
The Jilted Wife's Spectacular Genius Comeback
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After being locked in a mental institution for two years, Arlie was finally brought back to the Mccormick estate.
But her billionaire husband, Killian, didn't bring her home out of guilt or love. He handed her a cold surrogacy contract.
Her biological son, Julian, now looked at her with terror, calling her a monster while clinging to Kaelynn—the very mistress who had framed Arlie and stolen her life.
Killian froze Arlie's assets, locked her in a high-rise penthouse, and threatened to send her back to the asylum forever if she refused to undergo IVF.
He claimed they desperately needed a new baby's umbilical cord blood to cure Julian's terminal illness.
But Arlie secretly contacted her doctor and uncovered a horrifying truth.
The experimental gene therapy she had received years ago meant any attempt at pregnancy would trigger a fatal organ shutdown.
Killian didn't care if the procedure killed her in agony; he just wanted to use her as a disposable breeding machine to harvest a "spare part."
Watching the media brand her a selfish mother who wanted her son to die, the last trace of the obedient wife vanished.
Arlie pulled out a hidden satellite phone and dialed a number she hadn't used in years.
"Ronan, it's Li," she said coldly. "Wipe my name from their servers and prepare a full-scale assault. It's time to destroy them."
The Jilted Wife's Spectacular Genius Comeback Chapter 1
The heavy iron gates of Serenity Meadows groaned shut behind her, the metal grinding against metal in a high-pitched screech that made Arlie flinch. Her shoulders hunched up to her ears, her body curling inward on instinct. Two years of conditioned responses didn't just vanish because you walked out the front door. That sound meant lockdown. That sound meant the orderlies were coming.
She forced her hands to relax, smoothing down the shapeless grey cotton dress the facility had provided. It hung off her collarbones like a sack, the fabric stiff and scratchy against her skin. In her left hand, she clutched a small canvas tote bag containing a toothbrush, a worn paperback, and the watch her father had given her for her sixteenth birthday. That was it. That was the sum total of her life.
A nurse stood a few feet away, clipboard pressed to her chest. "Mr. Mccormick has arranged everything. Good luck, Ms. Stuart."
The name hit Arlie like a splash of cold water. Not Mrs. Mccormick. Ms. Stuart. The nurse's smile was tight, professional, and completely devoid of warmth. It was the first sign, a small crack in the fantasy Arlie had built in her head during those long, medicated nights.
She turned toward the circular drive, her eyes scanning the row of parked cars. Killian drove a black Bentley Flying Spur. She had memorized the license plate, the way the leather smelled, the subtle gloss of the wood trim. She looked for it now, her heart doing a frantic little flutter against her ribs. Maybe he was sorry. Maybe the two years apart had made him realize the truth. Maybe he was waiting to take her home.
The drive was empty except for one vehicle.
A black Lincoln Town Car idled at the curb. The windows were tinted so dark they looked like mirrors, reflecting the grey sky and the bare branches of the winter trees. The driver's door opened, and Arthur Finch stepped out. He was older, his hair more silver than black now, but his posture was still ramrod straight. He had been driving for the Mccormick family since Killian was in high school.
Arthur didn't smile. He didn't nod. He walked around to the back of the car, his face a mask of stone. He popped the trunk, the sound loud in the quiet afternoon air.
Arlie walked toward him, her thin hospital-issued slip-on shoes slapping against the pavement. "Arthur?"
He reached out and took the canvas tote from her hand. He tossed it into the trunk like it was a bag of garbage, the heavy thud echoing in the space. He slammed the lid shut. "Ma'am."
Not Mrs. Mccormick. Not Arlie. Ma'am. Like she was a stranger hailing a cab.
He opened the back door and stood waiting. Arlie slid onto the leather seat. It was freezing, the cold seeping right through her thin dress and into her bones. The car smelled like cheap pine air freshener, the kind you bought at a gas station, not the rich, woody sandalwood that usually lingered in Killian's cars. There was no water bottle in the cup holder. No cashmere blanket folded on the seat. No welcome home card.
