Genre Ranking
Get the APP HOT
Home > Billionaires > Married To A Billionaire's Deception
Married To A Billionaire's Deception

Married To A Billionaire's Deception

Author: : HONEY MULLINS
Genre: Billionaires
For five years, I worked three jobs to support my husband's dream. I poured my inheritance into his "debt" and believed we were building a life together. Today, I saw him on the news. My "struggling" husband, Jordan, is a billionaire heir, and our marriage was his five-year "Bootstrap Challenge." His real fiancée, Isabell, stood beside him. When I got home, our five-year-old son, Leo, looked at me with cold eyes. "You failed the test, Diana," he said flatly. "Daddy says you have a scarcity mindset." Then came the final call from Jordan. Leo wasn't mine. He was his and Isabell's child, and I was just a "socialization caregiver." My accounts were frozen. I was left with nothing. But they forgot about my father's last gift. An old laptop with an unchangeable blockchain ledger app, holding the immutable record of every hour I worked and every dollar I gave them. They called me an asset. Now, I'm coming to collect.

Chapter 1

For five years, I worked three jobs to support my husband's dream. I poured my inheritance into his "debt" and believed we were building a life together.

Today, I saw him on the news. My "struggling" husband, Jordan, is a billionaire heir, and our marriage was his five-year "Bootstrap Challenge."

His real fiancée, Isabell, stood beside him. When I got home, our five-year-old son, Leo, looked at me with cold eyes.

"You failed the test, Diana," he said flatly. "Daddy says you have a scarcity mindset."

Then came the final call from Jordan. Leo wasn't mine. He was his and Isabell's child, and I was just a "socialization caregiver." My accounts were frozen. I was left with nothing.

But they forgot about my father's last gift.

An old laptop with an unchangeable blockchain ledger app, holding the immutable record of every hour I worked and every dollar I gave them. They called me an asset. Now, I'm coming to collect.

Chapter 1

Diana Ware POV:

For five years, I was the wife of a struggling entrepreneur. Or so I believed. Today, I discovered my husband, Jordan Fernandez, is the sole heir to a multi-billion-dollar real estate empire, and our entire life was his five-year "Bootstrap Challenge" to prove his mettle to his family's board.

The last five years replayed in my mind, a montage of exhaustion and sacrifice. Eighteen hundred and twenty-five days. That' s how long I' d worked three jobs. My mornings started at 5 a.m., smelling of industrial-strength coffee and the faint scent of turpentine from my late-night graphic design gigs. My days were a blur of freelance projects, followed by an evening shift waiting tables at a diner where the regulars knew me by name and pitied my perpetually tired eyes. My nights were spent hunched over my laptop, chasing deadlines for logos and brochures, my vision blurring until the letters on the screen swam together.

All of it was for him. For Jordan. For his dream.

I believed in him with every fiber of my being. When he told me about the millions in student and business debt that crushed him, my heart ached for him. "We' ll get through this, Jordan," I had whispered, wrapping my arms around him in our tiny, cramped apartment. "Together."

And we did. Or rather, I did. I was the one who meticulously tracked every dollar, who chose the generic brand of cereal, who patched the holes in our son Leo' s jeans instead of buying new ones. I was the one who sold my own car, who cashed in the modest bonds my late father had left me, all to pour into the black hole of his supposed "debt."

My own career as a graphic designer, once promising, was now a collection of low-paying freelance gigs I took on in the dead of night. My portfolio was stale, my dreams were gathering dust in a folder on my desktop, all sacrificed at the altar of our future.

But I believed it was worth it. Every time I saw the hope in Jordan' s eyes, every time he' d kiss my forehead and whisper, "Just a little longer, Diana. I promise, I' ll make it all up to you," the exhaustion would melt away, replaced by a fierce, protective love. We were building something real. A family. A life forged in hardship, which would make the eventual success all the sweeter.

