
Too Late To Love Your Mute Wife
To save my father's bankrupt company, I endured a forced marriage to billionaire Godfrey Valentine. He despised me, believing I was a scheming mute who trapped him.
When his former fiancée, Allyson, returned, my nightmare truly began. During a family dinner, she deliberately knocked a bowl of boiling lobster bisque directly onto my lap.
The scalding liquid soaked into my heavy dress, instantly blistering my flesh. Because of my paralyzed vocal cords, I couldn't even scream. I could only gasp in silent, blinding agony as I collapsed.
At that exact second, Allyson let out a blood-curdling shriek over a tiny drop of soup that had splashed onto her knuckles.
Godfrey didn't even glance in my direction.
"Tell the driver to pull up to the front!"
He roared in panic, scooping Allyson into his arms like fragile glass and rushing her to the hospital.
"You clumsy, stupid girl!"
His mother sneered at me before following them, leaving me kneeling alone in a puddle of boiling soup.
That night, seeing the paparazzi photos of him fiercely protecting her at the private ER, my heart completely shattered. I finally realized that to him, my life was worth less than a single scratch on her finger.
I wiped my tears, contacted my best friend to start a street bakery, and walked away. This time, I chose to live for myself.
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Chapter 9
The Williamsburg street market was packed with bodies. The bright morning sun reflected off the colorful canvas tents lining the sidewalk.
Aubree reached for a small, brown cardboard box. She carefully picked up a lemon tart with a pair of silver tongs and placed it inside. She folded the lid shut and handed it across the table to a young college student wearing a backwards baseball cap.
She smiled brightly, her eyes crinkling at the corners, and raised her hands to sign, Thank you. Have a great day.
Cleo stood next to her, taking a five-dollar bill from the boy. "She says thanks, enjoy!" Cleo translated loudly over the noise of the crowd.
Aubree wiped a bead of sweat from her forehead with the back of her wrist. The thick gauze wrapped around her thighs rubbed uncomfortably against her jeans, sending dull spikes of pain up her legs, but she ignored it. Her chest felt light.
At the far end of the street, the crowd began to part.
A line of heavy, black SUVs slowly rolled down the narrow, congested road. In the center of the convoy was a massive black Maybach with a vanity license plate.
Inside the Maybach, the air conditioning blasted silently. Godfrey leaned his head back against the leather headrest, his eyes closed, rubbing his temples.
In the front passenger seat, Miles Mercer looked out the window at the market stalls. He suddenly stiffened.
Miles turned his head slowly. "Boss," he said, his voice low and cautious. "I believe that is Mrs. Valentine on the sidewalk."
Godfrey's eyes snapped open. His dark eyebrows pulled together in a hard line.
He reached out and pressed a silver button on the door panel. The thick, tinted window rolled down halfway, letting the loud noise of the street flood into the quiet cabin.
His eyes scanned the crowd and instantly locked onto the small folding table.
He saw Aubree. She was wearing a cheap, stained apron. She was handing a box to a young man, and she was smiling.
It was a massive, genuine smile. Her teeth were showing, her face glowing with a vibrant energy he had never seen inside their penthouse.
A sharp, violent spike of irritation stabbed Godfrey right in the center of his chest. The muscle in his jaw began to tick rapidly.
He watched as she raised her hands and signed to the crowd. People were pointing at her, whispering.
To Godfrey's warped, manic brain, she was putting herself on display like a circus animal. She was dragging the Valentine name through the mud on a dirty Brooklyn street.
His breathing turned shallow and fast. He reached into his suit pocket and pulled out a heavy metal Zippo lighter, flipping the lid open and shut with his thumb. Click. Clack. Click. Clack.
"Do you want me to stop the car, sir? Have her get in?" Miles asked, watching Godfrey's knuckles turn white around the lighter.
Godfrey let out a dark, cruel laugh. His eyes were entirely black.
"No," Godfrey spat. "Let her keep selling smiles on the street. I want to see exactly how cheap she is willing to make herself."
On the sidewalk, the hair on the back of Aubree's neck suddenly stood up. She felt a heavy physical weight pressing against her skin.
She looked past the customer and stared straight at the street.
She saw the Maybach. She saw the half-open window. And she saw Godfrey's eyes staring directly at her, filled with pure, unadulterated rage.
The smile fell off her face instantly. Her fingers went numb, and she nearly dropped the stack of empty pastry boxes.
They stared at each other across fifteen feet of crowded asphalt.
Godfrey did not blink. He slowly pressed the button, and the tinted glass rolled up, cutting off his face.
The Maybach accelerated slightly, rolling past the stall and disappearing down the street like a massive black shadow.
Cleo bumped her shoulder. "Hey, you okay? You look like you just saw a ghost."
Aubree's stomach tied itself into a painful knot. She shook her head quickly, forcing herself to look down at the table, her hands trembling as she rearranged the cupcakes.
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7.7
Eva Brooks, a 25-year-old woman, was set up by her best friend. Her fiancé broke up with her and demanded compensation for allegedly cheating on him.
Eva had a one-night stand with the richest CEO in Dominic City, Ethan Owen. He was arrogant and offered her a job as his secretary.
As his secretary, Ethan couldn't shake his fondness for Eva. He became obsessed with her, worrying that she was cheating on him.
He broke up with his fiancée to become engaged to Eva, but will his fiancée let him go? Will Eva accept a relationship with her boss?

7.5
Five years of a fake marriage to a billionaire.
Christi thought she was a wealthy wife-until City Hall told her the truth.
No marriage license. No legal rights. Nothing but a lie.
Her husband cheated on her for four years.
His entire family mocked her, used her, and planned to trap her with a baby.
She was ready to ruin them all.
Then a secret changed everything:
Her late parents were DARPA elites. She is the sole heir to $50 billion.
There's only one catch-marry Cornelius Gregory, Wall Street's ruthless paralyzed tycoon.
She signs the contract in an instant.
Freeze their accounts. Destroy the Rivera family.
The game is over for them.
And the queen has just arrived.

