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His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress

His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress

Author: : Whisper 119
Genre: Romance
She married him out of desperation, becoming the perfect docile wife while he treated her like dirt beneath his shoes. But everything shattered the night she overheard him mocking her with his friends-and discovered the necklace she'd cherished, her only link to the boy who once saved her life, didn't even belong to him. It was all a lie. No longer the doormat he married, she discards her fake identity and reclaims her birthright as the hidden heiress of Salvadore City. Now she's on a mission: find the necklace's true owner among his circle of friends, no matter how many hearts she has to break along the way. But her husband isn't ready to let go. Convinced she's playing games to make him jealous, he's blindsided when divorce papers land in his hands. By the time he realizes the woman he dismissed was never who he thought she was, she's already moved on-living her truth, chasing her destiny, and leaving him choking on regret. Some cages, once opened, can never be closed again.

Chapter 1 The Discovery

Chapter 1

ADRIA

I stood outside the VIP room with trembling hands, clutching the thermos of soup that still burned my palms through the insulated container. The hallway of Eclipse Club reeked of expensive cologne and poor decisions, much like my marriage.

"Sir, your wife is here with the soup for Miss Amber," Adina's voice filtered through the slightly ajar door before I could knock.

My husband's secretary. Always so efficient, always so beautiful in her tailored suits that probably cost more than my entire wardrobe. I'd tried befriending her once, during the first month of our marriage. She'd looked at me the way one might look at a stray dog-with pity and mild disgust.

"Tell her to leave it with you," Damien's voice replied, cold and dismissive. "I don't want her embarrassing me in front of everyone."

I should have left. God knows I should have turned around, gone home, and pretended I hadn't heard that. But my feet remained rooted to the plush carpet, and my heart-that stupid, desperate thing-still held onto the foolish hope that maybe, just maybe, he didn't mean it the way it sounded.

"Come on, Damien," another male voice laughed. "Your wife isn't that bad. She's pretty easy on the eyes, at least."

"Easy on the eyes?" Damien scoffed. "Marcus, the woman has zero personality. She follows me around like a lost puppy, agrees to everything I say, and has absolutely no backbone. Do you know what it's like being married to someone so... bland?"

The thermos nearly slipped from my grip. I pressed myself against the wall, hidden by the decorative column, my breath caught somewhere between my throat and my breaking heart.

"Then why'd you marry her?" This voice belonged to Kieran, Damien's childhood friend. I'd met him twice, both times brief and unmemorable.

"Honestly? I felt sorry for her." Damien's laugh was cruel, sharp enough to cut through whatever remained of my dignity. "She was so pathetic, always showing up wherever I was, looking at me with those desperate eyes. I figured she was an orphan with nothing going for her, and I thought... why not? A wife who worships the ground you walk on and asks for nothing? Seemed like a decent arrangement."

"An arrangement that's about to get complicated now that Amber's back," Adina chimed in, her voice carrying a smugness that made my stomach churn.

Amber. His first love. The woman whose photos I'd found tucked in his study drawer three months into our marriage. The woman who looked eerily similar to me-same dark hair, same petite frame, same wide eyes. I'd convinced myself it was coincidence, that maybe he saw something in me he'd loved in her.

What a fool I'd been.

"Amber and I have unfinished business," Damien said, his voice softening in a way it never had when he spoke to me. "She left for Paris before we could make things official. Now she's back, and-"

"And you're married to her knockoff version," Marcus interrupted with another laugh. "Man, that's cold even for you."

My vision blurred. Sixteen years. I'd waited sixteen years to find the boy who saved me.

I was six years old when it happened, burning with fever in that abandoned warehouse where my kidnappers had left me. The memories were fragmented, fever-distorted, but I remembered the feel of cool water on my cracked lips, gentle hands checking my pulse, and a voice-young but steady-telling me I'd be okay. Before he left to get help, I'd pressed my most precious possession into his palm: my mother's necklace, a delicate silver chain with an emerald pendant shaped like a teardrop.

