
The divorce he never saw coming
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"Sign the papers and leave. My true love is coming home, and this house no longer has room for a placeholder like you."
For three years, Lia Leighton was the perfect, invisible wife to Julian Cohen-the cold-blooded titan of the Port Harcourt business world. She was the one who nursed his wounds, managed his scandals, and endured his family's cruelty, all while he treated her like a piece of furniture he'd forgotten he bought.
But on their third anniversary, instead of a celebration, Julian hands her a cold ultimatum. His "White Moonlight"-the woman who broke his heart years ago-has returned, and Lia is being discarded like yesterday's news.
Julian expects Lia to beg. He expects her to cry for the meager settlement he's tossed at her feet. After all, she's just a penniless orphan he rescued from the gutter... right?
He couldn't be more wrong.
Without a single tear, Lia signs the papers, leaves her wedding ring in the dust, and vanishes.
When she resurfaces, she isn't the quiet wallflower Julian threw away. She is the glamorous, untouchable CEO of the Leighton Global Empire-the very woman who now holds Julian's entire financial future in her hands.
As Julian's world begins to crumble, he realizes too late that he didn't just lose a wife; he lost the most powerful woman in the city. But when he finally falls to his knees to beg for mercy, Lia only offers a cold, devastating smile.
"Mr. Cohen, I don't negotiate with exes. Stay in your lane."
The divorce he never saw coming Chapter 1
The air in the law firm of Fitzroy & Associates was chilled to a precise, unforgiving temperature. It was the kind of cold that seeped through fabric and settled in the marrow of your bones the kind of cold Julian Cohen loved.
I sat across from Lewis Fitzroy, my fingers trembling as I smoothed the crisp, white edges of the document on his mahogany desk. For three years, I had been the ghost in the penthouse, the woman who kept the bed warm and the coffee hot, only to be looked past as if I were made of glass.
"Are you certain, Lia?" Lewis asked, his voice low with a hint of something that sounded like pity. "Julian is the most ruthless divorce lawyer in this city. If he finds out you're using his own colleague to file behind his back..."
"He won't find out," I interrupted, my voice surprisingly steady. "To find out, he would have to look at me. And Julian hasn't truly looked at me since the day we said 'I do.'"
The memory of our wedding day flashed through my mind like a jagged piece of film. It hadn't been a grand affair. It was a cold, rainy Tuesday at the courthouse. Julian had looked at his watch three times during the ceremony. I had thought he was just busy. I didn't know then that he was timing how long it would take for him to legally replace the woman he actually wanted.
I signed my name. Lia Leighton. I didn't use his last name. I hadn't used it in my heart for months.
"The 30-day cooling-off period starts the moment he signs the acknowledgment of service," Lewis explained, sliding the folder toward me. "But Lia, he's a hawk. He reads every line of every contract. How do you expect to get his signature without him realizing he's signing his own death warrant?"
I tucked the folder into my bag, a bitter smile touching my lips. "Julian isn't a hawk when it comes to me, Lewis. When it comes to me, he's blind."
I walked out of the office and straight into the lobby. My heart performed a violent somersault.
Standing by the elevators was Julian.
He was striking infuriatingly so. His charcoal suit was tailored to perfection, his dark hair swept back with practiced precision. He was mid-sentence, laughing at something a junior associate had said. It was a rare, genuine laugh the kind he never brought home to our dinner table.
"Lia?"
His laughter vanished the moment his eyes landed on me. The warmth left his face, replaced by that familiar, unreadable gaze that always made me feel like an intruder in his world.
"What are you doing here?" he asked, stepping toward me. He didn't lean in to kiss me. He didn't even touch my arm. He stood exactly two feet away, maintaining the distance he had guarded for three years.
"I had a consultation," I said, my hand tightening on the strap of my bag. My stomach began to churn. I hadn't eaten since yesterday. The spicy noodles Julian had brought home the night before sat untouched in the trash, but the mere smell of them on his clothes was enough to trigger my gastritis.
He frowned, his eyes scanning the lobby. "In this building? You know I don't like my personal life mixing with my professional territory, Lia. If you needed legal advice, you should have called my secretary."
"It's just some property paperwork," I lied, the words tasting like ash. "Actually, I have it right here. It's for that transfer we discussed last month. I need your signature so I can finalize the filing today."
I saw the flicker of annoyance in his eyes. He hated being interrupted. He hated "domestic chores."
"Now? I'm in the middle of a case, Lia."
"It will take five seconds, Julian. Just the last page."
I pulled out the document, my heart hammering against my ribs so hard I was sure he could see my chest vibrating. I flipped straight to the signature line, pressing the paper flat against the high marble counter of the reception desk. I handed him my pen.
Julian took it, his fingers brushing mine. For a second, his gaze lingered on my face. A tiny, foolish part of me the part that had loved him since college hoped he would see the sadness in my eyes. I hoped he would ask, 'Lia, why are your hands shaking?'
Instead, a bell chimed. The elevator doors slid open.
"Jules? Are we ready?"
The voice was like silk. Elizabeth Osborne stepped out of the elevator, a vision in cream silk and diamonds. She looked radiant. She looked like a woman who had just shed the weight of an unhappy marriage and was ready to reclaim her throne.
Julian's entire demeanor changed in an instant. The tension in his shoulders vanished. The coldness in his eyes melted into a soft, yearning glow that I had prayed for every night for three years. He forgot I was standing there. He forgot the pen in his hand. He forgot everything except the woman walking toward him.
"Elizabeth," he breathed. "You're early."
"I couldn't wait," she said, her eyes flitting to me for a brief, dismissive second. "Who's this?"
"A client," Julian said shortly.
The word felt like a physical blow to my stomach. A client. Not his wife. Not the woman who had nursed him through the flu. Just a client.
He didn't even look at the paper. He scribbled his name that famous, arrogant signature that had ended hundreds of marriages on the line I provided.
"There," he said, handing the pen back without looking at me. "Go home, Lia. Don't wait up for dinner. I'm taking Elizabeth out to celebrate her... news."
He turned his back on me before I could even reply. He moved toward her, his hand reaching out to steady her elbow as if she were the most fragile, precious thing in the world.
I stood there, the signed divorce papers clutched to my chest. I watched them walk toward the exit, their heads bent close together, sharing a world I was never invited into.
"I'm here for a divorce," I whispered to the empty lobby.
The weight in my chest, which had felt like lead for three years, suddenly shifted. It didn't disappear the pain was still there, sharp and jagged but beneath it, a new spark flickered.
Julian Cohen, the man who never lost, had just lost the only thing that was truly his. And he was too busy chasing a ghost to realize his reality had just walked out the door.
I walked out of the building and into the bright afternoon sun. For the first time in a long time, I didn't go to the grocery store to buy the food he liked. I didn't go home to wait for a phone call that wouldn't come.
I walked to the nearest trash can, pulled out the bag of spicy snacks he had forced on me the night before, and dropped them inside.
"Goodbye, Julian," I said, my voice caught in the wind.
I had thirty days. Thirty days to vanish. Thirty days to find the girl I was before I let Julian Cohen turn me into a shadow.
The clock was ticking, and for once, I wasn't the one waiting.
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The divorce he never saw coming of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5Chapter 6 Ch. 6
Chapter 7 Ch. 7
Chapter 8 Ch. 8
Chapter 9 Ch. 9
Chapter 10 Ch. 10
Chapter 11 Ch. 11
All Chapters all
New Release Novels

