
The Billionaire's Silent Wife No More
For three years Sarah Miller was the invisible wife of billionaire Jason Vanguard. She cooked his meals. She cleaned his home. She hid her identity as the heiress to the world's wealthiest empire just to prove her love. Jason rewarded her sacrifice with coldness and public humiliation. On their third anniversary he bought a diamond necklace for his childhood friend while Sarah waited home alone.
That was the final straw.
Sarah signed the divorce papers and walked away with nothing but her pride. When she returned to the Miller Group as its powerful new CEO. the world gasped. Jason assumed his "poor" ex-wife would beg to come back. Instead he found himself facing a cold queen in the boardroom who didn't even remember his name.
Now Jason is desperate to win back the woman he threw away. But Sarah is no longer the silent wife who waits for him. She is the rival who can destroy him.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 2
I stood there for a moment after the gate closed. Just stood there.
The metal was still vibrating faintly from the force of it swinging shut and I stared at it like I was waiting for it to open again. Like some part of me still thought he was going to come back and say he was wrong. That it was a mistake. That three years meant something to him too.
He didn't come back.
I turned around and then I saw that Julian's car was parked just outside the gate. Black sedan. Clean and quiet. The kind of car that didn't announce itself but still made everything around it look a little cheaper by comparison.
I walked toward it pulling my suitcase behind me. The wheels kept catching on the gravel making that uneven rattling sound and I hated it. I hated that sound. I hated that I was standing outside the gate of a house I had lived in for three years dragging the same beaten up suitcase I had arrived with like nothing had changed. Like I hadn't given anything. Like I hadn't even been there.
Julian took the case from my hand without asking and put it in the trunk. I almost said thank you. I didn't. I didn't know this man well enough for thank yous yet.
I stopped walking.
"My mother's locket." I turned back toward the house. "It's in the nightstand. Top drawer. I need to go back."
"The locks already cycled." Julian didn't even glance at the house. He opened the passenger door and stood there waiting on me. "Jason's security team resets them the moment he leaves the property. If you go back to that door right now they will treat you like a stranger. Is the locket worth that humiliation?"
I looked up at the master bedroom window.
The curtains were already being drawn. By the maid. A woman named Gloria who had worked in that house for six years before I arrived and would keep working there long after I was gone. I knew her daughter's name. I knew she took her coffee with two sugars and no milk. I had covered for her twice when she came in late because of school runs.
She didn't look down. She didn't wave. She just drew the curtains and went back to whatever came next on her list.
I was already nobody in that house. And I had been standing outside for less than five minutes.
"He really didn't leave me anything did he," I said. It wasn't a question. I wasn't even talking to Julian really. I was just saying it out loud because saying it made it real and I needed it to be real before I could move forward from it.
"He left you your name," Julian said. "That's more than he intended."
I got in the car.
It smelled like leather and something clean and simple. Nothing like the house. Jason had always insisted on lilies. Every room, fresh lilies, changed twice a week. I had spent three years surrounded by that smell and I had convinced myself I loved it because it seemed easier than admitting it gave me headaches.
Sitting in that car I realized I had never liked lilies at all.
Julian pulled out smoothly into the street. He drove the way he moved and the way he talked. Like a man who had already calculated everything three steps ahead and had nothing left to be nervous about.
I kept my hands in my lap and watched the neighbourhood pass outside the window. These were streets I knew. I had walked them, driven them, sat in the back of Jason's car going through them a hundred times. But they looked different now. Unfamiliar in that strange way that places look when the context around them changes. Same streets. Different person sitting in the car.
"The press will be at the gate in about ten minutes," Julian said. Not urgently. Just informing me. "Jason's publicist sent the story before he even left the driveway. By tonight you're the cold, difficult wife who couldn't make her husband happy. By tomorrow they'll have a source saying you were never in love with him to begin with. Just after his money."
I laughed. It came out dry and short. "I didn't even have access to his money. I had twelve dollars."
"I know."
"Then you know how ridiculous that is."
"The story doesn't need to be true Sarah. It just needs to be first." He glanced at me briefly. "Which is why we aren't going to let it be the only story."
I looked at him. "What does that mean."
"It means Jason thinks this is over." Julian kept his eyes on the road. "He thinks you're going to spend the next two weeks crying in a hotel room and then quietly disappear because you have no money and no options and nothing to fight back with. He's already planning the next chapter of his life. Elena on his arm. The Miller money in his accounts. The whole thing wrapped up neat and clean."
"And you're saying it won't be."
"I'm saying it doesn't have to be." He said it simply. No big speech. No dramatic promise. Just that.
I turned back to the window. I wanted to feel something strong and certain the way people do in movies. Some kind of rising music moment where you decide to fight back and everything clicks into place. But that wasn't what I felt. What I felt was tired. Deeply, bone tired in the way you only get when you've been tense for so long that releasing it leaves you hollow.
Three years.
I had been tense and careful and quiet for three years. Watching what I said. Watching how I acted. Trying to be what he needed even when what he needed kept changing. Even when what he needed was clearly just not me.
"Where are we going," I said.
"Somewhere quiet. Somewhere his name doesn't open doors." Julian turned into an underground garage beneath a small hotel I didn't recognise. Nothing flashy. Just clean and anonymous and completely removed from anything connected to Jason Vanguard. He parked and killed the engine and sat for a moment before getting out. "You need a few hours before the next step. You've been running on shock since the bedroom. It hasn't hit you yet."
"I'm fine."
He looked at me.
"I'm fine," I said again.
He got out and grabbed my suitcase from the trunk. I followed him to the elevator. We rode up in silence. The room he took me to was on the top floor. It was simple but comfortable. Big window looking out over the city. Clean white sheets. No lilies anywhere.
I stood in the middle of the room and looked around.
Julian set my suitcase by the bed. He put a keycard on the small table near the door. "Registered under a company name. Nobody knows you're here. Not Jason. Not his lawyers. Not the press."
"Thank you," I said. And this time I meant it.
He nodded once and moved toward the door. He stopped with his hand on the frame and looked back at me the way he had in the bedroom. That same steady look. Like he was checking something.
"Get some sleep," he said. "Tomorrow things start moving."
"What things."
"The things Jason didn't think you were capable of starting." He said it quietly but there was something underneath it. A certainty that didn't feel like a threat. It felt like a fact that hadn't happened yet.
"He made a mistake today Sarah. Not just leaving you. He made a mistake underestimating what you're worth and who you come from. And that mistake has a price."
He left. The door closed softly behind him.
I stood in the silence of the room for a long moment. Then I walked to the window and looked out at the city. All those lights. All those people. None of them knowing that somewhere in a house with fresh lilies a man was celebrating getting rid of his wife while that wife stood in a hotel room with twelve dollars and a suitcase full of old clothes figuring out what came next.
I thought about the locket. I thought about Gloria drawing the curtains. I thought about the way Jason had said Elena is waiting in the car like it was the most natural thing in the world.
I didn't cry. I kept waiting for it and it kept not coming.
Maybe there were no tears left. Maybe I had used them all up in the quiet of that house over three years on nights when I cried alone and dried my face before he came home because showing him my hurt had stopped feeling safe a long time ago.
Or maybe something had shifted in me the moment I signed that paper.
Maybe Sarah Miller didn't cry anymore.
I pulled my old suitcase onto the bed and unzipped it. Right at the bottom underneath all the worn sweaters and plain dresses was a red silk slip dress I had bought two years ago on a rare afternoon alone. I had never worn it. Jason had never even seen it. I had folded it up and buried it under everything practical and sensible and acceptable.
I took it out and held it up in the light.
Tomorrow, Julian had said. Things start moving tomorrow.
I folded the dress carefully and laid it on top of everything else.
I was going to need it.
You may also like

