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Reborn To Divorce My Billionaire Husband

Reborn To Divorce My Billionaire Husband

Author: William Jafferson
Genre: Modern
Evangeline spent three years bending herself into the perfect, silent wife for her cold husband, Kellan. But when the true heiress of her adoptive family, Catalina, appeared, everything unraveled. Evangeline was exposed as a fake, the cuckoo who had stolen the nest. Her adoptive parents instantly cast her aside, disgusted by her existence. Kellan didn't even blink. He ruthlessly abandoned her for his new soulmate, Catalina. Stripped of her name and identity, Evangeline was left to die. She drowned in the icy sea, futilely scratching at shattered wood chips from a sunken yacht. As the saltwater filled her lungs, she felt a terrifying dread. Why did her years of absolute devotion mean nothing? Why was she thrown away like garbage the second the real daughter appeared? Opening her eyes, a frantic gasp for air tore from her throat. She wasn't drowning. She sat in the back seat of a Maybach, next to Kellan on the rainy night when Katarina first met Kellan. This time, the submissive wife was dead. She pulled the shivering Catalina directly into their car, forcing her into Kellan's pristine world. Then, she threw a divorce agreement onto Kellan's dining table. "Let's get a divorce, Kellan." When he threatened to freeze her assets, she didn't panic. She calmly walked into his corporate headquarters and slammed a scandalous press release on his desk. This time, she would be the one to open the cage door and personally deliver the real songbird back to them.
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Chapter 1

Raindrops lapped against the car windows, blurring Manhattan's neon lights into long, watercolor-like stripes. Every raindrop that fell onto the glass was like a small explosion, echoing the rhythm of her own inner panic and terror.

Evangeline turned her head slowly, a movement that felt stiff and unnatural.

He was there.

Kellan Mason, her husband, sat beside her, bathed in the cold blue light of his iPad. He hadn't looked up. His jaw was a hard, unforgiving line, his focus entirely on the stock figures scrolling across the screen. He was the same as he always was: distant, untouchable, a marble statue of a man who shared her home but never her life.

The driver, Ben, caught her eye in the rearview mirror, his expression a polite mask of concern. "Mrs. Mason? Are you alright?"

The name felt foreign. A costume she had worn for three years.

Three years.

It wasn't a memory. She was reborn, Evangeline is back. In her previous life, on 25th birthday, October 15th, the moment Catalina Tucker appeared at the Shaw family with her birth certificate and DNA comparison test was the beginning of Evangeline's nightmare.

The real daughter came back, and Evangeline became the imposter.

The Shaw family couldn't bring themselves to sever ties with her directly. To make Catalina Tucker the sole heir, Evangeline's car was tampered with, and in the end, she fell into the sea and died in an accident.

There are less than two weeks until her 25th birthday.

"Now that I've been given a second chance, I must make the most of it. So, my top priority is to get a divorce before the truth about my origins comes out, so I can get some of the assets.Then I'll leave the family and not get involved in death."Evangeline thought to herself. "Since that's the case, I definitely need to speed up the process of them getting to know each other.Only if Kellan and Catalina fall in love with each other can I get a divorce and be free sooner."

So rather than waiting for them to meet passively, she preferred to take the initiative.

"Ben," she said, her voice a dry rasp. It sounded like a stranger's. "Pull over at that convenience store."

Kellan's fingers finally stilled on the screen. He didn't look at her, but the subtle tightening of his jaw was a clear sign of his displeasure. The air in the car grew heavy, charged with his silent disapproval.

"We're going to be late," he stated, not a question, but a cold fact. His tone was the one he used in boardrooms, clipped and final.

In her past life, those four words would have been enough. She would have shrunk back, apologized for the inconvenience, and endured the gnawing cramp in her stomach until they arrived at the gala. She had spent three years bending herself into a shape that might please him, a silent, beautiful accessory.

However, she has changed

Evangeline met his gaze in the dark, reflective surface of the window. "I need a bottle of seltzer," she said, her voice devoid of the warmth he was accustomed to. "My stomach is cramping."

The directness of her tone, the lack of apology, finally made him turn his head. His eyes, the color of a stormy sea, narrowed on her. It was a look of faint surprise, of a man noticing for the first time that a piece of furniture had spoken. He held her gaze for a long, tense moment, searching for the familiar deference that was no longer there.

Then, with a barely perceptible sigh of irritation, he gave a curt nod to the driver.

The Maybach glided to a silent stop in front of a brightly lit 7-Eleven. Ben was already reaching for an umbrella in the door pocket.

"I've got it," Evangeline said, pushing his hand away gently.

