
The Jilted Ex-Wife's Lethal Comeback
I endured years of humiliation and forced sedatives from my billionaire husband's family, hoping my quiet obedience would eventually win his heart. When I finally discovered I was pregnant, I thought the child would be our anchor.
But when I rushed to his office to tell him, I found his untouchable first love sitting in his chair, rubbing her own swollen belly.
She smiled and whispered that she was the one who orchestrated the car crash that left my adoptive mother in a vegetative state.
When I lunged at her in a blind rage, my husband shielded her and shoved me backward with brutal force. My spine slammed against a marble table, and blood pooled at my feet.
"Kingston, please! I'm pregnant too!" I sobbed, clutching my stomach.
He just looked down at me with profound disgust.
"I had a vasectomy five years ago," he hissed, condemning me as a cheating whore before ordering his men to lock me up and forcibly abort the child.
I had never touched another man. I couldn't understand how the man I loved could order the murder of his own flesh and blood without a second thought.
To save myself, I stole his prized Aston Martin and drove it off a bridge into the freezing Atlantic, letting his pathetic, obedient wife drown in the wreckage.
Five years later, I returned to New York as a powerful European executive, ready to burn his empire to the ground.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 6
The international arrivals hall at JFK's commercial terminal was a chaotic sea of screaming tourists and crying babies.
Pushing through the crowd, completely unnoticed, were two five-year-old children sharing a single mini Rimowa suitcase.
The boy, Juelz, wore a black tech-wear jacket and a baseball cap pulled low. His jaw was set in a tight, serious line. In his small hands, he held a heavily modified, encrypted satellite phone. His thumbs flew across the screen, actively severing the airline's unaccompanied minor tracking signal.
Beside him walked Jaylynn. She wore a vintage, frilly Lolita dress and clutched a ragged teddy bear to her chest. Beneath her oversized pink sunglasses, her face was a terrifyingly exact, miniature replica of Kingston Savage.
"Over here! You little monsters!"
Sloane Donovan, Audrey's fiercely loyal best friend, shoved her way through the crowd. She wore combat boots and a leather jacket, waving a neon green sign.
She dropped to her knees and pulled both kids into a bone-crushing hug.
"I cannot believe you two," Sloane hissed, looking around nervously. "You convinced your mother's head of security to smuggle you onto a private cargo flight? And forged my signature on the pickup manifest? If Audrey finds out I aided and abetted this, she will murder me."
Juelz pushed his sunglasses up his nose. His voice was chillingly calm and entirely too mature. "Mommy came back to New York alone. She is walking into enemy territory. That toxic father of ours is a threat. We are here to provide tactical overwatch."
Jaylynn smiled sweetly. She reached into her little pocket and pulled out a square of artisanal Swiss chocolate, pressing it into Sloane's hand.
"You won't tell Mommy, Auntie Sloane," Jaylynn chirped. "Because you love us."
Sloane groaned, pocketing the chocolate. She grabbed their suitcase. "Get in the car before someone sees your face, Jaylynn. If Kingston catches a glimpse of you, the gig is up."
Sloane shoved them into the back of her armored Land Rover Defender and sped out of the airport.
Sloane's safehouse was a heavily secured, industrial loft in deep Brooklyn.
The second they walked through the steel door, Juelz unzipped the Rimowa suitcase. It wasn't full of clothes. It was a high-powered, portable server rack.
Within three minutes, Juelz had three external monitors hooked up on the kitchen island. Lines of glowing blue code cascaded down the screens.
Jaylynn sat on the rug. She unzipped the back of her teddy bear and pulled out a handful of micro-listening devices and signal jammers, methodically placing them around the loft's perimeter to block any outside surveillance.
Sloane set two mugs of hot milk on the table. "Alright, cyber-terrorist. What's the play?"
Juelz's fingers blurred over the mechanical keyboard. A 3D wireframe model of the Savage Tower security grid spun on the center monitor.
"Step one," Juelz said coldly. "Blind the bastard. He has the best intelligence network in the city. We cut his eyes out so he can't find Mommy."
Juelz hit the enter key, deploying a custom-built polymorphic virus directly into Savage Corp's external firewall.
Inside the Savage Tower cybersecurity center, all hell broke loose.
Red strobe lights flashed. Sirens blared. "WARNING: CRITICAL BREACH" flashed across fifty different monitors.
Max Keller burst into the CEO's office without knocking. Kingston was pacing behind his desk, waiting for the identity of the woman in the photo.
"Sir!" Max yelled over the alarms. "We're under attack! Someone is systematically wiping our core intelligence databases!"
Kingston's face darkened. He shoved Max aside and marched out to the security floor.
He stood behind his lead engineer. On the screen, every search query for "Echo," "JFK private arrivals," and "European Art Director" was being actively deleted in real-time.
Suddenly, the main server screen went pitch black.
A crude, 8-bit pixel animation popped up on the screen. It was a little demon wearing sunglasses. The demon unzipped its pants and urinated directly onto a pixelated image of Kingston's face.
Below the animation, bold white text typed itself out:
System purged. Your firewall is pathetic. Better luck next time, garbage.
Kingston slammed his fist down on the engineer's desk. The coffee mug shattered, sending hot liquid flying.
"Trace the IP!" Kingston roared, the veins in his neck bulging. "I want the location of this hacker right now!"
The engineer's hands shook as he typed. "I can't, sir! The IP is bouncing through forty different proxy servers across Russia, China, and Brazil. It's... it's a ghost."
In the Brooklyn loft, Juelz watched the "Trace Failed" notification pop up on his screen.
He smirked. The expression was a terrifyingly accurate copy of Kingston's own arrogant sneer.
Juelz hit one final key. He permanently corrupted all high-definition CCTV footage along the highway leaving JFK, replacing it with AI-generated loops of empty traffic.
Jaylynn clapped her hands in delight. She pulled up an iPad, scrolling through the guest lists of New York's upcoming high-society galas. "Okay, Juelz. Let's find Mommy a stage."
Back in Savage Tower, the screens flickered back to normal. But the damage was done. Every digital trace of the woman in the photo had been scrubbed from existence.
Kingston stared at the blank screen. His chest he heave.
The fact that she was being protected by a hacker capable of crippling Wall Street's best security only confirmed his suspicions. This wasn't a coincidence.
Kingston turned to Max, his eyes cold and dead.
"If we can't find her online, we find her on the street," Kingston ordered. "Lock down the city. Put men at every luxury hotel, every high-end restaurant. She's breathing my air. Dig up the concrete if you have to. Find her."
You may also like

