Ex-Wife To The Billionaire, Mother To His Twins Heir
img img Ex-Wife To The Billionaire, Mother To His Twins Heir img Chapter 1 The voice
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Chapter 11 He flipped through the pages img
Chapter 12 After the phone was hung up img
Chapter 13 Keep me safe By lying to my face img
Chapter 14 If I can't bring you back img
Chapter 15 Something inside me snapped img
Chapter 16 The weight of what he had lost img
Chapter 17 The ultrasound photo img
Chapter 18 Left At The Altar img
Chapter 19 I'm going to get my wife back img
Chapter 20 far away from the fight. img
Chapter 21 his vision was going red with anger img
Chapter 22 Enjoy your little fantasy while it lasts img
Chapter 23 He dropped her off img
Chapter 24 looked deep into mine img
Chapter 25 The sound bounced off img
Chapter 26 fire in his eyes img
Chapter 27 I could barely breathe from fear. img
Chapter 28 You think you've won img
Chapter 29 The dark red blood img
Chapter 30 freezing when my eyes met img
Chapter 31 The blood of your children and mine. img
Chapter 32 The heartbroken eyes img
Chapter 33 Stumbled backward in horror. img
Chapter 34 The shocking headlines img
Chapter 35 Kai and Solana. 21 1 25] img
Chapter 36 This was no longer just family drama. This was war. img
Chapter 37 I would rather raise them without the Moretti name img
Chapter 38 The words carried across the marble floors like thunder. img
Chapter 39 The unwanted visitor img
Chapter 40 The shame and her horrible words img
Chapter 41 Pure, deadly ice. img
Chapter 42 New York General Hospital Room 304 img
Chapter 43 That's impossible img
Chapter 44 The whole family is freaking out img
Chapter 45 The weak becomes strong img
Chapter 46 I choose the house. img
Chapter 47 Uncertain future waiting img
Chapter 48 Maybe this is enough img
Chapter 49 Lily is gone img
Chapter 50 after lily's dealt img
Chapter 51 Need for justice img
Chapter 52 Lily's funeral img
Chapter 53 Lily's memories leave on img
Chapter 54 Happiness after choosing the right one img
Chapter 55 The newly CEO img
Chapter 56 passed over for the family business. img
Chapter 57 Spring came early img
Chapter 58 My wedding day img
Chapter 59 Grandfather Moretti collapsed img
Chapter 60 Prison escape img
Chapter 61 Problem never end img
Chapter 62 All our enemies are dead or locked up forever. img
Chapter 63 After the last threat was eliminated img
Chapter 64 My home after marriage img
Chapter 65 Marcus meet is soulmate img
Chapter 66 Marcus and Elena wedding img
Chapter 67 New addition to the family img
Chapter 68 The twin special abilities img
Chapter 69 Christmas came early img
Chapter 70 The wall of our foundation img
Chapter 71 Addition to the family img
Chapter 72 chaos img
Chapter 73 Honor my mother's sacrifice img
Chapter 74 UN presentation img
Chapter 75 Mom, we have a problem. A big one img
Chapter 76 Four armed men img
Chapter 77 Sacrificial love img
Chapter 78 Unity Council decision img
Chapter 79 A big storm coming img
Chapter 80 I had another dream. A big one. img
Chapter 81 From victim to survivor to healer to leader to grandmother img
Chapter 82 Conference on Gifted Children in Geneva img
Chapter 83 I want to marry you again img
Chapter 84 Great-Great-Great-Grandma Lily img
Chapter 85 The manuscript img
Chapter 86 Lily's letter img
Chapter 87 Three months into writing the memoir img
Chapter 88 Some month after i start the memoir img
Chapter 89 The mystery of the child who will change everything img
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Ex-Wife To The Billionaire, Mother To His Twins Heir

Ms Ki Rah
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Chapter 1 The voice

AVA POV

The wine glass shook in my hand as I hid behind the wooden drink cart. My fancy shoes pressed into the soft rug. The pregnancy test felt hot against my palm, its plastic edges sharp on my skin. Three years. Three years of believing in fairy tales while living in hell.

"Marcus Moretti, seriously-when are you finally getting rid of Ava?" The voice cut through the soft jazz music coming from the other room. It was Derek, Marcus's friend from college. His voice was thick with whiskey and meanness.

"Did she really think someone like you would want someone like her?" This voice belonged to Jake, Marcus's best friend since they were kids. The same Jake who had tripped me in the hallway last week while Marcus just watched.

My throat felt tight. The night air suddenly felt too thin, too sharp in my chest. Marcus opened his mouth, and for one crazy moment, I thought he might stand up for me. Might tell them to stop.

My breath stopped. The Richard Mille watch I'd bought him for our anniversary suddenly felt worthless in my other hand.

"She'd probably pass out if she knew what we're really celebrating tonight," someone else laughed. "Poor thing thinks you're just having drinks with the boys."

"Sophia's plane gets in tomorrow." Marcus's voice sounded different now-lighter, almost excited. "One year in Milan was good for her. She's ready to start up where we left off."

Sophia. My sister. The perfect child who i had walked into their mixed family when I was five. She took everything I'd ever wanted without even trying-including, it seemed, my husband.

