Follow
Chapters
Share
Too Late, My Betrayer: Now I Shine Novel Cover

Too Late, My Betrayer: Now I Shine

My life was a constant calculation of cents, a future sacrificed for Nathan's endless, failing business debts. I stood in the freezing discount supermarket, weighing two packages of ground turkey, my medical school dreams sixty days past due. Then, a diamond necklace, shaped exactly like the starburst I designed, caught the light around a woman's neck, just before she purred, "Nathan, you are such a bad man." The ground turkey slipped from my numb fingers, hitting the dirty floor with a wet thud. Only last night, Nathan sat at our wobbly kitchen table, eating instant ramen, complaining about server costs. Now, his "strict landlord" Mr. Miller was chauffeuring this wealthy woman, Sloan, in a Rolls Royce. My entire existence for the past five years, a meticulously built lie, crashed down around me. I zoomed in on Sloan’s social media, my eyes burning as I saw the tiny "N" engraved on the starburst pendant. My body went numb, the crushing sadness replaced by a terrifying, absolute void. This wasn't some bankrupt loser; this was a monster who had swallowed me whole. I texted my old college roommate, Maya, with a single, chilling command: "Tear his life down to the studs. I want to see his true face."
Chapters
Share

Chapter 4

Clara Vance POV:

Nathan set the slightly damp pizza box down on our wobbly wooden dining table. The table rocked on its uneven legs, making a dull thumping sound against the cheap laminate floor.

He let out a long, heavy sigh and rubbed his temples with his index fingers. He slumped his shoulders forward, perfectly mimicking the posture of a man carrying the weight of the world. I had seen him do this a thousand times. He always used this display of vulnerability to trigger my protective instincts.

I picked up a chipped ceramic plate from the dish rack. I opened the box, pulled out a slice of lukewarm pepperoni pizza, and handed it to him.

Nathan reached out and wrapped his large hand around my wrist. He pulled my hand toward his face and pressed a soft, lingering kiss to the back of my knuckles.

My stomach pitched violently. The urge to rip my hand away and scrub my skin with boiling water was overwhelming. I forced my arm to remain completely relaxed. I did not pull away.

"I went to pitch to another investor today," Nathan said, offering me a sad, self-deprecating smile. "They rejected me again. Those suits looked right through me like I was garbage."

I looked into his eyes. His acting was flawless. If I did not know about the thirty billion dollars, I would have wept for him.

"It does not matter what they think," I said, keeping my voice soft and steady. "I believe in your talent. One day, everyone will see what you are capable of."

Nathan nodded bravely. He picked up the slice of pizza and took a bite.

I watched his face closely. For a fraction of a second, the muscles around his nose twitched. His jaw stiffened as he chewed. It was a micro-expression of pure, instinctual disgust. His palate, used to Michelin-starred meals and dry-aged wagyu, was rejecting the cheap, processed carbohydrates.

I reached across the table and gently pulled the paper plate away from him.

"You have a bad stomach," I said smoothly. "You should not eat cold grease. It will make you sick. I will go make you a hot bowl of noodles."

Relief flashed in Nathan's eyes, quickly hidden behind a mask of gratitude. He leaned back against the rickety wooden chair and nodded. "You are too good to me, Clara."

I turned my back to him and walked into our narrow, closet-sized kitchen. I turned the sink faucet on full blast. The loud rushing of the water echoed off the cheap tile, covering the sound of my ragged breathing.

I stood at the sink, pretending to wash a pot. I kept my eyes fixed on the dark glass of the microwave door. It acted like a perfect mirror, reflecting the living room behind me.

As soon as Nathan thought I was busy, his entire posture changed. His spine straightened. The defeated slump vanished. He reached into the deep inner pocket of his coat draped over the chair.

He pulled out a sleek, heavy black smartphone. It was not the cracked, outdated Android he carried around me. This phone caught no glare from the overhead light. It had a high-end privacy screen protector installed.

I watched his hand in the reflection. He pressed his right thumb firmly against the bottom center of the screen. A tiny green indicator light flashed, and the phone unlocked. He immediately began swiping and typing with rapid, aggressive efficiency.

I dumped a handful of dry noodles into a pot of boiling water. The steam rose, fogging up the glass, but I had already memorized the exact motion of his thumb and the exact pocket he used.

Ten minutes later, I walked out of the kitchen holding a steaming bowl of chicken noodles.

Nathan had already stashed the black phone. He was sitting at the table, holding his cracked Android, slowly swiping colorful candies across the screen in a game of Candy Crush.

After he finished the noodles, he let out a fake yawn. "I am exhausted. I need a shower."

He walked into the small bathroom and shut the door. A minute later, the loud spray of the showerhead hit the plastic tub.

I walked silently over to the chair where he left his coat. I slipped my hand into the inner pocket. My fingers brushed against the cold, smooth metal of the hidden phone.

I did not pull it out.