Last night, we had celebrated. Jordan came home, his face glowing, and lifted me off my feet. "We did it, baby! We' re finally in the clear!" he' d shouted, his laughter echoing in our small living room. He said a final investor had come through, clearing his last hurdle. The debt was gone. Our life was about to begin.

I cried tears of pure, unadulterated joy. We opened a cheap bottle of champagne I' d been saving for this very moment. We made plans. A small house with a backyard for Leo. A vacation, our first ever. Maybe I could finally quit my other jobs and focus on my design work again. The future, once a distant, hazy dream, was finally within reach.

Today, I was treating myself to a rare luxury: a coffee from a real café, not the instant sludge I usually drank. I was sketching a new design in my notebook, feeling a spark of creativity I hadn't felt in years, when my eyes drifted to the large television screen mounted on the wall.

A business news channel was on. And there he was. My Jordan.

But he wasn't my Jordan. He was wearing a suit so exquisitely tailored it probably cost more than our car. His hair was perfectly styled, not the charmingly messy look I was used to. He was standing on a stage, a confident, almost arrogant smile on his face that I had never seen before. Beside him, a stunning woman in a sleek white dress, her hand resting possessively on his arm. Her name, according to the chyron at the bottom of the screen, was Isabell Winters.

The headline blazed across the screen, searing itself into my brain: "BILLIONAIRE HEIR JORDAN FERNANDEZ CONQUERS THE ULTIMATE TEST: INSIDE THE FIVE-YEAR 'BOOTSTRAP CHALLENGE' ."

My hand froze, the pencil dropping from my fingers and clattering onto the floor. The world around me seemed to recede, the cheerful chatter of the café fading into a dull roar. The reporter' s voice cut through the haze, each word a sledgehammer blow.

"...sole heir to the Fernandez real estate empire... a five-year social experiment designed by the board to prove his business acumen... living on a simulated low income... a test of grit and character before taking the reins of the multi-billion-dollar corporation..."

My blood ran cold. The coffee in my stomach turned to acid.

I stumbled out of the café, the world tilting on its axis. The walk home was a blur. My key fumbled in the lock, my hands shaking so violently I could barely fit it in.

The first thing I saw when I opened the door was our five-year-old son, Leo. He wasn't playing with his usual worn-out wooden blocks. He was sitting in the middle of the floor, surrounded by the packaging of a brand-new, obscenely expensive-looking robot. The kind I' d seen in toy store windows and knew we could never afford.

"Leo, baby? Where did you get that?" I asked, my voice a strained whisper.

He didn' t look up at me with his usual bright, adoring eyes. Instead, his gaze was cool, appraising. It was an expression I' d never seen on his sweet face.

"Daddy bought it for me. He said the test is over," he said, his small voice eerily flat.

My heart seized. "The test?"

He finally looked at me then, his eyes holding a coldness that shattered me. "You failed the test, Diana."

I could only stare, my mind refusing to process his words. "What... what are you talking about, sweetie?"

"Daddy says you have a scarcity mindset," Leo recited, his voice like a recording. "He says you' re obsessed with money. That' s why you couldn' t pass."

The words, coming from the mouth of the little boy I had rocked to sleep, whose fevers I had nursed, whose scraped knees I had kissed, were more brutal than any physical blow. My throat closed up, a strangled sound catching in my chest.

"No, baby, that' s not true," I choked out, stumbling towards him. "We had to save money... for Daddy' s business... for our future..."

He flinched away as I reached for him, his small face twisting in a look of disdain that was a terrifying mirror of the man on the television. "Daddy says real partners support dreams, not just count pennies. He and Isabell are going to take me to Paris. She doesn' t count pennies."

Isabell. The name was like poison on his tongue.

My mind flashed back through the years. The nights I' d stayed up, reworking my budget after an unexpected bill. The times I' d skipped meals to make sure he and Jordan had enough. The crushing guilt I felt every time Leo asked for a toy I couldn' t afford. All of it. All of my sacrifice, my love, my tireless effort, had been twisted into this ugly caricature: a woman obsessed with money.

