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The Jilted Wife Is A Secret Heiress Novel Cover

The Jilted Wife Is A Secret Heiress

The Wellington beef sat cold on the mahogany table, a graying monument to three years of wasted devotion. It was my birthday and our anniversary, but my husband, Hamilton McKee, didn't even look at the gift I’d spent months knitting. "Our marriage is a transaction," he said, his voice cutting like a scalpel. "Stop trying to make it a romance novel. I just need you to stop existing in my space for five minutes." Then his phone buzzed with a call from Cuba, the ex-girlfriend he never truly left. His cold mask shattered into frantic concern, a look he had never once given me. "I'm coming," he whispered to her, sprinting for the door without a backward glance at the wife he was leaving behind. I chased him into the freezing Boston night, only to be swarmed by predatory paparazzi. As Hamilton’s Maybach roared away, a heavy camera bag slammed into my shoulder. I slipped on the black ice, my skull hitting a granite gate pillar with a sickening crack. Warm blood trickled down my neck, and as the world tilted, the fog in my brain finally cleared. I wasn't the penniless orphan from Southie he thought I was. Images of sterile operating rooms, complex sutures, and a billion-dollar inheritance flooded back—along with the memory of the car wreck three years ago where I was the one who pulled Hamilton from the flames, not Cuba. How could I have spent three years begging for scraps of affection from a man who didn't even recognize his own savior? Why did I let a fraud steal my life while I played the role of a submissive shadow? When I woke up in the hospital, the trembling girl was gone. I ripped the IV from my arm and stared at the man who had come back only to demand I stay out of his way. I didn't cry. I didn't beg. I simply handed him a piece of paper with one word written in the sharp, confident script of a woman who owned half the city: DIVORCE. "Sign it, Hamilton," I said, my voice like ice. "Because by tomorrow, I’m not just leaving you—I’m taking the McKee empire with me."
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Chapter 1

The Wellington steak sat in the center of the mahogany dining table, cold, gray, a monument to wasted time.

Isabella reached out and adjusted the plate for the tenth time. Her fingertips brushed the porcelain, , and they were trembling slightly. She aligned the silver fork until it was perfectly parallel with the knife.

The old grandfather clock in the hallway chimed. The sound was heavy, penetrating the floors of the Beacon Hill mansion. Midnight had come.

The day was over. Her birthday was over.

Isabella withdrew her hand and tucked a stray strand of hair behind her ear. The silence inside the house was suffocating. It wasn't just quiet; it was a dense, physical weight pressing against her chest, making it hard to breathe.

She looked down at her attire. A simple cotton dress, bought three years ago at a discount store in Southie. It was soft, worn, and utterly out of place in this room that smelled of beeswax and old money.

The sharp beep of the front door's fingerprint lock broke the silence.

Isabella stood up immediately. The chair scraped against the floor with an unpleasant screech, making her frown. She smoothed the wrinkles from her dress. Her heart hammered inside her ribcage like a trapped bird.

Hamilton walked into the dining room.

He brought the cold wind with him. He wore a dark wool coat worth more than the house she'd grown up in. His jaw was tight, his eyes scanning the room without really seeing it. Or seeing her.

A scent clung to him. Not the crisp winter air. Vanilla and expensive musk.

Cuba's perfume.

Isabella swallowed, her throat tightening. She reached for the small gift box on the side table. Inside was a scarf she had spent two months knitting. Cashmere, soft gray, meant to match his eyes.

"Hamilton," she said. Her voice was thin, almost a whisper. "I waited."

Hamilton didn't look at her. He walked straight to the crystal decanter on the sideboard. Amber liquid splashed into a glass. He drank it in one gulp, the motion sharp and angry.

"I don't need a welcome committee, Isabella," he said with his back to her. "And I don't need a gift. I just need you to stay out of my space for five minutes."

Isabella took a step forward, clutching the box tightly. "It's... the third year. Our anniversary. And my birthday."

Hamilton turned around.

His face was a mask of exhaustion and disdain. He looked at her as if she were a stain on his immaculate carpet.

"Our marriage is a transaction," he said. His words were precise, cutting through the air like a scalpel. "Stop trying to turn it into a romance novel. You needed tuition. I needed a wife who doesn't ask questions. Don't overact."

