
The Dead Wife's Spectacular Secret Return
Five years ago, I faked my death in a yacht explosion just to escape my ruthless, controlling husband, Gerald Sinclair. Now, I have returned to Boston as the new Dean of Medicine at St. Jude Hospital.
My only goal was to secretly check on my seven-year-old daughter, Cassidy. But what I saw shattered my heart. She was locked inside a heavily guarded VIP suite like a prisoner, so psychologically broken that she was standing on a windowsill, ready to jump.
Gerald's armed security team treated the hospital like a military base, forcing her to swallow heavy psychiatric pills. When she managed to escape through the air ducts and collapsed into my arms in the courtyard, her small, feverish body trembled violently.
"No! I don't want to go back to the white room!"
She begged me, crying in terror. But because my identity was a secret, I could only watch helplessly as Gerald's security chief tore my own child from my embrace and locked her back in the cage.
I didn't understand why Gerald would rather destroy our daughter's mind than let us go. Was his twisted obsession and need for control worth driving his own flesh and blood to the brink of death?
Now, my cover is blown. Gerald just received the message that I am alive, and he is flying back in a blind rage, freezing my accounts and locking down the entire city to trap me.
But he forgot one thing. I am no longer the helpless wife he backed into a corner. This time, I am taking my daughter back.
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Chapter 1
The heavy tires of the black Lincoln Navigator crushed the dry autumn leaves against the pavement. The SUV came to a harsh stop outside the main entrance of St. Jude Medical Center.
A valet in a red uniform rushed forward and pulled the door handle. It did not budge. The internal lock held firm.
Inside the quiet cabin, Catherine Clarke stared at the frosted glass of the hospital doors. Her lungs felt tight, as if someone had wrapped a leather belt around her chest and pulled it to the last notch. She pressed her thumb hard against the knuckle of her index finger, digging the nail in until a sharp pain grounded her.
She shoved the heavy door open. The biting Boston wind hit her face, smelling of exhaust fumes and damp earth. It was the smell of the city she had run away from.
Catherine stepped onto the beige tiles of the emergency drop-off zone. Her black heels clicked sharply against the ground.
A blaring siren drowned out the sound of her footsteps.
Two paramedics sprinted past her, pushing a blood-soaked stretcher. The wheels hit a puddle of muddy water, sending a spray of dirty liquid straight toward her beige trench coat.
Catherine shifted her weight and took a precise step back. The mud missed her by an inch.
Her eyes locked onto the patient on the stretcher. Bright red blood pulsed from a wound on the man's neck, shooting upward in a steady, terrifying rhythm.
The ER doctor on duty rushed to the stretcher. He grabbed a wad of gauze and slammed it against the neck, but the arterial pressure was immense. The gauze was instantly soaked, slipping on the slick blood as he struggled to locate the exact point of the rupture in the chaotic pulsing. Another spray of red hit the screen of the defibrillator nearby.
Catherine pulled her arms out of her trench coat and tossed it backward. The valet caught it.
She crossed the yellow emergency line.
"Ma'am, you can't be back here!" a charge nurse yelled, stepping in front of her with her arms out.
Catherine did not stop. She locked eyes with the nurse. Her stare was dead and freezing cold. The nurse froze, her arms dropping slightly.
Catherine stepped around her and reached the operating table. She snatched the hemostat right out of the ER doctor's trembling hand.
She did not hesitate. She pushed her bare fingers into the torn, slippery flesh of the neck wound. She found the pulsing artery by touch, clamped the hemostat down hard, and locked it.
The bleeding stopped instantly.
The ER doctor stared at her, his mouth hanging open. "Who the hell are you?" he stammered.
"You are losing the angle because the pressure is blinding the field," Catherine said. Her voice was flat and carried a distinct, clipped French accent. "Clamp the proximal end first before he bleeds out."
Eleanor Thorne, an administrative assistant, pushed through the crowd of stunned nurses. She was hugging a tablet to her chest and breathing hard. She saw Catherine standing over the bloodied table.
