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The Unwanted Wife's Flawless Spectacular Comeback

The Unwanted Wife's Flawless Spectacular Comeback

Author: : Hansiain Finley-moise
Genre: Billionaires
For four years, Ellyn was the scarred, despised wife of billionaire Baron Hudson, enduring his cruelty with silent devotion. But one night, after brutally forcing himself on her, he threw divorce papers at her bruised chest. "Did you really think I could ever stomach looking at that hideous face of yours for the rest of my life?" He kicked her out into the freezing rain because his flawless true love, Christine, was finally coming home. To ensure Ellyn suffered, Baron froze all her bank accounts, wanting her to starve on the streets until she begged for his mercy. Penniless and shivering in a rundown apartment, Ellyn discovered she was pregnant with his child, right as the news broadcasted him lovingly welcoming Christine at the airport. Her heart died completely. She had given him ten years of her life, only to be thrown away like garbage. But a shocking miracle happened: the intimate trauma had somehow triggered a biological cure, completely peeling away the ugly scar that had ruined her face for twenty years. If the ruthless Hudson family found out she was healed and carrying the heir, they would steal her baby and destroy her. Instead of taking his five-million-dollar hush money, Ellyn tore the contract to pieces, hid her newly flawless face, and vanished to Paris. Four years later, the Hudson family's grand banquet was brought to a dead halt by a stunning, untouchable woman in a red trench coat and her genius three-year-old son. Ellyn was back, and she wasn't the ugly duckling anymore.

Chapter 1

The heavy oak door of the master bedroom yielded with a faint, agonizing creak.

Ellyn stepped into the suffocating darkness of the penthouse suite. Her heart hammered against her ribs, a frantic rhythm that made her chest ache. She gripped the porcelain saucer so tightly her knuckles turned a translucent white. The chamomile tea sloshed over the rim, burning her thumb, but she didn't dare make a sound.

The air in the room was thick. It smelled of expensive scotch and raw, unbridled male sweat.

"Baron?" she whispered. Her voice trembled.

A massive, scorching hand shot out from the shadows.

Fingers like steel clamps locked around her wrist. The teacup slipped from her grasp, hitting the thick Persian rug with a muffled thud.

Ellyn gasped as a brutal force yanked her forward. The world spun. Her knees hit the edge of the mattress, and she was thrown violently onto the center of the king-size bed. Her head bounced against the mattress, leaving her dizzy and gasping for breath.

Before she could push herself up, a towering figure lunged over her.

Baron pinned her down. His weight was crushing. The heat radiating from his body felt like an open furnace. In the sliver of moonlight slicing through the curtains, his eyes were bloodshot. They burned with a feral, violent rage.

His large hand shot up and gripped her jaw. His thumb dug into her cheek, right next to the ugly, textured scar that ruined the left side of her face. The pressure was so intense she thought her bone would snap.

"Ellyn," he snarled.

He ground her name out between his teeth like it was a curse. The sheer disgust in his voice made her stomach drop to her knees.

"Baron, you're hurting me. I just brought you tea-"

"Shut up."

He cut her off, his voice a low, dangerous growl. His other hand grabbed the collar of her modest cotton nightgown.

With one violent yank, the fabric tore.

The sound of ripping cotton echoed like a gunshot in the silent room. Cold air hit her bare skin. Ellyn shivered violently, tears instantly welling in her eyes.

"You think you can drug me?" Baron sneered. His breath was hot against her face. "You think slipping something in my drink will make me touch you? Make you a real Hudson wife?"

"No! I didn't!" Ellyn cried out. She thrashed under him, her nails scraping desperately across his broad shoulders.

Her resistance only fueled his drug-induced rage. He caught both of her wrists in one hand and slammed them into the mattress above her head.

"You want this so badly?" he mocked. "You want to secure your pathetic little spot in this family?"

He didn't wait for an answer. He didn't care about her tears.

The pain was a sudden, tearing agony that ripped the breath from her lungs. Ellyn bit down on her lower lip so hard she tasted the metallic tang of her own blood. She refused to scream. She squeezed her eyes shut, letting the hot tears roll down her temples and soak into the velvet bedsheets.

Every movement was a punishment. He was destroying the last ten years of her silent, pathetic devotion. He was grinding her dignity into the dirt.