Isabella felt the blood drain from her face. Her fingers clenched around the gift box, numb.

Before she could respond, a vibration buzzed against the mahogany surface of the sideboard. Hamilton's phone.

The screen lit up. Cuba Hayden.

Hamilton's expression shifted instantly. The cold mask cracked, replaced by a frantic, raw concern that Isabella had never seen him direct at her.

He snatched up the phone. "Cuba? Where are you?"

He listened for a second, his knuckles white as he gripped the device.

"Don't move," he said, his voice dropping to a low murmur laced with fear and tenderness. "I'm coming. I'll be right there. Don't be afraid."

He hung up, grabbed his keys. He didn't look at the table. He didn't look at the cold dinner. And he didn't look at his wife.

He turned and ran for the door.

"Hamilton!" Isabella cried out. She dropped the box. It hit the floor with a dull thud. "Please! Just tonight!"

He didn't stop. The heavy oak door slammed shut, the sound echoing like a gunshot.

Isabella ran.

She didn't think. She just ran. She chased him into the bitter Boston night. Her slippers slapped against the icy driveway.

"Hamilton!"

The estate's iron gates stood open. Outside, a wall of flashbulbs ignited.

The paparazzi had been waiting. They circled like vultures, smelling scandal.

"Mr. McKee! Is Cuba really in the hospital?"

"Mrs. McKee! Do you know your husband is going to see his ex?"

"Is this marriage a sham?"

The questions drowned out the sharp clicks of the blinding flashes. Isabella shielded her eyes, disoriented.

Hamilton was already in his car. The black Maybach's engine roared to life. Through the tinted windows, she saw his silhouette. He glanced at the rearview mirror.

He saw her. He saw her standing in the cold, shivering, surrounded by wolves.

Then he looked away.

The car's tires screamed on the asphalt as he sped off, leaving a cloud of exhaust that choked her.

Isabella stood frozen. The cold seeped into her bones.

"Hey! Look at her! She's crying!"

A photographer, desperate for the money shot, lunged forward. He shoved another cameraman aside, swinging his heavy equipment bag wildly.

The bag slammed into Isabella's shoulder.

She staggered. Her slippers lost their grip on a patch of black ice.

She fell backward.

The world tilted. Time seemed to slow. She saw the dark night sky, the blinding white flashes, and the sharp granite edge of the gate's stone pillar rushing toward her.

Crack.

The sound was sickeningly loud.

An explosion of pain at the base of her skull. It wasn't just pain; it was a searing white light that burned through her brain, erasing the cold, the noise, the humiliation.

She hit the ground.

Warmth spread beneath her, creeping up the back of her neck. Sticky, wet warmth. It trickled down her spine, staining the collar of her cheap dress.

The shouts became distorted. It sounded like being underwater.

"She's down! Call 911!"

Isabella stared up at the sky. The stars were spinning.

Then darkness came. But it wasn't empty.

Images flickered behind her eyelids. Not memories of the orphanage. Not memories of waiting tables.

A sterile operating room. The rhythmic beep of a cardiac monitor. A scalpel in her gloved hand. Intricate vascular sutures.

A boardroom. A white-haired man smiling at her. "You're a McKee, Isabella. The true heiress. Never forget that."

Fire. The smell of burning rubber. Three years ago, just before the crash-her own hands, secretly installing a tiny recorder beneath a car's dashboard. Just in case, Uncle Marcus, she had thought. Dragging a heavy body from a wrecked car. Hamilton's face, bloodied and unconscious. Not Cuba. Her. It had always been her.

A dusty orphanage file room. A younger girl with cruel eyes-Cuba-pulling a necklace from a sleeping child's neck. Switching two folders. "You don't deserve this," the girl whispered. "I'm the heiress now."

Sirens wailed in the distance, growing louder.

A paramedic leaned over her, shining a penlight into her eyes. "Pupils are blown. She's losing consciousness."

Isabella's hand twitched on the cold pavement. Her fingers curled-not into a fist, but into a precise, delicate grip. The way a surgeon holds a scalpel.

The obedient wife died on that pavement.

The woman who woke up in the ambulance was someone else entirely.

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