Follow
Chapters
Share
Wife Uncovers Husband's Secret Novel Cover

Wife Uncovers Husband's Secret

The steam from Grayson's shower still clouded the bathroom mirror when I reached for his phone on the nightstand. I only needed to check the time—my own phone was charging downstairs, and Rylee's piano lesson started in twenty minutes. The screen lit up at my touch, revealing an app I didn't recognize. Shopping recommendations flooded the display in a cascade of silk and lace that made my breath catch. Lace bodysuits in deep burgundy. Silk negligees with plunging necklines. Delicate lingerie sets in colors I'd never seen in our bedroom—midnight black, champagne gold, emerald green. My fingers trembled as I scrolled through the browsing history. Each item felt like a small knife cutting into the certainty I'd built my life around. Grayson had never bought me anything like this.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

The hardest questions came at bedtime.

Rylee sat cross-legged on the unfamiliar quilt in what had become her new bedroom at my parents' house, clutching Clementine against her chest. The stuffed rabbit looked as lost as she did, its faded pink ears drooping in the lamplight. My daughter's eyes—Grayson's eyes, I realized with a pang—searched my face for answers I didn't know how to give.

"Mommy, did I do something wrong?" Her voice was so small it barely disturbed the air between us. "Is that why we left Daddy?"

I knelt before her on the hardwood floor, my knees protesting against the unforgiving surface. The words I'd rehearsed all week crumbled in my throat. How do you explain betrayal to someone who still believes in fairy tales? How do you protect innocence while preparing them for a world that breaks promises?

"Oh, sweetheart." I reached for her hands, so tiny and warm in mine. "You didn't do anything wrong. Not one single thing."

"But Daddy looked sad when we left. And you were crying." Her lower lip trembled, and I saw myself at seven—the same desperate need to fix things, to carry blame that wasn't mine to bear.

"Sometimes grown-ups make choices that hurt the people they love," I said carefully, each word measured like medicine. "Daddy made choices that hurt Mommy very much. But none of this is your fault, sweetheart. You are loved completely, always."

She considered this with the gravity only children possess, turning my words over like stones in her palm. "Will Daddy come back?"

The question I'd been dreading. The one that required me to close doors I wasn't sure I was ready to seal. "I don't know, baby. But I promise you'll always be safe with me."

That night, I listened through the thin walls as she cried herself to sleep, Clementine pressed against her face to muffle the sound. Each sob felt like a small fist against my ribs, a reminder of the collateral damage of adult failures. I lay in my childhood bed—the same room where I'd once dreamed of my wedding day—and wondered how to protect my daughter from inheriting my own capacity for self-deception.

The next afternoon found me in the garden with my mother, the September air heavy with the scent of late roses and unspoken history. Rylee played nearby, building elaborate fairy houses from fallen twigs and acorns, her resilience both heartbreaking and inspiring. Children adapted. It was adults who clung to broken things.

"I should have listened to you," I admitted quietly, watching Charlotte deadhead spent blooms with surgical precision. "You saw what he was, and I was too stubborn to believe it."

Her hands stilled on the pruning shears. For eight years, I'd imagined this moment would come with triumph in her voice, an 'I told you so' delivered with the sharp satisfaction of being right. Instead, she set down her tools and reached for my hand, her grip surprisingly strong.

"I pushed you away instead of keeping you close," she said, her voice thick with regret. "We were both proud and foolish. I was so afraid of watching you make what I thought was a mistake that I forgot the most important thing—you're my daughter, and my job was to love you through whatever came."

The tears came without warning, eight years of isolation cracking open like an eggshell. "I felt so alone, Mom. Even in my marriage, especially in my marriage. I kept waiting to feel like I belonged somewhere."

"You belong here," Charlotte said fiercely. "You always have. You're my daughter—you have steel underneath all that kindness. You proved that by walking away when it mattered."

For the first time since I'd found those images on Grayson's phone, I felt something other than emptiness. Not healing—that would take time—but the possibility of it. The comfort of family I'd forgotten I needed.

