Follow
Chapters
Share
You Lost Me: The Genius Heiress's Comeback Novel Cover

You Lost Me: The Genius Heiress's Comeback

I lay on the freezing bathroom floor, my life slipping away in crimson rivulets as I lost the baby Harrison claimed he wanted more than breath itself. In the next room, my husband was laughing into his phone, discussing party decorations with his mistress. When I finally dragged myself to the door to beg for help, he just stepped over me. "Call a doctor," he sighed, annoyed. "I have to go. Brooke's flight lands in an hour." Three days later, during a bank robbery, the gunmen held pistols to both our heads and gave Harrison a choice: save me, or save his mistress. Harrison didn't even blink. "Let the blonde go," he said, his voice void of emotion. "She's vital. Keep the wife. She's just insurance." I took a bullet because of him. But the true kill shot came when I woke up in the hospital. The family lawyer looked at me with pity and revealed the truth: Harrison never filed our marriage license. For three years, I wasn't his wife. I was just a prop. A clean face to front his estate while he laundered money. Harrison thought he had won when he drugged me and put me on a rigged boat to ship me away to an asylum. He watched from the dock as the vessel exploded into a fireball, believing his problem was incinerated. He thinks I'm dead. He thinks he's free to rule his empire with the woman who destroyed my life. But he forgot one thing: you can't kill a ghost. And I'm coming back to burn his world to ash.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 5

Ava POV

The next morning, I woke in the silence of the cabin, alone.

The yacht was docked. The party was over.

I checked my phone. The screen was blank, wiped clean. Factory reset. My contacts, my photos, my evidence-all of it erased as if it had never existed.

Smart.

I walked off the boat and didn't look back. I didn't go home. Instead, I went to a public library and logged into a secure cloud server I had built years ago, back when I was just Ava the computer science student, not Ava the Trophy Wife.

I recovered my texts. I found the ones Harrison had sent to Dustin, impersonating me.

Don't contact me again. You're a junkie. You're dead to me.

A cold, sharp rage crystallized in my chest. He hadn't just isolated me; he had amputated my family.

I took a cab to the estate. I needed one thing before I left for good: my father's wooden box. It held his dog tags and my mother's locket. It was the only thing of real value I had ever owned.

I walked into the house. It was quiet.

I went to the master bedroom. The box was usually on the top shelf of the closet.

It was gone.

I turned around. Brooke was standing in the doorway.

She was wearing my silk robe. My robe. And in her hands, she held the wooden box.

"Looking for this?" she asked, tossing it casually in the air.

"Give it to me," I said, my voice low.

"It's full of junk," she sneered, opening it. She pulled out the locket. "Cheap silver. Tacky."

"That was my mother's."

"The one who died because she couldn't drive?" Brooke laughed. "Harrison told me. Sad. But then, weak women breed weak daughters."

She let the locket drop. It hit the floor with a dull ping. Then, maintaining eye contact, she crushed it under her heel.

Something snapped inside me.

I didn't think. I launched myself at her.

I tackled her to the ground. We rolled, crashing into the vanity. I grabbed the box, ripping it from her hands. Her nails raked across my cheek, digging deep.

"Get off me!" she shrieked.

I stood up, clutching the box to my chest, breathing hard.

Brooke lay on the floor. She wasn't hurt. I hadn't hit her. I had just taken back what was mine.

But then she smiled. A wicked, calculating smile that didn't reach her eyes.

With a sudden, violent jerk, she ripped the neckline of her own dress. She scratched her own neck, drawing blood. Then she started screaming.

"Help! Harrison! Help! She's killing the baby!"

Heavy footsteps thundered up the stairs, shaking the floorboards.

Harrison burst into the room. He took in the scene: Brooke on the floor, weeping, clutching her stomach; me standing over her, wild-eyed, holding a box.

"She pushed me!" Brooke sobbed. "She tried to kick me in the stomach, Harry! She wants to kill our son!"

Harrison looked at me. There was no question in his eyes. No hesitation. Just pure, unadulterated hatred.

"You animal," he spat.

He crossed the room in two strides. He didn't check on Brooke. He came for me.

He grabbed me by the throat and slammed me against the wall. The box fell from my hands, spilling its contents across the floor.

"I gave you everything," he hissed, squeezing. Black spots danced in my vision. "And you try to kill my heir?"

"She... lied," I gasped, clawing uselessly at his hand.

"Get out," he said, releasing me so suddenly I crumpled to the floor. "Get out before I kill you myself."

