
The Billionaire's Regret: My Hidden Wife
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I sat at a mahogany table long enough to land a plane on, signing the papers that ended my two-year marriage to billionaire Eric Koch.
He didn't even show up for the divorce; he was in a private cigar lounge downstairs, sending his lawyer to hand me a five-million-dollar check to buy my silence like I was a discarded employee.
For two years, I had perfected the role of the "mouse"—the plain, timid wife Eric looked right past, never suspecting I was actually Rose, the world-renowned designer behind a secret fashion empire. I never told him I was the "angel" who dragged his unconscious body from a burning car years ago, the woman he’d been searching for while he ignored the one across the breakfast table. To celebrate my freedom, I had a one-night stand with a stranger in a penthouse, only to wake up and realize the man I’d just slept with was my ex-husband.
Before the ink on our divorce was dry, Eric used his billions to buy my studio, trapping me in a contract that forces me to work for him as a "lowly assistant" or face a fifty-million-dollar penalty.
I watched in silence as a fame-hungry actress paraded around his office wearing my stolen heirloom locket—the only proof of my true identity—claiming she was the mystery woman from his bed. Eric looked right through my frumpy disguise with the same cold indifference he showed his wife, never realizing the woman he was hunting was standing right in front of him.
I couldn't understand how he could be so obsessed with finding a ghost while treating the living woman who saved him like garbage. Why was he so determined to own every piece of Rose while he had spent two years throwing Aislinn away?
"Tell him nothing," I whispered to my reflection as I reapplied the thick foundation that masked my face.
"You're dangerous, Ann Reese," he told me later, his eyes narrowing as he sensed a familiar spark behind my thick glasses.
I adjusted my bun and looked him in the eye, ready to play the long game. He thinks he’s bought my future, but he’s about to find out that Rose doesn’t just design couture—she designs ruins.
The Billionaire's Regret: My Hidden Wife Chapter 1
The rain battered against the floor-to-ceiling windows of the Koch Tower conference room, a relentless, rhythmic assault that mirrored the pounding in Aislinn Reese's chest. But on the outside, she was a statue. A dull, grey, lifeless statue. She sat at the long mahogany table, the leather chair swallowing her slight frame. The air conditioning was set too low, a standard tactic in corporate negotiations to make the weaker party uncomfortable. It was working. Her fingertips were numb, but she didn't rub them together. She kept her hands folded in her lap, hidden beneath the table.
Across from her sat Gavin, Eric Koch's personal assistant. He was a man whose entire personality was curated to reflect his boss's efficiency, though he lacked Eric's terrifying presence. Gavin pushed a black fountain pen across the polished surface. It slid with a soft hiss and stopped exactly three inches from her right hand.
"Mr. Koch has authorized the immediate transfer of the initial alimony payment upon signature," Gavin said, his voice carrying a professional pity that stung worse than open mockery. "Five million dollars annually for the next five years. The properties in the Hamptons and the Aspen chalet are also yours, provided the NDA remains unbreached."
Aislinn stared at the document. Divorce Decree. The words should have looked heavy, final. Instead, they looked like liberation.
She reached for the pen. Her hand didn't tremble. She picked it up, feeling the cold weight of the metal against her skin. She didn't look at the signature line immediately. Instead, her eyes scanned the paragraph detailing the financial settlement. Five million. It was the price Eric was willing to pay to erase two years of a marriage he never wanted. A marriage forced by a grandmother's dying wish and a grandfather's ancient debt.
But Eric didn't know that she didn't need his money. He didn't know about the offshore accounts in the Cayman Islands, the blind trusts, or the royalties from the 'Rose' design empire that had been quietly accumulating interest for years. To him, she was a destitute orphan. Taking his money would only validate his assumption that she was a charity case.
Aislinn flipped the pen. With a swift, decisive motion that made a scratching sound against the paper, she drew a thick line through the alimony clause. Then another line through the property transfer.
Gavin blinked. His professional mask cracked for a fraction of a second. "Mrs. Koch-Ms. Reese. I don't think you understand. This is standard. It's what you're entitled to."
"I don't want it," Aislinn said. Her voice was low, raspy, and deliberately flat. It was the voice she had cultivated for two years-the voice of a woman who had nothing interesting to say. "I want a clean break. No money. No houses. Just the signature."
"But-"
"If I take the money, he thinks he bought me off," she interrupted, keeping her gaze on the paper. "If I take nothing, I just leave."
She signed her name at the bottom. Aislinn Reese. The letters were small, cramped, and unassuming. It was a forgery of her true self. If she had signed as she naturally did-as Rose-the signature would have been a bold, sweeping scrawl that demanded attention. But Aislinn Reese was invisible.
She set the pen down. Then, she reached for her left hand. The platinum band on her ring finger felt like a shackle she had grown used to, the metal warm from her body heat. She slid it off. The skin underneath was pale, a ghost of the commitment that never really existed.
Clink.
She placed the ring on the marble table. The sound echoed in the empty room, sharp and final.
