Follow
Chapters
Share
Thirty Days To Ruin My Cheating Husband Novel Cover

Thirty Days To Ruin My Cheating Husband

Evia Conway was the perfect billionaire's wife, a docile ornament bound by a ruthless prenuptial agreement that would leave her with nothing if she ever filed for divorce. That was until she found her husband's unlocked iPad and saw the photos of him wrapped around a 22-year-old blonde. The girl was Penelope, a scholarship recipient funded by Evia's own charity foundation. While Evia endured his family's public mockery for being barren, Frederic was secretly transferring two million dollars to buy his mistress a penthouse. He even laughed with his friends at an exclusive club, mocking Evia's devotion. "She is just a useless placeholder. Once Penelope gives birth to my heir, I will throw her out." Penelope even called Evia to flaunt her ultrasound, demanding she quietly disappear or face a public smear campaign. They all thought Evia was just a weak, clueless woman who could be easily discarded. But what Frederic didn't know was that Evia had kept a secret for three years: a medical report proving he was completely sterile. The baby he was destroying his marriage for was a total fraud. Evia didn't shed a single tear. She calmly put on her diamond necklace, smiled her perfect society smile, and opened her hidden encrypted laptop. She had exactly thirty days to surgically dismantle his empire and let him lose everything.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 1

The master bedroom door swung open with a soft click that felt like a gunshot in the silence.

Evia Conway stepped inside, her silk robe whispering against the threshold, and froze. The iPad sat on her vanity, screen glowing, unlocked. Frederic never left it unlocked. Never. Her heart slammed against her ribs, a physical percussion she felt in her throat.

She moved toward it without deciding to move. Her fingers hovered above the glass, cold, trembling. The screen saver cycled. Arctic sky. Green ribbons of light dancing.

Then Frederic. Her husband. His arms wrapped around a blonde woman whose face was tilted up to his, lips parted, waiting. The Northern Lights painted their skin in sickly green.

Evia's breath stopped. Her lungs forgot how to work. She stared at the date stamp in the corner-last weekend. London, he'd said. Boring meetings. Rain.

Her stomach twisted, a visceral cramp that bent her forward. She gripped the vanity edge, knuckles white, and forced herself to breathe. In. Out. The air tasted like copper.

She swiped. More photos. The same woman. Different angles. A hotel room. White sheets. Frederic's watch on the nightstand, the one she'd given him for their first anniversary.

Evia's thumb found the screenshot buttons. The screen's edge flashed white with a soft shutter click, a digital confirmation of the captured betrayal. She almost dropped the device, both hands shooting out to cradle it like a bomb. She steadied it against her chest, feeling her own heartbeat hammering through the thin aluminum casing.

Her fingers moved. Encrypted cloud. Her private server. Upload. The progress bar crawled. She watched it with the intensity of someone defusing explosives. Done. She deleted the local send history, scrubbed the cache, cleared the temporary files. Her hands knew these motions. Muscle memory from a life she'd buried.

She set the iPad down exactly as she'd found it. Screen still glowing. Still unlocked. Still showing her husband's betrayal in high definition.

Evia turned. Her feet carried her to the walk-in closet, past rows of couture that suddenly looked like costumes. The safe sat behind her winter coats, a matte black rectangle built into the wall. She spun the dial. Not a birthday. Not an anniversary. She entered a string of numbers-the primary constant from the final equation in her master's thesis. A sequence meaningful only to her. Click.

The door popped open with a pneumatic sigh.

She pulled out a folder thick with paper. The prenuptial agreement. Her fingers flipped to page seventeen, the page she'd memorized in darker moments. The net worth clause. The infidelity exemption. The paragraph that would leave her with nothing if she filed without documented cause.

Her mouth curved. Not a smile. Something colder. She'd signed this at twenty-four, dizzy with love, convinced that Frederic McLaughlin IV was her future. Three years later, she was holding her insurance policy.

She tossed the folder back inside. Locked the safe. Spun the dial.

