
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 2
The ceiling tiles were counting down. One, two, three, four.
Isabella opened her eyes.
There was no grogginess. No confusion. Her vision snapped into focus instantly, her pupils contracting against the harsh fluorescent light of the hospital room.
She took a breath. It was deep and controlled. She cataloged her body's sensations. A dull throb in the occipital region. A wave of vertigo that she quelled by pressing two fingers hard against the base of her skull. Slight nausea. Dehydration.
She lifted her left hand. A simple gold band sat on her ring finger.
She stared at it. A wave of revulsion curled in her stomach. It felt like a shackle.
The memories had settled. The two lives-Isabella Oconnor, the poor orphan from Southie, and Isabella Mckee, the heiress and prodigy surgeon-had collided and fused. The fog of the last three years, induced by the trauma of the car accident and suppressed by a subconscious desire to hide, was gone.
The door opened. A nurse walked in, carrying a tray. She didn't look up.
"Mrs. Mckee," the nurse said, her voice dripping with bored condescension. "Mr. Mckee paid the bill, but he said not to expect him. He's busy."
Isabella sat up. The movement was fluid.
She looked at the IV line taped to the back of her hand. With a quick, sharp motion, she ripped the tape and pulled the needle out. She applied pressure to the puncture site immediately with her thumb, preventing a bruise.
"Get out," Isabella said.
The nurse froze. She looked up, startled by the tone. It wasn't the voice of a woman who had been brought in crying. It was ice.
"Excuse me?"
"I said get out," Isabella repeated. She swung her legs over the side of the bed. "And tell the attending physician that this isn't a saline drip. It's a dopamine solution. A pressor is contraindicated for an isolated head injury without hemodynamic instability. This isn't just incompetent-it's reckless."
The nurse gaped at her, then turned and hurried out of the room, the tray rattling in her hands.
Isabella walked to the small mirror over the sink. She looked pale. A bandage was taped to the back of her head. But her eyes... her eyes were amber fire.
The door banged open again.
Hamilton strode in. He looked disheveled. His tie was loosened, and he smelled of hospital antiseptic and stale coffee.
He stopped when he saw her standing.
"Get back in bed," he snapped. "I don't have time for your theatrics, Isabella. The press is already having a field day."
Isabella turned slowly. She didn't flinch. She didn't apologize. She just looked at him.
She looked at him the way a scientist looks at a specimen in a jar.
"You're right," she said. Her voice was calm, devoid of the tremor that used to define her speech. "We don't have time."
She walked to the bedside table. There was a notepad and a pen next to the water pitcher. She picked them up.
She wrote one word on the paper. The letters were sharp, angular, aggressive.
She ripped the page off and held it out to him.
Hamilton frowned. He took the paper.
DIVORCE.
He let out a short, incredulous laugh. "Is this a joke? Are you trying to leverage the accident for a bigger allowance?"
Isabella walked back to the bed and sat down, crossing her legs. Her posture was regal.
"I want the beach house in the Hamptons," she said. "The dilapidated one on the north shore. The one nobody has visited in five years."
Hamilton blinked. "That shack? It's practically a ruin."
"That shack," she confirmed. "And in exchange, I will sign away my rights to the secondary Mckee shares outlined in the pre-nup. I walk away with the house and my personal effects. Nothing else."
Hamilton went still. The businessman in him woke up. The shares were worth millions. The house was worth dirt.
"You're serious," he said, narrowing his eyes. "You'd leave with nothing? You'd go back to waiting tables in Southie?"
Isabella's lips curved slightly. It wasn't a smile. "That is none of your concern. Do we have a deal?"
Hamilton stepped closer. He tried to use his height to intimidate her, a tactic that had worked for three years. "If you sign this, Isabella, you are dead to this world. You will starve."
Isabella didn't blink. She tilted her head back, exposing her throat, daring him.
"Call your lawyer, Hamilton. Before I change my mind."
"You're insane," he muttered. But he was already reaching for his phone.
Just then, his phone rang. The ringtone was distinctive.
He looked at the screen. His face softened into that sickening worry again.
"Cuba," he answered. "I'm here. What? You're dizzy?"
He looked at Isabella with pure annoyance. "I have to go. My lawyer will be here in an hour. Don't think you can back out."
"I won't," Isabella said.
Hamilton turned and stormed out, slamming the door so hard the frame rattled.
Isabella stared at the closed door.
"You have no idea," she whispered to the empty room. "The only person who is going to regret this is you."
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8.3
Ayleen Ramirez sat in the sterile Hope Hill Fertility Clinic, her heart shattering as Dr. Finch delivered the crushing news: her third IVF cycle had failed.
Eavesdropping outside a supply closet, she overheard her husband Don on the phone, laughing cruelly. "She's a defective incubator," he sneered to his mistress Alessandra. "I never used my sperm—just cheap bank donation. No trailer trash carries a Bradley heir."
Betrayed, Ayleen confronted him, but her adoptive family ambushed her at home. Her parents and brother sided with Alessandra, now pregnant by Don, demanding Ayleen sign divorce papers to secure family investments. "You're an embarrassment," her mother snapped, threatening to cut her trust fund. Ayleen tossed back their heirloom necklace and walked out.
She stormed the Bradley mansion, slapped divorce papers on Don, packed her bags amid his aunt's insults, and fled into the night.
Drunk in a trendy bar, she stumbled into a powerful stranger—Burdette Guerrero—spilling whiskey on his crotch, then accidentally grabbed a napkin to his trousers. He shoved her away in rage.
Worse, she mistook his penthouse suite for her hotel room, bursting in on his shower, smashing a mirror in panic. He pinned her to the wall, snarling accusations.
How did this arrogant man know her name? Why demand she sign a mysterious contract at 9 a.m.? Devastated and clueless she's actually pregnant—with his stolen heir—Ayleen sobbed alone, the world crumbling.
The next morning, she straightened her spine in the Grand Guerrero lobby, ready to face him and demand answers—no matter the cost.

