Follow
Chapters
Share
THE WIDOW'S BILLIONAIRE Novel Cover

THE WIDOW'S BILLIONAIRE

I spent 30 years being the perfect wife. I raised his children. Built his home. Smiled at his business dinners. And on our 30th anniversary, I found out it was all a lie. "I never loved you, Margaret. You were just... convenient." He said it so casually. Like he was commenting on the weather. While his 28-year-old girlfriend waited in the car. At 52, I had nothing. No career. No savings in my name. No identity beyond "Mrs. David Chen." But I had rage. And when the most ruthless billionaire in the city offered me a deal, I should have said no. "Be my wife for one year. Help me secure my company. And I'll make sure your ex-husband loses everything." I said yes. I didn't expect to fall in love at 52. I didn't expect him to fall first.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The red dress hung perfectly against my skin, the fabric whispering against my legs as I moved around our dining room. David had always loved this dress—the way it hugged my waist, the way the color brought out the warmth in my eyes. I'd worn it on our first anniversary, our tenth, our twentieth. Tonight, for our thirtieth, it felt like armor.

The table gleamed under the soft candlelight, set with our wedding china and the crystal glasses his mother had given us. I'd spent hours preparing his favorite meal: herb-crusted salmon, roasted vegetables, the chocolate soufflé that had taken me three attempts to perfect. The wine—a 1994 Bordeaux we'd been saving for a special occasion—breathed in its decanter.

Thirty years. I touched the pearl necklace at my throat, remembering the day he'd clasped it there on our wedding morning. "You're perfect, Margaret," he'd whispered then, his breath warm against my ear. "Absolutely perfect."

I'd been twenty-two, fresh out of college with a portfolio that had caught the attention of Hartwell & Associates in Manhattan. The offer letter had arrived the same week as our wedding invitations went out. Top-tier design firm, corner office overlooking Central Park, salary that would have made my father proud. But David had taken my hands in his, those dark eyes serious and pleading.

"I need you, Margaret. My practice is just starting, and I can't do this without you. Please."

So I'd folded the letter, tucked it away in my jewelry box where it yellowed with age, and became Mrs. David Chen instead of Margaret Walsh, interior designer.

The sound of his key in the lock made my pulse quicken. I smoothed the dress one more time, checked my lipstick in the hallway mirror. Thirty years of marriage, and I still wanted to look perfect for him.

"David?" I called, my voice bright with anticipation. "I'm in the dining room."

His footsteps were measured, deliberate. When he appeared in the doorway, I noticed immediately what was missing—no flowers, no small wrapped box, no bottle of champagne. His hands hung empty at his sides.

"You look beautiful," he said, but his voice carried no warmth. It was the tone he used with difficult clients, polite but distant.

Something cold settled in my stomach. "I made your favorite. The salmon you love, and I opened that Bordeaux we've been—"

"Margaret." He stepped into the room but didn't move toward me. "We need to talk."

The words hit me like a physical blow. In thirty years of marriage, nothing good had ever followed that phrase. I gripped the back of my chair, the wood solid and reassuring beneath my fingers.

"Can't it wait until after dinner? I've worked so hard—"

"No." He reached into his jacket pocket and withdrew a manila envelope. "It can't wait."

My hands trembled as I took it from him. The weight of it, the official seal in the corner—I knew what it was before I opened it. Divorce papers. The words blurred together: irreconcilable differences, division of assets, dissolution of marriage.

"I don't understand." The words came out as barely a whisper. "David, what is this? What's happening?"

He sat down across from me, in the chair where he'd eaten breakfast every morning for thirty years, where we'd planned our children's futures, where we'd dreamed about growing old together. But his face was that of a stranger.

"I never loved you, Margaret."

The candles flickered between us. The salmon grew cold on its platter. Somewhere in the distance, I heard the grandfather clock chiming eight o'clock, but the sound seemed to come from another world.

"I thought I should be honest," he continued, his voice steady and matter-of-fact. "After all these years."

"Honest?" The word scraped against my throat. "Our thirty years together—what were they?"

"A practical arrangement." He folded his hands on the table, the gesture so familiar it made my chest ache. "When I was starting my practice, I needed the right kind of wife. Someone from a good family, well-educated, presentable. You were perfect for what I needed."

