Follow
Chapters
Share
The Scientist He Erased Returns Novel Cover

The Scientist He Erased Returns

For ten years, I was the silent engine behind my fiancé, the celebrated genius Dr. Alston Scott. I dedicated my life to our research, pouring my soul into a breakthrough that would change the world. But when that breakthrough finally came, he stole it. He put his new protégé's name, Kiara Gamble, on my life's work. At the annual colloquium, to shield Kiara from plagiarism accusations, he publicly dismissed my decade of research. "She performed some preliminary data collection," he announced to the entire institute. In that moment, I understood. I wasn't his partner; I was a tool. A convenient, disposable part he was now replacing. My family had already cast me out for losing my "golden ticket," and now, the man I loved had erased my professional existence. So after he tried to silence me with a kiss, I slapped him, walked back to my lab, and deleted everything. Every file. Every piece of data from the last ten years. Then I booked a one-way ticket to the desert.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 6

Ellie Cleveland POV:

The medical bay was sterile and quiet, a stark contrast to the chaos of the corridor. A kind nurse cleaned the superficial cut on my jaw and offered me an ice pack. Alston, after having his arm bandaged, was already back on his phone, dictating emails, his voice low and precise. The incident, for him, was clearly just another anomaly to be processed and moved past.

"Don't forget the preliminary data for the next phase, Ellie," he said, without looking up. "Kiara and I will need to review it before our joint presentation."

My breath hitched. My jaw tightened, not from pain, but from the raw indignity. He had just taken a blow for me, and his immediate concern was still the data, still Kiara, still the work he shared with her. My gratitude, a fleeting, tender bud, withered and died.

"I'll have it ready, Alston," I said, my voice flat.

Later that week, the mandatory annual mentor-protégé dinner was held. Alston, of course, was expected to attend. And as his-ex-fiancée, current subordinate-I was also required to be there, a painful relic of a past that refused to fully vanish.

The restaurant was opulent, filled with the hushed chatter of academic elite. Kiara, seated beside Alston at the head table, was a dazzling centerpiece. Her laughter, bright and unrestrained, floated across the room. She leaned in, whispering something into Alston's ear, and a rare, almost imperceptible smile touched his lips.

Our mentor, the esteemed Professor Albright, raised his glass. "To the future of this institute! And to our brightest minds, like Dr. Scott and his brilliant protégé, Dr. Gamble. We're all rooting for a spectacular partnership, both scientifically... and personally, perhaps?" He winked, and a wave of knowing chuckles rippled through the room.

My fork clattered against my plate. My face burned. The humiliation was a hot, prickly rash spreading across my skin. They were openly, publicly, shipping them. And I was sitting right there, the discarded history, the inconvenient truth. I felt like a ghost at my own funeral.

Kiara blushed, a pretty, artful blush. She glanced at Alston, her eyes sparkling. "Oh, Professor Albright! You're too kind. But Dr. Scott and I do have some exciting collaborations planned. Lots of late nights in the lab, I'm sure." Her emphasis on "late nights" was a subtle jab, a quiet victory dance.

Alston, however, cleared his throat. His gaze, usually fixed on some distant intellectual horizon, was momentarily sharper. "Professor, with all due respect, my focus remains solely on the advancement of the field. Dr. Gamble and I share a professional synergy, nothing more." His tone was firm, a rare but unmistakable rejection of the professor's playful insinuation.

Kiara' s smile froze. Her eyes flickered, a momentary shadow of hurt crossing her face. She quickly composed herself, but the shift was palpable.

A few minutes later, Kiara excused herself, her exit a little too abrupt. Alston, to my surprise, pushed back his chair. "Excuse me," he mumbled, already following her. He rarely left a conversation unfinished, let alone a dinner party.

Murmurs erupted around me. "Well, that was unexpected," someone whispered. "Poor Kiara." "But why would he-"

A colleague, Professor Davies, leaned over. "Ellie, are you alright? That was... a bit much." His eyes, usually sharp with scientific inquiry, now held a glint of concern.

"I'm fine, Professor," I said, forcing a smile. "Just a long day." I wanted to melt into the floor, to disappear from this suffocating room.

I stood, making my own quiet exit, hoping to escape unnoticed. But as I passed the main entrance, a glimpse through the ornate glass doors stopped me dead.

Alston and Kiara were outside, bathed in the soft glow of the streetlights. Kiara was crying, her shoulders shaking. Alston, rigid as ever, had his hand on her arm, a gesture of awkward comfort. She looked up at him, her eyes glistening. She said something I couldn't hear, but the intensity of her gaze, the raw vulnerability, was unmistakable. She loved him.

And then, she did it. She reached up, pulling his head down, and kissed him. A desperate, lingering kiss.

Alston, the man who flinched from any casual touch, the man who had rejected our mentor's suggestion of a romantic partnership moments ago, didn't pull away. He stood there, stiff, but allowing it. Accepting it.

My heart, which I thought had turned to stone, fractured. He had never allowed me that. Never. Even the one, the only time I had kissed him, years ago, after a particular scientific triumph, he had stiffened, his lips unresponsive, his eyes wide with a peculiar aversion. He had tolerated my kisses, but he had never indulged them. Or her.

He finally pulled back, a strange expression on his face. He looked up, his eyes sweeping the area, and they landed, by chance, on me.

Our gazes locked across the glass. His eyes, usually so opaque, held a flicker of something. Recognition? Guilt? I didn't care.

I turned away, a quiet desperation settling over me. I couldn't do this anymore. I couldn't watch this slow, agonizing reenactment of everything I had craved, now effortlessly given to someone else.

"Ellie?" His voice, a low rumble, pierced the air behind me.