8.2
Trapped in a deadly fire at my own engagement party, my lungs burned as I reached a shaking hand out to my fiancé for help.
He stopped and looked right at me through the thick smoke. But instead of saving me, he wrapped his jacket tightly around my stepsister and ran, leaving me to burn.
I barely survived. But when I woke up in the hospital, my father and stepmother didn't even ask about my injuries.
They threw a stack of legal documents right onto my bed.
"Sign the papers, Avah. Step aside. Jaclyn is far better suited to be Kain's wife."
My fiancé then stormed into the room, publicly humiliating me with false rumors of an illegitimate child and threatening to bankrupt my company.
Four years of swallowing my pride to be the perfect, obedient pawn for our family business, all for nothing.
They threw me to the wolves without a single second of hesitation, expecting me to just lower my head and cry like I always did.
But the fire had burned that pathetic version of me away.
I ripped out my IV, letting the blood drip onto the sheets, and tore their contracts straight down the middle.
"The engagement is over."
I threw my million-dollar ring right at my ex's chest, then picked up the phone to call my trust lawyer. They wanted to take everything from me, so I was going to make them bleed.

7.9
On my wedding day, my fiancé Connor received an urgent phone call.
He told me a D-list actress had broken her leg on set, then abandoned me right at the altar.
In my past life, I cried until my throat bled, begging him not to leave.
But my tears only brought endless humiliation. My mother and adopted sister mocked me, framed me, and forged my signature to steal my multi-million dollar trust fund.
They kicked me out of the family estate without a single dime.
I ended up freezing to death in the minus-twenty-degree New York blizzard, listening to my mother's voicemail telling me to die in the street as long as I didn't bleed on her carpets.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand why my own blood relatives hated me so much, yet treated an adopted daughter like a precious princess.
The only person who showed me any mercy—draping his wool coat over my frozen corpse and giving me a proper burial—was Connor's ruthless, untouchable uncle, Harding Snow.
Opening my eyes again, I was back in the bridal suite, right as Connor was rushing out the door.
This time, I didn't shed a single tear.
I let him run to his actress, then walked straight into the VIP room to face the most feared billionaire on Wall Street.
"The wedding proceeds as planned, but the groom's name changes to yours."