"Find me when you're older," I'd whispered in my delirium. "This is a promise."

He couldn't have been more than eight, but he'd nodded solemnly and disappeared into the night. By the time the police found me, he was gone. The authorities assumed he was another street kid, impossible to trace. My parents had been frantic, grateful I was alive but unable to comprehend why I kept crying about a necklace and a boy with kind eyes.

Eighteen months ago, I'd bumped into Damien outside a coffee shop in the financial district. Literally bumped into him, my latte splashing across his expensive suit. I'd been stammering apologies when I saw it-the emerald teardrop pendant hanging around his neck, slightly hidden beneath his collar.

My necklace. My promise. My savior.

Everything else had ceased to exist in that moment. I didn't see the irritation on his face or hear his sharp words about the stain. I only saw salvation, destiny, the answer to sixteen years of searching.

From that day forward, I'd dedicated myself to being near him. I'd learned his routine, showed up at his favorite restaurants, joined the same gym, volunteered at charity events his company sponsored. People called me obsessed. My friend Maya called me insane. But how could I explain that I wasn't chasing a stranger? I was chasing the boy who'd saved my life, the promise I'd made to a feverish child's dream.

When he'd finally acknowledged my existence, I'd been ecstatic. When he asked me out, I'd cried. When he proposed after only eight months-a rushed, practical proposal in his office with no ring and barely any emotion-I'd said yes before he could finish the sentence.

I'd molded myself into whatever he wanted. Quiet when he wanted peace. Absent when he wanted space. Agreeable when he wanted compliance. I'd buried Adriana Salvadore, secret heiress to the Salvadore empire, and become Adriana Chen, orphaned nobody, because he'd mentioned once that he found wealthy, powerful women intimidating.

All for a boy who'd saved me.

Except he wasn't that boy.

"Hey, Damien, where'd you get that necklace anyway?" Kieran's question pierced through my spiraling thoughts. "I've never seen you take it off."

My heart stopped.

"This?" Damien's voice carried confusion. "A friend lent it to me, what, two years ago? Said it made me look more sophisticated for the Singapore deal. I just never got around to returning it."

The hallway tilted. Or maybe I did.

"Dude, you've been wearing a borrowed for two years?" Marcus laughed. "

The thermos slipped from my hands, hitting the carpet with a muffled thud. Soup seeped through the lid, spreading across the burgundy fibers like blood.

Everything I'd sacrificed. Everything I'd endured. Every piece of myself I'd carved away to fit into his life.

For a borrowed necklace and a man who'd never saved anyone but himself.

Chapter 2 Pathetic Wife

Chapter 2

ADRIA

I forced my feet to move, one step after another, away from that door and the truth that had just shattered my entire world. The hallway stretched endlessly before me, each step echoing in my ears like a countdown to something I couldn't yet name. My hands trembled as I smoothed down my plain cotton dress-the one Damien had once commented made me look "appropriately humble."

Appropriately humble. God, I'd actually taken that as a compliment.

The staircase loomed ahead, its wrought-iron railings gleaming under the club's ambient lighting. I descended carefully, mechanically, my mind still trapped in that moment of revelation. A borrowed necklace. Two years. All of it, every degrading moment, every sacrifice, every piece of myself I'd murdered to become his perfect, spineless wife-all for a piece of jewelry he couldn't even be bothered to return to its owner.

I was halfway down when I heard his voice.

"Adriana!"

My spine stiffened. That voice, the one I'd once thought sounded like coming home, now grated against my raw nerves like sandpaper on an open wound.

I turned slowly, schooling my features into the same placid, eager expression I'd worn for eighteen months. The mask settled over my face with practiced ease, even as something inside me screamed to rip it off and throw it at his feet.

Damien stood at the top of the stairs, backlit by the hallway's chandelier like some dark prince in a twisted fairy tale. His friends clustered around him-Marcus with his perpetual smirk, Kieran checking his phone with disinterest, and two others whose names I'd never bothered to learn. And there, tucked against his side like she belonged there, was Adina.

