
The Jilted Wife's Spectacular Genius Comeback
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."
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Chapter 5
Arlie stood in the middle of the living room, her arms wrapped around herself. The apartment was freezing. The air conditioning hummed, a constant, low drone that set her teeth on edge. She walked over to the thermostat. It was locked behind a plastic cover.
She moved to the windows. The city sprawled below, a glittering maze of lights and life. She pressed her hand against the glass. It was cold. Solid. Unbreakable. She was in a cage. A very expensive, very high cage.
She explored the space mechanically. The kitchen was stocked with expensive, tasteless food—kale, quinoa, bottled water. The bedroom had a bed the size of a small boat, with sheets that felt like sandpaper against her raw skin. The closet was filled with clothes. Designer labels, tags still on. But they weren't her style. They were tight, bright, and revealing. Kaelynn's style.
She sank down onto the floor of the closet, pulling her knees to her chest. She stayed there until the sun came up, staring at the row of expensive shoes that didn't fit.
Sometime in the grey hours before dawn, a memory surfaced. Not a plan. A fragment. Ronan's voice, years ago, as he pressed something into her hand at her engagement party. "Every woman who marries into a dynasty needs an escape hatch, Li. One day you might need it. Don't forget where you put it."
She had laughed at him. She had thought he was being dramatic.
She hadn't forgotten. The book. Moby Dick. The one on her bookshelf that no one had ever read, because no one in the McCormick house read anything without a stock ticker. If it was still there—if Kaelynn hadn't found it—she had one card. One call.
But it was in her bedroom. At the estate. And she was here.
She filed the thought away. It wasn't useful yet. It was just something to hold onto.
The next morning, the lock beeped. Arlie shot to her feet, her heart racing. She smoothed down her dress and walked into the living room.
Killian stood by the window, holding a briefcase. He was wearing a fresh suit, his hair damp from the shower. He looked like he had slept eight hours. He looked like he hadn't given her a second thought.
He set the briefcase on the coffee table and clicked it open. He pulled out another thick stack of paper. "This is the revised agreement. The financial terms are more favorable. I've added a clause ensuring your comfort during the pregnancy."
Arlie didn't sit. She stood across from him, the coffee table a vast chasm between them. She looked at the papers, then up at his face.
"Killian," she said softly. "Do you remember the first time we met?"
He paused, his hand resting on the document. His brow furrowed. "What does that have to do with anything?"
"It was raining," she continued, her voice distant. "At the university library. You gave me your umbrella. You said you liked walking in the rain."
Killian's expression didn't change. He stared at her, his blue eyes blank. "I don't remember."
Three words. They hit her harder than the public humiliation. Harder than the locked doors. He didn't just reject her present; he was erasing their past. The one moment of kindness that had kept her going for five years was a lie. It meant nothing to him.
Arlie nodded slowly. The last ember of hope in her chest sputtered and died. She felt cold inside. Empty.
"Okay," she said, her voice flat. She wasn't negotiating. Not really. She was testing—testing whether he would give anything at all, testing whether there was any limit to what she could ask for. She took a breath and pressed her nails into her palms to steady herself. "Let's talk business."
Killian blinked, clearly surprised by the shift.
"I'll do the IVF," Arlie said. "But I have conditions." She was making this up as she went, pulling demands out of desperation, not strength. But she had watched Killian negotiate for five years. She knew how his mind worked. He respected people who asked for things—it meant they were playing the game. She just had to pretend she knew the rules.
"Name them."
"First, the moment the child is born, we divorce. Immediately. No waiting period."
Killian studied her face for a long moment. "Agreed."
"Second," Arlie continued, her voice hardening. "I want joint custody of Julian. Fifty-fifty. And I want my mother's assets released. The ones held in trust under my name. The prenup clearly states that the Pembroke holdings transferred to me before the marriage are separate property—not yours, not my father's. You had no legal right to freeze them."
Killian's jaw tightened. He looked away, his eyes scanning the city skyline. "Fine. You'll get the money and the custody."
It was too easy. He gave in too fast. He didn't even fight her on the custody. It meant he didn't care about Julian. He only cared about the embryo.
Arlie took a deep breath. She looked at the man she had married, the man who had destroyed her, and asked the question that had been eating her alive for two years.
"In the five years we were married," she whispered, "was there even one second where you felt something real for me? One moment where you actually loved me?"
She stared into his eyes, desperate for a lie. She wanted him to say yes. She wanted to hold onto the illusion.
Killian swallowed. His throat bobbed. He opened his mouth. His eyes did something strange—they flickered. Arlie couldn't read what it was. Exhaustion, maybe. Or simple irritation at being asked a question he considered irrelevant. He closed his mouth. His face smoothed back into its polished, impassive mask.
He said nothing.
The silence stretched between them, a living thing. It was the loudest sound Arlie had ever heard. It was the sound of her heart breaking for the last time.
Arlie smiled. It was a terrible, broken smile. She reached for the pen resting on the table. Her fingers closed around it.
Then she stopped.
The memory from the night before surfaced again. Ronan. The book. The card. She didn't have it. She was locked in a cage fifty stories up. But she remembered something else—something from the prenup she had signed five years ago. The dissolution clause. She had read it a dozen times before signing, back when her mind was sharp and she could dissect a contract in minutes. If the marriage ended due to the husband's fault—infidelity, abuse, unlawful confinement—custody and asset division fell under a separate, much more favorable framework.
She couldn't contact a lawyer. She had no phone, no card, no way out. But Killian didn't know that. He didn't know what she remembered, or what resources she had hidden. And right now, that uncertainty was the only weapon she had.
She set the pen down. She looked up at him, her eyes cold but her heart hammering. She was bluffing. If he called her on it, she had nothing. But if he believed her for even a moment—
"I changed my mind," she said. "I'm not having your child. I seem to recall a clause in our prenup... the dissolution clause. Something about the wife retaining full custody rights if the marriage ends due to the husband's misconduct. Unlawful confinement might qualify. I think I need to review it carefully. "
She didn't say she had a lawyer. She didn't claim she could call anyone. She left the threat deliberately vague.
She dropped the pen. It clattered onto the glass table, the sound sharp and final.
Killian's face went white. Then, a dark, dangerous flush crept up his neck. The control snapped. He hadn't expected her to remember the terms. The woman who had been drugged into compliance for two years wasn't supposed to have that kind of recall. He didn't know whether to believe she had resources—and that uncertainty was exactly what she was counting on.
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9.7
Emaline Finley was drowning in massive debt to keep her dying father alive, even enduring a humiliating blind date with an arrogant man just to find a financial lifeline.
But the fatal blow came from her former best friend, Kitty. Kitty, who was already engaged to Emaline's ex-boyfriend, deliberately told Emaline's father that his expensive treatments were bleeding his daughter dry.
Out of extreme guilt, her father threw away his life-saving medication and checked himself out of the hospital to die at home. When Emaline found him, he was coughing up pools of bright red blood, his lungs rapidly collapsing. As the paramedics rushed him away, Kitty called to gloat, mocking Emaline's poverty and telling her to go watch her father die.
Emaline was completely shattered, suffocating under the sheer injustice of it all. She had been betrayed, stripped of her dignity, and was now forced to watch her only parent slip away because of a cruel, spiteful lie.
Just as her world went dark, a wildly wealthy stranger stepped in. Cullen Preston, the mysterious man who had witnessed her humiliating date, paid the astronomical medical bills and brought in the city's top surgeon to pull her father back from death. But his salvation wasn't charity.
"Consider it a dowry."
He bought her father's life, and in exchange, he demanded Emaline as his wife.