"But what about your little wife?" Derek asked with fake worry that made my stomach turn.

Marcus's laugh was sharp like broken glass. "Ava's useful. She handles the charity work, keeps me looking good to the public, and never asks hard questions. She's like having a perfectly trained helper who happens to sleep in my bed."

"She actually believes I love her," he laughed. "It's almost sweet how innocent she is. Like training a dog-a few nice words, some flowers, and she'll do anything I ask."

The words hit me like punches. My free hand pressed against my still-flat belly, protecting the life growing there from the ugly words spilling from the man I'd loved.

"She actually thinks you love her," another voice added. "It's almost sad."

"Desperate people believe what they need to survive," Marcus said, ice clinking in his glass. "Ava's been starving for love since her parents left her. I just... gave her enough to keep her hungry."

A sob escaped before I could stop it, echoing in the sudden quiet.

"What was that?"

Footsteps came closer. I pressed deeper into the shadows, my heart pounding against my ribs as expensive shoes clicked across the hard floor. When the sounds moved toward the balcony, I forced myself to move.

Standing up took everything I had. My legs felt like they weren't connected to my body as I dropped the watch and test into my purse. They felt light compared to the truth crushing my chest.

The fancy apartment we'd shared for two years felt like a tomb as I walked through it one last time. Wedding photos smiled mockingly from every surface-my happy face next to his perfectly fake expressions. Had I ever really known him at all?

I found myself on the building's rooftop garden. The city spread out below like scattered diamonds. The wind whipped my hair across my tear-wet cheeks as I stared into the darkness, feeling empty and weightless.

A small flutter in my belly stopped me cold.

"I can't," I whispered to the night sky, my hand protective over my womb. "I won't let his poison touch you."

I ran down the stairs, out of the mansion.

I found myself at the edge of the bridge near my home. The concrete felt cold under my bare feet. One more step and it would all be over.

I gripped the bridge railing until my knuckles went white, staring down at the black water that promised to swallow all my pain. The streetlights blurred through my tears-everything hurt. My chest. My heart. My soul.

"Mommy was such a fool," I whispered to the wind. "My poor, poor babies deserved so much better."

This was it. No more pretending I could fix what was already broken beyond repair.

I swung one leg over the railing. Then the other. The metal bit into my thighs as I sat on the edge of forever, my whole body shaking-not from the cold, but from the weight of giving up. The water called to me, dark and final and-

A hand shot out from nowhere, fingers wrapping around my wrist like a lifeline I didn't know I needed.

"Don't." The voice was rough, desperate. "Please don't."

Before I could understand what was happening, strong arms pulled me backward, away from the edge, away from the choice I couldn't take back. I fell against a solid chest, my legs giving out completely as sobs tore through me like breaking glass.

"I can't... I can't do this anymore," I choked out between gasps. "It hurts too much."

"I know." The voice was gentler now, holding me steady as the world spun. "But this isn't the answer. Trust me."

When my breathing finally slowed, when the shaking stopped long enough for me to think, I tried to turn around. To see the face of whoever had just saved my life. But the shadows were too thick, and he was already stepping back, already leaving.

"Wait!" My voice cracked. "Who are you?"

He paused at the edge of the streetlight's glow. For a heartbeat, I thought I caught a glimpse of his face-strong jaw, worried eyes-but then he melted back into the darkness.

"I'm No one," he called softly. "My name is No one."

And then he was gone. Like he'd never been there at all.

I stood alone on that bridge, my hand pressed against my stomach where tiny feet had started kicking-frantic, insistent, alive. The babies. God, the babies. What had I almost done?

The flutter under my palm felt different now. Not like a burden I couldn't bear, but like a promise I wasn't allowed to break. Dominic had pulled me back from the edge, but it was this-this fierce little heartbeat against my ribs-that would keep me from ever going there again.

Some strangers save your life in a single moment. Others leave you with questions that change everything.

Whoever he was, he had given me a second chance.

When I returned to our bedroom hours later, Marcus was waiting, his face carefully arranged to look like a worried husband.

"There you are! I was getting worried." He stood up from the chair, still wearing his celebration clothes. "How was book club?"

Book club. The lie I'd told to give him privacy for his "boys' night." How perfectly it fit his story.

"Eye-opening," I managed, my voice steadier than I felt.

His eyes narrowed slightly at my tone, but his smile never changed. "Sophia called. She wants to have lunch tomorrow-just you two. Isn't that sweet? She's really trying to fix things between you."

I studied his face, searching for any crack in the act. Finding none was somehow worse than discovering his betrayal.

"Of course she is," I said quietly.

He moved closer, hands reaching for my shoulders. I didn't pull away-couldn't afford to, not yet. His touch felt like ice water on my skin.

"I know she hurt you when we were younger, but people change, Ava. She's family now. We're all family."

Family. The word tasted bitter in my mouth.

"Yes," I agreed, meeting his eyes with new understanding. "We are."

Something flickered across his face-surprise, maybe, at my sudden agreement. But it was gone so quickly I might have imagined it.

As he pulled me into his arms that night, I lay stiff against his chest, planning. My children deserved better than a father who saw love as weakness and a mother as a tool.

They deserved truth. And I would give it to them, even if it meant tearing down everything I'd built on lies.

            
            

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