Three days later, I stood in the marble foyer of the Morrison Gallery, feeling exposed in my black dress and heels. Richard had suggested I attend this opening—something about supporting local artists and getting back into the world. What he hadn't mentioned was that Matthias Russell would be here.

I saw him before he saw me, standing before a abstract painting that seemed to capture the chaos I felt inside—bold strokes of color bleeding into each other, beautiful and broken simultaneously. He looked exactly as I remembered and completely different. The boy I'd known had become a man with quiet authority, his dark suit impeccable but understated, his presence commanding without demanding attention.

When our eyes met across the room, time folded in on itself. Recognition flickered in his expression, followed by surprise, and something else I was afraid to name. He approached with careful casualness, as if we were merely old acquaintances rather than two people whose lives had once been intertwined.

"Sophia." My name on his lips sounded like coming home. "It's been a long time."

We talked for over an hour about art, about neutral topics, about everything except the elephant between us. His voice was deeper now, seasoned with experience, but his laugh was exactly the same—warm and genuine and utterly without pretense. When he spoke about the emerging artists, his passion was evident, and I remembered why I'd been drawn to him all those years ago.

As the evening wound down, he handed me his business card with deliberate care. "If you ever need anything—a friend, a distraction, or just someone who remembers who you were before—I'm here."

I took the card, our fingers brushing briefly. "Thank you, Matthias."

Walking to my car, I felt the weight of possibility settling around me like a coat I wasn't sure I was ready to wear.