8.6
In my past life, the Cerberus strain leaked, turning the world into a blood-soaked hell of rotting flesh and mutated monsters.
I thought my boyfriend Declan and my best friend Hailee would have my back as we fled the quarantine zone.
Instead, when the surging crowd of the infected cornered us, they didn't hesitate.
They shoved me backward into the horde just to buy themselves three seconds to run.
As I fell into the mud, I saw them fleeing without a single backward glance.
"She's dead weight anyway!" Hailee screamed.
"Just keep running, she'll distract them!" Declan yelled back.
I was torn apart, feeling the agonizing tear of rotting teeth sinking into my neck and the hot spray of my own blood.
Before the apocalypse, my greedy uncle had locked away my ten-million-dollar trust fund, leaving me with nothing but a fake boyfriend who only wanted me for my money.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand how the people I loved most could trade my life for a head start.
Why did I blindly trust them? Why didn't I see through their perfectly choreographed lies?
Opening my eyes again, the stench of decaying flesh vanished, replaced by the sterile smell of my college dorm room.
Hailee and Declan were standing over my bed, faking tears of concern over my meningitis fever.
I was back exactly seven days before the world ended, and my spatial vault ability had come back with me.
This time, I'm extorting my uncle for every cent, hoarding the city's supplies, and leaving them all to rot.

9.1
June woke up transmigrated into the body of a ruthless billionaire's toxic, disposable wife.
Before she could even process the massive Beverly Hills mansion, a cold system voice announced she had exactly five minutes of lifespan remaining.
To survive, she was forced to bind with the system and strictly maintain the original owner's "brainless, abusive drama queen" persona to earn hours to live.
She was forced to violently slap hot coffee out of a terrified maid's hands and physically spank her manipulative five-year-old stepson.
When she tried to escape this nightmare by throwing divorce papers at her terrifying husband, Isaac Walton, he simply ripped them to shreds.
Every time she tried to be reasonable or show a hint of kindness, the system tortured her with agonizing cardiac pain, cementing her status as the most hated monster in the family.
The most absurd part happened when she threw a hysterical, system-mandated tantrum over a gossip magazine, and Isaac's icy demeanor suddenly melted.
He gently touched her hair, offering the one thing she desperately needed.
"Stop crying. I'll handle it."
Just as a spark of hope ignited in her chest, the system's critical death warning exploded in her skull: accepting his sympathy would instantly deduct thirty days of her life.
To stay alive, June had no choice but to violently slap away the only hand reaching out to save her, forcing herself to play the greedy villain while her husband's gaze turned dangerously dark.

