
The Billionaire's Stand-In Wife Is A Genius
I woke up in a silk-sheeted penthouse, the lingering warmth of my husband’s body still on the bed. But by the time the sun hit the floor-to-ceiling windows, Chadwick Dyer had already transitioned from the passionate lover of the night before into a cold corporate executioner.
He didn't say "good morning." He placed a blue folder from his family’s elite legal counsel on the nightstand and told me his childhood sweetheart, Ansley, was back in town. Our three-year marriage was being terminated as a "strategic move" to ensure the stability of his family’s multi-billion dollar trust.
He shoved a settlement check for millions into my bag, sneering that it was enough for me to live "happily ever after" with the man named Jay I supposedly called for in my sleep. I walked out with nothing but my old suitcase, returning to my hidden life as a master art conservator, only to be blackmailed back into his world forty-eight hours later. His grandfather threatened to ruin my career and my mother’s home unless I played the devoted wife for the cameras while Ansley staged a fake suicide attempt to reel Chadwick back in.
Standing in a VIP hospital wing, I realized the sickening truth: I was never the lead in my own marriage. I was just the understudy, a working-class girl picked because I was a dead ringer for the blonde socialite he truly desired. I was a placeholder for a ghost, a cheap replica used to fill a void until the "real" version returned.
"You can have him," I told her, finally seeing through the high-society rot. "He's hollow anyway."
I walked away from the hospital and the Dyer legacy, ready to disappear for good. But as I sat in a taxi, a notification on my phone stopped my heart. The man I thought had drowned three years ago—the Jay who haunted my dreams and the only man I ever truly loved—wasn't a ghost at the bottom of the Atlantic. He was the heir to a rival empire, he was back in New York, and he was the only one powerful enough to burn the Dyer family to the ground.
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Chapter 1
The morning sun sliced through the floor-to-ceiling windows of the penthouse, casting long, geometric shadows across the room. It was a cold light, the kind that illuminated dust motes dancing in the air but offered no warmth. Johnna woke to the sensation of silk against her skin, the expensive sheets cool and slippery. She reached out instinctively, her fingers seeking the solid warmth that had been there only hours before.
Her hand brushed against the linen, finding a faint, lingering heat.
She pulled her hand back, curling it into a fist against her chest. The space beside her was empty, but the indentation of his head on the pillow was still visible, a cruel reminder that he had been there, physically present but emotionally miles away.
Johnna sat up, pulling the sheet tight around her body. Memories of the previous night washed over her-the desperate way his hands had gripped her waist, the heavy rhythm of his breathing against her neck, the way he had whispered her name like a prayer or a curse. It had felt different. Urgent. Almost violent in its intensity. She felt a flush rise to her cheeks, a foolish hope blooming in her chest that perhaps, finally, the walls were coming down.
The sound of water running in the bathroom cut off abruptly.
A moment later, the door opened. Chadwick walked out, a towel slung low around his hips. Water droplets clung to the defined muscles of his chest and abdomen, trailing down in slow, mesmerizing paths. He didn't look at the bed. He didn't look at her. He walked straight to the walk-in closet, his movements precise and mechanical.
Johnna watched him, her heart thudding a slow, heavy rhythm against her ribs. She cleared her throat, the sound small in the cavernous room.
"Chadwick?"
He didn't turn. He dropped the towel and pulled on a pair of charcoal suit trousers, the fabric settling perfectly over his long legs. He reached for a white dress shirt, sliding his arms into the sleeves.
"Coffee is ready in the kitchen if you want it," he said. His voice was flat, stripped of the gravelly passion that had filled the dark hours of the night.
"About last night," Johnna started, swinging her legs over the side of the bed. She needed him to acknowledge it. She needed to know she wasn't the only one who felt the shift.
Chadwick stiffened. He buttoned his cuffs, his eyes fixed on his own reflection in the full-length mirror. He adjusted the silver links with unnecessary care, twisting them until they caught the light. In the reflection, his eyes met hers for a fraction of a second, then darted away.
"Get dressed, Johnna. We need to talk."
He turned around, fully armored in his bespoke suit. He walked to the bedside table where a leather briefcase sat. He clicked it open, the sound sharp like a gunshot in the quiet room. He pulled out a blue folder and placed it on the nightstand.
The embossed logo of Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom-the Dyer Group's external legal counsel-glinted ominously under the sunlight.
Johnna felt the blood drain from her face. Her stomach dropped, a physical sensation of falling while sitting perfectly still. She knew that logo. She knew what it meant. The hope that had bloomed moments ago withered instantly, turning into a dry, choking dust in her throat.
"What is this?" she asked, though she didn't need to.
Chadwick stood by the bed, looking at a point somewhere above her head. "My father and the trust administrators have been reviewing the quarterly projections. The merger with the Heath Group is contingent on... stability."
"Stability," Johnna repeated. The word tasted like ash.
"Ansley landed at JFK yesterday," Chadwick said. He said it quickly, like ripping off a bandage.
Johnna's fingers gripped the silk sheet so hard her knuckles turned white. Ansley. The name was a phantom that had haunted every corner of this marriage. The girl from the 'right' side of the tracks vs. the girl from the boroughs. The mistake vs. the destiny.
"She's back," Johnna whispered.
"She's going through a difficult time," Chadwick said, his voice taking on a defensive edge. "The family believes-I believe-that it is time we formalized the separation. The prenuptial agreement covers everything. You'll be taken care of."
Johnna looked at him. Really looked at him. This was the man who, six hours ago, had buried his face in her hair and held her as if she were the only anchor in a storm. Now, he was discussing the end of their marriage as if it were a corporate acquisition.
"Separation," she said. "You mean divorce."
"It's a strategic move for the trust," he said, still not meeting her eyes. "Ansley... her family expects certain protocols."
He was doing it. He was discarding her. The realization didn't come with hysteria, but with a terrifying, icy calm. She felt a strange detachment, as if she were floating near the ceiling, watching this pathetic scene play out.
"When?" she asked.
Chadwick blinked, finally looking down at her. He seemed surprised by her lack of tears. Perhaps he had prepared for a scene. Perhaps he had wanted her to beg, to validate his guilt.
"As soon as possible," he said. "It would be best if you were gone before the weekend. To avoid... confusion."
Confusion. He didn't want his childhood sweetheart to see his working-class wife.
Johnna nodded slowly. She reached out and picked up the blue folder. It was heavy. Heavier than it looked.
"Okay," she said.
Chadwick frowned slightly. "Okay?"
"I'll pack," she said.
He checked his watch, a reflex to hide his discomfort. "I have a meeting at the tower. I'll be back this evening."
He turned and walked toward the door. His footsteps were muffled by the thick carpet. He paused at the threshold, his hand on the handle. For a second, his back tensioned, the line of his shoulders rigid. Johnna held her breath, waiting. Maybe he would turn around. Maybe he would say he was sorry.
The door clicked shut.
The silence rushed back in, deafening and absolute. Johnna sat there for a long time, the blue folder on her lap. She didn't open it. She didn't need to read the terms to know she had lost. She let out a breath she didn't know she was holding, and with it, the first tear escaped, tracking a hot, wet line down her cold cheek.
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7.2
In the roaring flames of the abandoned warehouse, my skin blistered and peeled.
Through the crackling fire, my sister Elara's malicious voice echoed. She told me my husband, Damien, was dead, and it was all my fault.
For years, I had treated Damien like a monster. I fought him, threw tantrums, and desperately tried to escape our marriage, all because I blindly followed Elara's advice.
"Remember, the harder you fight, the more disgusted he'll get."
She texted me things like that, telling me to smash vases over his head and run away, claiming she was protecting me.
In reality, she was poisoning my mind, stealing my valedictorian spot at university, and plotting to crawl into my billionaire husband's bed.
My foolish rebellion cost me everything, ultimately leading to Damien's tragic death and my own fiery end.
As the massive explosion tore my consciousness to shreds, I finally understood who truly loved me and who the real monster was.
I died suffocating on my own agonizing regret, wishing I could tear Elara apart.
Then, a rush of freezing air punched into my lungs.
I opened my eyes to the crisp scent of cedar and mint. I was back seven years ago, on the very night our marriage was supposed to go to hell.
This time, looking at Damien's flawless, unscarred face, I didn't push him away.
I wrapped my arms around his neck and made a silent vow: I would make every single person who ever hurt him bleed.