His secretary. His mistress. The woman keeping his bed warm until his precious Amber came home.

She wore a dress that probably cost more than I'd spent on clothing in the past year, crimson silk that hugged curves I'd never have. Her hand rested possessively on Damien's arm, her perfectly manicured nails a shade of red that matched her lips. She smiled at me, and it was the smile of a victor looking down at the defeated.

A month ago, that smile would have destroyed me. Today, it barely registered.

"There you are," Damien said, descending the stairs with his entourage following like courtiers attending their king. "I was just telling everyone how dedicated you are, coming all the way here to bring soup."

The words sounded kind, but I'd learned to hear the mockery underneath. I'd just been too desperate to acknowledge it before.

"Of course," I said softly, keeping my eyes downcast the way he preferred. "I wanted to make sure Miss Amber had something warm to eat."

Adina giggled, the sound sharp and grating. "How sweet. Damien's wife playing servant to his guests."

Something hot flashed through my chest, but I swallowed it down. Not yet. I couldn't afford pride yet.

Damien reached the bottom of the stairs and held out his hand. For one absurd moment, I thought he wanted to hold mine. Then I saw the expectation in his eyes, the same expression he wore when he wanted his coffee or his dry cleaning.

The thermos. He wanted the thermos.

My mind flashed to the container I'd dropped upstairs, soup seeping into expensive carpet. "I-"

"You did bring it, didn't you?" His voice sharpened. "Don't tell me you came all this way and forgot it upstairs."

"No, I have it." The lie came easily. I'd become so good at lying, at pretending, at being whatever he needed me to be. "Let me get it from my bag."

I turned toward the coat check, my mind racing. I could say I left it in the car. I could offer to make more. I could-

"Adriana." His hand clamped around my wrist, spinning me back to face him. The grip was tight enough to hurt, but I'd learned not to flinch. "Stop wasting time. Go get it. Now."

I met his eyes for just a moment-cold, dark, and utterly devoid of the warmth I'd imagined I'd seen sixteen years ago in a fever dream. Had I really convinced myself this man could have been that boy? That gentle voice in the darkness, those careful hands?

"Yes, of course." I pulled free from his grasp and hurried back up the stairs, my heels clicking against the marble. Behind me, I heard Marcus say something that made the others laugh, followed by Damien's voice: "She's pathetic, but at least she's obedient."

My hands clenched into fists, nails biting into my palms hard enough to leave marks.

The thermos lay where I'd dropped it, a dark stain spreading across the carpet around it. I picked it up, feeling the remaining warmth through the metal, and stared at it for a long moment. Chicken soup. I'd spent two hours making it from scratch, simmering the bones, skimming the fat, adding the herbs Damien had once mentioned his mother used.

For Amber. For his first love. While I played the devoted wife delivering comfort to my husband's true desire.

The laugh that bubbled up from my chest was bitter and foreign.

I descended the stairs again, slower this time. They were waiting for me at the bottom, a tableau of judgment and casual cruelty. Adina had pressed even closer to Damien, her head resting on his shoulder. He didn't push her away.

"Finally," Damien said, holding out his hand again.

I placed the thermos in his palm, and he immediately unscrewed the lid. Steam rose from the opening-less than before, but still warm.

He sniffed it, frowned, then poured a small amount into the lid. His expression soured immediately.

"It's cold," he announced, loud enough for his friends to hear. "You brought cold soup for Amber?"

It wasn't cold. It was still warm, I'd just made it less than an hour ago. But contradicting him would be a mistake, and I needed to play this carefully. I needed to stay close enough to figure out which one of these people had lent him that necklace.

"I'm sorry," I whispered, letting my voice crack just slightly. "I can make more-"

"Do you have any idea how disrespectful this is?" He cut me off, his voice rising. "I ask you for one simple thing, and you can't even do that right?"

My jaw ached from clenching it, but I kept my expression remorseful. Apologetic. Pathetic.

"Damien, it's fine," Kieran said, sounding bored. "It's just soup."