7.9
Eileen Goff was a nobody, scrubbing diner tables to survive while her greedy family bled her dry.
On the eve of her twentieth birthday, the government's mandatory marriage algorithm matched her with a spouse.
It wasn't a plumber or a teacher. It was Harrison Butler, the ruthless, untouchable billionaire king of Butler Industries.
At the registry, Harrison's glamorous intended fiancée threw a half-million-dollar check at her.
"Take the money, get out of here, and never show your face again."
The registry supervisor even offered her a million dollars to sign a cancellation agreement, trying to erase her from the system.
At their first high-society gala, Harrison's stepmother and the fiancée locked Eileen in an empty room, plotting to humiliate her and prove she was just cheap trash.
Eileen was terrified and confused. Men like Harrison Butler didn't just accept federal matches with girls who smelled like fried onions.
But instead of abandoning her, Harrison smashed the door open, publicly banished his own family, and kissed her in front of the entire city's elite.
Why was this billionaire going to such extreme lengths to protect a complete stranger?
Then she overheard his assistant talking about a marriage clause in his grandfather's trust fund.
He didn't love her; he just needed a powerless, state-mandated wife to lock his parasitic family out of his empire.
Realizing she was a highly valuable pawn, Eileen stopped trembling, looked the billionaire in the eye, and spoke.
"I believe we can have more than just a legal relationship. We can have a business arrangement."

9.4
I was the eldest daughter of the powerful Kirk family, sent away to a Swiss sanatorium to recover from my supposed mental illness.
But my stepmother, Johnie, never intended for me to get better. She sent her personal cleaners to drag me onto a plane back to Washington D.C.
In my past life, I didn't know they were assassins. I was forcefully injected with heavy sedatives and locked in a secret torture chamber inside our luxury estate.
My stepmother and cousin skimmed my inheritance while watching me suffer.
They framed me as a crazy addict, and my own father, a sitting Senator, turned a blind eye to protect his political career.
"Her political value is gone, just get rid of her quietly."
That was the last thing I heard my father say before I was brutally slaughtered by my own family.
Until my last breath, I couldn't understand why they hated me so much.
Why did my father let them force those pills down my throat?
Why was my life worth less than my stepmother's public image?
Opening my eyes again, the freezing sensation of lake water filling my lungs vanished.
I was back in the VIP room of the St. Moritz Sanatorium in 2023.
It was the exact morning before the cleaners walked through my door with uncapped syringes.
This time, I wouldn't just survive. I was going to cut the throat of the Kirk family.

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.

7.1
Bonnie Galvan woke up to the suffocating scent of lilies, staring at the mirror in the exact same seven-figure wedding dress she had worn seven years ago.
In the doorway stood her so-called best friend Itzel and her secret lover Erwin, desperately urging her to elope.
They warned her that her soon-to-be husband, the billionaire Arlington Townsend, was a crippled monster, and marrying him would ruin her life forever.
In her previous life, she blindly believed their lies and ran away from the altar.
Because of her public betrayal, the ruthless Townsend family completely bankrupted her father's company in retaliation.
Erwin and Itzel swooped in as her saviors, only to steal whatever was left of her family's wealth and power.
When she was finally stripped of her value, Erwin pushed her down an icy mountain slope during a brutal blizzard.
With a shattered ankle, she could only watch as Itzel smirked and Erwin coldly walked away, leaving her to be buried alive under the freezing snow.
As her lungs burned and her heart gave out in the agonizing cold, she was consumed by hatred.
Why did the man who swore to protect her and the friend she trusted with her life plot so meticulously to destroy her?
Opening her eyes again, Bonnie was back in the bridal suite, minutes before the ceremony.
This time, she didn't run.
She walked straight down the aisle, looked the terrifying Arlington Townsend in the eye, and firmly said her vows.
"I do."