9.6
When Kristine Iglesias discovers about her boyfriend's cheating, she chooses the ultimate weapon for her revenge: A one night stand with his enemy.
The irresistible, dominating, heartless billionaire, Zayne Nightwood.
One night all it took to change the flow of her life. An irresistible desire sparked between them. Both of them began to crave each other badly.
One night. One opportunity.
The news of their one night stand and her pregnancy spread like fire caught on silk. A scandal was created, risking both hers and his image,
But there was a catch. Everyone thought Zayne got her pregnant but the child was not Zayne's but Edric's.
In her one drunken mistake, she saw an opportunity, a dark path to annihilate all the obstacles, to make all her enemies pay.
Subsequently, Kristine and Zayne decide to marry, to fool the public and avoid allegations.
All on the demand that she will be all Zayne's. From her soul to every inch of her pretty skin. From her life to that unborn child's life– all shall belong to him.
Because according to him, she was his leash, his tamer, she 'should' be his.
When both of them had secretive motives behind this marriage, trusting each other or falling in love was going to be hard.
But how can they resist each other when both of them got addicted to each other?

7.1
After five years in a federal prison, framed by my stepmother and fiancé, I was finally released.
Instead of a welcome home, my stepmother tossed me a one-way ticket to Geneva and a threat: renounce the family name and disappear, or end up in the Hudson River.
When our limo was suddenly ambushed by military-grade SUVs on the highway, their cowardice almost got us killed.
I took the wheel, crashed the attackers, and saved their lives.
But the moment the danger passed, my stepmother tried to slap me, called me a psycho, and abandoned me on the desolate roadside.
My ex-fiancé later cornered me in public, trying to assert his dominance by grabbing my arm.
They still thought I was the broken girl they sent to a cage just so they could steal my dead mother's biochemical research.
I didn't feel heartbreak, only a cold, absolute certainty.
They threw me to the wolves, not realizing the federal penitentiary had burned away my capacity for mercy.
I hacked into the dark web and found out Dante Meltoni, the most dangerous Mafia Don in New York, was tearing the city apart to find a legendary underground doctor.
I am that doctor.
I walked straight into his heavily guarded fortress, pulled out a syringe, and saved his dying grandfather.
Then I looked the terrifying Don right in the eye.
"Marry me. And let me use your empire to wipe my family off the map."