The room tilted around me. "Perfect for what you needed."

"Your father's connections helped me get my first major clients. Your mother's social circle opened doors. You were gracious at dinner parties, charming with potential investors. You gave me two beautiful children and managed our home flawlessly." He paused, studying my face with clinical detachment. "You were exactly what I required."

Required. Like a piece of office equipment.

"But love?" My voice cracked. "David, I loved you. I gave up everything for you. My career, my dreams—"

"I know." He didn't even have the decency to look apologetic. "And I'm grateful. But I've met someone who's shown me what real love feels like."

The words hit me like a slap. "Someone else."

"Her name is Amber. She's twenty-eight, brilliant, passionate about life." For the first time all evening, his voice warmed. "She's my company's marketing director. When I'm with her, I feel alive in a way I never have before."

I thought of all the late nights he'd claimed to be working, all the business trips that seemed to multiply over the past year. The cologne I didn't recognize, the new clothes, the way he'd stopped really looking at me.

"How long?" I asked.

"Two years."

Two years. While I'd been planning our anniversary, choosing the perfect wine, believing we were growing closer in our golden years, he'd been building a life with someone else.

"The house will be yours," he said, flipping to a page in the documents. "And I'm offering five hundred thousand dollars as a settlement. It's more than fair, considering—"

"Considering what? That I'm fifty-two and haven't worked in thirty years? That I have no retirement savings because I trusted my husband to take care of our future?" My voice rose, surprising us both. "That I don't even know who I am anymore because I've been Mrs. Chen for so long that Margaret Walsh died decades ago?"

He had the grace to look uncomfortable, but only for a moment. "You'll be fine, Margaret. You're resourceful."

I stared at the signature line where his name was already written in his familiar script. The date made my blood freeze. "You signed this a month ago."

"I wanted to wait until after the holidays. I didn't want to ruin Christmas for the kids."

The doorbell rang, cutting through the suffocating silence. David straightened in his chair, and I saw something I'd never seen before—anticipation, even joy, lighting his features.

"That's Amber," he said, standing. "I'm moving out tonight."

I followed him to the front door in a daze, my red dress suddenly feeling like a costume from a play I no longer understood. He opened the door to reveal a young woman with honey-blonde hair and bright blue eyes, wearing a black dress that probably cost more than my monthly grocery budget.

But it wasn't her youth or beauty that made my knees buckle. It was the necklace at her throat—my grandmother's pearl and diamond pendant, the one that had gone "missing" from my jewelry box a month ago. The one I'd torn the house apart looking for, the one David had helped me search for, his face a mask of concern.

"Hello, Mrs. Chen," Amber said, her voice sweet as honey. "I'm so sorry about all this."

She touched the necklace—my necklace—with delicate fingers, and I realized that my thirty-year marriage hadn't just ended tonight.

It had been stolen from me, piece by piece, lie by lie.

