
The Penniless Ex-Wife Is A Hidden Boss
For five years, Casey played the perfect, obedient contract wife to the billionaire Bartholomew Hendricks. On their fifth anniversary, she waited five hours in front of a cold dinner, only to be called to pick him up from a club.
When she arrived, she found him in a VIP room, looking softly at his assistant, Halie. Around Halie's neck was the massive blue sapphire necklace Casey thought was her anniversary gift.
The crowd of elites openly mocked her, calling her the pathetic little contract wife. Halie shrank back into Bartholomew's arms and squeezed out fake tears. Instead of defending his wife, Bartholomew's eyes turned to solid ice.
"Why are you interrupting my friends?"
He ordered her to stop throwing a tantrum and drive him home. The humiliation peaked when his aunt violently slapped Casey across the face in a crowded hospital corridor during a family emergency. Bartholomew just watched her bleed, only caring about the family's reputation in the tabloids.
Standing there with a bruised cheek and a bleeding lip, Casey looked at the man she had loved. There was no anger left, no sadness, only a freezing, absolute emptiness. She finally realized her humanity meant nothing to him.
She took off her five-carat diamond ring, packed only the cheap clothes she came with, and handed him a net-zero divorce settlement. Bartholomew thought she would starve and come crawling back, completely unaware that she was secretly a multi-millionaire author who was about to turn his world upside down.
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Chapter 7
The Maybach swerved sharply into the emergency drop-off lane at Mount Sinai Hospital. The driver slammed on the brakes. The heavy tires shrieked against the concrete.
Bartholomew shoved his door open before the car completely stopped. He sprinted toward the sliding glass doors. Casey pushed her door open and followed him.
The harsh, fluorescent white lights of the hospital lobby hit Casey's eyes, making her blink rapidly. The air smelled strongly of bleach and sterile alcohol.
They ran down the main corridor and turned the corner toward the intensive care waiting area. The entire Hendricks family was gathered there. Men in expensive suits and women in designer coats stood in tight, anxious clusters.
Genevieve Hendricks was pacing near the double doors. Her eyes were red and swollen. She looked up and saw Bartholomew approaching.
Genevieve let out a sharp cry and rushed forward. Her high heels clicked violently against the linoleum floor. She reached Bartholomew, but she did not hug him. Her eyes darted behind him and locked onto Casey.
Genevieve's face twisted into a mask of pure hatred. She lunged past Bartholomew.
She raised her right hand high in the air and swung it down with all her strength. Her palm cracked against Casey's left cheek.
The sound of the slap echoed like a gunshot down the quiet hospital corridor. Everyone stopped talking. Every head turned to stare.
The physical force of the blow snapped Casey's head to the side. A sharp, burning pain exploded across her skin. Five bright red finger marks instantly swelled on her pale cheek. She tasted the warm, metallic tang of blood pooling in the corner of her mouth. Her teeth had cut into her inner lip.
"You vicious little rat!" Genevieve screamed, pointing her shaking finger at Casey's face. "You caused this! Ever since you married into this family, we have had nothing but absolute misery! You must have done something behind our backs to upset him! You drove his blood pressure up! You did this to him!"
Casey stood perfectly still. Her ear was ringing loudly. She pressed her tongue against the cut inside her mouth. She did not raise her hand to touch her face. She did not shed a single tear.
She slowly turned her head and looked at Bartholomew. He was standing less than two feet away from her. He was her husband. He was supposed to protect her.
Bartholomew was staring at her red cheek. His eyebrows were pulled together in a tight frown. But he did not step between them. He did not yell at his aunt. He did not check to see if Casey was bleeding.
He looked around at the staring family members. Before Genevieve could raise her hand to strike again, Bartholomew stepped forward and grabbed his aunt's wrist. His grip was rough, forcefully pulling her away from his wife. He turned his head, his dark eyes briefly sweeping over the bright, swollen handprint blooming on Casey's pale cheek. A muscle in his jaw ticked violently, a fleeting flash of complex, unfamiliar conflict tightening his chest. He leaned close to Genevieve. "Stop it," Bartholomew hissed under his breath. "We are in a public hospital. Do you want the tabloids to write about us acting like animals?"
The words hit Casey harder than the physical slap. He did not care that she was hurt. He only cared about the family reputation. The last microscopic thread connecting her to him snapped completely.
Leland Hendricks, Bartholomew's uncle, stepped forward and grabbed Genevieve's arm, pulling her back. Leland glared at Bartholomew. "Where were you? You are the heir to this family, and you were unreachable when he was dying."
Bartholomew ran a hand through his hair, looking stressed and defensive as he argued with his uncle. He completely forgot Casey was standing there.
The red light above the surgical doors suddenly clicked off. The heavy doors pushed open. A surgeon in green scrubs walked out and pulled down his mask.
"He is stabilized," the surgeon announced. "The blockage was cleared. He needs absolute rest, but he will survive."
A collective sigh of relief swept through the hallway. Shoulders dropped. People hugged each other. Bartholomew closed his eyes and let out a long breath, the tension leaving his body.
The family started moving toward the recovery room doors.
Casey did not move with them. She reached up and wiped the drop of blood from the corner of her mouth with her thumb. She swung her backpack off her shoulder and unzipped the main compartment.
She pulled out a thick stack of papers secured in a brown folder.
She walked directly up to Bartholomew. He turned to look at her, a warning glare already forming in his eyes.
Casey slammed the heavy folder directly into the center of his chest.
Bartholomew grunted from the impact and instinctively brought his hands up to catch the folder. He looked down at the cover page. The bold black letters read: DIVORCE SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT.
His pupils dilated. He snapped his head up and glared at her.
"What the hell is wrong with you?" Bartholomew whisper-shouted, his face turning red. "You are doing this right now? Here?"
Casey looked at him with dead, empty eyes. "I already signed it. It stipulates a net-zero split. I am walking away with nothing. I do not want a single penny of your family's money."
The family members standing nearby heard the words 'net-zero'. They froze. Genevieve stopped walking and stared at Casey with her mouth wide open. A gold digger never walked away with nothing.
Bartholomew gripped the edges of the folder. His knuckles turned white. He felt completely humiliated. He felt like she was stripping him naked in front of his entire family. He raised his hands, preparing to rip the document in half.
"Tear it up," Casey said, her voice cutting through the silence like a knife. "If you do not sign it by tomorrow morning, I will send a digital copy to the front page of the Wall Street Journal. Let the world know I gave up billions just to get away from you."
Bartholomew froze. His hands shook with rage, but he did not tear the paper.
Casey turned her back on him. She walked away from the crowd and pressed the button for the elevator. The metal doors slid open. She stepped inside and turned around.
The doors slowly closed, cutting off the sight of Bartholomew's furious, panicked face. Casey looked at her reflection in the metal doors. Her cheek was swollen and bruised. Her lip was bleeding. But she smiled. It was a broken, beautiful smile of absolute freedom.
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8.4
Ayleen Avery was just a struggling hotel worker trying to survive her shift. But during a sudden blackout, she accidentally stumbled into the pitch-black VIP suite of a ruthless billionaire driven mad by chronic insomnia.
Calmed only by her unique natural scent of roses and rain, the terrifying man attacked her from the shadows and forced himself on her. Terrified and broken, Ayleen fled at dawn, unknowingly leaving behind her late mother's antique rose necklace in his bed.
Her greedy coworker found the necklace, claimed to be the woman from that night, and was instantly swept into a life of luxury. Meanwhile, Ayleen was blackmailed into a forced marriage with her attacker—Cassius Doyle—to save her adoptive father from prison. Deceived by the stolen necklace, Cassius believed Ayleen was a manipulative spy. He brought the coworker into their home and paraded her around the master bedroom.
"In this house, you are lower than the dirt on my shoes."
He choked Ayleen, forced her to sleep in a damp storage room, and treated her with violent disgust while pampering the thief.
Ayleen was suffocating in absolute despair. She had lost her innocence, her freedom, and her mother's only relic to a vicious liar. She couldn't understand how this all-powerful man could be so completely blind. Why couldn't he recognize the very scent that had cured his agonizing madness?
Staring at the dark bruises he had just left on her neck, Ayleen wiped the blood from her lip. She would endure this three-month marriage to secure her family's safety, but once the contract ended, she would expose the truth and tear down the fake savior he cherished so much.