Catherine handed the hemostat back to the doctor. She took a sterile towel from a tray and slowly wiped the thick blood from her fingers.
"Everyone," Eleanor said, her voice squeaking. "This is Dr. Clarke. The new Dean of Medicine. From Europe."
The air in the trauma bay vanished. The medical staff stood completely still.
Catherine tossed the bloody towel into a red biohazard bin. She looked at the silent room.
"I want the head of the ER in my office in ten minutes," Catherine said.
She turned and walked toward the private elevators. Eleanor jogged to keep up with her, quickly retrieving the beige trench coat from the valet and draping it securely over her own arm as she followed. The elevator doors slid shut, cutting off the noise of the emergency room.
The elevator chimed and opened on the top floor. Catherine stepped out. She looked at the oil paintings of past deans lining the walls. Her eyes stopped for a fraction of a second on a blank space near the end, then moved on.
Eleanor pushed open the heavy mahogany double doors. "This is your office, Dr. Clarke. You have a great view of the Boston skyline."
Catherine walked straight to the massive floor-to-ceiling window. She looked down at the city. Her jaw was locked so tight her teeth ached.
Eleanor stood by the desk and read from her tablet. "Here is your schedule. Also, I should mention the VIP wing. We have a very special patient staying with us. The security is extremely tight."
Catherine's finger stopped moving on the edge of the desk. The sharp edge of the wood dug into her skin, leaving a white line.
"What is the patient's last name?" Catherine asked. She kept her voice perfectly level.
Eleanor lowered her voice to a whisper. "Sinclair. The Sinclair family. Their security team treats this hospital like a military base."
Catherine's heart slammed against her ribs. It beat so fast it made her dizzy.
She closed the file folder on her desk. "Cancel all my non-essential meetings for the morning."
Eleanor looked confused. "But the board members are waiting to meet you."
Catherine raised a hand, stopping her. "I need to review the financial reports. Now. Please leave."
Eleanor nodded quickly and hurried out of the room.
Catherine waited. She heard the heavy wooden door shut. She heard the metal lock click into place.
The mask shattered.
Catherine slumped against the edge of the desk. She gasped for air, her chest heaving. Her legs felt like water.
She stumbled around the desk and pulled open the bottom drawer. Her hands were shaking so badly she could barely grip the handle. She reached into a hidden compartment at the very back.
Her fingers found the cold metal of an old silver pocket watch.
She pulled it out and pressed the latch. The cover popped open. Inside was a faded, yellowed photograph of a newborn baby.
Catherine traced the baby's cheek with her trembling thumb. A hot tear fell from her eye and hit the glass of the watch face. It blurred the baby's smile.
On the desk, the red light of the internal VIP security phone began to flash. A loud, piercing ring shattered the silence of the office. Catherine jumped, snapping the watch shut.
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8.9
I returned to New York for my welcome-home party, expecting a warm embrace from Edwin, my devoted fiancé of twenty years.
Instead, his first words to me were a cold, public warning to stay away from his new girlfriend, Kacy.
He stood in my family's hotel, shielding a girl I had never even met, and painted me as a vicious, jealous bully.
"She is very sensitive, Kaitlyn. Her background is tough. Please, be gentle with her. Don't upset her."
He humiliated me in front of our entire elite circle, allowing them to mock me as the aggressive, discarded ex while he carried her away like a fragile princess.
For twenty years, I had been his loyal shadow, fixing his mistakes and loving him unconditionally.
I couldn't understand how decades of deep devotion could be instantly erased by a few crocodile tears and a manipulative damsel act.
He was absolutely certain I would throw a tantrum, cry, and eventually crawl back to beg for his attention.
But he was wrong.
He didn't know that Everett Rowe, a billionaire tech mogul, had been patiently waiting five years to marry me.
He also didn't know that during my three years abroad, I wasn't just studying art—I became "K.B.", the ruthless Wall Street predator who could swallow his family's empire whole.
I calmly pulled out my phone, ignored the mocking whispers around me, and typed a single message to Everett.
"Yes. I'll marry you."