8.1
I was the "fallen princess" of New York, living in a charcoal silk cage while paying off my father’s millions in debt with my own body. My owner was Braxton Kensington, a man who looked at me with the same cold interest he gave a fluctuating stock graph.
One morning, a New York Times alert shattered the silence: Braxton was getting engaged to a billionaire socialite in the merger of the decade. When I demanded my freedom and the five-million-dollar severance promised in our contract, he just smirked and pointed to the fine print.
"In a court of law, an engagement is just an intention," he whispered, gripping my chin until it bruised. "Until I sign that marriage license, you belong to me."
He flicked a black AmEx at my feet like I was a tragic charity case, ordering me to buy a dress for his engagement gala. To save my dying mother from eviction, I took a secret translation job, only to realize my client was his new fiancée, Caroline. She dragged me to Braxton’s office to humiliate me, and after he hid me in a secret room to avoid a scandal, he branded me a "security risk" and froze every cent I had.
I stood in a CVS with my last sixty dollars, swallowing a Plan B pill dry while watching a news report about Braxton demolishing my family’s last legacy. He didn't just want my body; he wanted to erase my entire existence and leave me with nothing.
The cruelty was breathtaking, but Braxton forgot that a woman with nothing left to lose is the most dangerous player in the game. I reached out to the only man he truly feared—his billionaire half-brother and the boy whose heart I broke years ago, Ansel Neal.
"Coffee isn't enough," Ansel replied to my message in seconds. "Dinner. Our old spot. 8 PM."
As I walked into the club to meet Braxton's greatest rival, I knew the game wasn't over. I was just changing the rules.

