital.
She had exactly forty-six hours to find a husband to secure her inheritance, and she knew exactly which ruthless billionaire CEO to target to help her burn the Kent family to the ground.

9.2
Arla was supposed to marry Clinton Freeman, the perfect fiancé who had promised to love her and protect her five-year-old son.
But instead, the cold steel of a dagger pierced her chest.
As she collapsed onto the freezing basement floor, she watched her adoptive sister Blair laugh.
"Look at her," Blair sneered, kicking her son's small, blue, lifeless body.
Clinton stood there, calmly wiping the bloody blade on a pristine handkerchief.
In her dying moments, the horrifying truth became clear. Her fiancé and her adoptive family had been plotting all along to steal her massive trust fund.
To break her, they had secretly tortured her child. Clinton had watched Blair pierce the little boy's arms with sewing needles, rewarding him with candy to keep him silent.
Arla's lungs burned with the taste of copper and ash.
She couldn't understand why the family she trusted could be so monstrous, or why they had to brutally murder an innocent child just for money.
The darkness swallowed her whole, drowning her in suffocating hatred and absolute despair.
Then, she gasped for air.
The concrete floor was gone, replaced by the silk sheets of a hotel penthouse suite.
Arla had been reborn to the exact night six years ago—the very day Blair first dragged her son into the dark attic.
This time, she picked up a solid silver letter opener, ready to burn them all to the ground.

7.6
Elliana Lewis lay dying on the freezing concrete of a federal penitentiary, her ribs shattered by a guard's heavy boot.
She had been flawlessly framed for murder by the one person she trusted with her life: her sweet, innocent stepsister, Jovita.
During her final prison visit, Jovita wore their mother's diamonds and smiled cruelly behind the glass. She revealed she had liquidated the family company, caused their father's stroke, and paid the guards to ensure Elliana suffered a grueling, agonizing death.
"Your marriage was a joke from day one, Ellie. You have nothing left."
As her lungs stopped, the tragic truth finally dawned on Elliana. She had spent months screaming for a divorce and publicly humiliating her billionaire husband, Damon Stirling, believing his silence was weakness. She didn't realize until it was too late that his endless tolerance was the deepest form of protection. She had pushed away the only man who would have burned the world down to keep her safe.
Why had she been so incredibly stupid? Why did she blindly trust a monster and destroy the only person who truly loved her?
Then, a blinding light pierced her retinas. Elliana bolted upright, gasping for air on a massive, king-sized bed.
There was no pain. No broken bones. The digital clock on the nightstand flashed a date from exactly ten years ago.
It was the morning after her disastrous wedding night.
This time, she would tear Jovita's life apart piece by piece. And she would hold onto Damon so tightly that nothing could ever pry them apart.

8.1
Chantal Lewis's family legacy was twenty-four hours away from a fifty-million-dollar foreclosure.
Desperate to save her parents, she sold her soul, offering herself as a paper wife to Dell Valdez, a ruthless Wall Street billionaire needing a quick PR fix.
But Dell didn't just buy her; he trapped her in a living nightmare.
He forced her into a brutal three-year repayment plan she could never afford, treated her like a disposable prop, and deliberately leaked a scandalous paparazzi photo to destroy her hard-earned professional credibility.
Worst of all, the first time his calloused hand touched hers, a violent, terrifying flashback assaulted her brain.
The scorching heat of his palms and the distinct, dark scent of his cedarwood cologne perfectly matched the repressed memory of a pitch-black room where she was pinned to a mattress against her will.
Chantal didn't understand why her cold-blooded fake husband felt exactly like the monster from her unspoken trauma.
She understood even less why, after months of ignoring her, he was suddenly acting violently jealous and possessive when she merely smiled at another man!
Why did his scent match her attacker, and what was he truly planning?
Furious, she called him to threaten a divorce, only for his voice to drop into a lethal whisper.
"Try it. See what happens."
Before she could process his deadly threat, her office phone rang.
"Ms. Lewis," her receptionist trembled. "Your brother is in the lobby. He owes money to some very bad people, and they are coming here right now."

7.1
Five years ago, Grace was left to die in the suffocating darkness of a collapsed building.
She survived with severe amnesia, clawing her way through Los Angeles as a broke, struggling actress.
But her fragile peace shattered when she was cornered by Bryce Delaney, a ruthless billionaire who looked at her with agonizing, terrifying obsession.
He slammed a multi-million dollar prenuptial agreement onto his mahogany desk, demanding she become a bought-and-paid-for mother to his three identical sons.
Worse, she accidentally ran into her biological mother, a wealthy socialite, on the street.
Instead of joy, her mother looked at Grace in absolute horror.
"You should have stayed dead! To us, you are dead!"
At her most important audition, her sister Ashleigh publicly humiliated her, mocking her torn clothes and ordering security to throw her out like trash.
Meanwhile, Bryce threatened to destroy her entirely if she tried to escape his grasp.
Grace was suffocating in confusion and rage.
Why did her own family leave her to bleed out in the rubble?
Why were they so terrified to see her alive?
And why did this powerful tyrant call her "Gracie" with such broken grief, yet try to trap her in a fake, transactional cage?
She refused to be a victim again.
She threw the contract directly at Bryce's chest and violently slapped her sister's hand away.
Just as the industry tried to blacklist her, an elite European consortium suddenly descended, pouring fifteen million dollars into the production solely to crown Grace.
The war for the truth had just begun.