When it was finally over, the silence returned, heavier and colder than before.

Baron rolled off her. He shoved her shoulder away as if touching her bare skin physically repulsed him. He stood up, his chest heaving, and snatched a silk robe from the armchair.

He didn't look at her. He walked to the nightstand, yanked the drawer open, and pulled out a thick stack of papers.

He turned and threw them at her.

The heavy document hit her bare, bruised chest. The sharp edge of the paper sliced across the back of her hand. A thin line of blood welled up instantly.

Ellyn flinched, pulling the torn sheets of the bed around her shivering body. She looked down. In bold, black letters across the top page, it read: Divorce Agreement.

"Sign it," Baron commanded.

He stood at the foot of the bed, looking down at her. His eyes were completely devoid of warmth. He looked at her the way a man looks at a cockroach on his shoe.

"You're a charity case, Ellyn," he spat. His voice was ice. "You don't belong here. You never did. Did you really think I could ever stomach looking at that hideous face of yours for the rest of my life?"

His words were a physical blow. Her lungs seized. The air vanished from the room.

Her fingers trembled as she touched the papers. The humiliation burned her throat like acid.

Baron let out an impatient breath. He picked up a heavy Montblanc pen from the nightstand and tossed it onto the bed. It hit the mattress with a dull thud.

"Sign it now," he warned, his jaw clenching. "Or I swear to God, I will make sure you can't even afford a cardboard box in the slums of this city."

Ellyn closed her eyes. She swallowed the massive lump of grief blocking her airway. Her heart was dead. It had stopped beating the moment he threw the papers at her.

She picked up the cold metal pen.

Her hand shook violently, but she pressed the nib against the signature line. The sharp tip nearly tore through the paper as she dragged it across the page, spelling out her name.

When the final stroke was done, she didn't hand it to him.

She gathered what little strength she had left, lifted the heavy stack of papers, and threw them hard against his chest.

Baron blinked. A flicker of genuine surprise crossed his dark eyes as the papers scattered across the floor. He hadn't expected her to fight back.

Ellyn didn't wait for his reaction. She clutched the torn bedsheet to her chest and forced herself off the bed. Her legs gave out. She stumbled, her knee hitting the floor hard, but she grabbed the edge of the mattress and pulled herself up.

She didn't look at him. She dragged her aching, battered body across the room.

She reached the bathroom, stepped inside, and slammed the heavy door shut. She twisted the lock until it clicked, sealing herself away from the monster in the bedroom.

Chapter 2

Ellyn collapsed onto the cold bathroom tiles.

Her knees hit the floor with a dull thud. She reached up with trembling hands and turned the shower dial all the way to the left. Scalding hot water blasted from the showerhead, soaking through the torn bedsheet and hitting her bruised skin.

She sat under the spray, her body shaking uncontrollably. The water washed away the physical traces of him, but it couldn't wash away the deep, throbbing ache between her thighs or the hollow emptiness in her chest.

She forced herself to stand. Her legs wobbled. She gripped the edge of the marble sink, her knuckles white, and leaned over the basin.

She splashed cold water onto her face, trying to shock her system back to reality.

As the water ran down the drain, she noticed something strange. The water swirling around the silver drain stopper was mixed with tiny, dull flakes of dead skin, like old wallpaper peeling away.

Ellyn froze. Her breath caught in her throat.

She slowly raised her left hand and touched her cheek. She touched the spot where the hideous, raised scar had lived for twenty years.

Her fingertips didn't meet rough, dead tissue.

Instead, pieces of skin peeled away under her touch. It felt like wet wallpaper flaking off a wall.

A sharp gasp ripped from her lungs. She jerked her head up and stared into the massive vanity mirror.

The steam parted. Ellyn stopped breathing.

The woman staring back at her didn't have a scar. The left side of her face was completely smooth. The skin was flawless, porcelain-pale, and perfect. The ugly mark that had defined her entire miserable existence was simply gone.

"No," she whispered.

She rubbed her cheek frantically. She scrubbed the skin until it turned raw and pink, terrified that it was a trick of the light, a hallucination brought on by the trauma.

But it was real. The scar was gone.

Her heart hammered against her ribs. Her mind raced back to what had just happened in the bedroom. The forced intimacy. The exchange of bodily fluids. A wild, impossible thought slammed into her brain.