"Leo," I whispered, my voice breaking. "That robot... I saw the receipt. It cost five hundred dollars. I could have paid our electricity bill for three months with that."

He just stared at me blankly. "See? You' re doing it again. You' re always talking about money."

My knees felt weak. I staggered back, my hand hitting the wall to steady myself. My eyes landed on the small coffee table.

Lying there, on top of a glossy magazine with Jordan' s face on the cover, were two documents.

One was a divorce agreement.

The other was a check made out to me for fifty thousand dollars. A severance package.

Jordan' s signature was scrawled at the bottom of the agreement, bold and flamboyant. It was the signature of a winner, a conqueror. The man who had held me last night and promised me the world.

My phone buzzed. It was him. I answered, my hand trembling.

"Diana," his voice was cool, distant. The warmth from last night was gone, as if it had never existed. "I assume you' ve seen the news. And the documents."

"Jordan... why?" The word was a raw wound in my throat.

He sighed, a sound of faint annoyance. "It was a test, Diana. The 'Bootstrap Challenge.' A five-year project to prove to my family' s board that I had the determination to build something from nothing. Isabell, my fiancée, designed the parameters."

Fiancée. The word hung in the air, thick and suffocating.

"The millions in debt?" I asked, my voice hollow.

A soft, condescending chuckle came through the phone. "That was my seed money, Diana. The board provided it. I just had to prove I could not only manage it, but grow it while living a 'struggling' lifestyle. Your income was a crucial part of the simulation. It demonstrated my ability to leverage all available assets."

My income. My three jobs. My father' s inheritance. I wasn' t his partner. I was an asset.

"You... you bastard," I spat, the rage finally cutting through the shock.

"Don' t be like that, Diana. You were compensated. Fifty thousand is more than generous for five years of... role-playing. Be smart. Sign the papers, take the money, and leave quietly. My real life is starting now."

The final piece of my world crumbled into dust. "Our son... Leo..."

"Ah, yes. That' s the other thing," he said, his voice dropping to a clinical, detached tone. "This is probably for the best, because you' ll need to understand this. Leo isn' t yours, Diana."

I remembered the lies. The story about a difficult birth, the reasons I couldn' t be in the delivery room, the documents I signed in a post-adoption haze, told they were just formalities.

"He' s mine and Isabell' s," Jordan continued, his voice utterly devoid of emotion. "We used a surrogate. You were legally designated as his 'socialization caregiver.' Part of the experiment was to see if a non-biological maternal figure, under financial duress, could provide a stable upbringing. The board was very impressed with your performance, for the most part. Though your scarcity mindset was a noted flaw."

The phone felt like a block of ice against my ear. My lungs refused to draw breath. The little boy in the living room, the one whose first steps I' d witnessed, whose first word was "Mama," was a stranger.

"Our lawyers will be there in an hour to finalize the transition," Jordan said briskly. "I' d appreciate it if you were gone by then."

The line went dead.

I stood there, the phone still pressed to my ear, listening to the silence.

I wasn' t just a failed wife.

I wasn' t even a mother.

Chapter 2

Diana Ware POV:

The silence in the apartment was deafening, broken only by the faint beeping of Leo' s new robot. My life, the one I had poured my blood, sweat, and tears into for five years, had been revealed as a meticulously crafted stage play. And I was the unwitting, and now discarded, lead actress.

A cold, hard knot formed in the pit of my stomach. Leave quietly? Take the severance check and disappear? No. They had taken everything from me-my time, my money, my love, my very identity as a mother. I would not let them erase me so easily.

I was still standing there, frozen in the hallway, when the doorbell rang. An hour, Jordan had said. They were early. Of course they were. They couldn' t wait to sweep away the garbage.

I opened the door to find her. Isabell Winters. In person, she was even more striking than on television. Her beauty was sharp and polished, like a diamond. She wore a simple cream-colored dress that probably cost more than my monthly income from all three jobs combined. Two men in dark suits, lawyers by the looks of them, stood silently behind her.