8.2
I went to a private clinic for a routine physical, only to find out I was pregnant.
It was impossible. I took my birth control every single day. But when the doctor tested my pills, they turned out to be high-purity vitamin placebos. My billionaire husband, Denton, had been systematically replacing my medication.
Yet, on our anniversary, he brought my sister Beverly home, demanding a divorce so he could marry her. When I refused to sign a settlement that left me with nothing, he froze my accounts and blacklisted me across New York.
My own father disowned me. When an old friend offered me a job just so I could afford prenatal care, Denton launched a ruthless financial attack to bankrupt his firm.
Then, Beverly got into a car crash. Denton's bodyguards dragged me off the street and forced me into a hospital trauma room. Beverly was hemorrhaging, and I was the only blood match.
I cried and begged Denton to stop, desperately trying to protect my fragile pregnancy without exposing my baby to the monster who controlled my life.
"Please, my body can't handle this. Don't do this to me!"
But he just looked at me with pure disgust and ordered his men to strap me to the chair, forcing the needle into my vein while threatening to kill me if his mistress died.
As I dragged my bleeding, cramping body out of the hospital into the freezing snow, my last shred of hope died.
I touched my stomach and made a vow: I would disappear, and I would make them all pay.

9.5
Blaire's mother gave her a ruthless ultimatum: find a husband today, or never call her mother again.
Desperate to escape the suffocating control and disastrous blind dates, Blaire agreed to a fake marriage with a stranger she met through an old woman.
She thought she was marrying a dirt-poor salesman drowning in mortgage debt.
They lived in a rundown Queens apartment and split the living expenses fifty-fifty.
He drove a sputtering Toyota Camry, established extreme territorial rules, and treated her like a gold-digging biohazard.
When she accidentally tripped and spilled hot soup on him, he didn't help her up, instead accusing her of using pathetic tricks to seduce him.
Her own mother even crashed their apartment, ruthlessly mocking his pathetic financial state and calling him a total loser.
Blaire endured his coldness and extreme germaphobia, genuinely pitying him for his stressful, low-paying job.
She refunded his money and defended his dignity, refusing to take advantage of a struggling man.
But she couldn't understand why this supposedly broke guy possessed such a lethal, commanding aura, or why an incredibly expensive cashmere blanket mysteriously appeared on her when she was freezing on the couch.
Until her brother called with a shocking warning.
"Blaire, the name on your marriage certificate belongs to the notoriously secretive billionaire CEO of New York's top financial syndicate!"
Blaire laughed out loud, completely unaware that behind the bedroom door, her "broke" husband was frantically ordering his PR team to bury his true identity.

7.1
I was the top commander of a black-ops military program. After slaughtering my way through a hellish mission, I reached the extraction helicopter, trusting my second-in-command to watch my back.
But the moment our hands locked, he didn't pull me up. Instead, he plunged a syringe of lethal neurotoxin directly into my neck.
He aimed his gun at my chest, coldly stating that I was too dangerous to live. My lungs stopped, and I died in a pool of my own blood. But the endless blackness suddenly shattered. My consciousness violently forced its way into a new, broken shell. I woke up in a freezing alley, soaked in muddy rain.
This body belonged to seventeen-year-old Eliza Wyatt. A massive wave of foreign memories crashed into my brain. Her own younger sister had just stood at the top of the stairs with a mocking smile, watching street thugs beat Eliza to death.
"Take good care of the Wyatt family's eldest daughter. Tonight is the night she finally disappears."
The endless humiliation, the cold stares of her family, and the brutal betrayal by her own blood flashed before my eyes. Why was this fragile girl treated like garbage and pushed to her death by the very people who should have protected her?
I looked down at my pale, trembling hands. The top commander was dead, but in this bleeding shell, Eliza Wyatt was very much alive. I picked up a switchblade from the bloody puddle and stood up in the storm. It was time to hunt.

7.0
Erika was a disgraced ex-wife, struggling to survive in a freezing Brooklyn slum to raise her five-year-old son.
But her billionaire ex-husband, Doyle Morgan, wasn't done destroying her. He orchestrated a cruel trap, forcing her to deliver a custom sapphire brooch to his new mistress, just to watch her get humiliated and severely burned by scalding coffee.
When Erika fought back and refused to beg, Doyle's punishment was swift. He demoted her to scrubbing executive toilets with raw, bleeding hands. Starved, exhausted, and pushed to the absolute brink of organ failure, she finally collapsed lifelessly in front of him in Central Park.
For five years, she had endured his relentless torment and the world's mockery just to keep her child safe. Doyle despised her, convinced her son was the filthy proof of her cheating with another man.
He didn't know the boy was actually the child of his deceased older brother, conceived in a dark, drugged hotel room. Why couldn't he just leave them alone to suffer in peace?
But when Erika woke up in the VIP hospital ward, the nightmare took a terrifying turn. Doyle pinned her weak wrists to the mattress, his eyes burning with a dark, possessive obsession. He had figured out the truth about the boy's bloodline.
"He's a Morgan. He has my family's blood in his veins, and I will not allow my nephew to be raised in a slum. If you can't care for him, I will. From this moment on, you and that boy belong to me. And you are never leaving my sight again."

8.7
I was dying in a cold hospital bed, listening to the monitor count down my final seconds.
As a ghost, I watched my own funeral. My popular friends and wealthy family soon moved on, but one person stayed.
Cas Riley. The invisible outcast from the back of my history class.
He brought a white rose to my grave every single day, withering away until he collapsed on the frozen ground, dying of a broken heart for a girl who barely knew his name.
Opening my eyes again, the hospital smell was gone. I was reborn back in my high school classroom.
I immediately tracked him down, only to witness the brutal hell he was trapped in.
He was humiliated by a cruel foreman for pennies, violently slapped by his uncle over his sick mother's medical money, and forced into bloody street fights.
He was starving, covered in bruises, and completely alone.
When I tried to buy him medicine and step into his life to protect him, he violently pushed me away in the pouring rain.
"Stay out of my life! To protect you, I have to fight, and when I fight, I lose everything!"
He wasn't rejecting me out of hate. He was terrified that his dark, violent reality would drag me down with him.
Standing soaked in the rain, my resolve hardened like steel.
Gentle kindness wasn't going to save him from this hell.
To protect the boy who died for me, I had to become ruthless enough to tear down his entire rotten world and build him a new one.