She didn't wait for Kellan. She pushed open the heavy door and stepped out into the downpour. The cold, driving rain was a shock, soaking the hem of her gown and plastering strands of hair to her face in an instant. It felt real.

The automatic door chimed as she entered the convenience store, the harsh, fluorescent lights a painful glare after the dim luxury of the car. The air smelled of stale coffee and cleaning chemicals. It was a world away from the curated scents of her life with Kellan.

She walked past the aisles of brightly colored junk food, her heels clicking on the linoleum floor. Her target was the refrigerated section at the back. She grabbed the first bottle of water she saw, her hand shaking slightly as she twisted the cap.

She turned and walked to the counter.And there she was.

The girl behind the register was hunched over, carefully counting out change into a drawer. She wore a cheap, ill-fitting red polo shirt with the store's logo on it. Her hair was a simple brown ponytail, and her face, when she finally looked up, was a study in innocent, wide-eyed purity.

A face that had haunted Evangeline's nightmares. A face she saw in the flash of the explosion before the water closed over her head.

Catalina Tucker.

Evangeline's heart gave a single, violent thud against her ribs. This was her. It was unmistakably the woman who would become the true Shaw family heiress, the love of Kellan's life, and the architect of her demise.

"That'll be one dollar and seventy-nine cents," Catalina said, her voice soft and a little hesitant. She seemed intimidated by Evangeline's drenched but obviously expensive attire.

Evangeline stared at her, her gaze sharp and unblinking, cataloging every detail. The chipped nail polish. The faint shadow of exhaustion under her eyes. The raw, hungry ambition that she tried so hard to hide behind a veil of shyness.

She reached into her clutch and pulled out a crisp hundred-dollar bill, laying it on the counter. Her fingertips deliberately brushed against the back of Catalina's hand. The girl flinched, a small, startled movement.

"Keep the change," Evangeline said, her voice smooth as glass.

Catalina fumbled with the cash register, her cheeks flushing. "Oh, I... I can't. I have to give you your change." In her nervousness, a cascade of coins spilled from her trembling fingers, clattering across the counter. "I'm so sorry!"

In her past life, Evangeline might have felt a flicker of pity. Now, she only felt a cold, predatory satisfaction.

"Don't worry about it," she said, her lips curving into a smile that didn't reach her eyes. The smile was a weapon she was just learning how to wield. "It's just money."

She let her gaze drift down to the plastic name tag pinned to Catalina's shirt. Catalina T.

Perfect.

Without another word, Evangeline turned and walked back toward the door. The plan was already taking shape in her mind, wild and audacious. In her last life, they had called her the cuckoo who had stolen the nest. They had stripped her of her name, her home, her very identity.

This time, she would be the one to open the cage door. She would personally deliver the real songbird back to them.

She paused under the store's awning, the rain forming a curtain around her. Across the wet, gleaming asphalt, the Maybach waited, a dark, silent beast. Inside, her husband was waiting.

And soon, so would his soulmate.

A deep, shuddering breath filled her lungs. This time, it wasn't a gasp of panic. It was a declaration of war.

Chapter 2

Evangeline stepped from the relative shelter of the awning back into the relentless downpour. The cold seeped through her silk dress, a chilling embrace. She pulled open the rear door of the Maybach, but she didn't get in.

Instead, she turned.

Her eyes found Catalina, who was now nervously wiping down the counter she had just spilled coins on.

"Hey!" Evangeline's voice cut through the sound of the rain, sharp and commanding.

Inside the car, Kellan looked up from his iPad, his brow furrowing in annoyance at this new delay. He saw his wife, soaked and disheveled, shouting at a convenience store clerk.

Catalina looked up, startled. She pointed a tentative finger at her own chest, her expression a mixture of confusion and fear.

"Yes, you," Evangeline called out, her tone leaving no room for argument. "Do you need a ride? It's coming down hard."

Catalina took a few hesitant steps toward the door, stopping just inside the frame. She glanced at the sheets of rain, then at the impossibly luxurious car, and finally back at the strange, beautiful woman beckoning to her. She shook her head, wringing her hands in her apron. "No, thank you, ma'am. I'll be fine. My bus stop is just around the corner."

"Don't be ridiculous," Evangeline said, her voice taking on a sharp edge of impatience. "A girl waiting for a bus alone in this weather, in this part of town? You'll catch your death, or worse." It was a perfect piece of emotional blackmail, wrapped in a veneer of concern.

From inside the car, Kellan's voice was a low, cold rumble. "Evangeline, what are you doing? Get in the car." He did not entertain strangers. He especially did not entertain strangers who smelled of cheap air freshener and desperation.