9.5
For two years, I lived as a ghost in the Horn manor, a world built on blood money where my every breath was monitored. Fulton Horn, my stepfather’s nephew and the executor of my life, held the golden leash around my neck, forcing me to play the role of his secret mistress while he paraded a socialite as his fiancée.
Everything shattered at a high-society gala when the scent of raw seafood made me vomit at the feet of Fulton’s future bride. The ballroom erupted in whispers of a secret pregnancy, but Fulton’s reaction wasn't concern—it was cold, predatory calculation.
He immediately forced me into a clinical "inspection" to ensure his "merchandise" was sound, then destroyed my only chance at escape by framing my friend in a scandal and blacklisting my credit. He dragged me to his penthouse, ripped my clothes, and told me I was nothing but a "placeholder" for his dead first love, Arlena.
I was drowning in his obsession, forced to model his fiancée’s engagement gown while he claimed he was the only one who could "protect" me.
"You are what I say you are," he whispered, "and you belong where I say you belong."
I didn't understand how he could be so cruel, or why he was so determined to keep me in a cage of secrets. But when I looked closer at the photo of the "original" girl he loved, my blood turned to ice. It wasn't a girl named Arlena. It was a picture of me from six years ago, smiling and unbroken.
I realized then that Fulton hadn't just found a replacement—he had spent years carefully destroying the girl I used to be so he could keep the broken pieces for himself. Reaching for the hidden keycard, I finally made a choice: I would find a way to kill the ghost he loved before he finished killing the woman I had become.