7.4
I was only fifteen when my venomous family orchestrated my doom by forcing me into an arranged marriage with mafia heir Javier Velasquez.
On our wedding night, Javier paraded strippers into our suite to show his absolute contempt, turning me into the ultimate joke of the underworld overnight.
But being a joke was a luxury compared to what came next.
Three years later, Javier needed to be a widower to marry into a heavily armed family and secure their backing for a coup.
He didn't grant me the mercy of a bullet.
Instead, he dragged me to an abandoned underground safehouse, locked me in the damp, rotting dark, and told the world I had been assassinated.
For six months, I starved in that dungeon, surviving only on the desperate hope that my family was safe.
Then, on the day of his lavish new wedding, a cruel maid kicked a plate of spoiled food onto my floor and delivered the final, fatal blow.
"Annabel is dead. Pined away and died of a broken heart two weeks ago."
My gentle mother was dead, all because she actually believed his lie about my tragic murder.
Driven by pure agony and an all-consuming hatred, I shattered crates of smuggled chemical solvents and struck a match, letting the roaring inferno turn their bloody wedding into my funeral pyre.
I thought the fire was the end.
But when I opened my eyes, the suffocating smoke vanished, replaced by the biting chill of a Long Island winter.
I was standing in the snow, back on the exact day my descent into hell began.
This time, the terrified girl was dead, and I would use their own ruthless rules to tear their empire apart.

9.5
Frances survived a horrific car crash, only to return to a suffocating life. Her wealthy husband, Baron, and his domineering mother were now relentlessly pressuring her to adopt a "poor, distant relative" named Jagger as the heir to their billionaire empire.
But on her way to sign the adoption papers, a violent vision flashed in her mind. The crash wasn't an accident. She saw her car in flames, while Baron watched with cold, calculating eyes. Beside him stood an older Jagger, who calmly muttered the chilling truth.
"The problem is solved."
A private investigator soon confirmed her worst nightmares. Jagger wasn't a charity case; he was Baron's illegitimate son. The family had been illegally funneling offshore money to fund his elite lifestyle. Worse, Baron's ultimate plan was to label Frances mentally unstable, lock her away in a Swiss sanatorium for life, and bring in Jagger's biological mother to take her place.
For years, Frances had played the perfect, obedient wife in their corporate marriage contract. How could they be so ruthlessly evil, plotting her agonizing death just to legitimize their dirty bloodline and steal her trust fund?
But she was no longer the fragile puppet they thought she was. At the high-stakes board meeting, with all eyes expecting her to submit, she put the expensive pen down.
"I refuse."
Instead of adopting their bastard son, she slammed down an SEC whistleblower threat, forced a new will, and introduced her own handpicked heir. The war had just begun.

8.2
In our beast world, females are treated as nothing more than precious breeding stock to keep the pack strong. As the pack's best Mender, I spent all my time focusing on my healing herbs, completely ignoring my maturity ritual.
But tonight, the blind pack elder grabbed my wrist and delivered a chilling ultimatum.
If I don't choose my mates by the next Full Moon, the Council of Elders will force a match and assign them to me.
The threat is already suffocating. Arrogant, elite warriors like Caleb Quinn are pacing outside my door like starving wolves, stalking my porch and using pack business to corner me. At home, the reality of multiple mates is even worse. My mother has two mates—my father, the strongest Alpha, and my cold, intellectual step-father. Their toxic, murderous jealousy turns our house into a daily war zone. They literally unleash suffocating killing intent on innocent cubs just for hugging my mother.
I am disgusted by this sick, possessive obsession. I refuse to let my life become a battlefield of jealous males fighting over who gets to guard my door, and I absolutely refuse to be forced into a harem by the Elders.
So, I made a declaration that shocked my entire family and broke every pack tradition.
"I will only ever take one mate."
And to make sure none of those predatory warriors can touch me, I set an impossible trap.
"Whoever wants me must defeat my father first."

7.5
After spending five grueling years securing the Madden Pack's empire, I thought my Alpha mate and I were finally building a perfect family.
But on my birthday, I returned home to find a thick, impenetrable wall of ice in our Mate bond.
Caden had completely shut me out to throw a lavish party for my half-sister, Adalynn.
He let Adalynn pollute our penthouse with her cheap perfume and brainwash my five-year-old daughter, Elara.
"Auntie Adalynn is a million times better than Mommy!"
Elara chirped happily to a camera, while Caden watched with a doting smile.
He publicly humiliated me, commanded the servants to ignore me, and deliberately fed Elara severe allergens just to spite my maternal rules.
When my pup ended up in the pack hospital gasping for air, Caden confiscated her tablet and roared at her to stop crying for the mother who "abandoned" her.
My heart shattered into a million irreparable pieces.
I couldn't understand how the man destined to protect my soul could twist my love into cruelty and use our helpless cub as a punching bag for his ego.
But the weeping, pathetic Luna died right there.
I calmly signed the divorce papers, surrendered all my assets, and walked out into the cold night.
Opening my encrypted laptop, I reclaimed my hidden identity as the global elite hacker "Ghost" and initiated a lethal protocol.
It was time to burn his entire world to the ground.