"Diana," she said, her voice smooth as silk but with an undercurrent of something sharp. "I' m Isabell. I' m so sorry you had to find out this way. It was all supposed to be handled more... delicately."

Her eyes, a cool shade of blue, raked over me, taking in my worn jeans and faded t-shirt. It wasn' t a look of sympathy. It was a look of clinical assessment, like a scientist observing a lab rat.

"You played your part beautifully, though," she added, a faint, condescending smile playing on her lips. "Truly. The board was very impressed with your resilience."

Without waiting for an invitation, she swept past me into the living room, her expensive perfume filling the small space and choking me. She was the picture of effortless ownership.

"Leo, darling!" she called out, her voice changing, becoming warm and melodic.

Leo' s head snapped up. A huge, genuine smile spread across his face, a smile I hadn' t seen directed at me all day. He scrambled to his feet and ran, not to me, but to her. He threw his arms around her legs.

"Isabell!" he cried. "Daddy said you were coming!"

She laughed, a light, tinkling sound, and bent down to his level. She cupped his face in her perfectly manicured hands. "Of course, my sweet boy. Did you like the present?"

He nodded enthusiastically.

"Well, there' s plenty more where that came from," she said, pulling a small, brightly colored lollipop from her purse. "How would you like to go to Paris this weekend? We can see the real Eiffel Tower, not just the pictures in your books."

Leo' s eyes went wide. "Really?"

"Really," she confirmed, stroking his hair. It was a gesture of such practiced intimacy it made my stomach churn.

I stood in the doorway, a ghost in my own home. I was watching a scene from a life that had been running parallel to mine, a life I never knew existed. I wasn't his mother being replaced. I was a temporary stand-in, my contract now terminated.

Isabell' s gaze swept across the living room, her nose wrinkling slightly as she took in our modest, second-hand furniture. The sofa I' d found on the curb and reupholstered myself. The coffee table I' d painstakingly sanded and re-stained. Each piece was a testament to my effort, my love, my struggle.

To her, it was just junk.

"God, Jordan wasn' t exaggerating," she murmured, more to herself than to me. "This is all so... bleak. It' s hard to believe the heir to the Fernandez empire lived like this." She turned to one of the lawyers. "Make a note. Have all of this cleared out and disposed of before we move in the new furniture."

Disposed of. My life' s work. My home.

The lawyer nodded and then turned to me, his expression impassive. He held out a sleek, expensive-looking fountain pen. "Ms. Ware. If you would just sign the agreement. The fifty thousand dollars will be wired to your account as soon as you vacate the premises."

"Fifty thousand dollars," I repeated, the words tasting like ash in my mouth. "For five years of my life."

"It' s the highest compensation package ever offered for a Social Role-Player in a project of this duration," the lawyer stated flatly, as if quoting a price list. "The industry standard is considerably lower."

Industry standard. They had an industry for this. For ruining people' s lives.

"You should take it, Diana," Isabell said, her voice dripping with false sympathy. "It' s a generous offer. Don' t make this ugly. You' re a smart woman. You know you can' t fight us. It would be a waste of everyone' s time and your... limited resources."

She then turned to Leo. "Darling, say goodbye to Diana."

The final, brutal command. The severing of the tie.

Leo turned to look at me. His face was a confusing mixture of curiosity and impatience. The warm, loving boy I knew was gone, replaced by this cold little stranger.

"Goodbye, Diana," he said, his voice flat. He looked me up and down one last time, his nose wrinkling in a perfect imitation of Isabell.

"You smell like the diner," he said. "Greasy."

And then I did something that surprised them all. It surprised even me.

I laughed.

It wasn't a happy sound. It was a raw, broken, terrible sound that clawed its way out of my shattered soul. It was the laugh of a woman who had absolutely nothing left to lose.

Isabell and the lawyers stared at me, their masks of cool composure finally cracking. They looked at me as if I had gone completely insane.

Maybe I had.