8.3
For three years, my billionaire husband Bronson treated me like a fragile glass doll. The media said he worshipped me, but his love felt more like a suffocating collar as we struggled with infertility.
The day I finally got a positive pregnancy test, I wanted to surprise him. Instead, I opened his hidden safe and found a commercial surrogacy contract.
He had secretly bought another woman to carry his child, and she was already seven weeks pregnant.
When I confronted him and threw my wedding ring on his desk, his perfect husband mask shattered. He claimed he did it to "protect" my weak body. When I demanded a divorce and walked out, he systematically cut off my air supply. He froze my credit cards, drained my personal trust fund, and blacklisted me across the entire entertainment industry.
"She'll last forty-eight hours before she's crying on her knees."
Standing penniless in the freezing rain, I pressed a hand to my flat stomach. If he found out about the baby inside me, he would use it as an unbreakable chain to lock me in his cage forever. I couldn't let him win.
With nowhere left to run, I called an old co-star who had mysteriously vanished from Hollywood years ago.
Gardner Whitfield wasn't an actor anymore; he was a ruthless corporate predator. He slid a contract across his desk, offering to forge me steel wings to tear Bronson apart.
"Sign this, and you become my exclusive property for five years."
Without hesitating, I picked up the pen.

9.5
Elena's world crumbles when she finds out her husband, Alex, has been cheating on her. After confronting him, he doesn't show regret; rather he demands for a divorce and she walks away for good, giving up her marriage and the career she carefully built.
To move on, she strikes an unexpected deal: a contract marriage with Max, who turns out to be Alex's past rival.
But just as Elena begins to rebuild her life, Alex realizes what he lost-and wants her back.
But Elena isn't the same woman he once knew and she is not alone anymore.

7.7
I stood in a fifty-thousand-dollar Vera Wang gown, waiting to seal the merger of the century between the Singleton and English families. Everything was perfect, fragile, and obscenely expensive.
But minutes before the ceremony, my brother burst into the bridal suite looking like he’d seen a ghost. He handed me a crumpled note from Jeffery, the man I was supposed to marry.
"I can’t do it," the note read. "I’m choosing love." Jeffery had fled to Paris with another woman, leaving me to face two thousand guests and a family legacy that would plummet forty percent by Monday morning.
Harrison Singleton, the family patriarch, didn't offer sympathy; he offered a cold ultimatum. The wedding would happen, with or without Jeffery. He stepped aside to reveal Declan Singleton, the "Wolf of Wall Street" who had spent the last year ruthlessly stripping my father’s companies for parts.
To save my family from bankruptcy, I had to walk down the aisle and marry the man I hated most. At the altar, Declan didn’t just say "I do"; he claimed me with a kiss so possessive it felt like a sentencing.
The humiliation was physical, a knife twisting in my gut as the world watched the "hostile takeover" of my life. I was a spoil of war, traded to a predator who believed in leverage over love.
Then, Jeffery called, weeping about his mistake and begging to come back. I looked at the massive, perfectly-sized diamond Declan had already prepared for me and realized this wasn't a coincidence.
I wiped away my tears and straightened my emerald silk. If I had to live in a cage, I was going to make sure I had the sharpest teeth.
"Let's go to war," I whispered to my new husband.

7.2
Stepping out of the women's correctional center, Karli took her first breath of freedom in three years.
But the luxury SUV waiting for her didn't bring her home. Instead, her adoptive parents tossed a prenuptial agreement onto her lap.
They demanded she marry a violently unhinged, disfigured man so their company could secure a massive commercial deal.
When she refused, her adoptive mother slapped her hard across the face.
The blow brought back the suffocating nightmare from three years ago—how they had drugged her, framed her for a crime she didn't commit, and sent her to prison just so her stepsister could steal her fiancé.
Now, to break her again, her adoptive father ordered his bodyguards to drag her into the estate's freezing, pitch-black basement.
"You can rot in the dark without food or water until you sign that paper!"
Sitting on the damp cement, bleeding and shivering, a white-hot fury burned away Karli's panic.
They had stolen her youth, her reputation, and her grandfather's inheritance. She would rather die than be their sacrificial lamb again.
She smashed the basement window with a hammer, dragged her bleeding body through the shattered glass, and sprinted blindly into the stormy night.
Under the flickering neon sign of a convenience store, she grabbed the sleeve of a terrifyingly cold stranger.
"Are you single? Marry me right now."
She just needed a legal marriage to escape her family, entirely unaware she had just proposed to the most ruthless billionaire in Chicago.