I scrambled to pick up the dog tags.

"Leave it!" he roared. He kicked the tags away, sending them skittering across the hardwood. "You leave with nothing. Because you are nothing."

I looked at him. Then I looked at Brooke, who was watching us through her fingers, a smirk playing on her lips.

I stood up. I didn't grab the tags. I didn't grab the locket.

I walked to the door. I stopped and looked back at the man I had married.

"You're right, Harrison," I said, my voice steady for the first time in days. "I am nothing. And you can't kill a ghost."

I walked out the front door.

I pulled the burner phone I had bought at the library from my pocket. I dialed the number Dustin had sent me years ago.

"This is Agent Peterson," a voice answered. My brother.

"Dustin," I said. "It's Ava. I'm ready to work."

"About time," he said. "We have a jet waiting. And Ava?"

"Yeah?"

"Burn it down."

"I intend to," I said.

As I walked down the long driveway, I heard sirens wailing in the distance. Harrison had called the police. He wanted me arrested.

But he was too late. Ava the Wife had died in that foyer.

The Ghost was just born.

You may also like

His Secret Heir In Her Arms Novel Cover
9.5
I returned to New York with a broken suitcase and exactly three hundred and forty-two dollars in my bank account. My mother was dying in a public hospital, and the only treatment that could save her required a fifty-thousand-dollar deposit I didn't have. While I was pleading with the billing department, I ran into my billionaire ex, Gannon Sharpe, and his cruel fiancée, Aleta. Without a second thought, Aleta slapped me so hard my lip split, kicking my belongings across the floor and calling me a gold-digging thief in front of the entire staff. I looked at Gannon, the man I once loved more than my own life, hoping for a shred of mercy. Instead, he looked at me with pure revulsion and told me I belonged in the gutter. He believed the lies his grandfather told him—that I had abandoned him after his car crash and vanished with millions. He had no idea I was the one who actually pulled him from that burning wreckage, or that I was currently skipping meals in a moldy motel just so our secret son could have formula. He called me "disgusting" and walked away, leaving me to rot. I wanted to scream that I was the genius scientist who wrote his company’s core algorithms, and that the child he didn’t know existed was shivering with a fever only blocks away. But the ironclad NDA I signed to save my family kept me silent, even as Gannon looked at me like I was something he’d stepped in. Desperate for health insurance to save my mother and son, I took a bottom-tier data entry job in the basement of Gannon’s own tower, intending to stay invisible. But when a billion-dollar error threatened to bankrupt his empire, I couldn't stop myself from hacking the system to fix the code. Now, the man who hates me is standing in my cubicle, demanding to know how a "dropout" knows his most guarded secrets. Gannon is finally digging into my past, and he’s about to find out exactly what—and who—I’ve been hiding for the last four years.
I Built Your Empire, Now It Burns Novel Cover
9.2
I realized my husband did not love me the moment he stepped over my broken heart to answer a text from his mistress. Caleb was the "Architect," a feared Capo in New York, but he forgot that I was the one who funded his rise from the gutter with my inheritance. He brought his assistant, Kimberly, into our private penthouse. She wore my silk robe, mocked my past trauma, and snapped my dead mother’s rosary right in front of my eyes. When I lashed out in grief, Caleb didn't defend me. He pinned me against the wall, comforting her while calling me "unstable" and "violent." He gaslighted me, claiming I would be eaten alive without his protection. He thought I was just a fragile princess who would crumble without him. He truly believed he was the king, forgetting that I was the one who built the castle. I didn't cry. I simply wiped the blood from my arm and walked out the door. He didn't know that I owned thirty percent of his laundering front and the land beneath his precious casino. I picked up the phone and dialed the number of his deadliest rival, the Irish mob. "The bank is closed, Caleb. I’m selling my shares to the enemy."
Jilted Bride: Now Call Me Auntie, Darling Novel Cover
8.8