"No, it's not fine." Damien's eyes never left my face, and I saw something in them I'd missed before-the pleasure he took in this. In humiliating me. In breaking me down in front of his friends. "She needs to understand that there are standards in this relationship. Expectations."

Before I could process what was happening, he tilted the thermos and poured the remaining soup down the front of my dress.

The liquid was still hot enough to make me gasp, soaking through the cotton to my skin. Vegetables and noodles stuck to the fabric, sliding down to pool at my feet. The thermos clattered to the ground, rolling across the marble with a hollow, metallic sound.

"There," Damien said, his voice cold and satisfied. "Now go home and make it properly this time. And Adriana?" He stepped closer, his voice dropping low enough that only I could hear. "Clean yourself up. You look pathetic."

I stood there, dripping soup and humiliation, and felt something inside me finally, irrevocably break.

Not my heart-that had already shattered upstairs. This was different. This was the death of whatever desperate, delusional thing had kept me chained to this man, to this life, to this version of myself that I'd carved down to nothing.

Marcus laughed. "Man, that's harsh even for you."

"She'll be fine," Adina purred. "She always is. Aren't you, Adriana?"

I looked up at her, then at Damien, then at each of his friends in turn. One of them had my necklace. One of them was the key to finding the boy who'd actually saved me.

I smiled-a soft, defeated smile that I'd perfected over eighteen months.

"Yes," I said quietly. "I'll make more soup right away."

The lie tasted like freedom.

Chapter 3 The Changed Adria

Chapter 3

ADRIA

The hot water scalded my skin, turning it pink and raw, but I didn't move to adjust the temperature. I stood under the shower spray until the bathroom filled with steam, until I could barely see my own hand in front of my face, until every trace of that soup-and his touch-had been washed down the drain.

My phone buzzed on the bathroom counter, the sound cutting through the white noise of running water. I ignored it. Then it buzzed again. And again.

With a sigh, I turned off the shower and wrapped myself in a towel, my wet hair dripping onto the tile floor. The phone screen lit up with a new message, and I already knew who it was from before I picked it up.

**Damien: Don't bother coming back to the club. Your presence and that horrible soup you made have made Adina sick. I won't be coming home tonight either.**

I stared at the message, waiting for the familiar ache in my chest, the desperate need to fix things, to apologize, to beg him to reconsider. I waited for the tears that usually came so easily, for the crushing weight of failure that had become my constant companion.

Nothing came.

I felt nothing but a distant, clinical observation of the words on the screen. Adina was sick. Of course she was. Probably from laughing too hard at my humiliation. And Damien wouldn't be coming home-meaning he'd be spending the night with her, or Amber, or whoever else caught his fancy.

A month ago, I would have called him. Begged him to come home. Promised to make it right. Waited up all night in case he changed his mind, sitting by the door like a dog waiting for its master.

I rolled my eyes and dropped the phone on the counter without responding.

The silence that followed felt liberating.

I walked to my closet-the small, pathetic closet where I'd hung all the bland, modest clothes Damien preferred. Beiges and grays and navy blues. Nothing too bright, nothing too attention-grabbing, nothing that might embarrass him or make me stand out. I pushed past them all, reaching for the very back where I'd shoved everything from my old life into a single garment bag.

My fingers closed around soft fabric, and I pulled out a pair of black joggers and a faded gray sweatshirt from my alma mater-MIT, where I'd triple-majored in computer science, business, and engineering. The sweatshirt had paint stains on one sleeve from an art class I'd taken for fun, and a small burn hole from a late-night soldering accident in the robotics lab.

I pressed the fabric to my face and breathed in deeply. It smelled like storage and dust, but underneath that, I could almost catch traces of who I used to be.

Adriana Salvadore. Heiress. Genius. Fighter. Friend.

Not Adriana Chen, the pathetic, desperate wife who'd erased herself for a man who'd never wanted her in the first place.