You may also like

Candice And The Cocky King Novel Cover
9.3
She bit her lower lip, nervous. "You're a dangerous man. I have seen you kill without a thought. What's to make me believe it won't be my head falling to the ground one day?" He stared at her for long, quiet seconds before he said slowly, "There are far more dangerous things I want to do to you and with your body. Death by my hand should be the least of your worries." ***** Candice is a metropolitan real estate agent, whose world revolves around closing deals and raking in commissions. But everything changed when a mysterious billionaire set her up on a blind date, thrusting her into a world beyond her wildest imagination. Suddenly, she finds herself at the center of a supernatural storm, with creatures from the shadows seeking to exploit her connection to Wayne Wyatt, the powerful and enigmatic werewolf monarch. Forced into a role she didn't fully understand, she agrees to play her role as Luna to her newly found Alpha – but only for a price. However, taming the proud and infuriating King would require her to navigate a delicate balance of power and seduction, testing her wits and will against his unyielding dominance. She finds herself in a bind, trying to resist this gorgeous, prideful king or succumb to the primal attraction that threatens to consume them both.
Divorce After His Affair Novel Cover
7.9
I gently touched my stomach, feeling a wave of sadness wash over me. The emotional weight of the pregnancy test was something only I could truly comprehend. It was my own flesh and blood, making it hard to let go. Since I became pregnant, he hadn’t bothered to stay by my side. Instead, he let his assistant, Anastasia, flaunt herself in front of me repeatedly. Every time I asked him to stay with me, to give me a little motivation, he’d cite being busy as an excuse while gallivanting around with her. Meetings turned into spa hotel getaways with Anastasia; business trips became bikini holidays in the Caribbean. Incidents like this happened more times than I could count. I cried and fought, but he never took it seriously. He’d dismiss me with, “She’s just an assistant, what could we possibly have?
After Being Dumped by her Boyfriend, She Became his Stepmother Novel Cover
7.4
Sylvia Payne rubbed her aching back and cautiously made her way down the stairs. At the corner, she unexpectedly ran into Clint Norris, whom she hadn't seen for three years. He had dumped her after they had been in a relationship for eight years due to his beloved woman, Paulina Bailey. As soon as Clint saw Sylvia, he furrowed his eyebrows and sighed, "Sylvia, I know this is unfair to you. But Paulina and I truly love each other. Please consider me owing you in this lifetime... Even if you come to my house and beg me to get back together, I will never agree. Please leave..." Sylvia didn't know what to say at that moment. Where was she supposed to go? This was her home now. In fact, Sylvia was now Clint's stepmother. Two days ago, she had gotten married to Clint's father, Roderick Norris.
Married to my Step Brother  Novel Cover
9.0
Blurb- ‎ A CONTRACT SIGNED IN INK, A LOVE WRITTEN IN BLOOD. ‎ ‎She needed a husband to keep her empire. He needed a bride to hide his sins. ‎When Belle Bailison is blackmailed into marriage to claim her rightful place as CEO, the last man she expects to offer a deal is the ruthless, enigmatic Adam Hamilton. Cold, powerful, and hiding more than just business secrets. Adam proposes a contract Belle can’t afford to refuse – 25% of her shares in exchange for a marriage that’s nothing more than a facade. ‎ ‎But when dark family secrets unravel, and forbidden feelings ignite between enemies-turned-lovers, Belle must confront a horrifying truth. ‎ ‎In a world of blood ties, betrayal, and buried pasts – can love survive when trust is the ultimate casualty?
Mistaken for a Rogue: The Alpha's True Heir Novel Cover
8.1
I was eight years old when my father, Alpha Derek, raided the rogue bunker to save my mother. I thought I was finally safe. But because I reeked of the wolfsbane chemicals used to hide my scent, my mother looked at me with pure disgust. "Get that thing away from me! It smells like him!" she shrieked. To protect his traumatized mate, my father didn't check my DNA. He threw me into the garage to sleep on oily rags. For months, I was the true Alpha's daughter, yet I was forced to eat dog food while they pampered a fake orphan named Kylie in my place. When Kylie ordered the guard dog to tear my arm open, my mother stood at the window. Instead of saving me, she let the maid close the curtains so she wouldn't have to see the blood. I only became useful when my father got into a critical car crash. They drained my rare "Moon Blood" to save his life, then immediately signed papers to ship me off to a labor camp to get rid of the "stain" on their family. They thought I was a dirty rogue. They didn't know the chemical smell was masking the rarest bloodline in a century. I am not a rogue. I am a White Wolf. And just as my grandfather discovers the DNA results and falls to his knees in regret, the most powerful pack in the North has already arrived to claim me as their queen.
The Price Of Loving Mr Damien Novel Cover
9.4
Arielle West thought she was living a dream. A billionaire husband who adored her, a life of luxury, and a love that felt unbreakable. He once told her he didn’t want kids. She obeyed him. She gave up everything: her peace, her body, and her dreams, all in the name of love. When the doctor warned that another abortion could kill her. But before she could tell her husband, she discovers his cruelest secret: a mistress, and two children he never said existed. Arielle leaves, determined to protect the only innocent left in their story. Now, years later, Damian Blackwood wants her back. But the woman standing before him isn’t the naive wife he betrayed. She’s stronger, fiercer, and no longer his to break. Because she has already paid the price of loving him, and she will never pay it again.