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The Billionaire Who Thought I Was Nothing

The Billionaire Who Thought I Was Nothing

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img 28 Chapters
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img mia philein
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About

At twenty-one, Aria Vale believed marriage would give her the family she had always dreamed of. Married to Lucien Blackwood-a wealthy, admired man who promised protection-she sacrificed her dreams, her independence, and her voice. One year later, with a newborn in her arms and no money to her name, Aria is abandoned without warning. Broken, poor, and underestimated, she disappears from his world. Years later, she returns transformed, not as the naïve girl he controlled, but as a powerful woman standing far above him. This time, love is not her weakness. And the billionaire who thought she was nothing will learn what he lost.

Chapter 1 The Day He Left Without a Goodbye

The day my husband left, he did not argue with me.

He did not shout.

He did not slam doors or throw accusations.

He did not pack his clothes in anger or demand explanations.

Lucien Blackwood simply walked out of our home as if I was already invisible.

I was twenty-two years old, sitting on the edge of the bed, my newborn son asleep against my chest, when the front door closed quietly behind him. The sound was soft, almost polite, but it echoed through the house like something final. Like a decision already made long before that moment.

At first, I told myself he had gone to work.

Lucien was always calm. Always composed. Always in control. That was the man the world knew, the wealthy speaker who commanded stages, the generous realtor admired for his success, the electrical engineer who motivated thousands with his polished words and confident smile.

People said he was disciplined. Kind. Principled.

No one would have believed that same man had slowly taken everything from me.

Including my voice.

A year earlier, I had walked down the aisle believing I was the luckiest woman alive.

I was a final-year university student then-young, hopeful, and painfully aware of my financial limits. I lived on the small allowance my mother sent whenever she could, stretching it carefully between textbooks, transport, and food. On the side, I modeled for makeup brands and accepted occasional acting roles, grateful for every small payment that helped me survive as a student.

Lucien's life was the opposite of mine.

He already touched his millions.

He spoke about investments with ease.

He moved through rooms with confidence that came from never having to worry about tomorrow.

He said he admired my simplicity.

"I like that you don't chase money," he told me once, brushing my hair back gently. "You're different."

When I talked about work, he smiled indulgently.

"You don't need to stress yourself," he said. "I'll take care of everything."

When I mentioned auditions or brand calls, he shook his head slightly.

"A wife's place is peace, Aria. Not struggle."

He said it like wisdom.

And I believed him.

Slowly, without realizing it, I stopped working.

When makeup brands called, Lucien answered the phone for me.

When casting agents reached out, he said they were using me.

When my mother asked questions, he said she didn't understand "our level."

Piece by piece, my world became smaller.

By the time I realized peace had turned into silence, it was too late.

Lucien controlled the money.

He controlled where I went.

He controlled who I spoke to.

And whenever I questioned him-gently, carefully-he smiled and said the same thing every time.

"Everyone else is fake, Aria. I'm the only one who truly cares about you."

That smile never reached his eyes.

Still, I stayed.

I told myself love meant patience.

Marriage meant sacrifice.

And good wives didn't complain.

Then I got pregnant.

Lucien was pleased, but distant. Supportive, but absent. He spoke about legacy and heirs while I navigated sleepless nights, swollen feet, and a loneliness I couldn't name.

When our son was born, I thought everything would change.

I thought a child would anchor him.

Instead, it made me disposable.

The smile disappeared the day he left.

That morning, he moved through the house quietly. No anger. No emotion. He dressed neatly, adjusted his watch, and avoided my eyes. I watched him from the bed, my body sore, my baby warm against my chest.

He didn't kiss our son goodbye.

He didn't touch my hand.

He didn't explain.

The door closed.

Hours passed.

I waited.

Evening came.

Night fell.

Lucien never returned.

No call.

No message.

No apology.

No explanation.

I checked my phone until the screen dimmed.

I told myself something must have happened. A meeting. A delay. An emergency.

But deep down, something colder settled into my chest.

The house felt empty in a way I had never known before.

I walked through the rooms slowly, my baby cradled against me, listening to the silence. The refrigerator hummed softly. The lights glowed. Everything looked normal.

Except my life wasn't.

That night, I cried until my body hurt.

Not loudly. Not dramatically.

Quietly-so my baby wouldn't feel my fear.

Because the family I dreamed of was gone.

Because the man who promised to protect me had erased me instead.

And because the billionaire I trusted had decided, without words or warning, that I was nothing.

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