Baron's body was the cure. His physical chemistry had somehow triggered the healing.

Before she could process the magnitude of this discovery, the heavy thud of footsteps echoed from the bedroom. The main door of the penthouse opened and slammed shut.

Baron was gone.

Panic seized her. If the Hudson family found out her face was healed, they wouldn't let her go. Baron would think she had undergone some experimental, dangerous surgery just to stay with him. They would treat her like a freak, a lab rat.

She yanked open the vanity drawer. Her hands flew through her makeup bag.

She grabbed a dark, heavy concealer and a box of waterproof bandages. With frantic, jerky movements, she smeared the dark paste over her flawless left cheek. She haphazardly layered the bandages over the concealer, making a mess of it. Her trembling fingers created a rough, grotesque lump. While far from perfect, in the dim light of the bathroom, it was enough to temporarily fool anyone.

She stared at the mirror. The ugly duckling was back. Her eyes, however, were no longer filled with fear. They were dead, cold, and clear.

Ellyn unlocked the bathroom door and stepped back into the bedroom.

The room was a disaster. The torn nightgown lay on the floor. The bed was a mess of tangled sheets.

She didn't shed a single tear. She walked straight to the walk-in closet and dragged out a battered, cheap suitcase from the very back. It was the same suitcase she had brought with her four years ago.

She opened it on the floor. She ignored the rows of Chanel dresses, the Hermès bags, and the velvet boxes of Cartier jewelry Baron had bought her for public appearances. She grabbed her old, faded jeans, her plain t-shirts, and a worn-out gray hoodie.

As she zipped the suitcase shut, she heard voices in the hallway.

Ellyn froze. She crept toward the bedroom door and pressed her ear against the wood.

"Did you see his face when he left?" It was Brenda, one of the senior maids. Her English was thick with a Bronx accent. "He looked ready to kill. I bet the ugly bitch is finally getting thrown out tonight."

"About time," another maid snickered. "Mr. Hudson's assistant just called. Christine is flying back from Paris next week. He's clearing out the trash to make room for the real lady of the house."

The name hit Ellyn like a physical blow to the stomach.

Christine.

She stumbled backward. Her spine hit the doorframe with a heavy thud.

The maids outside went dead silent. Footsteps hurried away down the hall.

Ellyn stood frozen. The cold seeped into her bones.

It all made sense now. The sudden divorce papers. The absolute lack of mercy. The rush to get her out. It wasn't just because he hated her. It was because his first love, his perfect white lotus, was coming back.

Ten years of loving him. Four years of being his punching bag. All of it was just a placeholder until Christine was ready to return.

A harsh, dry laugh scraped its way out of Ellyn's throat.

She walked over to the glass vanity table. She looked at her left hand. She gripped the plain platinum wedding band and pulled it off her finger.

She tossed it onto the glass surface. The metal hit the glass with a sharp, final clink.

She pulled the gray hoodie over her head and yanked the strings tight, hiding her face in the shadows. She grabbed the handle of her cheap suitcase.

She didn't look back.

Ellyn walked out of the penthouse. The hallway was empty. The warm glow of the wall sconces made her sick.

She bypassed the private elevator. She pushed open the heavy, metal fire door leading to the stairwell.

A blast of cold, stale air hit her face. The heavy door swung shut behind her, cutting off the luxury of the Hudson world forever. She gripped the railing and started the long walk down into the dark.

Chapter 3

The morning light filtering through the floor-to-ceiling windows of the Hudson penthouse lobby was cold and gray.

Ellyn dragged her cheap suitcase out of the heavy fire door and into the lobby. The wheels squeaked against the polished marble floor.

She didn't make it to the front doors.

Arthur Vance, Baron's lead attorney, sat on the center leather sofa. He wore a bespoke three-piece suit. He slowly lowered his porcelain coffee cup onto the saucer. The clatter was sharp in the quiet room.

He stood up and stepped directly into her path.

"Mrs. Hudson. Or rather, Miss Martinez," Arthur said. His English was clipped, professional, and dripping with condescension.

He unlatched his leather briefcase and pulled out a manila folder. He held it out to her, along with a crisp piece of paper.

Ellyn's eyes dropped to the paper. It was a Chase Bank cashier's check.

