
Silent No More: The Genius Ex-Wife's Revenge
8.3 / 10.0
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The hospital ceiling was a blinding white, and I was losing my baby in a pool of rusty red. Because of my selective mutism, I couldn't scream as the doctors demanded a next-of-kin signature for the emergency surgery I needed to survive.
With trembling hands, I called my husband, Julius.
The line clicked open to the sound of cheering and a baby's first cry. Julius wasn't at work; he was in a delivery room, holding another woman's hand.
"I'm right here, Chanelle. One last push. You can do it."
When he finally realized I was on the line, his warmth vanished instantly.
"Elinor? I'm busy. Don't call just to breathe on the line."
He hung up while I was hemorrhaging on the gurney. Minutes later, my mother-in-law appeared not with comfort, but with a lawyer and a legal waiver.
"Sign away any claim your lost child gave you, or you don't get a cent for this procedure."
I signed the paper with a hand slick with blood, watching my child’s existence be erased for a few more minutes of life. When I returned home, Julius didn't ask if I was okay. He called me "barren" and "hysterical" while his mother forced a tray of raw, bloody organs into my hands, demanding I cook a recovery meal for the mistress.
They thought my silence was a weakness, a padlock they could keep locked forever. They didn't know I was a forensic accountant with a secret crypto fortune and the original blueprints for every design the mistress had ever stolen from me.
I realized then that I wasn't an incubator or a maid—I was the one who held the keys to their entire financial empire.
I took off my five-carat ring, tossed it into the fireplace, and sent a single message to a lawyer.
"It's time for total war."
Silent No More: The Genius Ex-Wife's Revenge Chapter 1
Pain wasn't a sound. It was a color. It was the blinding white of the Mount Sinai emergency room ceiling tiles, and the rusty red soaking into the sheets beneath Elinor's hips.
She curled her knees to her chest, a futile attempt to hold herself together physically when she was coming apart biologically. The cramp ripped through her lower abdomen again, a serrated knife twisting deep in her womb. Her mouth opened, jaw unhinging in a silent scream, but her throat remained a locked vault.
Selective mutism. That's what the doctors called it. A physiological padlock snapped shut by trauma.
Nurse Joy pulled back the thin blanket and gasped. The sound was sharp, sucking the air out of the small curtained cubicle.
"Dr. Evans!" Joy yelled over her shoulder, her rubber-soled shoes squeaking against the linoleum as she scrambled for the intercom.
Dr. Evans swept in seconds later. He didn't look at Elinor's face. He looked at the monitors, then at the blood. His expression hardened into the professional mask of a mechanic looking at a totaled car.
"We need to do a D&C immediately," Evans said, his voice clipped. "She's hemorrhaging. The tissue isn't expelling naturally."
He turned to the nurse. "Get the consent forms. And check her file. Does she have a proxy?"
"Coagulation disorder history," Joy read from the tablet, her brow furrowed. "Hospital policy requires a next of kin signature for the anesthesia waiver due to the risk level."
Joy thrust a sleek black smartphone into Elinor's trembling hand. The screen was cracked at the corner.
"Honey, you need to call him," Joy said, her voice tight with urgency. "We can't wait. Call your husband."
Elinor stared at the phone. Her fingers were slick with cold sweat. She tapped the screen. The contact name "Hubby" sat at the top, mocking her.
She pressed the call icon.
Ring.
The sound was a hammer against her temple.
Ring.
Every second that passed was a drop of blood leaving her body.
Ring.
The line clicked open.
A wall of noise assaulted her ear. Cheering. The pop of a cork. Laughter. It sounded like a party. It sounded like joy.
Elinor tried to force air through her vocal cords. She tried to make a sound, a grunt, anything to signal distress. But the muscles in her neck seized, rigid as stone.
"Hello?" Julius's voice came through, rich and warm.
Elinor's breath hitched.
"Chanelle, breathe," Julius said. He wasn't talking to the phone. He was talking to someone next to him. "I'm right here. One last push. You can do it."
The world tilted on its axis.
"Julius..." A woman's voice. Weak, breathless, dripping with performative vulnerability. "I'm so scared. Don't leave me."
"I'm not going anywhere," Julius promised. A baby cried in the background, a thin, sharp wail of new life. "There, you see? You did it. They're beautiful."
Elinor's grip on the phone tightened until her knuckles turned the color of bone. Tears spilled over her lashes, hot and stinging, sliding into her ears.
Julius seemed to realize the phone was active. The warmth vanished from his tone instantly.
"Elinor?" His voice was now ice. "I'm busy. Don't do this right now. Don't call just to breathe on the line."
Click.
The dial tone hummed. A flatline sound.
"Mrs. Logan," Dr. Evans barked, snapping his fingers in front of her face. "We are losing time. Your blood pressure is crashing."
Elinor lowered the phone. The screen went black, reflecting her own hollow eyes.
She didn't look at the nurse. She didn't look at the doctor. She reached out, her hand shaking violently, and grabbed the clipboard from the end of the bed.
She found the line marked Patient accepts full liability / No Next of Kin available.
She signed her name. The pen tore through the paper.
As they wheeled her down the hallway, the fluorescent lights blurred into streaks of comets. Just as they neared the operating room doors, a figure blocked their path. Beverly Logan, her mother-in-law, stood there, flanked by a man in a crisp suit holding a briefcase. Her face was a mask of cold fury.
"Before you go in," Beverly said, her voice like chipping ice, "there is a formality."
The lawyer stepped forward, placing a different clipboard on Elinor's gurney. "A supplement to your prenuptial agreement, Mrs. Logan. A standard clause regarding fetal demise and its impact on inheritance succession. Just sign here."
Elinor's vision swam. The nurse protested, "Ma'am, she's hemorrhaging, this is not the time-"
"She signs, or you don't get a cent for this procedure," Beverly snapped, her eyes locked on Elinor's. It was blackmail, pure and simple. Sign away any claim her lost child might have given her, or bleed to death.
Her hand, slick with sweat, took the pen. She scrawled her name across the line, her signature a jagged scar. They had taken her voice, her husband, her child. Now they were taking the very memory of his worth.
The anesthesia hit her veins like liquid frost.
Her last conscious thought wasn't of the baby she was losing. It was the image of Julius, holding another woman's hand, welcoming children that weren't his, while his own child died in silence.
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Silent No More: The Genius Ex-Wife's 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
New Release Novels

