
The Wife He Called A Nanny
A woman I' d never met introduced herself as my son' s mother in the parent group chat. I was three thousand miles away with my dying mother. My husband, Jaxon, told me it was just a mistake.
Then, at a school event, he publicly disowned me, telling everyone I was just the nanny.
He pointed to his mistress-the woman who tormented our son-and called her his "real" mother.
My ten-year marriage was a lie. The man I loved let this woman lock our sick seven-year-old in a dark closet, then called me unstable and tried to take him from me.
They thought they had won. They thought I was just a broken housewife with nothing left.
But they forgot who I was before I became his wife.
Today is Jaxon's big promotion meeting. He doesn't know the new Vice President who holds his future in her hands… is me.
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Chapter 2
Grace Fox POV:
The memory flooded back, sharp and painful. Valentine' s Day. Jaxon had come home late, claiming a project had run over. He presented me with a small, velvet box. Inside was a delicate silver bracelet with a single, tiny sapphire. It was pretty, but it felt like an afterthought.
Later that week, I' d been checking our credit card statement online, a routine task I handled for our household finances. I saw the charge from Tiffany & Co. It was for two items. The bracelet, and a pair of diamond stud earrings that cost five times as much.
When I' d asked him about it, he' d waved it away. "A gift for my mother," he'd said smoothly. "Her birthday is next month, I was just planning ahead."
I had believed him. I, the trusting wife, had believed every single one of his lazy, insulting lies.
Now, those same diamond earrings were dangling from Kori Whitfield's ears, catching the sterile fluorescent light of the school hallway. The symbol of his lie, his betrayal, right there in front of me.
My mind reeled, connecting dots I had refused to see.
Her Instagram. A public profile, under a cutesy handle, 'Kori' sArtCorner.' I had stumbled upon it weeks ago when she was announced as Ben' s new art teacher. I' d thought it was just professional curiosity. Now I realized it was a breadcrumb trail, left intentionally for me to find.
A picture from two months ago. A huge bouquet of red roses on a desk. The caption: "He knows I'm allergic to everything else, but he always finds a way. #bestman #love"
That same day, I had been in the emergency room, my throat closing up, gasping for air after walking past a florist shop. My pollen allergy was severe, life-threatening. Jaxon knew that better than anyone. He had sat by my hospital bed for hours after my first major reaction years ago, holding my hand, his face pale with fear. He knew. And he had bought another woman roses.
Another post. A selfie of her pouting in her car. "Stuck in traffic, but can't wait for my man to pick me up for our surprise date night! "
The time stamp matched a text from Jaxon on my phone. "Hey, babe. Going to be super late tonight. Big deadline, you know how it is. Can you grab Ben from after-school care?"
I' d been groggy from the allergy medication and had slept through the text. I woke up in a panic two hours later to a flurry of calls from the school. Ben had been sitting on the steps, all alone, waiting. He spiked a fever that night, the stress and the cold evening air getting the best of him.
On the frantic drive to the pediatrician, Jaxon had gripped the steering wheel, his knuckles white. "Why didn't you check your phone, Grace? I told you I was busy! You need to be more responsible. What kind of mother misses a message like that?"
The guilt had eaten me alive. I' d apologized profusely. I had berated myself for days, feeling like a failure. I was the stay-at-home mom. My one job was to care for our son, and I had failed.
Now, the truth settled in my stomach like a block of ice. He wasn't in a meeting. He was on a date with her. He had let our son sit alone in the cold so he could be with his mistress. And then he had twisted it, masterfully, to make it my fault.
The self-blame I had carried for weeks evaporated, replaced by a fury so pure and cold it made my vision sharp. It wasn't my apology to make. It was his.
My hand, clutching my purse, was rock steady. My gaze swept over Kori Whitfield, no longer seeing a flustered girl but a co-conspirator. The cheap cardigan, the faux-gentle demeanor, the trembling lip-it was all an act.
"You're lying," I said, my voice flat.
Kori' s face, which had been a mask of tear-stained panic, now hardened. The victim act was failing, so she was switching tactics. "I told you, he asked me to do it! He's worried about you!"
"He bought you those earrings for Valentine's Day," I stated, not a question but a fact. "The same day he gave me a bracelet that cost a fraction of the price. He told me the earrings were for his mother."
Her face went from white to red and back to a pasty, sickly white. Her mouth opened and closed like a fish, but no sound came out. She was cornered. She had no more lies left.
Pathetic. For all her brazenness online and in the group chat, in person she was nothing. A weak, unimaginative girl who thought she could steal a life that wasn't hers.
I didn't need to hear another word. I had seen enough.
I turned on my heel and walked away, leaving her trembling in the hallway. My heels clicked decisively on the polished linoleum, each step a final, irrevocable decision.
The moment I was outside in the cool morning air, I pulled out my phone. I didn't call my friends. I didn't call a divorce lawyer.
I called the one person who could give me not just support, but power.
"Dad," I said, when he answered.
Jefferson Humphrey, CEO of Fox Holdings, the most ruthless and powerful real estate mogul in New York, did not waste time with pleasantries. "Grace. You sound different. What's wrong?"
"I need your help," I said, my voice like ice.
I looked at my phone's lock screen. It was a picture of Jaxon, Ben, and me, smiling on a beach last summer. A perfect family. A perfect lie. My finger hovered over it for a second, then I went into my settings and changed the wallpaper to the stark, black default screen.
"I'm getting a divorce," I told my father. "Jaxon is having an affair."
There was a moment of absolute silence on the other end of the line. Then, his voice, a low rumble of thunder. "With who?"
I took a deep, steadying breath. "Our son's first-grade art teacher."
Another silence, this one heavier, more dangerous.
"Good," he finally said, and the word was a death sentence. "Tell me everything. The lawyers are already on standby."
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9.5
Kathryn was the true daughter, but Jolene stole her life and set her up for ruin.
After a brutal kidnapping scheme, Kathryn's loyalty to her brothers and fiancé was met with cruel betrayal. Narrowly escaping, she chose to cut all ties and never forgive them.
Then she shocked the world: the miracle doctor for the elite, a top-tier hacker, a financial mastermind, and now the untouchable star her family could only watch from afar.
Her brothers begged, her parents pleaded, her ex wanted her back-Kathryn exposed them all.
The world gasped as the richest man confessed his love for her.