"He's in Europe, correct?" Aislinn asked, standing up. She picked up her worn canvas tote bag, hunching her shoulders slightly to diminish her height.
Gavin cleared his throat, looking uncomfortable as he collected the papers. "Yes. Mr. Koch is in Zurich for the banking summit. He sends his... regards."
A lie. A polite, corporate lie. Aislinn knew Eric's schedule better than Gavin did. Eric wasn't in Zurich. He was twenty floors down, in the private cigar lounge of the exclusive club that occupied the building's lower levels, likely nursing a scotch and complaining about the weather. He couldn't even be bothered to take an elevator ride to end their marriage.
"Goodbye, Gavin," she said.
She turned and walked out. She didn't look back at the ring. She didn't look back at the view of the city she had ostensibly ruled as the wife of New York's most powerful man.
The elevator ride down was silent. Aislinn watched the floor numbers tick down. 50... 40... 30... With every passing floor, the invisible weight on her shoulders lightened. When the doors opened to the lobby, the security guards nodded at her with vague recognition, the way one acknowledges a piece of furniture that is being moved out.
"Do you need the car, Mrs. Koch?" the doorman asked, reaching for an umbrella.
"No," she said. "And it's Ms. Reese."
She stepped out into the rain. It was a torrential downpour, the kind that soaked through fabric in seconds. She didn't care. She walked past the line of waiting black limousines and raised her hand. A yellow taxi screeched to a halt, splashing water onto the curb.
"Brooklyn," she told the driver as she slid onto the cracked vinyl seat. "DUMBO. The Clocktower Building."
The driver raised an eyebrow in the rearview mirror, eyeing her worn tote bag and soaked grey cardigan. "The Clocktower? You sure, lady? That's heavy rent for a..." He trailed off, looking at her shoes.
"I'm house-sitting," Aislinn lied smoothly, leaning back into the shadows of the seat. "For a very eccentric, very rich old woman. I just water the plants."
The driver grunted, accepting the explanation. It made more sense than a woman looking like a drowned rat actually living in one of the most expensive penthouses in Brooklyn. He hit the meter.
Her phone buzzed in her pocket. It was Harper.
Voice Message: "Tell me it's done. Tell me the ink is dry and you are currently fleeing the scene of the crime. Drinks are on me. The Vault. Tonight. No excuses."
Aislinn leaned her head against the cool glass of the window. The city blurred into streaks of neon and grey. She closed her eyes and let out a breath she felt like she'd been holding for seven hundred and thirty days.
When she unlocked the door to her apartment, the silence that greeted her wasn't lonely; it was luxurious. She kicked off the scuffed loafers she wore to annoy Eric's mother and dug her toes into the deep pile of the authentic Persian rug that cost more than the alimony she had just rejected.
She dropped the canvas bag. She walked into the bathroom and turned on the tap. The water ran warm. She splashed it over her face, scrubbing hard. She reached for the bottle of specialized oil cleanser and began to rub.
Grey foundation dissolved. The fake, painted-on freckles that gave her a childish, unpolished look wiped away. The contouring that made her face look rounder and softer vanished. She grabbed a towel and patted her face dry.
She looked in the mirror.
The woman staring back was a stranger to Eric Koch. Her skin was porcelain, luminous and clear. Her cheekbones were sharp enough to cut glass. Her eyes, no longer hidden behind the thick, distorting lenses of her black-framed glasses, were a piercing, intelligent green.
She reached behind her back and unhooked the compression corset she wore every day. Her ribs expanded. She took a deep, full breath. Her body, freed from the constraints of "Aislinn the Dowdy Wife," settled back into its natural, statuesque curves.
"Goodbye, Mrs. Koch," she whispered to the reflection. Her voice wasn't raspy anymore. It was rich, velvet, and dangerous.
Her phone pinged again. An encrypted email notification.
Sender: Declan
Subject: Q3 Financials - Code Red
Aislinn picked up the phone, her eyes narrowing. She tapped out a reply with lightning speed, her thumbs moving in a blur.
Reply: Cut the marketing budget for the spring line. Reallocate to R&D. I want the new sketches on my server by midnight. - Rose.
Harper called again. "Pick up, you free woman!"
Aislinn answered, putting the phone on speaker as she walked into her walk-in closet-a space filled not with grey wool skirts, but with silks, velvets, and avant-garde pieces she had designed herself.
"I'm coming," Aislinn said.
"Good. Because I'm already in line and I told the bouncer my best friend is a newly single heiress. Don't make a liar out of me."
Aislinn ran her fingers along the rack of clothes. She stopped at a dress she had made three years ago. It was emerald green silk, backless, with a neckline that plunged dangerously low. It was a weapon of mass destruction in fabric form.
She pulled it on. The silk draped over her body like water. She opened a small, velvet-lined box on her vanity. Inside lay an antique emerald locket, suspended on a delicate gold chain. It was the only thing she had left of her mother.
She clasped it around her neck. The cool stone rested in the hollow of her throat.
She applied a coat of matte red lipstick. She looked at herself one last time. There was no trace of the timid girl who had signed the divorce papers an hour ago.
Tonight, she wasn't Aislinn Reese. She wasn't even Rose. She was just a woman who had been in a cage for too long, and the door had finally been left open.
Continue Reading
The Billionaire's Regret: My Hidden Wife of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6Chapter 7 Ch. 7
Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

