Follow
Chapters
Share
The Dead Woman Who Stole My Husband Was Coming For Me Next Novel Cover

The Dead Woman Who Stole My Husband Was Coming For Me Next

I found out my fiancé was in love with another woman the day she died. Not from him. From her Instagram memorial — 847 strangers grieving a stranger, and my fiancé's comment pinned at the top in a language he swore he didn't speak. "Mon trésor. Je t'attendrai." My treasure. I'll wait for you. Four years together. Four years of "you're the only one, Willow." Four years of him promising he didn't believe in emotional affairs because we "communicated everything." He met her in Aspen in December. A ski lodge. A stranger from Lyon with sad eyes and nowhere to go for Christmas. By February she was in Seattle — "for work," he said. I shook her hand in our kitchen. I saw the way she looked at him. Six days later she was dead. Fell from a lookout in the Cascades. No witnesses. And Ryker? Ryker stopped sleeping. Stopped eating. Started whispering her name in French into his phone at 3 a.m. So I did what any heartbroken fiancée would do. I packed a bag. Told him I needed space. Promised I'd be back when I could "support him through his grief." He cried. He thanked me. He called me his angel. What Ryker doesn't know? I already found her journal in his sock drawer. I already know she wasn't just some tourist. And the man whose name is written on the last page — Caspian Vance, the billionaire who owns half of Seattle — just sent a black car to my sister's house. "Miss Harper. Mr. Vance would like a word about the woman who died. He believes you and he… have the same enemy."
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The coffee had gone cold twenty minutes ago.

I hadn't noticed. I was still holding the mug, both hands wrapped around ceramic that no longer offered any warmth, staring at my phone screen like it might rearrange itself into something that made sense.

It didn't.

*Mon trésor, je t'attendrai.*

Ryker's comment sat there at the top of the memorial post, pinned by likes. Fifteen of them. Fifteen people had pressed a little heart on the most devastating thing I'd ever read, and not one of them knew what I knew.

Last Tuesday, sitting right here at this same kitchen island, I'd asked Ryker if he wanted to send flowers to Elodie Marchand's family. He'd shrugged, poured himself a glass of water, and said, *I wouldn't even know what to write. I barely know French beyond 'bonjour.'*

I set the mug down before I dropped it.

My fingers were already moving, opening the translation app. I already knew what it meant — some buried corner of my brain had caught the shape of the words the moment I'd read them — but I needed the screen to confirm it. I needed something outside my own head to tell me I wasn't misreading this.

*My treasure, I will wait for you.*

The kitchen felt very quiet. Outside, Seattle was doing its usual gray morning thing, low clouds pressing down against the window glass, a bus hissing past on the wet street below. Normal sounds. Normal world. Nothing had changed out there.

Everything had changed in here.

I went to Elodie's profile.

I told myself to be methodical. I told myself not to spiral. I scrolled slowly, the way you do when you're looking for something and terrified you'll find it.

December. A grid of Aspen photos — powder snow, blue sky, that particular golden light that only exists at high altitude. In the third one, Ryker stood behind a woman with dark curly hair and a red ski jacket, his arms looped around her waist, both of them laughing at something off-camera. The kind of photo where no one's performing for the lens. The kind where they've forgotten anyone else exists.

I remembered that day.

I remembered sitting on our couch with takeout going stale on the coffee table, waiting for him to call. He'd finally picked up around nine, his voice slightly thick, and said the guys he'd been skiing with had come down with something. *Food poisoning, probably. I've just been hanging out in the lodge by myself, babe. Kind of a wasted trip.* He'd sounded tired. Lonely, even. I'd felt bad for him.

I kept scrolling.

February. Elodie at the Space Needle, her smile wide, the city spread out silver behind her. The location tag said Seattle. I stared at the date until the numbers stopped looking like numbers.

That week. That exact week. Ryker had told me a client was in town, someone from the Tokyo office who needed hand-holding through a series of dinners and site visits. He'd come home on Friday smelling like rain and restaurant kitchens, kissed me on the cheek, and fallen asleep on the couch with his shoes still on. I'd pulled a blanket over him. I'd thought, *he works so hard.*

The coffee mug was still sitting there. I pushed it away.

She'd been here. She'd been in my city, and he'd been with her, and I had pulled a blanket over him when he came home.

I don't know how long I sat there. Long enough for the gray outside the window to shift into something slightly lighter. Long enough for the sounds of the apartment to start filtering back in — the hum of the refrigerator, a car alarm somewhere distant, and then, from down the hall, the familiar creak of the bedroom floorboards.

I moved fast.

Phone face-down on the counter. Shoulders back. I picked up my cold coffee like it was something I'd been meaning to drink.

"Morning, babe." My voice came out steady. I don't know how.