Evangeline ignored him completely.

She closed the distance to the doorway in three long strides, her heels clicking ominously on the wet pavement. Before Catalina could protest further, Evangeline took hold of her thin wrist. The girl's skin was cold and clammy.

"Come on," she said, her grip firm. It wasn't a request.

She pulled the half-resisting, half-stunned Catalina out into the rain and toward the car. She wrenched open the front passenger door and, with a firm push on the small of Catalina's back, bundled the girl inside.

Then, Evangeline walked calmly back to her own door, slid into the plush leather seat, and shut it with a solid, definitive thud.

Silence descended upon the car.

It was a thick, suffocating silence, broken only by the rhythmic swish of the windshield wipers. The air was suddenly heavy with the scent of Catalina's vanilla body wash, a sweet, cloying fragrance that was a violent assault on the car's subtle, expensive leather-and-wood scent.

Kellan's jaw was so tight it looked like it might crack. With a sharp, disgusted motion, he pressed the button to lower his window an inch, letting the cold, damp air rush in.

The driver, Ben, cleared his throat, his eyes darting nervously in the rearview mirror. "Mrs. Mason? Where to?"

Evangeline leaned back against the headrest, a picture of serene composure. "Ask our guest," she said, her voice smooth. "Where do you live, Catalina?"

The girl in the front seat flinched at the use of her name. She hunched her shoulders, trying to make herself smaller. "Um, Brooklyn," she stammered, her voice barely a whisper. She gave an address in a neighborhood known for its crumbling pre-war buildings and high crime rate.

Kellan finally snapped.

He closed his iPad with a sharp crack that made both Catalina and Ben jump. "Evangeline," he said, his voice dangerously low, each word a chip of ice. "What in the hell do you think you're playing at?"

She met his furious gaze in the mirror, her own eyes cool and unreadable. "I'm performing a random act of kindness, Kellan. It's a concept you capitalists might find foreign. Consider it my charity for the evening."

The barb hit its mark. A muscle feathered in his cheek. His eyes turned from cold to glacial. This was not his wife. His wife was pliant, predictable. This woman was a stranger, armed with a sharp tongue and an agenda he couldn't begin to fathom.

In the front seat, Catalina looked like a trapped animal. She opened her mouth to say something, perhaps to apologize for the trouble, but Evangeline cut her off.

"Ben, you have the address. Please proceed."

With a resigned sigh, Ben put the car in drive. The Maybach executed a smooth, silent U-turn, heading away from the glittering towers of Midtown and toward the distant, gritty lights of Brooklyn. Away from the life they were supposed to be living.

Kellan stared out the window, his reflection a mask of cold fury. But after a moment, his gaze shifted, his eyes flicking to the rearview mirror, landing on the reflection of the girl in the passenger seat.

It was a brief, dismissive glance, filled with annoyance and contempt.

Catalina, at that exact moment, dared to look up, her own frightened eyes meeting his in the mirror. The intensity of his cold stare was like a physical blow. She gasped softly and immediately dropped her gaze to her lap, where she began pleating the damp fabric of her uniform.

Evangeline saw it all. The first spark. The first connection, however hostile. A small, cruel smile touched her lips. She pulled out her phone, pretending to check her messages. Under the guise of typing a reply, she opened her notes app.

Step one: Introduction. Complete.

The atmosphere in the car grew colder with every passing block. Kellan reached up and, with a single, vicious tug, loosened his tie as if it were choking him. He pulled out his own phone and dialed his assistant.

"The gala," he clipped out, no preamble. "Cancel it. Tell them I've been unavoidably detained."

Listening to him dismantle their evening, a wave of pure, unadulterated triumph washed over Evangeline. She had derailed the night. She had changed the script.

The car crossed the bridge into Brooklyn. The gleaming skyscrapers gave way to graffiti-covered brick walls and rundown storefronts. And she, Evangeline, had just built a bridge right across it.

Chapter 3

The Maybach slowed to a stop in front of a dilapidated red-brick apartment building in a part of Brooklyn that tourists were warned to avoid. Puddles the size of small ponds had formed along the broken curb, reflecting the flickering streetlights.

Catalina let out a breath she seemed to have been holding since Manhattan. She fumbled with the seatbelt buckle, her movements jerky with her eagerness to escape the suffocating luxury of the car.

"Thank you so much," she whispered, her hand on the door handle.

The rain was still a torrential downpour outside, a solid wall of water.

"Wait." Evangeline's voice cut through the quiet.