I didn't stop. I just kept walking, my pace quickening. "I'm going home, Alston," I called back, the words feeling like a final, definitive farewell.

The walk back to my dorm was a blur. The city lights, usually a comfort, seemed to mock me with their indifferent shine. He knocked on my door a few minutes later, his familiar, precise rap echoing in the quiet hallway.

You may also like

After Divorce:My arrogant ex-husband regrets Novel Cover
7.1
I sat alone at my long marble dining table, staring at a plate of cold truffle risotto. My husband, Jere, was late again, claiming he was stuck in a "war zone" of a board meeting for a multi-billion dollar merger. A single Instagram notification shattered the silence. It was a photo of a candlelit birthday dinner, featuring a man's hand resting on a white tablecloth. I recognized the slight veins, the jagged scar on the thumb, and the navy-faced Patek Philippe watch I had spent six months tracking down as a wedding gift. Jere wasn't in a boardroom; he was celebrating his ex-girlfriend Irina's birthday while texting me to "don't wait up." The next morning, I followed him to a VIP hospital wing. I watched through a cracked door as my husband cuddled a five-year-old boy and whispered tender promises to Irina. When he came home, he tried to buy my silence with a rare pink diamond bracelet, but I found the receipt: he had bought two identical ones. He had branded his wife and his mistress with matching jewelry, using hidden trackers to keep us both on a leash. When I confronted him, he didn't flinch. He coldly reminded me that he owned my father's massive debts and could send him to prison for insolvency fraud with one phone call. "Stop with the attitude, Deliah," he said. I felt like a ghost haunting my own life, trapped in a gilded cage by the man who paid for my mother's heart surgery while keeping a secret family across town. The humiliation peaked at our rescheduled anniversary dinner when Jere received a text, threw a stack of hundreds at me like I was a stranger, and abandoned me in a crowded restaurant to rush back to her. "Pay the bill," he commanded before walking out. Standing in the wreckage of a shattered crystal vase back at the penthouse, I realized my silence was the only thing keeping his empire standing. I pulled the crumpled divorce papers from my purse and signed my name with a steady hand. I wasn't just walking away; I was calling his sister to help me burn his perfect world to the ground.
After My Husband Proposed to His Mistress Publicly Novel Cover
8.2
On my thirtieth birthday, the award-winning songwriter released a new track. My husband, Mathias Thomas, announced to the media that the song was titled "Rachel," dedicated to someone special. Shortly after, Rachel Griffin, a new singer, tweeted: “Thank you, Mathias, for the debut gift. I really love it. @MathiasThomas” The picture she shared showed her singing in a recording studio. Mathias retweeted, commenting, “Destiny brought us together; may your journey to stardom be successful.” Quietly, I liked both tweets and then messaged Connor Wheeler, who was overseas: "Connor, I’d love to join your team and head abroad for the shoot." ============================== Mathias came home smelling of alcohol, calling my name. When he opened the door and saw me lying in bed, he paused for a moment. “Why didn’t you make me something for the hangover?” I kept my eyes closed and didn’t reply. Mathias nudged my arm, saying, “Leanna, I need some hangover soup.” I opened my eyes reluctantly, my voice steady. “The recipe is in the kitchen cabinet.” “Aren’t you going to make it for me?” he frowned, looking frustrated.
Damaged Goods, A Priceless Return Novel Cover
7.2
After a fire stole my family and my voice, my boyfriend Jermain promised to be my shield. I was the silent composer behind our band's success, fighting to speak again-for him. Then I overheard him call me "damaged goods, a millstone around my neck." His betrayal escalated. He let his new flame publicly humiliate me, then abandoned me-injured and deafened-in a storm, calling me a "liability." The boy who promised to be my voice was gone. In his place was a stranger who saw me only as a burden he was tired of carrying. So I vanished. Three years later, with my voice and hearing restored, I returned not as a victim, but as a celebrated artist. He's back, begging for a second chance, but he's about to learn that the "damaged goods" he threw away are now priceless.
Divorce Unleashed Her: The Mafia Empress Awakens Novel Cover
7.6
She was the heir of a criminal syndicate, bred to command the underworld. For seven years she loved the wrong man, serving his family and building their fortune. Her payment was betrayal-his affair with her best friend. During her three-year coma, he hissed, "Don't wake up." They carried on at her bedside, then plotted her death to steal the company. She woke anyway and shattered them, rattling high society as a mafia heir and lethal fighter who ran the black-market economy. He begged. She kicked him aside and chose the man who'd waited a decade-the world's top arms dealer. "I'm yours."
Her Last Name, His Claim  Novel Cover
7.5
She left him five years ago, long before he became the ruthless billionaire the world now fears. Now she's ready to marry again but first, she needs his signature. Except Enzo Wayne doesn't plan to let go. He's waited five years to remind her what belonging means. One signature, one demand, one impossible month..and one question neither of them wants to answer: What if she never stopped loving him?
His Mistress, My Fortune Novel Cover
8.5
I stared at the numbers on my screen, a cold feeling settling in my stomach. The financial reports for Pinnacle Group never lied—and right now, they were telling a story I'd suspected for months but hadn't wanted to confirm. Micro-transfers. Dozens of them, siphoning from our corporate accounts into an unmarked personal one. Small enough to fly under the radar of our financial oversight team, but large enough to add up to significant sums over time. The pattern was unmistakable. I scrolled further, my finger freezing over the trackpad when I saw it: a single withdrawal of $50,000 from my personal investment fund. Not just any money—the fund I'd specifically set aside for Emma's birthday present and future investments. The glass walls of my CEO office suddenly felt like a cage. Outside, New York City sprawled beneath me, oblivious to the betrayal unfolding on the 50th floor of Pinnacle Tower.