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

After My Husband Froze My Accounts for His Mistress Novel Cover
9.4
I came home early because I was happy. That was the simple, stupid truth of it. I had spent the afternoon roughing out sketches for the spring collection—clean lines, asymmetrical draping, a whole series built on the interplay of shadow and light—and they were good. I knew they were good the way you know sometimes, deep in your hands before your brain catches up. I wanted to show Tate. I wanted to see his face. I still wanted that then. The Snyder penthouse was quiet when I stepped off the elevator. The entry hall smelled like cedar and cool air, the way it always did in October. I set my bag down and slipped off my shoes out of habit, the marble cold through my socks.
Call Me Fake Heiress? Now I Bought My Ex's Company Novel Cover
7.4
I never expected to be branded a 'fake heiress' and a 'scheming bitch' on my own wedding anniversary. "Did you really think we'd never find out you faked the DNA test?" My mother's voice cut like a blade. "You've been impersonating our real daughter all along." The irony was suffocating. They were the ones who stormed into my peaceful life, insisting that I was their long-lost child-no proof needed. And now they dared to call me the fraud. "Since Camille has finally returned to where she belongs," my father declared coldly, "it's time for you to crawl back into whatever shadow you came from." Then came the final blow. My husband of five years didn't even hesitate. "I'll have the divorce papers drawn up immediately. Don't make this difficult, Mirena. You were never meant to be my wife." Overnight, I was discarded. The scandal of the city. The woman who stole a life that was never hers. But they forgot one thing: I never needed them. Before I was George Ashton's wife, I was Mirena Sterling-the Investment Queen. The woman who broke Wall Street records before she turned twenty-five. A racing champion. A tech prodigy. I walked away from all of it. Gave up my empire. My crown. My name. All for a man who threw me away like garbage the moment someone "better" came along. Big mistake. On the night they cast me out, soaking wet and humiliated, I ran into the last person I ever wanted to see. "Look at you now, Mirena," Alexander Pierce murmured, watching me with those piercing eyes. "The woman who once ruled the financial world. Reduced to this." He tilted his head. "And for what? Love?" A dark laugh. "Pathetic." My former rival. The man who spent years trying to beat me-and never once succeeded. Now he stood before me, a Wall Street titan, watching my downfall with hungry satisfaction. He thought he'd seen the last of me. He was wrong. The game was simple now: drop the dead weight, reclaim what's mine, and remind everyone why they feared my name. Within months, I was back. Every market moved when I breathed. Every headline screamed my return. The Sterlings came crawling, begging for mercy they'd never shown me. And George? He watched in horror as I bought his most prized company without blinking. The divorce he'd so eagerly signed? His greatest regret. "Mirena, please," he begged, groveling at my feet. "Give me another chance." I didn't even look at him. "Sorry, darling. I don't recycle trash." But what I didn't expect was him. Alexander Pierce dropped to one knee in front of me-the man who had once mocked my fall, now looking up with something raw and undisguised in his crimson gaze. "I knew you'd take back everything they stole," he said, voice low. "Now..." A slow, dangerous smile curved his lips. "Take me too."
Chosen Her? Face My Fiery Wrath Novel Cover
9.0
My fiancé, Connor, and I had a one-year pact. I'd work undercover as a junior developer in the company we co-founded, while he, the CEO, built our empire. The pact ended the day he ordered me to apologize to the woman who was systematically destroying my life. It happened during his most important investor pitch. He was on video call when he demanded I publicly humiliate myself for his "special guest," Jaden. This was after she'd already scalded my hand with hot coffee and faced zero consequences. He chose her. In front of everyone, he chose a manipulative bully over our company's integrity, our employees' dignity, and me, his fiancée. His eyes on the screen demanded my submission. "Apologize to Jaden. Now." I took a step forward, held up my burned hand for the camera, and made a call of my own. "Dad," I said, my voice dangerously quiet. "It's time to dissolve the partnership."
Fiancé's Betrayal Unveiled: A Second Chance at Love Novel Cover
9.5
The elevator's soft ding echoed through the marble hallway as I stepped onto the penthouse floor of Victor's building. My heels clicked against the polished stone, each step carrying me closer to what I hoped would be a peaceful evening with my fiancé. The weight of my grandfather's heirloom necklace rested against my collarbone—a comforting presence that always reminded me of his words about dignity and self-worth. I used my key to enter Victor's apartment, expecting to find him reviewing business documents in his study as usual. Instead, I heard soft laughter drifting from the master bedroom—feminine laughter that wasn't mine. "It really does suit you better," came Noor's voice, followed by the rustle of fabric. "The cut is perfect for your figure." My blood turned to ice. I moved silently down the hallway, my heart hammering against my ribs. Through the partially open bedroom door, I saw her—Noor Herrera, Victor's widowed sister-in-law, standing before the full-length mirror wearing my custom wedding dress. The ivory silk cascaded around her petite frame, the intricate beadwork catching the afternoon light streaming through the windows.
Husband's Affair Costs Her All Novel Cover
9.3
I stared at the pregnancy test in my trembling hands, the two pink lines blurring through my tears of joy. Four times. This was the fourth time I'd held such a test, but unlike the previous three that had ended in devastating loss, something felt different about this moment. Maybe it was the way the evening light filtered through our penthouse windows, casting everything in golden warmth, or maybe it was simply the stubborn hope that refused to die despite everything we'd endured. "This time will be different," I whispered to the empty apartment, my voice echoing off the marble floors. "This time, our baby will make it." Lawson wouldn't be home for another hour, which gave me time to prepare something special. I wanted this announcement to be perfect—a moment we'd remember forever when we told our child about the night we first knew they existed. Moving through our home with renewed purpose, I lit dozens of vanilla candles throughout the living room, their soft glow transforming the sterile elegance into something intimate and magical. I selected Lawson's favorite wine from our collection, a bottle of Château Margaux we'd been saving for a special occasion. What could be more special than this?
MARRIED TO ME EX FIANCE'S. BILLIONAIRE UNCLE Novel Cover
8.4
“Divorce? Divorce?” Camilla brokenly asked her husband. She couldn't believe what she heard. “Yes, I think we should just get a divorce.” Caesar barked. Camilla Garrison was betrayed by her fiance, by sleeping with her step sister. That wasn't enough; she was also chased out from the house her maternal grandfather left for her and was tricked by her blood brother and father to sign her company in their name. Devastated and heartbroken, she left the country with the help of a friend, where she will change her name to Phoenix Gilbert and get married to her ex fiance Trillionaire uncle just to get revenge. After Camilla had over a quarter of her problem, a found secret would destroy everything. She also have a lot of enemies to overcome. Dive into this story and see how Camilla did all this. What would be Caesar's reaction when he found out Camilla had lied about herself? What would also happen when he found out his wife was his nephew's ex? Her Ex-fiance also wanted to win her back