The bathroom tiles were ice against her bare feet. She turned the faucet to cold, maximum pressure, and cupped her hands. The water hit her face like a slap. Once. Twice. She looked up.

The mirror showed a stranger. Pale. Wet. Eyes too bright. But something else too. Something hardening behind the shock.

Evia reached up. Her fingers found the diamond necklace at her throat, the one Frederic had presented at last year's gala, cameras flashing, his hand possessive at her waist. The clasp gave easily. She held it for a moment, watching the stones catch the light, then opened the cabinet door beneath the sink and dropped it into the trash can. It landed with a dull thud against empty tissue boxes.

She didn't close the cabinet.

The study door locked behind her with a decisive click. Evia moved to the bookshelf, third shelf from the bottom, behind the first edition Fitzgerald that Frederic had never opened. Her fingers found the release mechanism, a slight depression in the wood trim. The panel swung outward.

The laptop inside was matte black. No logo. No serial number. She'd built it herself, years ago, before she'd learned to smile at charity dinners and pretend not to understand corporate finance.

She powered it on. The screen lit her face in pale blue. Tor browser. Onion routing. Her fingers danced across the keyboard, entering addresses that existed only in encrypted directories.

The interface that loaded wasn't for a bank, but a complex monitoring program she'd coded years ago, a silent, sleepless sentinel watching the intricate web of the McLaughlin family trusts. She ran a diagnostic, her eyes scanning lines of code, checking for backdoors, for vulnerabilities she might have missed. The architecture was sound. Her work had held. Her legal access, granted by marriage, was also her financial prison, but a prison whose walls she had meticulously mapped.

Evia's cursor hovered over the alert protocols. Not a transfer switch, but a notification trigger. She initiated a sequence without hesitation, a series of low-level flags designed to look like routine system queries. To any outside observer, it was digital noise. To her, it was the first tremor of a controlled earthquake. The system requested confirmation. She provided biometric verification-thumbprint, retinal scan through the laptop's hidden camera.

The data began to flow, not out, but inward. She was pulling information, cross-referencing clauses in the trust with real-time asset locations. By morning, she would have a complete schematic of every shell company, every layered ownership structure. The path to freedom wouldn't be a smash-and-grab, but a surgical extraction.

Her jaw unclenched. A fraction. She opened the encrypted messaging application. The contact list showed one entry: [CASPER]. A white-hat hacker she'd known since her MIT days. A ghost in the machine who valued code purity above all else. She typed a string of alphanumeric characters, a pre-arranged signal. `` Sent.

The response came in four seconds. `[ACK. NEST IS WARM. AWAITING FLIGHT PLAN.]`

Evia's fingers stilled. Seventy-two hours to finalize her exit strategy. Thirty days to erase Evia Conway McLaughlin from every database that mattered. Thirty days to become someone else.

She shut down the laptop. Replaced the panel. Wiped the keyboard with her sleeve out of habit, though she'd never touched it with bare fingers.

The window overlooked the front drive. She was standing there, watching her own reflection ghosted against the dark glass, when the sound reached her. The Aston Martin's engine, that particular growl Frederic favored, cutting through the night like an accusation.

Headlights swept across the fountain. The car stopped. The door opened.

Evia watched him emerge, her husband, straightening his coat, running a hand through his hair. The gesture she'd once found charming. He looked up at the house, at their bedroom window, and smiled.

Her stomach heaved. She swallowed bile.

She turned from the window. Her hand found the light switch, plunging the study into darkness. She stood there, breathing, letting the blackness settle over her like armor. When she opened the door to the hallway, her face had transformed. The mask was in place. The McLaughlin smile. The McLaughlin poise. The McLaughlin wife.

The front door opened. Frederic's voice carried through the marble foyer, exchanging pleasantries with the housekeeper, complaining about the chill. Evia descended the stairs slowly, her hand trailing the banister, counting her steps.

She saw him before he saw her. Standing at the base of the staircase, handing off his coat, his profile sharp under the chandelier's glare. He turned. His face lit up with that practiced warmth, arms spreading wide.