8.9
This is my story of how to lose a mob boss in ten days.
I have a
I've been arranged to marry a monster.
Run away? Good idea. Tried that. Didn't work.
Because in my family, my father makes the rules.
And he says this wedding is happening .
But he still has a soft spot for me, his last remaining daughter.
So he offers me a deal.
Take ten days.
Get to know Sasha.
See if you change your mind.
Yeah, right.
Sasha Ozerov is a beast in Brioni.
He's ruthless, flawless, utterly unconcerned with mortals like me.
All he wants is what our marriage would bring
My family's power and the city in the palm of his hand.
But maybe, if I can make him back out of the deal...
I'll keep my freedom.
So I set out to do everything I can to drive him crazy.
I have ten days to make my husband hate me.
What happens if I start to love him instead?

9.5
My boyfriend, Jefferson, convinced me to give up my Yale scholarship for him. He was my secret, my escape from the shame of my mother's past, and I threw away my future for our love.
Then, at a gala, he publicly announced his engagement to Aubrey Carroll-the girl who made my high school years a living hell.
He trapped me in his mansion, forcing me to become her personal servant. She tortured me daily, culminating in her brutally killing our dog, Charlie, with a garden trowel.
When her friends arrived, they joined in, stripping me half-naked and live-streaming my panic attack for the world to see.
The man who once promised to protect me watched as they destroyed me.
But as I lay bleeding out on the floor, it wasn't an ambulance that arrived. It was the private security of Alexzander Stevens-my estranged, billionaire grandfather.
He revealed I was his sole heiress, and now, we were going to make them pay for every last tear.