Chapter 3

Diana Ware POV:

My laughter echoed in the suddenly silent room, a harsh, grating sound that made Isabell' s perfectly sculpted face tighten with annoyance. The lawyer holding the pen took an involuntary step back.

"What' s so funny?" Isabell asked, her voice sharp.

I finally managed to stifle the laugh, wiping a tear of pure, hysterical despair from the corner of my eye. I looked at her, at the lawyer, at the little boy who was no longer mine, and a strange, terrifying calm washed over me.

"Oh, nothing," I said, my voice eerily steady. "I was just thinking about what a good deal this is."

Without another word, I turned on my heel and walked back into the bedroom I had shared with a phantom. Their confused gazes followed me.

"What is she doing?" I heard Isabell hiss to the lawyer. "Is she packing? Make sure she doesn' t take anything of value."

I ignored her. I pulled a large, dusty storage box from under the bed. It wasn't my clothes I was after. It wasn't the few pieces of jewelry I owned or the sentimental trinkets from a life that was a lie.

I began to move with methodical precision. I opened my nightstand drawer and pulled out a thick stack of bank statements from the last five years, one for each of the three jobs I worked. I added the pile of pay stubs I kept for tax purposes.

Next, I went to the small desk in the corner. I gathered every credit card statement, every bill, every receipt I had meticulously saved. I found the statements for the supplementary credit card Jordan used-the one I paid off every month, filled with his "business" lunches and "networking" expenses.

When I turned around, Isabell was standing in the doorway, her arms crossed, her expression shifting from annoyance to suspicion.

"What is all that?" she demanded. "You' re not seriously thinking of trying to blackmail us, are you? Trying to squeeze out a few more dollars? It' s pathetic, Diana."

I didn' t answer her. I walked past her, back into the living room, and went straight to the small basket where I kept the mail. I rummaged through it until I found what I was looking for: the receipt for Leo' s new five-hundred-dollar robot. It was a crisp, damning piece of paper. Proof of a casual expenditure that represented a mountain of work for me.

I walked back to my box of papers and placed the receipt right on top. It was the final, perfect flourish.

I closed the lid of the box. It was heavy, filled with the paper trail of my servitude.

"That' s it," I announced, my voice clear and strong. "I' m ready to go. I' ll just be taking this with me."

The lawyer stepped forward, blocking my path. "I' m afraid not, Ms. Ware. Those are financial documents related to the project. They are the property of the Fernandez Corporation."

I looked him dead in the eye. "They are records of my labor. My earnings. My expenditures. They belong to me."

"Are you trying to renegotiate your compensation?" Isabell sneered, looking at me as if I were a particularly stupid child. "I told you, it won' t work."

"Who said anything about compensation?" I asked, a slow, cold smile spreading across my face. "You and Jordan, you taught me a very valuable lesson today."

She raised a perfectly plucked eyebrow. "Oh? And what' s that?"

"You said I have a scarcity mindset. That I' m obsessed with money," I said, my voice dropping low. "You' re right. I am."

I leaned in, my voice just a whisper, but it carried the weight of five years of rage. "Because love can be a lie. A family can be a stage play. A child can be taken from you. But money... money is just numbers. It' s honest. It doesn' t pretend to be something it' s not. It doesn' t promise you a future and then rip it away. From now on, I only believe in what I can count."

I hefted the heavy box. I walked to the front door, slipping on my worn-out sneakers. I didn't look back at the expensive furniture that would soon arrive. I didn't look back at the woman who had orchestrated my ruin.

And I didn' t look back at Leo. To look at him now would be to acknowledge a wound so deep it would kill me. I had to cauterize it. I had to cut it out of me completely.

The only things I took from that apartment were my ID, my now-useless bank cards, my laptop, and the box. The box was my past, my pain, and my only hope for a future.

As I pulled the door shut behind me, the last thing I heard was Isabell' s light, musical laughter, followed by Leo' s childish giggle. The sound was a brand on my soul.

And it was the fuel for the fire that was just beginning to burn.

Download Book

COPYRIGHT(©) 2022