"Darling."

He started up the steps toward her. Two steps. Three. The familiar scent of him reached her first-his cologne, yes, but underneath it, something else. Something floral and cloying. Perfume. Not hers. Never hers.

Evia's vision narrowed. Her body moved without her permission, sidestepping, her hand reaching for the Ming vase on the pedestal beside her. She adjusted a stem that didn't need adjusting. The gesture looked natural. Domestic. Dutiful.

Frederic's arms closed on empty air. He stumbled slightly, recovering with the grace of a man who'd never been denied anything.

"Evia?"

"The flowers were drooping." Her voice sounded distant to her own ears. Calm. Perfectly modulated. "I thought I'd fix them before dinner."

She didn't turn. Her fingers traced the porcelain petals, feeling nothing, seeing everything in the vase's curved reflection. Frederic's face, confusion flickering, then smoothing into indulgence.

"You're too good to this house." He moved closer, close enough that the foreign perfume invaded her lungs. "London was miserable. Rain every day. Meetings that could have been emails."

Evia arranged a leaf. Then another. She said nothing.

"I thought about you constantly." His hand found her shoulder, heavy, proprietary. "This gala season, we should get away. Just us. The villa in Amalfi-"

"That sounds lovely." The words fell from her mouth like stones into still water. She turned finally, the vase between them, and held out the hand towel the housekeeper had left on the pedestal. "You should freshen up. You look tired."

Frederic took the towel, his fingers brushing hers. She didn't flinch. She'd learned not to flinch. He wiped his hands, studying her face with the attention he usually reserved for quarterly reports.

"Are you feeling alright? You seem... distant."

Evia looked at him. At this man she'd promised to love. At the lie she'd lived inside for three years. The mask held. It would hold for thirty more days.

"I'm fine." She set the towel aside. "Just tired."

She moved past him, down the remaining stairs, her heels clicking a measured rhythm against the marble. She didn't look back. She didn't need to. She could feel his eyes on her, puzzled, slightly irritated, already dismissing her mood as female caprice.

Behind her, Frederic cleared his throat. "Evia-"

She didn't stop. Didn't pause. The mask was perfect. The mask was everything.

The hallway stretched before her, long and lit, leading to rooms she'd decorated and despised.

Evia spine straight, her hands loose at her sides.She walked it like a woman walking toward an exit she couldn't yet see.