Ryker appeared in the kitchen doorway. He was shirtless, hair still flattened on one side, eyes carrying that bruised, swollen look he'd had every morning for the past week. He'd cried at the news, actually cried, sitting on the edge of the bed with his face in his hands while I rubbed his back and told him it was okay to grieve. *She was your friend,* I'd said. *Of course it hurts.*

I watched him cross the kitchen. Thirty-one years old, broad-shouldered, the small tattoo on his left forearm that I'd traced with my finger a hundred times. He was the person I knew better than anyone. He was a stranger.

He came up behind me and wrapped his arms around my waist. His face pressed into the curve of my neck, warm breath against my skin, and I felt my whole body go rigid before I forced it to relax.

"Thank you," he murmured. "For being so patient with me this week. You've just—" He exhaled. "You're my angel, Willow. You know that?"

*Mon trésor, je t'attendrai.*

The translation looped through my head on repeat. I made my hand reach up and cover his. I made my fingers squeeze.

"What do you want for breakfast?" I asked.

He lifted his head. Kissed the back of my neck once, soft and absent, the way you kiss someone when you've stopped really seeing them. "I'll just do coffee. You don't have to make anything."

He let go of me and moved to the machine, pulling a mug from the cabinet. His back was to me. His phone was on the counter.

I wasn't going to look at it. I had enough. I had more than enough already, and whatever came next I could figure out from a safe distance, somewhere that wasn't this kitchen, somewhere that wasn't standing three feet from him while my chest felt like it was slowly caving in.

Then the screen lit up.

A message preview. Just long enough to read before it dimmed.

*The French girl's things arrived. Come pick them up. — M*

I stopped breathing.

The French girl.

Elodie Marchand had been dead for eight days. She had died on a mountain in Colorado, in an accident that the news had described as a tragic fall, and Ryker had come home from that same mountain, claimed he'd heard about it from mutual friends, and cried in our bedroom.

And now someone was holding her things. For him. Because apparently he had a right to them.

The coffee machine finished with a soft beep. Ryker reached for his mug without turning around.

I looked at the back of his head. At the familiar slope of his shoulders. At the phone on the counter between us, screen dark again, quiet as a secret.

My hand moved toward it before I could think about whether I wanted to know.