I had taken an elective on advanced biometric security during my second year of medical school. I knew that high-end corporate devices often had proximity locks. If the phone moved too far from a paired smartwatch or a specific location beacon, it would wipe itself entirely.

I pulled my hand back out empty. I walked over to the bathroom vanity drawer. I dug past the cheap toothpaste and pulled out a roll of breathable medical tape and a small container of translucent setting powder. I tucked them into the waistband of my sweatpants.

The shower stopped. Nathan walked out, a towel wrapped around his waist, his dark hair dripping wet onto his shoulders. He walked to our sagging mattress on the floor and climbed under the thin blanket.

I reached over and clicked off the main lamp, leaving only a dim, yellow nightlight plugged into the wall.

I crawled into bed beside him. I lay perfectly still, staring at the ceiling, listening to the rhythm of his breathing. I waited until the shallow breaths of sleep deepened into the slow, heavy pulls of deep REM sleep.

Sleep well, darling. I'll make sure you have sweet dreams tonight.

You may also like

After My Fiancé Abandoned Me, His Billionaire Rival Saved Me Novel Cover
9.4
On her wedding day, Sarah is humiliated when her fiancé deserts her for his pregnant mistress. Desperate and broken, she finds an unexpected ally in her ex's most powerful rival, the billionaire CEO Julian Thorne. Driven by a desire for revenge and a hidden obsession, Julian offers her a marriage of convenience. As they unite to destroy the man who hurt her, Sarah discovers that her new husband's cold exterior masks a deep, protective love.
Gradually drifting further and further away, books disappearing. Novel Cover
9.7
In this modern billionaire romance, a profound distance begins to grow between two souls as their shared world starts to crumble. The literal and metaphorical disappearance of books serves as a haunting backdrop for their fading connection. Once bound by a deep intellectual and emotional spark, the couple now faces an unexplained void. As their library thins, they must confront the reality of their relationship before everything vanishes.
Ending a Toxic Engagement Novel Cover
8.7
After years of enduring a suffocating relationship, Clara finally decides to break free from her wealthy but manipulative fiancé. Her choice to end the toxic engagement sends ripples through their elite social circle, challenging her to reclaim her identity. As she navigates her newfound independence, a powerful billionaire enters her life, offering a different kind of connection. Clara must now learn to trust again while facing the consequences of her past.
From Jilted Assistant To Zillionaire Queen Novel Cover
9.1
For ten years, Ran hid in the shadows as Hollywood star Jincheng Lu's secret girlfriend and assistant, starving herself to pay for his acting classes. On their tenth anniversary, she sat in a cheap apartment with $9.87 in her bank account, watching him slide a massive diamond ring onto a wealthy heiress's finger on live television. When she called the number she had memorized for a decade, she only heard a cold busy tone. He had blocked her. Despair swallowed her whole. She forced down a handful of sleeping pills with stale whiskey and died alone on the cold bathroom tiles. His mother found her rotting body three days later, calling her a "filthy bottom-feeder" before ordering a cleanup crew to dispose of her existence like industrial waste. Jincheng didn't even ask if she suffered. He just ordered his PR team to digitally erase her ten years of sacrifice from the internet. "Make sure the press release is airtight. She was an unstable former assistant. She had a history of mental illness. That's it." Until her heart stopped completely, she didn't understand. She had abandoned her status as the hidden heiress of the wealthy Qin family to build his empire from the ground up. How could he erase every trace of her without a second thought, using her corpse as a PR shield for his perfect new life? Opening her eyes again, the sharp smell of hospital antiseptic burned her lungs. She hadn't just died. She had woken up in the body of a notorious, D-list reality TV influencer who shared her exact name. Looking at her new face in the mirror, a cold smile spread across her lips. She was going to tear his perfect life apart, piece by bloody piece.
He Loved Her, Not His Wife Novel Cover
9.4
For five years, I was the ghost in my billionaire husband's mansion. I accepted his coldness, believing the ruthless tech mogul was simply incapable of love. That lie shattered when I saw him abandon a ten-billion-dollar merger to kneel on a dirty police station floor and tie his mistress's shoelace. His cruelty escalated. He had me dragged from a surgical table to cook for her. He let her destroy my life's work, then held me down as she sliced my hands with the broken marble. To appease her, he forced me to pick up broken glass from a pool with my bare hands, my blood clouding the water as the party guests watched in silence. He wasn't incapable of love. He was just incapable of loving me. But in her final act of humiliation, his mistress made a fatal mistake. Thinking she was signing a document to get rid of me, she used his legally binding personal seal and stamped our divorce papers. She thought she was ending me; instead, she set me free.
Losing Ryker: The Billionaire's Second Chance  Novel Cover
8.4
After a painful divorce from Ryker, a powerful billionaire who once held her heart, Elara is determined to rebuild her life from the ashes of their failed marriage. Just as she finds her footing, Ryker reappears, desperate to atone for his past mistakes and reclaim the love he threw away. Faced with his relentless pursuit and the ghosts of their history, Elara must decide if their connection deserves a second chance or if some bridges are meant to burn.