You may also like

Divorced Wife's Secret Twins: Billionaire's Regret Novel Cover
8.8
I discovered I was pregnant with twins from my marriage to Ell Steele, the ruthless CEO of the Steele Group. But he saw me as a gold-digging nobody, unworthy of his heir. He stormed into our penthouse with his lawyer, slamming down abortion consent forms and a divorce NDA, offering five million to terminate and vanish. "You're not fit to carry my child," he spat, gripping my jaw. I refused the abortion, signed the zero-payout divorce to keep my company insurance for my dying mom's ICU bills, but stayed on as an admin assistant. Brittany, his mistress, spilled coffee on my reports, got me demoted to the dusty sub-basement sorting old files. She framed me for attacking her, security dragged me out, slamming me into doorframes that cramped my belly. Trapped in a sabotaged freight elevator, I nearly miscarried in the dark, gasping for air while Ell rescued me—only to find my prenatal pills and rage. At the gala, I warned Brittany the Angel's Tears necklace—Georgina's flawed design—was cracking. She accused me of theft; Ell ordered me stripped and searched publicly. It snapped anyway, shattering the diamond, but he blamed me, firing and blacklisting me on the spot. Beaten down, humiliated, body aching from their cruelty—how could my husband, who I once loved, destroy me without a shred of doubt? What made him so blind to my pain? Dragged from our home in the rain, a black Rolls-Royce Phantom pulled up. The butler bowed: "Madame Aura, your suite awaits." As Ell watched from his Maybach, I initiated the hostile takeover—time to bankrupt them all.
FALLING FOR MY MOM'S FIANCÉ  Novel Cover
7.2
I didn't hear it from my mother or from family... I saw it online, just like everyone else. A headline, a picture, a ring on her finger. And the man standing beside her? Philip Davenport. Billionaire. CEO. Untouchable. The kind of man who takes what he wants and keeps it. Including my mother. I was supposed to hate him-the man who replaced my father, the man I swore I'd destroy. So I made a plan: get close, get under his skin, make him want me... then watch everything fall apart. It was simple. Until he looked at me like I was the only woman in the room. Until his touch lingered longer than it should. Until every glance, every word, every moment started to feel like something I couldn't control. Now I'm caught in a dangerous game of desire and deception, where the lines I drew are slowly disappearing. The closer I get to him, the harder it is to remember why I started. My mother trusts me, my boyfriend loves me, and the man I was supposed to ruin is becoming the one I can't resist, and every step I take only pulls me deeper into something I was never meant to feel. I wanted revenge. What I got instead was something far more dangerous. And now? I might lose everything. Because falling for my mom's fiancé was never the plan. And if I'm not careful, I won't just lose the game... I'll lose myself.
Hard To Get, Easy To Fall: Surrender To Me, My Blind Tycoon Novel Cover
8.5
Kaelyn spent three years believing Andrew loved her completely, until one overheard conversation shattered everything. He had never returned for her. He had come back to save another woman, even if it meant taking Kaelyn's heart. Humiliated and done with loving alone, she agreed to marry Theodore, the blind yet powerful heir chosen by his grandfather. After the wedding, no matter how many times she tried, she just couldn't get past his walls. Then at a banquet, her desperate ex came begging. Before Kaelyn could react, Theodore drew her into his arms and murmured, "Giving up already? Try again. I'm ready to surrender."
Her Dangerous Distraction Novel Cover
7.8
Amara Daniels doesn't believe in destiny or happy endings; having survived from the dark shadows of her past, her life no longer has room for mistakes or attractive billionaires like Ethan Cole. Ethan enters her life with his charming persistence, and she becomes worried after he meets her four-year-old son, her past that she has carefully buried. He is her dangerous distraction. But their chemistry conceals shocking secrets and connecting fates - that might either bring them together or set them apart forever. In a game where hearts and careers collide, can she have it all or will passion cost her everything?
More Than His Partner, She's Queen Novel Cover
9.3
For five years, I was Ashton Miller's invisible partner, his loyal fiancée, pouring my life into building his empire from the shadows. Tonight, the Bronze Deer exhibition, my masterpiece, was finally opening at the Met, a testament to our shared future. Then, Bianca, a third-tier actress, stepped into the spotlight in *my* custom Vera Wang wedding dress. My blood ran cold as Ashton's arm circled her waist, his whispered words promising to make her the "new queen of the city." Five years of trust and sacrifice crumbled. I was a blood bag, drained and discarded. When I publicly exposed their lies, Ashton cornered me backstage, his face twisted in fury, threatening to ruin me, to blacklist me forever. I ripped off his engagement ring, tossing it at his chest. "We're done," I said, walking out as his enraged screams echoed. The man whose empire I secretly built called me a parasite, his mistress feigning tears, painting me as delusional. My guilt vanished, replaced by freezing, absolute hatred for the man who twisted reality to erase my existence. Standing in the New York rain, I finally pulled out the military-grade encrypted phone hidden for five years. The line clicked open instantly, a low, gravelly voice asking, "Is it you?" Before I could answer, Archer's voice hardened: "Give me the location. I'll be there in ten minutes. Who touched you? I want his life."
My secret lover is the CEO Novel Cover
7.7
It's common knowledge that Ethan married me only because I look like his first love. Three years of marriage, and he never once slept with me, because he thought it would be a desecration of his first love. On the surface, I was madly in love with him. In reality, I was blowing through his money like crazy and keeping a man on the side. But now there's a problem. The man I've been keeping… how does he look exactly like the richest man in New York? And even have the same name?