She gripped the edge of the seat, her knuckles turning white. "Where's Killian? Is he... is he meeting us at the house?"
Arthur adjusted the rearview mirror. His eyes met hers for a fraction of a second. They were flat, empty. "Mr. Mccormick is in a board meeting. He sends his regards."
A board meeting. Arlie's stomach twisted. Mccormick Capital held their board meetings on Wednesdays. It was a schedule set in stone. Today was Friday. Arthur was lying, and he wasn't even trying to hide it.
"And Julian?" The name came out a whisper. "My son, is he-"
"The young master is at his riding lesson," Arthur said, pulling the car away from the curb. "With Ms. Kaelynn."
The air in the car suddenly felt too thin to breathe. Kaelynn. The name was a poison that burned her throat every time she swallowed. It was Kaelynn who had forged the documents. Kaelynn who had embezzled the funds. And Kaelynn who had let Arlie take the fall, smiling that sweet, sad smile as they dragged Arlie away to Serenity Meadows.
Arlie stared out the window. The trees blurred past, a streak of brown and grey. She wasn't going home. She was being transported. She was cargo being returned to the warehouse.
"Is everyone well?" she asked, her voice barely audible over the hum of the tires. "The family?"
"Yes," Arthur said.
"Is the house the same?"
"No."
She waited for him to elaborate. He didn't. The silence stretched, thick and suffocating. Arlie's fingers moved from the seat to her lap, twisting the hem of her grey dress. The thread was cheap, already fraying under the pressure of her nails. She was drowning in the quiet, drowning in the rejection that hung in the air like a bad smell.
Arthur's phone buzzed. He answered it on the first ring, his voice clipped and respectful. "Yes, sir. I have her. She's calm."
Calm. The word was a mockery. She was shaking so hard her teeth were chattering.
"Understood," Arthur said. "Straight to the estate. Mr. and Mrs. Stuart are already there."
Arlie froze. Her father and Meredith. They were at the Mccormick estate? They never came to the estate. They hated the drive. They hated the pretension. This wasn't a homecoming. This was an intervention. This was a tribunal.
She leaned forward, her hands bracing on the back of the passenger seat. "Arthur, my trust fund. I need to call my financial advisor. I need to know the status of my accounts."
Arthur's eyes flicked to the mirror again. This time, there was something there. A flicker of pity, maybe, or just the grim satisfaction of delivering bad news. "Ms. Stuart, Mr. Mccormick gave instructions for your trust fund to be frozen during your treatment. As for its current status, I believe he intends to discuss it with you personally."
The words hit her like a physical blow, knocking the air from her lungs. Frozen. She had nothing. She had no money, no identity, no family. She was a ghost sitting in the back of a car that smelled like pine and lies.
The car turned onto the long, winding drive of the Mccormick estate. The house loomed at the end of the lane, a sprawling monstrosity of brick and ivy. It had never felt like home, but it had been hers. Now, looking at the cold, dark windows, it looked like a mausoleum.
The car slowed as it approached the front circle. Arlie's eyes drifted to the garden on the left, the one that lined the path to the front door. She had spent years cultivating those beds. She had planted white roses, hundreds of them, because they were the only flowers that looked pure against the dark stone of the house.
The garden was a sea of red.
Every single white rose bush had been ripped out and replaced. Red roses, the color of blood, the color of passion, the color of Kaelynn's lipstick, stared back at her. They were perfect, blooming, and aggressive. They took up space. They demanded attention.
Her existence had been erased. The garden was a statement. She is here now. You are not.
The car rolled to a stop. Arthur got out, but Arlie didn't move. She just stared at the red roses, her breath fogging the cold glass of the window. She was home.
Continue Reading
The Jilted Wife's Spectacular Genius Comeback of Contents
Chapter 1 Ch. 1Chapter 2 Ch. 2Chapter 3 Ch. 3Chapter 4 Ch. 4Chapter 5 Ch. 5
Chapter 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