8.9
I sold three years of my life to a billionaire to save my mother. I was his pretend fiancée, a stand-in for his ex, counting down the days until the contract ended and we could finally be free.
But just as we were about to escape, his real girlfriend returned and publicly accused me of faking a pregnancy to trap him.
My fiancé, Drake, didn't hesitate. He called me a disgusting gold-digger and threatened to pull my mother's medical funding to force me into an abortion.
The shock of his cruelty sent my mother into cardiac arrest. She died right there in the hospital.
They demanded I abort a child that could never exist, a lie built to destroy me.
But they didn't know my secret. After my mother' s death, I finally told him the truth that shattered his world: I was born without a uterus. And with her last letter in my hand, I walked away from him forever.

7.2
Stepping out of the women's correctional center, Karli took her first breath of freedom in three years.
But the luxury SUV waiting for her didn't bring her home. Instead, her adoptive parents tossed a prenuptial agreement onto her lap.
They demanded she marry a violently unhinged, disfigured man so their company could secure a massive commercial deal.
When she refused, her adoptive mother slapped her hard across the face.
The blow brought back the suffocating nightmare from three years ago—how they had drugged her, framed her for a crime she didn't commit, and sent her to prison just so her stepsister could steal her fiancé.
Now, to break her again, her adoptive father ordered his bodyguards to drag her into the estate's freezing, pitch-black basement.
"You can rot in the dark without food or water until you sign that paper!"
Sitting on the damp cement, bleeding and shivering, a white-hot fury burned away Karli's panic.
They had stolen her youth, her reputation, and her grandfather's inheritance. She would rather die than be their sacrificial lamb again.
She smashed the basement window with a hammer, dragged her bleeding body through the shattered glass, and sprinted blindly into the stormy night.
Under the flickering neon sign of a convenience store, she grabbed the sleeve of a terrifyingly cold stranger.
"Are you single? Marry me right now."
She just needed a legal marriage to escape her family, entirely unaware she had just proposed to the most ruthless billionaire in Chicago.