7.7
Nora's life turned into a nightmare after she was banished from her pack by her own husband. She was subjected to mockery, abuse and humiliation before being cast out with nothing.
Faced with the cruelty of a world that had never once been kind to her, the moon goddess decided to bless her with her fated mate.
The same man she watched slaughter others without a single trace of mercy. The man who was twice as cold and twice as ruthless as the husband who destroyed her.
Yet he would not let her go. She found herself stuck between the husband who used her and the ruthless mate who wanted her but refused to admit it. Two powerful men. One woman who was never supposed to survive any of it. And a moon goddess who was not done with her yet.

9.6
In the two years after I married Daniel Carter, my private photos had gone viral nine times, and Daniel had been taken into custody ten times.
Because every time his mistress, Emily Morgan, was unhappy, she would leak my private photos all over the internet.
I, Claire Parker, never let it slide. I reported every shady business Daniel was involved in and personally sent him behind bars.
That lasted until an unexpected kidnapping. I took a bullet for him, one aimed straight at his heart, and he shielded me beneath his body, taking the brunt of the explosion for me.
After we survived, the man who had always been so cold-blooded knelt before me, his voice hoarse beyond recognition.
"Honey, let's leave the drama behind. I just want a peaceful life with you."
Right in front of me, he ordered his men to send his mistress out of Northhaven and never let her appear before him again.
In the third year after we reconciled, I carried my eight-month pregnant belly and brought him lunch.
But on the way there, I was hit by a car. The hospital issued three critical condition notices, yet they still could not save the baby.
Daniel rushed over, but he did not even spare me a glance. Instead, he pulled the woman who had hit me and her child into his arms, soothing her in a low voice.
"Don't be scared. I'll protect you and the child."
Only then did I realize that the woman who had hit me was the very mistress he had sent away three years ago.
When I demanded an explanation, Daniel brushed it off as if it were nothing. "She didn't do it on purpose. Don't take it out on her and her son. You can have a baby another time."
At that moment, I finally understood. They had gotten back together long ago.
I looked at him and nodded. "Don't worry, this will never happen again."

7.7
Not only was I drugged, blinded and assaulted. I was deceived into carrying a baby by a stranger I never knew. Then he appeared and took my child away.
I was sent to a militia by the father of my child. I thought I was rescued but I was recruited to be a weapon for killing. Who was manipulating me, I didn't know. The answers were far from what I knew.
Forced to blend into the world that I could never believe I would be to, a place where brutality reigned, kill or be killed was the only language. I have survived but he has to pay for everything he did to me, because I believed every phase of my life was set by him and him alone. Have I really survived?
Who would have thought, he existed twice in the same world? Do I really know who I should take revenge on? Him or the person I would sacrifice everything for?
Was my mother the one who orchestrated everything? What kind of pawn am I?

7.5
On the morning of our twenty-fifth wedding anniversary, I found a cream-colored document tucked inside my husband's suit pocket.
It was a twenty-million-dollar asset transfer for his former receptionist, Carmen. But what made my blood run cold was the contingent beneficiary: Leo, my newborn son who the hospital claimed was kidnapped twenty-three years ago.
When I confronted Devonte, he didn't even try to explain. He handed me a fake Cartier watch, canceled all my credit cards, and publicly called me delusional.
The next day, he moved Carmen into our mansion and emptied all our joint accounts into offshore trusts.
"If you don't sign these papers and walk away, I will have you committed," he threatened, his mother nodding in agreement.
They had orchestrated the kidnapping of my baby, hiding him with the mistress while I spent half my life sedated and screaming in grief. Now, to keep his secret, Devonte was going to lock me in a psychiatric ward and bury me in debt.
I didn't understand how the man I loved could be such a monster. Why did he steal my child? What else was hidden in that confidential adoption file?
Pushed to the absolute brink, I refused to be his victim.
When his goons came to my temporary apartment to drag me away, I turned to the rugged union electrician who had just fixed my lights.
"If you need a husband to keep you out of a psych ward, I'll marry you," he said, offering himself as my legal shield.
I took his hand. It was time to tear my husband's perfect life apart.