8.5
🔞Explicit Content🔞
"Suck my c^ck, Rosabella. That's all you're good at. A hopeless orphan can only dream of luxury. Keep your filthy mouth out of my affair...use it only to make me cum."
******
Bella Hale has known suffering her entire life. Orphaned at sixteen, she survives on scraps and desperation. She does whatever it takes not to starve with only little dignity intact.
She envies the rich-people who seem immune to hardship and pain. Yet she promised herself that if she ever got her hands on one of them, she would never let go. She was done suffering.
Lucian Rodriguez is everything she should despise.
A cold, selfish, ruthless billionaire with little conscience and no mercy...
a man who knows how to smile for the world while keeping his darkness well hidden.
Their worlds collide when Lucian's four-month-old daughter goes missing... and Bella finds her.
Lucian offers no gratitude...and Bella refuses to let the opportunity slip. She demands compensation. Not just money, but security. A lifetime guarantee that she will never be poor again. In return, she will do whatever he wants. Her body. Her life. He can have it all.
Bella is taken into his world-strictly as a deal.
What she doesn't realize is that when you make a deal with the devil, you should never expect it to be fair.
And she will learn too late that being poor was far better than belonging to Lucian Rodriguez.
A deal turns into obsession.
Survival into desire.
Desire into Hate.
Hate into Love.
That love and commitment becomes the biggest and worst mistake.
Will Bella's desperate deal destroy her?
Or Will she become Lucian's destruction?

8.8
After years trapped under the cruelty of her stepfather's control, Isabella knew the rules of surviving in a world ruled by men like Marco Deluca - never be noticed, never be wanted. But when she becomes a witness to something she was never meant to see, Vincenzo spares her life for reasons he doesn't understand.
Drawn to her quiet strength and fearless gaze, he finds himself willing to burn his empire to keep her safe. But loving him means stepping into a world that destroys everything it touches... and she might be the only thing he can't afford to lose.

9.3
"Adrian, why would you lie to me? Why would you let her push my mum like that?"
Yvonne's voice trembled, holding back tears.
Adrian smirked. "Wake up, Yvonne. You really thought I wanted you when Tricia was right here?"
That was how Adrian-her first crush, the boy she thought cared-chose to humiliate her in front of everyone as she was the cleaner's adopted daughter.
But fate had other plans.
Because the Diamond Belfort brothers-the heirs everyone adored were coming to their school in search of their missing heiress- baby sister. But the queen bee steals the chance that should have been hers. Then again, secrets don't stay buried forever. With her true identity waiting to explode, Yvonne must decide to rise from the ashes, claim her place, and bring down everyone who tried to destroy her.
Because the real heiress doesn't beg.
She takes rather.
Now, Yvonne is done playing small. It's her time to rise, reclaim her crown, and make everyone regret ever doubting her.

9.5
Ten years ago, a storm tore through Burke Manor and destroyed my life. I was just an eight-year-old orphan hiding in the shadows when a rotted balcony railing gave way, sending the heir to the Burke fortune plummeting to the pavement.
Before the ambulance even arrived, the lie was set in stone.
"She pushed him!" my rival screamed, and the world instantly branded me a murderer.
I was hauled away in a police cruiser, losing everything. A decade later, I was an eighteen-year-old mechanic in Queens, covered in grease and struggling to keep my Nana Rose alive.
But the past doesn't stay buried. Finn Burke returned in a black Maybach, looking like a predatory emperor. When Nana suffered a massive heart attack, the hospital demanded a deposit I couldn't pay, and Finn was there with a checkbook and a contract of "indebted servitude."
He bought my grandmother's life and, in exchange, he bought me. He dragged me back to the manor, locked a titanium GPS shackle around my wrist, and forced me to be his personal caretaker.
He wants me to manage his pain, to bathe him, and to look at his crippled legs every day as a reminder of the "sin" he says I committed. He calls me his property, a slave to a debt I can never repay.
But while massaging his legs, I felt something impossible—muscle tone and reactive tension that shouldn't exist after ten years of paralysis.
He thinks he’s broken me, but he’s forgotten one thing. I’m a mechanic; I know when someone is hiding what’s under the hood.
Finn Burke is lying about his legs, and I’m going to find out why, even if I have to burn this manor down to get the truth.