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img img Billionaires img You Can't Afford Your Genius Ex-Wife Now
You Can't Afford Your Genius Ex-Wife Now

You Can't Afford Your Genius Ex-Wife Now

img Billionaires
img 40 Chapters
img Xin Miaomiao
5.0
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About

For two years, Kailey lived as the invisible wife of billionaire Jack Velasquez, treated like a ghost in a mansion that felt like a beautiful cage. When Jack finally grew tired of her, he didn't even show up to say goodbye. He sent his cold-faced butler to hand her the divorce papers, kicking her out like trash. The entire East Coast high society mocked her, laughing at the "gold digger" who got dumped. Jack expected her to cling to his wealth, assuming she would eagerly take the fifty million dollar alimony. But shortly after the divorce, Jack's precious ward was diagnosed with an inoperable brain tumor. Desperate, Jack ordered his men to turn over every rock in the world to find "The Surgeon"-a legendary, untraceable medical genius. He had no idea that the mythical savior he was frantically searching for was the quiet, forgettable ex-wife he had just thrown away. When Jack finally stood before her in the hospital, he didn't apologize. Instead, he threatened to destroy her career if she failed the surgery, arrogantly calling her a greedy opportunist. "I will take your license, your reputation, and your precious new center, and I will burn them to the ground." Kailey didn't shed a single tear. She had already signed away his fifty million without taking a cent. She simply picked up her old surgical tools, put on her pristine white coat, and forced the arrogant billionaire to fund a nine-figure neuroscience center just to get her to the operating table.

Chapter 1

The dining room of the Velasquez estate smelled like stale coffee and polished mahogany. Kailey Randall sat at the head of a table that could seat twenty, but this morning, it only held her. The silence was thick, pressing against her eardrums like a physical weight.

This was it. The last morning.

She pushed back the heavy velvet chair, the legs scraping against the marble floor with a sound that echoed through the empty hall. She didn't belong in this chair. She never had.

Kailey walked up the grand staircase, her fingers trailing lightly over the cold iron banister. Two years. Two years of walking up these steps, sleeping in a room that felt like a museum, and living with a man who looked through her like she was made of glass.

In the bedroom, she bypassed the massive walk-in closet. Racks of designer gowns, shoes that cost more than her childhood home, and bags she never cared to touch lined the walls. They belonged to the Velasquez name. They didn't belong to her.

Instead, she opened the plain wooden dresser in the corner. She pulled out a pair of worn jeans, a white t-shirt, and a gray cardigan. The fabric felt like home against her skin. She changed quickly, balling up the silk pajamas and tossing them into the hamper.

She didn't leave a single thing behind.

Downstairs, Reginald Kent stood by the front door. He was the Velasquez family butler, a man whose face seemed permanently carved from granite. He held a silver tray in his gloved hands. On the tray sat a single sheet of thick cream paper.

"Madam," Kent said. The word was empty, stripped of any respect. He looked right past her shoulder as he spoke.

Kailey took the paper. The divorce agreement. Her eyes scanned the dense legal text, but she didn't need to read it. She had memorized every clause.

At the bottom of the page, Jack Velasquez's signature sat in black ink. It was sharp, hurried, and impatient. The tail of the 'z' slashed across the line like a knife. He couldn't wait to be rid of her.

Her lawyer had called yesterday. "Take the money, Kailey. It's a fortune. You earned it putting up with him."

But she didn't want his money. She wanted something far more valuable.

Kailey pulled a pen from her cardigan pocket. She leaned against the marble console table and signed her name. Kailey Randall. The scratch of the nib was loud in the quiet foyer. Clean. Final.

She placed the pen on the tray. "I'm packed," she said, nodding toward the single canvas suitcase by the door.

Kent's lip curled slightly as he glanced at the battered bag. It was the same bag she had arrived with two years ago. "Mr. Gibson is waiting outside," he said, his tone dripping with dismissal. He made it sound like she was being evicted from a motel.

Kailey didn't flinch. She picked up the suitcase. It was light. It held everything she owned before she became Kailey Velasquez.

She walked out the front door. The Long Island air was crisp, carrying the scent of saltwater and manicured lawns. At the end of the gravel driveway, parked between a row of black SUVs, sat a beat-up Ford F-150.

Harley Gibson leaned against the truck's hood, a cigarette burning between his fingers. When he saw her, his jaw tightened. He threw the cigarette to the gravel and crushed it under his boot.

He crossed the distance between them in three long strides, taking the suitcase from her hand. "That's it?" he asked, his voice low and rough. "Two years, and you walk out with the same bag you walked in with?"

"Everything I need is right here," Kailey said, patting the canvas.

Harley's face was red, the veins in his neck bulging. "And Jack? That piece of shit didn't even come down to say goodbye? He just sends his butler to kick you out like trash?"

Kailey looked back at the mansion. The stone walls, the towering windows, the iron gates. It was a beautiful cage.

"I didn't want him here," she said. A small, genuine smile touched her lips. "This is exactly what I wanted, Harley. Clean break."

Harley stared at her, his eyes searching her face for a crack, a sign of heartbreak. He found none. He opened the truck door for her. "Get in. Let's get the hell out of here."

Kailey climbed into the passenger seat. The leather was cracked, and the cab smelled like motor oil and pine air freshener. It was the best smell in the world.

Harley started the engine, the V8 roaring to life. He pulled out of the circular drive, not bothering to look back at the estate.

In the truck, Harley's grip on the steering wheel was white-knuckled. "The whole East Coast thinks you're a joke, Kai. They think you married him for the money. They think you got dumped because you weren't good enough for the great Jack Velasquez."

Kailey listened to her brother's anger. She didn't interrupt. Her fingers rested on her knee, tapping out a slow, steady rhythm. One, two, three. One, two, three. It was a habit, a surgeon's cadence, keeping her pulse steady.

"They think I wanted his money," Kailey said softly, her gaze fixed on the road ahead. "They're about to find out I want something they can't afford to give me."

Harley glanced at her, confused. "What are you talking about?"

Kailey reached into her bag and pulled out a folded document. She handed it to him.

Harley took it, unfolding it with one hand while steering with the other. His eyes widened as he read the bold print at the top. Waiver of Spousal Support.

"You signed away the alimony?" Harley's voice cracked. "Kailey, are you crazy? That was fifty million dollars! You earned that!"

"I don't want his dirty money," Kailey said, her voice like steel. "I'm only taking back what belongs to me."

Harley slammed on the brakes, pulling the truck over to the side of the road. He turned to her, his face a mask of disbelief. "Taking back what? What could possibly be worth fifty million dollars?"

Kailey turned her head to look at him. The morning sun caught her eyes, igniting a spark that had been dormant for two years. A confident, almost dangerous smile spread across her face.

"My name," she said.

"Kailey Randall?" Harley asked, completely lost.

"No," she corrected him, her voice dropping to a whisper that carried the weight of a secret world.

"The Surgeon."

Harley stared at her, the word hanging in the air between them, heavy and incomprehensible. "'The Surgeon'?" he repeated, his voice tight with confusion. "Kai, what the hell does that mean? Where have you been for two years?" Kailey turned back to the windshield, her fingers resuming their steady tapping on her knee.

"Drive, Harley," she said. "I'll explain everything, I promise. But right now, we need to go. I have work to do."

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