8.1
At sterlinggate university, only one rule matters:
Monsters do not belong.
Yuna never meant to become one.
After being publicly humiliated by her boyfriend , Yuna's emotions spiral out of control, she had a tough encounter with her bully, Megan, triggering a secret she was never meant to awaken. She isn't just a werewolf.
She is a kitsune.
A nine-tailed fox believed to be extinct.
A creature every wolf has been trained to hunt.
When her transformation is exposed, the university goes into lockdown. Hunters flood the campus. Silver charms are distributed. And one order is made clear:
"Kill the kitsune".
The only person willing to protect her is Noah Phillips,the star wolf of the university... and the son of the chief hunter leading the execution.
As danger closes in and her powers grow harder to control, Yuna must choose:
hide and survive, or rise and fight back.
Because if the wolves discover the truth...
They won't just kill her.
They'll start a war.

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.

8.3
Betrayed at the altar. Replaced by her own sister.
On what should have been the happiest day of her life, Amara loses everything-her fiancé, her dignity, and her future.
But that same night, a dangerous man steps out of the shadows with an offer she can't refuse.
Marriage. Power. Revenge.
Now bound to a ruthless CEO, Amara is ready to destroy everyone who betrayed her.
There's just one problem...
Her new husband knows more about her past than he should.
And the closer she gets to revenge-
the more she realizes she may have married the man who ruined her in the first place.

7.6
After an exhausting fourteen-hour flight, Katia returned to her Upper East Side penthouse, expecting the quiet comfort of the life she had built.
Instead, she found a pair of familiar red stilettos in the foyer and her fiancé, Caleb, tangled in their bedsheets with his twenty-two-year-old assistant.
She didn't scream or cry. She simply took off her three-carat engagement ring, threw it at his bare chest, and demanded he buy out her half of the penthouse by Friday.
Seeking to numb the sickening disgust, she got blackout drunk and crashed at a luxury hotel, accidentally stumbling into the wrong suite.
Thinking the imposing man inside was a high-end escort hired by her friend, she threw him over her shoulder and spent a wild night with him.
The next morning, she left five thousand dollars on his nightstand with a lipstick-stained note.
"Good Job."
For six years, she had funded Caleb's dreams and built his startup from the ground up, only to be treated like a lifeless ATM.
With ruthless precision, she spent the next two months systematically bankrupting his company, cutting off his venture capital, and erasing his life's work.
She felt no heartbreak, only a cold, calculating need to cleanse herself of his betrayal.
But when Katia finally returned to corporate headquarters to co-lead a massive merger, she literally crashed into the new Vice President.
Strong arms caught her waist, and the sharp scent of cedarwood and whiskey hit her like a freight train.
"You came back," Jackson whispered, his eyes burning as he stared at the woman who had treated him like a cheap gigolo.

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.

7.6
Isolde Mitchell knew her wealthy husband was cheating on her, but the true nightmare began when her mother-in-law summoned her.
The older woman coldly announced that the mistress was pregnant with a boy and would be moving into their estate.
Because Isolde's family had gone bankrupt and she had only given birth to a frail daughter, she was deemed completely worthless.
When Isolde packed her bags and demanded a divorce, her husband Clark just laughed.
He threatened to use their ironclad prenup to leave her penniless and take full custody of her daughter just to torture her.
To make matters worse, he forced Isolde to secure a failing business deal with the ruthless billionaire Jacques Valdez, essentially ordering her to sell her body to get the signature.
"If you fail, you will never see Bria again."
He even sent his goons to snatch the little girl from her preschool to prove his point.
Isolde was completely cornered, trembling with a mix of rage and absolute despair.
How could the man she married be such a monster? She would rather die than let them destroy her daughter, but how could a bankrupt mother fight a powerful dynasty with absolutely nothing?
Out of options, she looked at the private business card the terrifying billionaire Jacques had unexpectedly given her daughter.
Swallowing her pride, she decided to make a deal with the devil himself, ready to use his power to tear her husband's family apart.