The number printed on it made her stomach churn. Five million dollars.

"Mr. Hudson has instructed me to handle your departure," Arthur said, his chin tilted up. "Sign this Non-Disclosure Agreement. Take the money. Leave Manhattan today. You will not speak to the press, you will not contact any member of this family, and you will disappear."

He looked at her like she was a stray dog begging for scraps.

The sheer insult of it made Ellyn's blood boil. The heat rushed to her face, burning beneath her fake scar. They thought she was a whore they could pay off.

Ellyn let out a short, hollow laugh. She didn't reach for the check. She took a step back, her eyes locking onto Arthur's with pure disgust.

Arthur frowned. His patience vanished. "Don't be greedy, Ellyn. Five million is more than a woman of your background will see in ten lifetimes. The Hudson family's patience is nonexistent today. Take the deal."

"And if I don't?" she asked, her voice dangerously quiet.

"If you don't sign," Arthur threatened, stepping closer, "Mr. Hudson will bury you in litigation. You won't see a single cent, and you'll owe us millions in legal fees. You will be ruined."

Something inside Ellyn snapped.

She lunged forward and snatched the thick NDA from Arthur's hand.

Before he could react, she gripped the top of the document and ripped it straight down the middle.

Riiiiiip.

Arthur's eyes widened in shock. "Are you insane?"

Ellyn didn't stop. She stacked the torn halves and ripped them again. And again. Her hands moved with frantic, furious energy until the legal document was nothing but a pile of confetti in her fists.

She raised her hands and threw the shredded paper directly into Arthur's arrogant face.

The white pieces fluttered down around him like dirty snow. Arthur stumbled back, his gold-rimmed glasses slipping down his nose. He pointed a trembling finger at her.

"I don't want a single penny of his filthy money," Ellyn stated. Her English was flawless, sharp as a razor. "It makes me sick."

She stared right through him. "Tell Baron he doesn't need to worry. I am vanishing from his world today. I wouldn't stay if he begged me."

She turned her back on the stunned lawyer. She grabbed her suitcase handle and marched toward the massive double doors.

The old butler stood by the entrance. He looked at her with a mix of pity and shock. He reached out to take her bag, but Ellyn dodged his hand.

She pushed the heavy doors open herself.

A violent gust of wind hit her instantly. The New York autumn rain was pouring down in sheets, slamming against the stone steps.

"Miss Ellyn, please, let me call a car. Take an umbrella," the butler pleaded, holding out a large black umbrella.

"No," Ellyn said.

She pulled her hood up. She stepped out from under the portico and walked straight into the torrential downpour. The freezing rain soaked through her clothes in seconds, but she kept her spine perfectly straight. She didn't look back.

Inside the lobby, Arthur wiped a wet piece of paper off his lapel. His face was purple with rage. He pulled his phone from his pocket and dialed the direct line to the President's office.

Miles away, at the top of the Empire State Building, Baron stood by the floor-to-ceiling window of his office. He watched the rain lash against the glass.

His phone buzzed. He answered it, his jaw tight.

"Mr. Hudson," Arthur's voice came through, shaking with anger. "She refused the money. She tore up the NDA and threw it at me. She walked out into the rain."

Baron's grip on the phone tightened. His knuckles turned white. A surge of irrational irritation flared in his chest.

He let out a cold, mocking scoff. "She's playing hard to get. She thinks throwing a tantrum will make me feel guilty."

"What are your orders, sir?"

"Freeze every supplementary credit card attached to her name," Baron commanded, his voice devoid of emotion. "Cut off her phone plan. Block her from every Hudson account. Let's see how long her pride lasts when she's starving on the street."

He ended the call and tossed the phone onto his desk.

He reached up and yanked his silk tie loose. He turned and swept his arm across the desk, sending a stack of quarterly reports crashing onto the carpet.

His chest heaved. For a split second, the image of Ellyn's dead, empty eyes from last night flashed in his mind. His heart skipped a painful beat.

He hated that feeling. He pressed the intercom button.

"Send a car to JFK," Baron barked at his assistant. "Christine's flight lands next week. Make sure she has everything she needs."

Out on the highway, the rain washed over Ellyn's face. The cheap concealer began to run, but her grip on the suitcase never loosened. She kept walking.

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