Follow
Chapters
Share
The Dead Wife’s Return Novel Cover

The Dead Wife’s Return

"I didn't kill your wife, Sebastian. You did." I was the perfect wife. I cooked, I cleaned, and I loved Sebastian Thorne with every fiber of my being. But on our anniversary, I found him with my stepsister, mocking me, defiling my mother’s memory. Broken and pregnant, I fled into the storm. My car plunged off the cliff. They never found my body. Five years later, I am no longer Elena, the weak, invisible housewife. I am Valeria Stone, the CEO of Phoenix Corp. I have returned with a new face, a new name, and a heart of ice. Sebastian Thorne thinks he can conquer me. He looks at me with those hungry eyes, obsessed with the woman who reminds him of his dead wife. He wants to own me. He wants to bed me. But he doesn’t know I’m the ghost he created. He doesn’t know about the son I’m hiding. And he certainly doesn’t know that I came back for one thing only: to burn his empire to the ground.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

I had to get out. Now.

My hands shook as I stuffed clothes into a suitcase, not caring what I grabbed or whether anything matched. The pregnancy test sat on my nightstand like a ticking bomb, those two pink lines both my salvation and my death sentence. Every sound from downstairs made me freeze—Sebastian's deep laughter, Bianca's musical giggle, the clink of glasses as they toasted whatever sick celebration they were having.

They thought I was broken. Beaten. A barren waste of space who would quietly disappear from their lives.

They had no idea what I was capable of.

I zipped the suitcase shut and grabbed my mother's jewelry box from the dresser—the only thing of real value I had left that Sebastian couldn't touch. My hands trembled as I opened it, revealing the diamond necklace my father had given her on their wedding day. It would be enough to start over somewhere far from here.

The sound of footsteps on the stairs froze my blood. Heavy, deliberate steps that could only belong to Sebastian. I shoved the jewelry box into my purse and grabbed the suitcase, my heart hammering against my ribs.

"Elena?" Sebastian's voice drifted through the door, sickeningly sweet. "Are you feeling better, darling?"

I pressed myself against the wall beside the door, hardly daring to breathe. Through the crack beneath the door, I could see his shadow as he paused outside.

"I know you're upset," he continued, his tone dripping with false concern. "But we should talk. Like adults."

Like adults. As if finding your husband buried inside your sister was something mature people discussed over tea.

The doorknob turned.

Panic shot through me like electricity. I grabbed the suitcase and bolted for the window, throwing it open just as Sebastian stepped into the room. The fire escape ladder was old and rusted, but it was my only chance.

"Elena, what the hell are you doing?" Sebastian's voice sharpened with genuine alarm.

I didn't answer. Couldn't answer. I was already climbing through the window, my suitcase banging against the frame as I maneuvered it outside. The metal rungs bit into my palms, cold and unforgiving, but I forced myself to move quickly.

"Get back here!" Sebastian shouted, and I heard him crossing the room toward the window.

I half-fell, half-climbed down the ladder, my feet hitting the alley pavement just as Sebastian's head appeared in the window above.

"Elena! Don't be stupid!"

I ran.

My car was parked two blocks away, and I sprinted through the darkening streets like a woman possessed. My purse bounced against my hip, the jewelry box inside rattling with each step. Behind me, I could hear Sebastian calling my name, his voice growing more distant but no less threatening.

I reached my car and fumbled with the keys, my hands shaking so badly I could barely get them in the ignition. The engine turned over just as Sebastian rounded the corner, still in his bathrobe, his face twisted with rage.

Our eyes met through the windshield for one terrible moment. Then I floored the accelerator.

The city blurred past my windows as I drove with no destination in mind. I just needed distance. Space. Time to think. The pregnancy test was still clutched in my left hand, and I kept glancing at it as if those two pink lines might disappear.

My phone buzzed incessantly on the passenger seat. Sebastian. Then Bianca. Then Sebastian again. I didn't answer.

Rain began to fall, light at first, then harder, drumming against the windshield with increasing intensity. The wipers squeaked as they fought against the deluge, and I realized I was driving too fast for the conditions. But I couldn't slow down. Couldn't stop.

If I stopped, I might fall apart completely.

The coastal highway stretched ahead of me, dark and winding. I'd driven this route countless times during happier days, when Sebastian and I would take weekend trips to the shore. Now it felt like a path to nowhere, which was exactly where I wanted to be.

My phone rang again, and this time I glanced at the screen. Sebastian's name flashed insistently, and without thinking, I grabbed the phone to silence it.

That's when I saw the truck.

Massive headlights blazed through the rain, much too close, much too fast. The driver had drifted into my lane around the curve, and there was nowhere to go. The guardrail to my right, the truck to my left, and the ocean far below.