On the eve of my glamorous Waldorf Astoria wedding, I went to the penthouse to surprise my fiancé, Hugh, wearing my late mother's heirloom pearls. Instead, I heard my stepsister's familiar laugh and caught them tangled together on the sofa. Through the cracked door, I heard Hugh slur that he was only marrying me for my family's financial backing. "As soon as I secure my inheritance, she's the first thing I'm getting rid of," he promised her. Floy giggled and asked for my mother's pearl necklace, my only legacy. Hugh agreed without hesitation, mocking my dead mother's naivety and my desperate dreams of building a family. Every sweet word he had ever said was a lie, a knife he had been patiently sliding between my ribs for years. They planned to strip me of everything the moment I signed the prenup. I didn't cry or scream. The crushing weight of their betrayal hollowed me out, leaving behind a terrifying, absolute calm. Why should I be the one to lose everything while they stole my future and insulted my mother's memory? I calmly walked down the hall, set the prenuptial agreement on fire, and vanished into the rainy night. If Hugh wanted to play dirty for the Maxwell empire, I would play for keeps. Using a forgotten, century-old family covenant, I was going to marry Hugh's uncle-the comatose, paralyzed war hero, Fleet Maxwell. I would return not as a naive bride, but as their worst nightmare: his aunt, and the new lady of the house.
Loving him is a sin I can't escape Novel Cover
7.2
Five years ago, Elena Moretti walked away from Dominic Russo without explanation-leaving him to face the collapse of his father's empire alone. Now Dominic is no longer the reckless man she once loved. He's a ruthless billionaire CEO with power, influence... and a memory that hasn't forgotten betrayal. When he acquires the company Elena works for, he offers her a deal she can't refuse: work under him for six months-or watch her family's name be dragged through a financial scandal from the past. Forced into close proximity, old wounds reopen and buried secrets threaten to surface. But the more time they spend together, the more dangerous the tension becomes. Because hatred is easier than forgiveness. And love? Love is guilty as sin.
Reborn Heiress: The Revenge She Deserves Novel Cover
7.9
The rain was a solid sheet of gray as the black SUV rammed into my car, sending me spiraling over the guardrail. As the glass shattered and the world turned upside down, a searing pain ripped through my chest before everything went cold and dark. I didn’t stay in the darkness. My spirit hovered ten feet in the air, watching the steam hiss from my mangled sedan. I followed the magnetic pull of my soul back to my family estate, expecting to find them devastated. Instead, I found my stepmother, Florene, and my sister, Kassidy, pouring vintage champagne and laughing in the drawing room. "To the end of the nuisance," Florene said, her eyes gleaming with greed. "The trust fund unlocks at midnight. We're finally rich." The betrayal cut deeper than the metal that killed me, but the real shock came at my funeral. Hiram Tyson—the cold, masked husband I’d spent three years fearing—collapsed over my closed casket. He unbuckled his silver mask, revealing a face ruined by scars, and sobbed a name I hadn't heard since childhood. "I'm sorry, Angel. I thought keeping you at arm's length would keep the darkness away." He wasn't the monster I thought he was. He was the boy I had saved at the orphanage years ago, and he had been protecting me in silence while my own family plotted my murder. I reached out to touch him, but the world exploded into a blinding white light. When I opened my eyes, I wasn't in a casket. I was back in our bedroom, feeling the heavy weight of Hiram’s arm across my waist. The calendar on the nightstand read September 14, 2023—exactly one year before the crash. I looked at the silver mask resting on the table and felt a cold, hard determination settle in my chest. This time, I wasn't going to be the victim. I was going to be the villain in their story and burn their world to the ground.
Rejecting The Billionaire's Contract Marriage Novel Cover
9.6
I was the devoted PR manager and secret girlfriend of A-list actor Vance Sterling for three years. Just minutes after he promised me a romantic dinner, I caught him sleeping with a wealthy Los Angeles socialite. When I confronted him, he didn't apologize. Instead, he mocked my status, froze my bank accounts, and left me completely homeless on the rainy streets of the city. Blacklisted in Hollywood and utterly destitute, I ended up having a reckless, revenge-fueled one-night stand with the socialite's ruthless billionaire fiancé, Jory Elliott. But my nightmare had just begun. My younger brother accrued a half-million-dollar gambling debt with a brutal cartel, and they threatened to chop off his fingers. Jory stepped in and paid the ransom, only for my brother to beg the billionaire for more gambling money, calling me a selfish bitch for not milking him dry. Then, Jory threw a marriage agreement at my face. "Act as my devoted wife for two years, and I will wipe the debt and give you ten million dollars." I gave my youth to an actor who discarded me like trash, and my own flesh and blood only saw me as a walking ATM. Did these powerful men really think my dignity was just another corporate asset to be bought and traded? I looked into the cold, calculating eyes of the billionaire who thought he owned me. I threw the contract right at his chest and stepped out of his Maybach into the freezing rain. I would rather rot in the gutter than be a pet bought with a checkbook.