8.0
Aliya woke up in a dingy, freezing apartment with a throbbing headache, only to realize a horrifying truth.
She had transmigrated into the American romance novel she read just last night, becoming the ultimate vicious supporting character. The exhausted man walking through the front door was Cyrus Pace, an amnesiac billionaire currently living under the delusion that he was a broke laborer.
The original owner had trapped him with fabricated memories of being childhood sweethearts. Worse, she relentlessly abused him. Her phone was filled with toxic texts calling him a useless loser, and she had just staged a psychotic hunger strike to force him to buy a designer bag. Cyrus already looked at her with bone-deep, visceral disgust. In the original plot, the moment he regained his memory, his ruthless revenge would send her straight to a maximum-security prison for the rest of her life.
"Are you done playing your hunger strike game?"
Hearing his cold, mocking voice, the sheer terror made Aliya's blood run cold. How was she supposed to survive living with a future tyrant who already despised her? Every time his massive shadow fell over their cramped, shared mattress, her heart stopped. A single wrong move—even a microscopic mistake like accidentally crossing a physical line—would completely seal her doom.
Staring at the torn box of condoms hidden under the bed, Aliya made a desperate, life-or-death decision.
She had to completely rewrite her toxic persona, secretly hustle a high-commission real estate job, and save enough money to flee the country before the billionaire remembered exactly who he was.

9.2
Chelsi was down to her last fourteen dollars. After a humiliating job rejection for being "too low-class," the threat of eviction forced her to try live-streaming. Terrified of her exhausted, tear-stained face, she cranked the AR beauty filter to the max, morphing into a bizarre plastic alien.
She was immediately dragged into a forced streaming battle with Kamron, the platform's most arrogant top streamer. Seeing her distorted filter, Kamron sneered, unleashing fifty thousand fans to flood her chat with toxic insults.
Kamron set a ruthless penalty for her inevitable loss.
"You're going to take a bar of soap, scrub your face completely clean, and shove your bare face right into the camera."
Desperate to keep the fifty dollars she had just earned for rent, Chelsi begged for a different punishment, but Kamron coldly refused. With her heart pounding, she walked to the freezing bathroom, her hands shaking as she scrubbed her skin raw, bracing for the cyberbullying.
She squeezed her eyes shut, feeling utterly humiliated by the cruelty of the internet. Why did she have to be stripped of her dignity just to survive? She clicked off the filter, waiting for the tidal wave of disgust to destroy her.
But the insults never came. The high-definition camera revealed a breathtakingly delicate, flawless face that no algorithm could ever replicate. The chat went dead silent, Kamron was so stunned he dropped a ten-thousand-dollar virtual yacht, and a silent war between two mysterious billionaires was about to begin.

7.1
I worked eighty-hour weeks on Wall Street just to keep my sick brother alive, enduring endless humiliation from the wealthy family that adopted us.
But when I went to surprise my boyfriend of three years, I found him kissing my spoiled adoptive sister, Tatum.
They were celebrating their engagement to merge their powerful families.
To keep me quiet, my adoptive mother, Eleanor, threatened to freeze my brother's medical trust fund unless I attended the party to play the supportive sister.
Instead, I discovered Eleanor had been embezzling from my brother's life-saving fund to cover her own bad investments.
The nightmare worsened when a drunken Ryder cornered me in my apartment stairwell.
"Once I marry Tatum, Eleanor is giving me control of Liam's trust fund to buy out my father's board members."
He planned to drain my brother's medical money, dump Tatum, and keep me as his mistress.
For a decade, I suffered their abuse hoping for a shred of decency, only to realize they were plotting to leave my brother to die on the streets for corporate greed.
Calling the police wouldn't stop these billionaires. I needed absolute power.
Remembering the dark, predatory gaze of Jaren Jarvis—the ruthless billionaire who had watched me fight back at the party—I canceled my call to 911.
If they wanted to destroy my only family, I was going to use the devil himself to crush theirs.