9.8
Adeline's stepmother had secretly drugged her for years, turning a child genius into a drooling, mentally disabled laughingstock just so her stepsister could steal her life.
But when her greedy father sold her off to Griffin Herring—a violent, untouchable billionaire psychopath—to save his company, things took a deadly turn.
Before the wedding, Griffin attacked her in a dark alley, nearly snapping her neck before stealing her grandfather's silver necklace.
That necklace held a micro-drive with her family's deepest secrets, and without it, she had nothing.
Back at the estate, her situation only worsened. Her stepsister Damaris paraded around in the Herring family's diamond engagement gifts, trying to force-feed Adeline wet dog food on an Instagram live stream.
When Adeline's calculated "clumsiness" ruined the video, her furious father locked her in a damp, rusted basement.
"Give her to the psycho," her stepmother hissed through the door. "Let him lock her away forever."
Listening from the shadows, Adeline's fists clenched until her palms bled.
Her supposed mental fog wasn't a tragedy—it was a calculated assassination of her mind. They had destroyed her childhood and were now throwing her to a monster just to keep the billions.
The dull, empty look in Adeline's eyes vanished instantly, replaced by a razor-sharp, chilling clarity.
She pulled a thin surgical needle from her messy bun and picked the heavy iron padlock in ten seconds. It was time to break into the billionaire's penthouse, take back her necklace, and tear them all apart.