I dressed quickly, my body remembering the comfort of clothes that actually fit properly, that didn't restrict my movement or make me feel like I was playing dress-up in someone else's life. I pulled my wet hair into a ponytail, grabbed my keys, and headed for the garage.

The Mercedes SUV Damien had bought me sat pristine and barely used-he preferred I take taxis so I wouldn't "embarrass him with my terrible driving." Next to it, covered with a tarp and gathering dust, was my baby: a matte black Ducati Panigale V4 that I'd customized myself. I'd told Damien it belonged to a friend who was storing it here.

I bypassed both vehicles and went for the BMW sedan I'd registered under a shell company-untraceable, unremarkable, perfect for disappearing.

The drive to the storage facility took forty minutes. I'd rented the unit three years ago, back when I was still myself, before I'd seen that necklace and lost my mind. It was located near the outskirts of the city, in a neighborhood that straddled the line between industrial and residential, the kind of place where no one asked questions and security cameras were more for show than function.

I parked in the empty lot and made my way to unit 247, punching in the code I'd memorized but never written down. The metal door rolled up with a screech of protest, revealing boxes stacked neatly against the walls, labeled in my own handwriting: **Books. Equipment. Clothes. Documents.**

And there, in a fireproof safe in the corner: **Identity.**

I pulled out the safe, entered the combination, and lifted the lid. Inside lay everything I'd locked away to become Damien's wife. My real driver's license. My credit cards linked to my actual accounts. My passport. My old phones-three of them, each serving different purposes.

I grabbed the primary one, a custom-built smartphone with encryption that would make the NSA weep, and powered it on.

The boot-up screen glowed in the dim light of the storage unit. I watched the loading bar inch forward, my heart rate picking up for the first time since I'd dropped that thermos upstairs at the club.

Then the notifications started.

The phone vibrated so violently it nearly jumped out of my hand. Messages flooded in, thousands of them, the notification counter climbing so fast it became a blur. Missed calls: 3,847. Text messages: 12,493. Emails: 28,756. Social media notifications: exceeded maximum count.

I scrolled through them with shaking fingers. My parents. My brothers-Adrian, Mikael, and Elijah. My sisters-Sophia and Isabella. My best friends from college-Maya, Jordan, and China. Messages from my martial arts master, Sifu Wong. Encrypted messages from my hacker collective, the ones I'd built security systems with for Fortune 500 companies. Emails from fellow CEOs I'd collaborated with on tech startups.

**Mom: Adriana, please call us. We're worried sick.**

**Adrian: This isn't funny anymore. Where the hell are you?**

**Maya: If you don't respond in 24 hours I'm filing a missing person report.**

**Sifu Wong: Your absence from the dojo speaks of either death or cowardice. I hope it's the former.**

That last one made me smile despite everything. Sifu Wong had never believed in coddling his students.

I opened Facebook-an account I'd abandoned eighteen months ago with over fifty thousand followers. My last post stared back at me: **Going ghost for a while. Don't worry, I'll be back when I've found what I'm looking for.**

The comments section had exploded. People asking if I was okay, if I'd been kidnapped, if I'd joined a cult. Conspiracy theories about my disappearance. Memorial posts from people who'd assumed I was dead.

I navigated to Instagram, where I had a hundred thousand followers from my photography hobby and tech reviews. Same story. TikTok, where my martial arts videos and coding tutorials had garnered two million followers. Same desperate messages, same concern, same assumption that something terrible had happened to me.

Something terrible had happened to me. I'd lost my mind over a borrowed necklace and a childhood fantasy.

My fingers moved across the keyboard, typing before I could second-guess myself:

**I'm back.**

I hit post simultaneously across all platforms.

The response was instantaneous. Likes flooded in faster than I could count. Comments exploded. Shares multiplied. My phone started ringing immediately, the screen lighting up with incoming calls from dozens of numbers.

But only one mattered.

**Adrian - Twin Brother**

I answered on the second ring.

"ADRIANA FUCKING SALVADORE, WHERE THE HELL HAVE YOU BEEN?!"

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