She leaned forward, her arm stretching between the two front seats. From the side pocket of the driver's door, she retrieved a long, sleek, black umbrella. It was a Brigg, custom-made for Kellan in London. His initials, K.M., were discreetly engraved in silver on the polished Malacca wood handle. It was one of his favorite things.

She shoved the umbrella into Catalina's lap.

"Take this," she said.

Catalina stared at the object as if it were a venomous snake. The sheer quality of it, the weight and feel, was so out of place in her world. "Oh, no, I couldn't possibly. It's yours. I'll just run for it."

"I insist," Evangeline's tone was flat, leaving no room for negotiation. "You can return it to me. Sometime." She let the last word hang in the air, a promise of a future encounter.

From the back seat, Kellan watched his personal property being given away to a complete stranger from the slums. His face was a thundercloud, his silence more menacing than any shout. He didn't intervene, but the temperature in the car dropped another ten degrees.

Overwhelmed, Catalina clutched the umbrella. "Thank you. Thank you," she repeated, then pushed the door open and scrambled out, disappearing into the building's dimly lit entryway.

The passenger door clicked shut.

Ben put the car in gear, and the Maybach pulled away from the curb, leaving the grim Brooklyn street behind. It headed back toward the glittering cage of Manhattan's Upper East Side.

The journey back was executed in absolute silence. Kellan stared out his window, a rigid silhouette of fury. Evangeline, for her part, closed her eyes, resting her head against the cool leather. She could feel his anger radiating across the space between them, a palpable heat. It no longer intimidated her. It fueled her.

The car descended into the private underground garage of their penthouse apartment building. They rode the private elevator up to the top floor without exchanging a single word. The soft chime announcing their arrival was unnaturally loud in the tense silence.

The elevator doors slid open directly into their apartment foyer. Kellan strode out first, ripping his loosened tie from his neck and tossing it onto a marble console table. He didn't stop, his long strides carrying him straight to the living area.

Evangeline took her time, slipping off her damp heels and sliding her feet into a pair of silk slippers. She walked to the wet bar, her movements unhurried, and poured herself a generous measure of Macallan 18 into a crystal tumbler.

She was lifting the glass to her lips when he appeared behind her.

He moved with a predatory silence she hadn't anticipated. One moment he was across the room, the next his presence was a suffocating blanket at her back. He snatched the glass from her hand, slamming it down on the marble countertop. The whiskey sloshed, a dark amber wave against the crystal.

His hands were on her waist, spinning her around. He backed her against the edge of the bar, trapping her. His large frame loomed over her, blocking out the light, caging her in with his body and his rage.

"What," he bit out, his voice a low, dangerous rasp, "was that tonight? What game are you playing, Evangeline?"

His face was inches from hers. She could see the fury simmering in the depths of his dark eyes. He lowered his head, his mouth aiming for the sensitive skin of her neck. It was a familiar move. A punishment. A reassertion of ownership. A way to end a fight without words, to smother her objections with a possession she was supposed to crave.

A wave of revulsion, so powerful it was physically sickening, churned in her stomach. The ghost of his touch felt like a brand.

She reacted without thinking.

She jerked her head to the side, and his lips met empty air. His entire body went rigid with shock. He had never, in three years of marriage, been denied.

Her hands came up, pressing flat against the hard wall of his chest. She pushed. Hard. It wasn't enough to move him far, but it broke the contact. It created a sliver of space.

"Don't," she said, her voice shaking with a mixture of disgust and adrenaline.

He stared down at her, his eyes narrowed in disbelief. The surprise was slowly being replaced by a darker, more dangerous anger.

"I have my period," she lied, the words tasting like ash in her mouth. It was a weak excuse, a shield she had never had to use before, but it was the only one she could think of in the moment.

Kellan's eyes raked over her, from her pale, defiant face down to her hands still pressed against his chest. He was searching for a crack in her facade, for the wife he thought he knew. He found none.

A humorless, ugly sound escaped his lips. It wasn't a laugh. It was a sneer.

He stepped back, releasing her. He straightened his shirt, his movements sharp and precise, as if trying to restore his composure.

"Fine," he said, his voice dripping with contempt. "But this little tantrum of yours is over. Do you understand me?"

He didn't wait for an answer. He turned on his heel and strode toward the master bedroom suite. The bathroom door slammed shut with a crack that echoed through the silent apartment.

Evangeline sagged against the bar, her legs suddenly weak. The sound of the shower starting was a dull roar in her ears. She reached for the whiskey glass, her hand trembling, and drained it in one long, burning swallow.

The liquor did nothing to warm the ice in her veins. She looked toward the closed bedroom door, her eyes glinting with a hard, unyielding light. This was only the beginning.

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