8.8
Elizbeth married the wealthy heir Carlton Wilkinson to save her grandfather's life's work.
But on their wedding night, instead of a loving husband, she faced a cold tyrant. He forced her to sign a brutal prenup, stripped her of all family rights, and banished her to a dingy guest room.
He was convinced she was just a pathetic, gold-digging liar.
When a catastrophic pain attack drove Carlton to smash his own head against the wall, Elizbeth rushed in to save him using her specialized acupuncture. She risked her life to calm his spasming nerves.
But the moment he woke up, he nearly choked her to death. He threw her against the wall, bleeding and bruised, accusing her of using cheap parlor tricks to poison him.
The next morning, his greedy relatives openly mocked her cheap clothes, waiting like vultures for Carlton to drop dead so they could steal his fortune.
Elizbeth was humiliated and terrified, but she soon discovered a classified secret.
Carlton was a former Delta Force operator slowly going mad from an undetectable weaponized biotoxin. The poison made him paranoid and violent. He would rather die in agony than accept help from a woman he despised.
Begged by his desperate grandfather, Elizbeth knew she had to cure him in the shadows.
At 1:00 AM, she slipped a heavy, odorless sedative into his water and sneaked into his pitch-black bedroom to begin the detox.
But as her silver needle hovered over his skin, a massive hand shot out and pinned her violently to the mattress.
"How much did they pay you to poison me?" he hissed in the dark, his eyes wide awake and blazing with murderous fury.

8.6
For years, Elvera lived as the despised charity case in the cramped Wright household.
When she caught her foster sister Donita straddling her fiancé, they didn't even panic. Instead, they loudly framed Elvera for stealing a diamond necklace to justify kicking her out.
Her foster parents immediately sided with the cheaters, screaming at her to pack her trash and starve in the gutters. Only her dying foster brother tried to sneak her his medical savings, but the family violently shoved him away, mocking him as a walking corpse.
Standing in the freezing Brooklyn wind, Donita and Crockett followed her outside just to laugh. They waved a crisp twenty-dollar bill in her face, mocking her biological family as a bunch of unemployed street thugs.
They really thought she was going to freeze to death on the pavement with nothing but a faded backpack.
But then a roaring, matte-black supercar pulled up.
The man who stepped out wasn't a street thug; he was her real brother, an FBI task force commander.
He effortlessly snapped Crockett's shoulder out of its socket, put Elvera in the passenger seat, and drove her straight to a sprawling billionaire estate in the Hamptons.
Sitting by the fire in her biological parents' palace, watching them casually display an eight-million-dollar sculpture she had secretly designed, the head butler suddenly walked in.
"Sir, the fake heiress has returned from Europe."
Elvera took a slow sip of her coffee. The real game was finally about to begin.

9.1
June woke up transmigrated into the body of a ruthless billionaire's toxic, disposable wife.
Before she could even process the massive Beverly Hills mansion, a cold system voice announced she had exactly five minutes of lifespan remaining.
To survive, she was forced to bind with the system and strictly maintain the original owner's "brainless, abusive drama queen" persona to earn hours to live.
She was forced to violently slap hot coffee out of a terrified maid's hands and physically spank her manipulative five-year-old stepson.
When she tried to escape this nightmare by throwing divorce papers at her terrifying husband, Isaac Walton, he simply ripped them to shreds.
Every time she tried to be reasonable or show a hint of kindness, the system tortured her with agonizing cardiac pain, cementing her status as the most hated monster in the family.
The most absurd part happened when she threw a hysterical, system-mandated tantrum over a gossip magazine, and Isaac's icy demeanor suddenly melted.
He gently touched her hair, offering the one thing she desperately needed.
"Stop crying. I'll handle it."
Just as a spark of hope ignited in her chest, the system's critical death warning exploded in her skull: accepting his sympathy would instantly deduct thirty days of her life.
To stay alive, June had no choice but to violently slap away the only hand reaching out to save her, forcing herself to play the greedy villain while her husband's gaze turned dangerously dark.

9.0
Eileen woke up in a trashed hotel room, her head pounding with the pathetic memories of a despised Hollywood actress.
Outside the window, paparazzi were already screaming about her manufactured cheating scandal, but the real nightmare was waiting at her door.
Her paralyzed, billionaire husband, Carlisle Vinson, looked at her with pure disgust while his butler shoved a divorce settlement at her chest.
"Mr. Vinson is offering a severance package of fifty million dollars, provided you sign immediately and vacate the premises."
The original owner had left her an absolute mess.
Her trusted assistant had sold her room number to the press to frame her, and a playboy had scammed her out of her entire two million dollar life savings.
If she signed those papers and lost the Vinson family's protection, the breach of contract fees and her enemies in the industry would swallow her alive in days.
Eileen felt a cold fury override the original owner's lingering panic.
Why should she take the fall and be thrown out on the streets while the parasites who set her up lived out their wealthy fantasies?
She had died once, and she wasn't about to waste her second chance playing the victim.
Eileen slammed the heavy divorce folder shut right against the butler's chest.
"I'm not signing," she said with a terrifying, absolute calm.
She stepped behind her husband's wheelchair, ready to shield him from the cameras, secretly cure his dead legs, and make everyone who betrayed her bleed.