I yanked the steering wheel hard to the right, tires screaming against wet asphalt. The car spun once, twice, the world becoming a kaleidoscope of rain and darkness and terror. Then the guardrail gave way with a sound like thunder, and suddenly I was flying.

Time stretched like taffy. The car fell through space, nose-first toward the churning black water below. I had a moment of perfect clarity where I thought about the baby—my impossible, precious baby—and how it would die with me in this cold, dark place.

Then we hit.

The impact drove the breath from my lungs and sent shockwaves of pain through every bone in my body. Water rushed in through the cracked windshield immediately, shockingly cold and relentless. The car was sinking fast, the ocean claiming it with hungry efficiency.

I fumbled with my seatbelt, but my fingers were already numb from the cold water rising around my chest. The belt was jammed, or maybe I was too panicked to work it properly. Either way, I was trapped.

Water reached my neck, then my chin. I tilted my head back, gasping for the last precious inches of air trapped against the car's roof. The taste of salt and terror filled my mouth.

This couldn't be how it ended. Not when I'd finally found something worth fighting for.

I pressed my hand to my stomach, where my child—our child—was growing in secret. "I'm sorry," I whispered to the darkness. "I'm so sorry."

The water covered my mouth, then my nose. My lungs burned as I held my breath, but I knew it was only a matter of seconds now. The car continued its descent into the depths, taking me and my unborn child with it.

Just as my vision began to tunnel and my chest screamed for air, something exploded through the passenger window in a shower of glass and bubbles.

A hand. Strong, sure, reaching through the murky water toward me.

I grasped it desperately, feeling callused fingers close around my wrist with iron determination. The seatbelt finally gave way, and suddenly I was being pulled through the shattered window, up through the crushing darkness toward a surface I could no longer see.

My lungs gave out just as we broke through. I gasped and choked, salt water burning my throat as precious air filled my chest. Strong arms held me against a solid body as we treaded water in the churning waves.

"I've got you," a voice said near my ear, deep and rough with exertion. "Don't fight me."

I couldn't have fought if I'd wanted to. Consciousness was slipping away like sand through my fingers, and the last thing I remembered was being pulled toward a distant light, my mysterious savior's grip never loosening around my waist.

When I woke up, everything was white.

White walls, white ceiling, white bandages wrapped around what felt like half my face. The antiseptic smell of a hospital filled my nostrils, but this wasn't like any hospital room I'd ever seen. Too luxurious. Too private. Too quiet.

I tried to sit up and immediately regretted it as pain shot through my ribs like lightning.

"Easy." The voice was the same one I remembered from the water—deep, controlled, dangerous. "You've been unconscious for two days."

I turned my head carefully and saw him sitting in a chair beside the bed. Tall, broad-shouldered, wearing a black suit that probably cost more than my car. His face was sharp angles and shadows, with dark eyes that seemed to see straight through me. There was something predatory about the way he watched me, like a wolf deciding whether I was prey or potential pack.

"Who are you?" I managed to croak through my damaged throat.

He leaned forward, elbows on his knees, and studied me with unsettling intensity. "Someone who was in the right place at the right time. The question is—who are you really, Elena Blackwood?"

The use of my maiden name sent a chill down my spine. "How do you—"

"I know a lot of things." He reached into his jacket and pulled out something that made my heart stop. The pregnancy test. Still showing those two unmistakable pink lines. "Including the fact that you're carrying a child your husband doesn't know about."

Terror and protective instinct warred in my chest. "Give that back."

"Your face took the worst of it," he continued as if I hadn't spoken, his tone clinical. "The doctors did what they could, but there will be scarring. Significant scarring. Your husband will never recognize you."

I reached up with trembling fingers to touch the bandages covering the right side of my face. The implications of his words began to sink in.

"The baby?" I whispered.

"Safe. For now." He pocketed the pregnancy test and leaned back in his chair. "But that depends entirely on what you decide to do next."

"I don't understand."

His smile was sharp as a blade. "You have two choices, Elena. You can go back to your old life—disfigured, broken, still married to a man who wants you dead. Or..." He paused, letting the word hang in the air like a promise. "You can disappear completely. Become someone new. Someone with the power to destroy the people who destroyed you."

I stared at him, this dangerous stranger who had saved my life and somehow knew my deepest secrets.

"Who are you?" I asked again.

He stood, straightening his suit jacket with practiced precision. "My name is Dante Romano. And I'm offering you something very few people get in this life."

"Which is?"

His dark eyes glittered with something that might have been amusement. Or hunger.

"A chance for revenge."