9.5
"Do you know what marriage is?" Evelyn asked with a raised brow.
"Marriage is 'I do' and 'you do', then boom, children come in anytime they want," Drake replied with a cute smile.
"How do children come in?" She asked knowingly.
"Man and a woman call them," he replied foolishly.
"How do they call them?" She probed.
"Just like this..." He placed his phone to his ear.
"I already forgot that it's useless talking to you," Evelyn got annoyed and walked away
***
Twenty years old Evelyn Brown was forced to marry the son of the richest man in the country, Drake Valentino.
She thought her life was perfect, not until she was forced to get married to a man she barely knows because of money.
Evelyn had thought the arranged marriage wasn't bad as her groom was a handsome young man from a rich family, just like hers until she entered the marriage.
She was shocked into disbelief when she realized her husband wasn't as normal as she thought he was, he was a complete... Moron!

9.1
Ten years ago, they buried me alive. My fiancé Jake and my adoptive brother Alon had me committed, framing me as insane to cover up his affair with my family's long-lost biological daughter, Corina.
They erased me from their perfect lives, painting me as a danger to myself and others. While I was left drugged and broken in a psychiatric facility, he married her, securing his connection to our family's power and launching his political career.
But I survived. I rebuilt a quiet life from the ashes, finding peace in a small bookstore by the sea. This was my sanctuary.
Until today.
They walked through my door, shattering a decade of silence. Jake, now a powerful District Attorney aiming for the Senate, stared at me, his composure cracking.
"Chandler?"
I met his gaze, my voice cold and steady, the voice I used for any stranger.
"Can I help you?"

7.8
I was the orphan Marcus Thorne took in. He was my guardian, my savior, and the man I foolishly fell in love with.
But when he caught me sketching his portrait, he didn't see devotion. He saw a mess.
He called my feelings "inappropriate" and told his fiancée I was just a "minor household issue" before shipping me off to Italy to get rid of me.
He thought I would pine for him. Instead, I erased him.
I blocked his number, deleted his photos, and sent him a check for every single cent he spent on me with two words: *Debt paid.*
Three years later, Marcus showed up in Florence. He looked wrecked, desperate, and furious that his "property" had walked away.
He tried to order me home. He tried to claim he finally loved me.
He expected the girl who used to worship him to fall into his arms.
But I looked at the man who broke my heart and felt absolutely nothing.
"You don't love me, Marcus," I said, stepping back into the arms of a man who actually valued me.
"You just hate losing."
And for the first time, I watched him crumble while I walked away.

9.2
SYNOPSIS:
Before meeting Elliot Winter, Michelle's life was a routine of beatings from her drunk dad and juggling part-time jobs. He was handsome, loaded, and had a smile that could melt ice.
There was also a twenty-year age gap between them, Michelle didn't care because their relationship was the only ray of sunshine in her rather bleak world. And when he popped the question she was more than happy to say yes. Michelle thought she had found her happily ever after, but she couldn't have been more wrong. With each year that passed Elliot became more of a stranger and less of the man she had fallen for, neglecting her and looking the other way when his mother treated her poorly, that was until the day their 5th anniversary rolled around, she caught him in bed with her sister.
Her love is replaced by hate, a swooning affection now burning rage. Well, two could play that game. That night, she dials her stepson's number with a single text that will change their lives forever.
'I need you tonight'

9.4
For five years, I poured my soul into my career and my secret lover, my boss Hudson. But for the fifth time, he gave the promotion I bled for to my incompetent rival, Kaitlyn.
My world shattered when I overheard him callously admitting our entire relationship was just a "cost-effective strategy" to keep me motivated without the director's salary.
The humiliation didn't end there. He physically forced me into a deeper bow before Kaitlyn, re-injuring my back. When I finally quit, his revenge was swift: an assignment to a notoriously dangerous remote site.
That night, I was brutally attacked. My desperate emergency call to Hudson went straight to voicemail. A notification later revealed why: he was on stage at a company party, singing a love duet with Kaitlyn while I was fighting for my life.
The man I loved had left me to die.
After I cut all ties and finally started to heal, he showed up at my parents' door, begging for forgiveness.
This time, I wouldn't just walk away. I would make him face every lie he ever told.