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The Jilted Wife's Spectacular Billionaire Comeback

The Jilted Wife's Spectacular Billionaire Comeback

img Billionaires
img 40 Chapters
img 7 View
img Zhi Yao
5.0
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About

For ten years, I was the perfect, obedient wife to my wealthy husband, managing his severe OCD and hosting flawless high-society parties. But on our tenth anniversary, when I brought him his special hangover soup, I caught him sleeping with my younger sister in our master bedroom. Instead of panicking, he coldly handed me divorce papers with zero assets. He told me I was just a "placeholder" until my sister finished her degree and was ready to take my spot. Desperate, I called my mother for help, only to find out she had known about their affair for years. "You don't have Jana's drive or her looks. You clean house and you cook. That's not a wife, that's a domestic." My own mother sneered at me, telling me to walk away quietly because our family needed his financial support. They kicked me out of the penthouse with nothing but a suitcase, laughing that a woman who hadn't worked in a decade would end up begging on the streets. I bled for this family for ten years, only to be thrown away like garbage when my sister wanted my life. But they didn't know that while I was playing the boring housewife, I had secretly earned a Cordon Bleu diploma, a Cornell nutrition certification, and a Columbia master's degree. Using a hidden photo to blackmail a property out of him, I packed my elite credentials and landed a $300,000-a-year job managing a billionaire's estate. When my ex-husband drunkenly called days later demanding I come back to serve him, I calmly hit block.

Chapter 1

"Thank you so much for coming. Drive safe."

Estella smiled until her cheek muscles ached. The heavy oak door of the penthouse clicked shut, finally cutting off the loud jazz music and the suffocating smell of expensive cigars. She let out a long breath, her shoulders dropping a full inch. Ten years. Ten anniversary parties she had hosted down to the last napkin fold.

She turned around, her heels clicking on the marble floor. Conrad stood by the wet bar, his back to her. He was already pulling at his tie, yanking it loose with a sharp, agitated motion. There was no relief in his posture, no warmth for a successful night. Just the same cold impatience he wore like a second skin.

Jana glided out of the dining room, holding two half-empty champagne flutes. Her younger sister smiled, a bright, practiced flash of white teeth. "Another flawless party, sis. Conrad is so lucky to have you."

Estella nodded, but a cold thread wound through her stomach. Jana's eyes weren't on her. They were locked on Conrad's back, lingering on the way his shirt stretched across his shoulders. It was a look of ownership. A look that had no business being on a sister's face.

"I'm exhausted," Conrad said, not turning around. He poured himself a scotch, the ice clinking hard against the glass. "I'm going to shower."

"I can help clean up," Jana offered, stepping closer to Estella. Her perfume-Estella's signature scent, the one Conrad had gifted her last Christmas-hung heavy in the air between them.

"No, go home," Estella said, her voice steadier than she felt. "You've done enough."

Jana smirked. Just a tiny twitch of her lips, but it was there. "If you insist. Goodnight, Conrad."

Conrad raised a hand in a lazy wave without looking back. Jana grabbed her coat, leaving Estella alone in the massive, silent living room. The silence pressed against her eardrums. She looked at the overflowing ashtrays, the rings of condensation on the antique mahogany table. Ten years of her life, dedicated to this man, and he hadn't even said happy anniversary.

She needed to fix it. She always tried to fix it.

Estella walked into the kitchen, her sanctuary. She opened the Sub-Zero fridge, pulling out the ginger and the organic bone broth. Conrad always drank too much at these events, and he always woke up with a raging headache if she didn't make her special soup. It was a ritual. Her fingers moved automatically, peeling, slicing, simmering. The smell of ginger filled the air, a comforting warmth that usually made her feel useful.

She poured the clear, golden liquid into a porcelain bowl, placing it carefully on a silver tray. She climbed the stairs, her heart beating a little faster. Maybe tonight, after the soup, they could actually talk. Maybe he would realize how much she cared.

The door to the master bedroom was slightly ajar. A sliver of warm light spilled into the hallway. Estella balanced the tray with one hand, pushing the door open with a gentle smile.

"Conrad, I made your favor-"

The words died in her throat.

The tray tilted. The bowl slid. Hot soup spilled over the rim, scalding her wrist, but she didn't feel it. She couldn't feel anything below her neck.

Conrad wasn't alone. He wasn't in the shower. He was standing by the vanity, a white towel wrapped loosely around his hips. And pressed against him, her back arching into his chest, was Jana. Her sister's dress was unzipped, hanging off her shoulders. Conrad's mouth was on Jana's neck, his hands gripping her waist with a possessiveness he had never shown Estella.

"Tell me when you're going to tell her," Jana moaned, her head falling back against his shoulder. Her eyes were open, staring right at the doorway, right at Estella. There was no fear in them. Only triumph.

Conrad's head snapped up. The crash of the tray hitting the floor echoed like a gunshot. Porcelain shattered, spraying hot soup and shards across the hardwood.

The noise broke the spell. Conrad stepped back from Jana, but he didn't cover himself. He didn't apologize. He just looked at Estella, his eyes flat and empty, like she was a stranger who had wandered into the wrong room.

"What are you doing?" Estella's voice was a rasp. It didn't sound like her. It sounded like a dying animal.

"I think you see exactly what I'm doing," Conrad said. His voice was calm. Too calm. He reached for a robe, slipping it on with casual indifference. "Saves me the trouble of explaining it tomorrow."

Jana adjusted her dress, zipping it up with a slow, deliberate motion. She didn't hide. She walked over to the bed and sat down, crossing her legs. "Don't look so shocked, Estella. You had to know this was coming."

Estella's hands shook. She stared at Conrad, waiting for the punchline, waiting for him to say it was a joke. "It's our anniversary."

"Exactly," Conrad said, walking toward her. He didn't stop until he was inches away, looking down at her with a disgust that made her stomach revolt. "Ten years, Estella. Ten years of playing house with the wrong sister."

The words hit her like a physical blow, knocking the air from her lungs. "Wrong sister?"

"I only married you because Jana was going to Oxford," Conrad said, his tone clinical, like he was discussing a business merger. "The Lowe family needed a solid alliance with the Nieves name. You were the placeholder. The stable one. You were supposed to keep the seat warm until Jana was ready."

Estella's knees buckled. She grabbed the doorframe to keep from falling. She looked at Jana, who was examining her nails with a bored expression. "You knew? You both... this whole time?"

"Every minute," Jana said, her smile widening. "Honestly, sister, you should be embarrassed. Did you really think your little soups and party planning were enough to keep a man like him? You're boring, Estella. You're a glorified maid."

Conrad reached into his pocket and pulled out his phone. He tapped the screen a few times, then turned it toward her. It was a document. A legal document. "I'm done playing games. The divorce papers will be filed tomorrow. My lawyer will contact you in the morning."

Estella stared at the screen. The words blurred, then sharpened. Dissolution of Marriage. It was over. Her entire life, her entire identity, was being deleted with a tap of a screen.

"Get out of my room," Conrad said, his voice hardening. "You can sleep in the guest room tonight. I want you out by the weekend."

He turned his back on her, walking over to sit next to Jana on the bed. Jana leaned into him, her hand resting on his thigh. They looked at Estella like she was a stain they couldn't wait to scrub away.

Estella turned and walked out. She didn't remember climbing the stairs to the guest wing. She didn't remember closing the door. She just stood in the dark, empty room, staring at the wall, while the image of her husband and her sister burned itself into her brain.

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