7.2
Four years ago, Madelynn accepted money from Caiden's family and vanished. She thought it was for the best-he would remain the untouchable heir while she faced her tough life alone.
When they met again, Caiden humiliated her in public, yet appeared when she was cornered by a difficult client, pulling her back into his life.
He forced her to stay as his lover, using her mother's medical bills as leverage, whispering, "What you owe me... you'll repay the same way."
Madelynn believed he despised her. Only after the accident, when he ran toward her before the explosion, did she understand-he never let go.

9.0
I am the undisputed ice queen of the ER, a doctor whose life is built on absolute control. A month ago, I impulsively married a stranger to create a legal shield against my ex-mentor's betrayal.
Our prenup had one strict rule: a fake marriage with zero interference in each other's lives. But tonight, my "husband on paper" was wheeled into my ER, unconscious, reeking of cheap whiskey, and suffering from a bleeding ulcer.
To authorize his emergency surgery, I had to sign the consent form as his wife, detonating a gossip bomb among my colleagues. Worse, his overbearing family found out he was hospitalized. To stop his terrifying mother from flying in and exposing our sham marriage, I had to lean over his hospital bed and take a fake, loving couple's selfie.
I didn't understand why this disciplined math professor was suddenly drinking himself to death, nor why my chest tightened when he looked at me with exhausted eyes and begged for homemade soup. My perfectly ordered, untouchable life was crumbling into a chaotic mess, and I was losing my grip on the narrative.
"We should probably spend some time together beforehand. We could be roommates."
To prepare for an unavoidable family dinner and a wedding, my stranger husband just asked me to move into his apartment. The ultimate uncontrolled variable has just crossed the line, and our fake marriage is about to become dangerously real.

8.0
Finley's stepfather gave her a sickening ultimatum: marry her predatory stepbrother Shane tonight, or he would throw her fragile mother out on the street.
To escape this hell, she used a matchmaking agency and hastily married a complete stranger. Garrison Strickland claimed to be an ordinary data analyst making $95,000 a year, driving a beat-up Honda Civic, and needing a wife in name only. They got their marriage license at City Hall that very afternoon.
But when Finley returned home to pack her bags and threw the certificate on the table, her family just laughed. Dozier ordered Shane to drag her into the bedroom to "teach her a lesson" and trap her forever.
"Come on, little sister," Shane crooned, lunging at her. "Don't fight it."
Finley's own mother just stared at the floor, blaming Finley for ruining the family, watching blindly as Shane cornered her.
Terrified and desperate, Finley smashed an ashtray over Shane's head and frantically dialed her new husband's number. Shane snatched the phone, mocking the "imaginary husband" before the line went dead. Finley felt a bottomless despair. Garrison was just a normal guy; he would never risk his life against her violent family. She was completely on her own, waiting for the end.
Suddenly, deafening bangs echoed through the house, and Garrison stepped into the living room radiating a cold, terrifying fury. This supposedly "frugal data analyst" effortlessly snapped Shane's wrist, leveled a ruthless death threat that made Dozier tremble, and whisked Finley away in a waiting Bentley. Looking at the powerful man beside her, Finley's heart raced: just who exactly had she married today?

9.0
Isolde woke up in a freezing, ruined stone house with a splitting headache and only five percent of her life signs remaining.
Before she could even process the mechanical system voice in her head, a flood of violent memories slammed into her.
She had transmigrated into the body of a cruel noblewoman who mercilessly tortured her beastmen husbands with a barbed whip.
And right now, she was lying in a pool of her own blood, having been shoved against the stone floor by one of them.
Outside the rickety door, her husbands were coldly discussing her death.
"Just go in and finish her. One stab, and we're free."
"If she hit her head and died on her own, then it's an accident. We walk out of here as free males."
To test if she was faking her sudden amnesia, the snake beastman Dangelo even ground his heavy military boot into her injured hand, waiting for her to snap so he could legally end her.
She was poisoned, freezing, and entirely at the mercy of the men who deeply despised her.
She was bearing the deadly consequences of a monster she never was, with a red system warning of imminent death flashing in her mind.
But they didn't know the new Isolde had awakened a survival system and Life Magic.
She swore a blood oath to the Beast God to buy herself three months of time.
Then, she turned her sights to the dying wolf beastman chained in the shed, deciding to pull him back from hell to become her very first shield.

7.9
In my past life, I was the naive surrogate who fell desperately in love with Karson King, an untouchable Wall Street billionaire.
I thought my blind devotion would earn me a place in his family. Instead, his cruel mother forced me to sign away my parental rights to my three-year-old daughter.
I was locked in a dark, freezing basement. I watched helplessly as his arrogant relatives tormented my child, pushing her down a flight of marble stairs and shattering her tiny arm.
When we finally died in a horrific car crash, my face covered in blood amidst the shattered glass, Karson didn't shed a single tear. To him, my death was just the convenient erasure of a cheap mistake.
I sacrificed my dignity for his approval, but they treated us worse than stray dogs. Why did my innocent daughter have to pay the ultimate price for their ruthless arrogance?
Opening my eyes again, the harsh glare of a massive crystal chandelier pierced my vision. I was back in the grand foyer of the King estate, exactly five years ago.
"Sign it. You are nothing but a gold digger."
My soon-to-be mother-in-law slammed the thick legal contract onto the marble table, demanding I give up my daughter.
This time, the paralyzing fear evaporated, replaced by absolute, icy clarity.
I didn't cower. I picked up the pen, looked right at the billionaire who despised me, and prepared to manipulate his entire empire.

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.