9.3
Elliana sat on the cold marble floor, staring at the two pink lines on the pregnancy test. Overjoyed, she went to her husband Garrett’s study to surprise him.
But the room was empty. On his iPad, she accidentally opened a muted security video from the night before. As a graphic novelist trained in facial anatomy, she easily read Garrett’s lips as he spoke to their housekeeper.
"Increase the hallucinogens and the birth control. Let her become a complete lunatic."
The truth shattered her reality. Her three years of inexplicable exhaustion and mental collapses were orchestrated to keep her away from her ex-fiancé, who was now married to Garrett’s sister, Cristina. The nightmare worsened during a horrific highway crash. As their SUV flipped and caught fire, Garrett ruthlessly abandoned a pregnant Elliana in the crushed backseat. He dragged Cristina to safety, leaving Elliana to burn. She survived, but her right hand—her drawing hand—was permanently destroyed.
Lying in the hospital with her career ruined and her intellectual property stolen by the husband who forged her signature while she was drugged, a freezing void of hatred consumed her. She was nothing but a sedated decoy to hide Garrett's twisted, incestuous obsession with his own sister.
When Garrett knelt by her hospital bed with fake tears, Elliana didn't scream or expose him. Instead, she forced a pathetic, dependent smile, playing the perfect broken wife. She was going back to his penthouse to steal his encrypted files, ready to feed him to Manhattan's most cutthroat divorce lawyer and watch his empire burn.

7.9
Eileen Goff was a nobody, scrubbing diner tables to survive while her greedy family bled her dry.
On the eve of her twentieth birthday, the government's mandatory marriage algorithm matched her with a spouse.
It wasn't a plumber or a teacher. It was Harrison Butler, the ruthless, untouchable billionaire king of Butler Industries.
At the registry, Harrison's glamorous intended fiancée threw a half-million-dollar check at her.
"Take the money, get out of here, and never show your face again."
The registry supervisor even offered her a million dollars to sign a cancellation agreement, trying to erase her from the system.
At their first high-society gala, Harrison's stepmother and the fiancée locked Eileen in an empty room, plotting to humiliate her and prove she was just cheap trash.
Eileen was terrified and confused. Men like Harrison Butler didn't just accept federal matches with girls who smelled like fried onions.
But instead of abandoning her, Harrison smashed the door open, publicly banished his own family, and kissed her in front of the entire city's elite.
Why was this billionaire going to such extreme lengths to protect a complete stranger?
Then she overheard his assistant talking about a marriage clause in his grandfather's trust fund.
He didn't love her; he just needed a powerless, state-mandated wife to lock his parasitic family out of his empire.
Realizing she was a highly valuable pawn, Eileen stopped trembling, looked the billionaire in the eye, and spoke.
"I believe we can have more than just a legal relationship. We can have a business arrangement."

8.6
As the eldest daughter of the Sharp family, I was treated worse than a stray dog, while my younger sister Seraphina was their precious princess.
When the family needed someone to marry a dying billionaire heir, they naturally chose me to take her place.
To force my consent, my brothers held a peanut butter sandwich to my face—knowing it was a lethal allergy—while dangling my EpiPen just out of reach.
On speakerphone, my own mother sighed in annoyance.
"Let her die. It might be for the best."
I choked out an agreement just as my throat closed up. But the forced engagement broke my sacred mystical vow, causing me to violently cough up my own lifeblood.
Seeing the blood, Seraphina dramatically fainted. My brothers instantly carried her to the hospital, stepping over my dying body and leaving me to bleed out on the cold marble floor.
I had to use a forbidden blood rune, draining my last ounce of strength, just to survive the night.
Even the mystical Order I served offered no comfort, calling only to demand I secure ten billion dollars for them or forfeit my soul for eternity.
Abandoned by my blood family and my spiritual master, I was completely alone, left with nothing but a broken body and a ticking clock.
But they made one fatal mistake: they let me live.
I turned to the dying heir they forced me to marry, a man plagued by a dark curse only I could cure.
"I will be your wife, and I will save your life," I told him.
In exchange, I would use his unimaginable wealth and power to make everyone who threw me away pay the ultimate price.

7.9
For five years, April Gamble loved Julian Travis with everything she had, trusting him completely.
But on a stormy night, he casually tossed a liquidation agreement at her feet, single-handedly destroying her grandfather's company.
He coldly admitted he only dated her to steal Vance Group's internal financial data.
"You were convenient," Julian said, swirling his whiskey without a shred of guilt.
Before April could even process the brutal betrayal, a breaking news alert lit up her phone.
She watched in absolute horror as her grandfather jumped from the ledge of the Vance Tower on live television.
Julian looked at her writhing, screaming form with utter boredom and simply ordered his bodyguard to throw her out.
Blinded by grief and tears, April sped into the torrential rain, only to be completely crushed by a hydroplaning transport truck at an intersection.
As the shattered glass tore into her skin and the metal crushed her ribs, she died with a hatred so pure it made her teeth ache.
Why did five years of devotion mean absolutely nothing to him? Why did her family have to die just to feed his ruthless greed?
When she opened her eyes again, the harsh hospital lights blinded her, but the familiar burn scar on her arm was gone.
She wasn't the betrayed financial analyst April Gamble anymore.
She had woken up in the body of Altagracia Blanchard, the most notorious, obscenely wealthy heiress in New York.
Julian had taken everything from her, but now, armed with a billionaire's empire, she was going to bury him.