You may also like

Abyss. Novel Cover
9.5
Isabel is a young woman battling the aftermath of a devastating fire that left her orphaned and erased part of her memory. She suffers from trauma-induced panic attacks, especially around fire, and carries her pain in silence. With no clear past and nowhere to call home, she moves to the city in search of work and stability. When she lands a job as a fashion consultant for Giovanni Banderas, a cold, commanding CEO who refuses to fall in love, her world begins to shift. What she doesn’t know is that Giovanni’s father is the very man responsible for the destruction of her family, something Giovanni himself is unaware of. As their connection deepens, old enemies resurface. Lucas (Lulu), a charming friend who turned to a rival with a dark agenda, sets his eyes on Isabel both for love and revenge. The company Isabel works for was built on betrayal, stolen shares, and buried secrets some of which belong to her. With the help of Juan, a police officer and friend, the truth slowly unravels. Loyalties are tested, hearts are broken, and Isabel is forced to confront her trauma, her past, and the fire that never stopped burning. In a world where power hides the darkest sins, can love survive?
I Divorced Him After He Chose Her Nineteen Times Novel Cover
8.1
After five years of marriage, my husband has left me stranded nineteen times for a woman he rescued. The first time, he took off with her because she scraped her knee, leaving me stuck on the roadside for three days. The second time, he claimed the dirt on my clothes triggered her allergies, forcing him to stop the car, abandoning me in a desolate landscape for seven days. ... It seemed that whenever I had a chance to be alone with him, his assistant conveniently fell ill. The nineteenth time he left me behind, I hopped into his rival’s jeep, and that made him furious. --- The jeep arrived at the refugee camp, and Thomas Sullivan led me over, chuckling as he said, "Estelle, it's been almost three years since you’ve been back home, right? I remember this vacation coincides with your fifth wedding anniversary with Dutton. You should make it special." The word "anniversary" only brought bitterness to my heart. Yes, almost three years in the refugee camp without returning home.
Leaving Betrayal for True Love Novel Cover
8.0
The morning light filtered through the stained glass windows of St. Catherine's Cathedral, casting rainbow patterns across the marble floor where I would soon walk down the aisle. My fingers trembled as I touched my mother's pearl necklace, the familiar weight offering little comfort against the knot of anxiety in my stomach. "Emmie, you look absolutely radiant!" Grace Thompson, my maid of honor, beamed as she adjusted my veil. The ivory silk cascaded around my shoulders like a waterfall, but I couldn't shake the feeling that something was wrong. That's when I saw her—Mina Davis gliding through the bridal preparation room with her characteristic feline grace, her honey-blonde hair perfectly styled despite the early hour. She wore a pale pink bridesmaid dress that hugged her curves, but her smile didn't reach her ice-blue eyes. "Oh, Emmie darling, you're going to make such a beautiful bride," Mina cooed, her voice dripping with false sweetness. "I just wanted to help with the final touches. You know how much Jason means to me." I forced a smile, my stomach churning.
Love Outside my Reach Novel Cover
9.1
Jordan was taken aback, his lips parted as he gasped in surprise. Chloe sighed, "Is there any other special cleaning you want in the room aside from the regular one?" she asked coolly. Jordan stared at her in disbelief. Her indifference stung him. Did she just ignore what he was saying? He waited three hours for her the day before. Of course he could never tell her that. He had been mad at himself for having such feelings. Right now, he couldn't be any madder. But the girl just stood there, looking so nonchalant, carefree, unconcerned. His business card was a treasure to anyone else, but she had trashed it. He clenched his jaw. For once, he was at a loss for words. Chloe spoke up, "I will get to work then." She turned to leave. "Hey!" Jordan bellowed. She stopped, frowning. Why was he so angry? "You will get to work, doing what? Telling everyone it wasn't you who made that mess?" he scoffed, "Isn't that what you were about to say to my mother?" Chloe put on a false perplexed look, "But that's the truth. We both know I am not the one at fault. What exactly are you scared of, Mister Cavanaugh? Why should it be a big deal?" "So you are going out there to tell on me?" he gave a low laugh. "No. Not really," Chloe said offhandedly, "I think I have my job back for now, thank you. I will face that and hope you don't play such games with me again." Jordan came closer to her, frowning, "Are you threatening me?". Chloe wanted to place her hands on his broad chest and push him away, he smelled so good, "Threatening you? Hell no, that's not a threat. I was just soliciting for peace. I didn't do anything wrong to you or your family. YOU wronged me, you ought to apologize. But I am not even asking you to". Jordan moved closer, step by step, until her back hit the door. His face hovered inches from hers, his breath warm, his eyes dark and unreadable. Chloe’s heart skipped a beat, as she began to panic. Chloe Carson thought moving to Colorado would bring stability and a chance to rebuild her life. But her new job at the Cavanaugh mansion proves anything but simple, especially with Jordan, the handsome yet infuriating heir whose every word and glance keeps her on edge. As Chloe tries to find her footing, she also faces Niles, her cousin’s crush, whose attraction to her awakens feelings she did not expect. Torn between Niles’s gentle affection and Jordan’s intoxicating pull, Chloe must navigate jealousy, secrets, and emotional traps she never saw coming. As unexpected consequences spiral around her, Chloe will have to decide whose heart she can trust... before it is too late.
Married in 14 Days Novel Cover
9.2
After his father passes away, Darnell becomes the new heir to King Hotels. But his grandfather-who owns shares of the hotels-wants Darnell to marry to earn his (Grandfather's) shares before his death. After her father's death, Sasha and her family are left to deal with the burden he leaves behind-a huge debt owed to loan sharks. Darnell approaches Sasha with a two-month marriage contract for five million dollars-enough to pay off her father's debt and be free from her traditional mother. She accepts. Things are complicated when grandfather doesn't die after two months, and Sasha is being extorted by loan sharks. She and Darnell must stay married for their benefit, despite their lack of affection for each other. Eventually, they fall in love. But drama unfolds when family secrets are exposed, old lovers resurface, and unknown families appear. Darnell and Sasha must decide if their love is worth it all.
Married to my Dad's Billionaire Mafia Friend Novel Cover
8.4
There’s a thin line between desperation and destiny ****** Sophia Jenkins has lived her life in the shadows of hardship. At 23, she juggles multiple jobs, trying to lift her family out of debt while caring for her terminally ill mother. Her only dream is to escape the weight of her broken home and rewrite her family’s fate. But fate had other plans. On her birthday, when relentless debt collectors humiliate her and her father, Sophia’s world shatters—until a mysterious man steps out of a sleek black car, commanding the chaos with nothing but his presence. Leonard Morano. At 40, Leonard is the ruthless head of the Morano mafia empire, a billionaire controlling over a hundred businesses and underground casinos. What no one knows is that he was once Martin Jenkins’ best friend—and the man who silently watched Sophia grow from afar before vanishing when she was fifteen. Now, he’s back. And he’s not offering help. He’s demanding marriage. With the chilling words, “Marry me, and I will smash every obstacle in your way,” Leo pulls her into a world of luxury, power, and deadly secrets. But can Sophia survive the dark underworld Leo rules? Can love truly bloom in the cracks of fear, obligation, and a past that refuses to stay buried?