9.5
In the glittering shadows of New York City's elite, impoverished artist Elena Vasquez clashes with the enigmatic billionaire tycoon Alexander Hale. What begins as a chance encounter in a rain-soaked alley spirals into a whirlwind of passion, betrayal, and redemption. As Elena fights to reclaim her stolen dreams, Alexander's guarded heart unravels, forcing them to confront family secrets, corporate intrigue, and the ruthless divide between their worlds. Will their forbidden love survive the storms of jealousy, scandal, and loss, or will it shatter like the fragile art that brought them together? Shattered Canvases is a steamy billionaire romance that explores the raw edges of desire and the healing power of vulnerability.

9.8
Raven Lopez, the estranged heiress of a powerful family, sacrifices her fortune and her pride to save her husband Viktor's collapsing empire.
She raises his children as her own and builds his success from the ground up only for his former lover to return and her world to fall apart.
Blinded in a hospital accident and abandoned by the man she gave everything to, Raven is forced to depend on an arrogant doctor, Killian....the one man she should never trust. As she regains her sight, she uncovers shattering truths.
Her amnesia, her failed marriage, and even her blindness were all part of a twisted plan set in motion by the two brothers who claimed to love her or rather three brothers.
The last brother had always been a mystery,lurking in the dark and waiting for her to be most vulnerable before he possesses her. Now that she's been divorce,he returns to claim what has always been his.
One brother wanted her wealth. One wanted to own her completely. One loved her, but broke her first to make her his.
Torn between three brothers,Raven must submit to one of them or they all ruin her.
____________________
WARNING ⚠️ ?
For the girls that take interest in books with trigger warnings,May God help us. :-)
This book is not for the faint of heart. It's dark,contains stalking,forced proximity,sexual situations (quite a lot),violence , kidnapping, gory scenes,non/dub con, manipulation etc

8.6
I woke up from emergency surgery to repair a torn retina, completely blind and alone.
The first phone call I received wasn't one of concern. It was my mother, furious that I had embarrassed our family by missing a business brunch.
Her next order was chilling.
"Go to your husband. Get pregnant. A Hartman heir is the only thing that will secure our trust fund."
My husband, Jakobe Hartman, is a man who views our marriage as a corporate merger. Our hundred-page prenup has a clause that strictly forbids any emotional entanglement. He was the last person I wanted to see me so helpless.
But then I stumbled blindly out of my room and crashed right into him. He found me weak and pathetic. He overheard my mother's abusive voicemail. He even listened in silence as I spun pathetic lies on the phone, pretending he was a doting husband just to get her off my back.
I expected him to walk away in disgust. Instead, he moved me to the penthouse suite and sent me home in an armored car. I dismissed it as a cold calculation to protect his public image.
I thought I was finally safe in my own apartment. I had no idea he was watching me on a live security feed, just moments after ordering the hostile takeover of my family's entire company.

9.0
I stood in the center of the Pierre Hotel’s grand ballroom, a mute, smiling doll in a Dior dress. My job was to signal stability to investors while my fiancé, Clive Fitzpatrick, looked for any excuse to ignore me.
The night of our engagement, the world turned into a different kind of hell. I watched Clive disappear onto the terrace with another woman, his hand possessively on her waist. Distraught and drunk, I stumbled into a dark penthouse suite seeking sanctuary. I woke up the next morning to a gravelly voice and the smell of expensive tobacco. I hadn't slept with my fiancé; I had accidentally spent the night with his uncle, Bruno Fitzpatrick—the man Wall Street called the "executioner."
The humiliation was only the beginning. Clive didn't just cheat; he admitted he was only marrying me to steal my family's voting rights so I could "rot" in an apartment while he lived with his mistress. When I tried to protest, my adoptive mother, Claudia, dragged me into a private room and whipped me with a riding crop to remind me of my place. She held up a video of my frail, sick sister, Lucia, making it clear that my total obedience was the only thing keeping Lucia alive. I was a business asset to be traded, used, and beaten into submission.
I couldn't understand why everyone I was supposed to trust was so eager to destroy me. Was I really just a mannequin to be discarded once the merger papers were signed? The marks on my back burned, but the ice in my veins was colder. I was done being the victim of a mediocre man and a heartless mother.
Then Bruno offered me a way out. At the family dinner, right in front of my cheating fiancé, he proposed a lethal bet: if I could raise the company’s stock by ten percent in thirty days, he would give me his board veto—the ultimate power to crush Clive and Claudia forever. If I failed, I would owe him any favor he asked. I looked at the man who had ruined me and the man who wanted to own me, and I realized I had nothing left to lose. I wasn't going to be a doll anymore; I was going to be the one who burned the house down.