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After He Called Me Gold Digger I Became His Rival Novel Cover
8.5
I spent three years by Nathan's side. Until the day of his birthday party, when I accidentally overheard his remarks about me from outside the private room: Just a gold digger... A temporary fling until his first love returned from abroad... Little did he know, I am Nyomi Coleman, the heiress of a family far more prestigious than his. Turning away, I dialed my brother's number: "Cassius, I've agreed to the family arrangement." --- It had been three years since I last called my brother. "Cassius, I want to come home." From the other end of the line, my brother, Cassius Bell, detected the tremor in my voice and urgently asked, "What's wrong? Is something going on?" I fought back my tears, took a deep breath, and said, "I was wrong. True feelings can't always be reciprocated. You mentioned introducing me to some friends last time. I'm open to the idea of a date now." Cassius had always disapproved of the Tuckers, thinking them unworthy.
After His Mistress Crashed Into Me, He Asked for My Kidney Novel Cover
8.7
My head throbbed with a dull, heavy rhythm. I opened my eyes to a stark white ceiling. The smell of bleach and rubbing alcohol burned my nose. A heart monitor beeped somewhere to my left, the sound piercing my aching skull. I tried to shift my weight, but a sharp, blinding pain shot through my ribs. I gasped. The memories hit me in a violent rush. The screeching tires. The smell of burning rubber. The silver Porsche crossing the center line and slamming directly into my driver’s side door.
Contract Bride, Eternal Obsession: My Husband Refused To Let Me Go Novel Cover
9.2
Bethany discovered her "true love" was a lie the moment she was sent to another man's bed. Her fiancé and sister had cheated on her and conspired to steal her family's fortune. With nothing left, she struck a deal and entered a contract marriage with a feared man rumored to be ruthless. People were eager to see how long Bethany could survive in this marriage. Determined to take revenge, she expected nothing more than a transaction. But when her sister mocked her for being ruined by some stranger, he calmly said, "That man is me." And when her ex threatened, he gifted her a rare diamond. "My woman deserves the very best." As the contract neared its end, she tried to leave-only for him to pull her close. "I want this contract to last forever."
Contract marriage to my billionaire ex boyfriend's brother  Novel Cover
9.2
Marissa," he said softly, but there was nothing gentle about it. His voice was low, controlled to the point of fracture. "Walk away. Now. Or I won't be able to stop myself." The sound slipped from me before I could cage it-a quiet, helpless moan. I lifted my chin, meeting his gaze. "Don't," I whispered. "Don't stop yourself, Carlton." His last bit of restraint snapped, along with the clasp of my bra
Divorce After His Affair Novel Cover
9.8
The doorbell rang as I was preparing dinner—Brandon's favorite pasta, the one I'd perfected over years of marriage. I wiped my hands on a kitchen towel and headed for the door, expecting the organic produce delivery I'd scheduled. "Mrs. Shaw?" The delivery man balanced a small box in one hand and a tablet in the other. "Special delivery for this address." I frowned. "I didn't order anything." "It's addressed to this residence, ma'am." He handed me the elegantly wrapped box with a cream-colored envelope attached. "Just need your signature." After signing, I examined the package. The wrapping paper was from Cartier—Brandon must have ordered something. Perhaps he remembered our anniversary after all? A flicker of hope warmed my chest.
Escaping The Grasp Of My Billionaire Novel Cover
8.7
Five years ago, I was the invisible scholarship charity case at an elite Manhattan prep school, trying to survive in a sea of trust-fund babies. Arlo Hammond, the untouchable billionaire heir, made sure to completely dismantle my soul. When his wealthy friends asked if he noticed me, his mocking laughter echoed down the hallway. "Are you out of your mind? You seriously think I'd be interested in a boring little nerd like her?" But the moment we were alone, he would corner me in dark alleys, pinning my wrists against brick walls with terrifying, possessive jealousy if my phone even buzzed. He played his twisted games until I was left standing in the rain with my shattered dignity. Now, I am an Assistant District Attorney. I spent years burying those memories under mountains of legal files. But tonight, he returned. When we crossed paths at an exclusive club, he looked at me with the cool detachment he'd give a piece of furniture. In front of a crowd of elites, he coldly declared: "We have absolutely nothing to do with each other anymore." Then he walked away to pick up a supermodel, leaving me trembling from the sheer humiliation. I didn't understand. If I was so worthless to him, why did he still have my birthday tattooed in dark ink on his wrist? Why did he look at me with such raw, painful vulnerability in the shadows? I stared at my pale reflection in the mirror and made a silent vow. I am not that pathetic seventeen-year-old anymore, and I will prove to him that I am completely, entirely over him.