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A Substitute Wife's Billion-Dollar Revenge Novel Cover

A Substitute Wife's Billion-Dollar Revenge

After her family betrays her, a young woman is forced into marriage as a substitute for another. Now wed to a powerful billionaire, she refuses to remain a disposable pawn in their cruel games. Amidst a world of immense wealth and deception, she sheds her victim identity to seek cold justice. This is her calculated journey of transformation and revenge as she reclaims her dignity from those who discarded her without a second thought.
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Chapter 3

She let herself in with a keycard I didn't know existed.

I heard the lock beep — that small, electronic chirp — and then the front door swung open, and there was laughter. Adrian's laughter, low and easy, the kind I had spent three years trying to earn. And underneath it, a woman's voice, bright and unhurried, like someone who had never once questioned whether she belonged somewhere.

I was standing at the stove. I had cracked four eggs into the pan. The yolks were still whole.

One of them wasn't, anymore.

I looked down. The egg had slipped from my fingers and broken against the tile, the yolk spreading slow and yellow across the grout. I didn't move to clean it up. I just stood there, listening to the sound of two people walking into my house like it had always been theirs.

Sophia Hartley was smaller than I had imagined — that was the first thing I noticed when she walked into the kitchen. Small. Poised. Luminous in the way that certain women are luminous, the kind that has nothing to do with effort. She wore a pale dress. Her hair was a perfect wave. She looked at me the way you look at someone standing in a doorway you need to pass through: politely, briefly, with a faint trace of something I could only call sympathy.

"Oh," she said. "You must be Elena."

"Yes."

She smiled. Then she looked around the kitchen — my kitchen, the one I cleaned every morning, the one where I had hung a tea towel I had embroidered myself, where I kept a pot of mint on the windowsill because the smell helped with the nausea I'd been hiding for eight weeks — and her expression softened into something almost fond.

"It's exactly the same," she said. "Adrian really doesn't change anything, does he? He's so sentimental."

I set down the spatula.

"You've been here before?"

She looked at me. Just for a second, something flickered behind her eyes — quick, satisfied, gone before I could name it.

"Oh." A small pause. "He didn't tell you? We designed this house together. Three and a half years ago." She tilted her head toward the windows. "I chose those curtains. The ivory ones. I spent two weeks finding exactly that shade."

The ivory curtains.

I washed them every week. I ironed them on Sunday mornings, standing in the laundry room in bare feet, pressing each panel until the fabric lay smooth and perfect. I had always thought Adrian chose them. I had always thought they were something he had wanted for us.

The egg yolk was still spreading across the floor.

Sophia's eyes dropped to it. She made a small sound — not unkind, just efficient — and crouched down, pulling open the cabinet under the sink with the easy familiarity of someone who had opened that cabinet a hundred times before. She knew where the paper towels were. She knew without looking.

I watched her clean up my mess in my kitchen in the house she had designed, and I didn't say a single word.

———

It happened at the corner of the island.

I was carrying a plate toward the living room. Sophia was straightening up, reaching back to return the paper towels to their shelf. We met at the turn — not violently, not dramatically. Her elbow caught my stomach. I slipped on the wet tile where the egg had been.

My hip struck the marble edge of the counter.

The sound it made was small. A soft, interior crack, like something giving way.

I sat down hard on the floor.

For a moment I just sat there, trying to understand what I was feeling — the radiating ache from my hip, and then, lower, something else. Something warm. Something that had no business being warm.

I looked down.

The pale fabric of my trousers was turning red. Slowly at first, then not slowly at all.

Sophia made a sound — a high, startled cry — and pressed her hand to her chest. "Oh my God."

Adrian came in at a run. I watched his feet cross the kitchen floor. I watched him reach Sophia. I watched his hands close around her shoulders.

"Are you all right? Did you get hurt?"

She shook her head, eyes wet. "I'm fine, I'm fine — it was an accident, she just slipped, I barely touched her —"

"Adrian."

My voice came out steady. I didn't know how.

He turned. He looked at me on the floor, and his expression moved through confusion and landed somewhere I recognized. That look. The one that meant inconvenience.

"Elena. Get up."

"I can't." I pressed my hand to my stomach. "Adrian, the baby —"

"Enough." His voice was flat. Final. "She barely touched you."

"I know she barely touched me. That's not —"

"Every time Sophia is here," he said, "you do this."

Every time.

This was the first time. The first and only time Sophia had ever been inside this house while I was in it. And in his mind there was already a pattern. In his mind he had already cast me in a role — the difficult wife, the one who made scenes, the one who couldn't let him have anything good without trying to ruin it.

I looked up at him from the floor. The blood was warm against my legs. I felt something loosen inside me — not grief, not yet. Something quieter. Something final.

"She's performing," Sophia said softly from behind him. "You told me she did this. Is this what you meant?"

He didn't answer her.

He didn't deny it, either.

I picked up my phone.

My hands were steady. I didn't know why they were steady.

"I'm having a miscarriage," I said to the dispatcher. "Please send help." I gave the address in a clear, even voice — the address of this house that Sophia had designed, that Adrian had given her a key to, that I had cleaned and tended and tried to make into a home for three years. "Thank you."

I hung up and looked at Adrian.

"You don't need to come," I said. "I called an ambulance. Stay with Sophia. She's shaken."

He stared at me.

I meant it. That was the part that seemed to confuse him — that I meant it entirely, without sarcasm, without performance. I wasn't asking him to feel guilty. I wasn't asking him for anything at all. I was just telling him the truth. I didn't need him. I wasn't sure I ever had. But I knew it now, with absolute clarity, sitting in a pool of my own blood on the kitchen floor of a house that had never really been mine.

———

The hospital was white and quiet.

The doctor was kind. She used a gentle voice and careful words. Not viable. I'm so sorry. Nine weeks and three days. I nodded each time she paused. I kept my eyes on the window. The sky outside was the same flat gray as the ceiling tiles.

Adrian arrived an hour later. I could hear him in the hallway before he came in — his voice, asking the doctor something. Then a pause. Then the doctor's voice, low and careful: She lost the pregnancy. Nine weeks.

Silence.

Then Adrian said, "Oh."

Just that. One syllable. The same sound he might have made if someone told him a meeting had been rescheduled.

He came into the room and stood near the door for a long moment before walking to the bed. He didn't sit. He kept his hands in his pockets and maintained a careful distance, like someone visiting a colleague in the hospital. Someone they didn't know very well.

"The doctor says you'll be fine," he said.

"I know."

"I didn't know you were pregnant."

"I know."

Another silence. He shifted his weight. "I've arranged everything. Medical costs, recovery, counseling if you need it. Daniel is bringing a check. You won't have to worry about any of it."

A check.

I turned my head and looked at him — really looked, the way I hadn't allowed myself to in a long time. He was handsome. He had always been handsome. He was standing beside the bed where I had just lost our child, and he was telling me about a check.

"Get out," I said.

He blinked. "What?"

"Get out of this room." My voice was quiet. "You standing there makes me sick."

Something moved across his face. He opened his mouth, closed it. Then he turned and walked out.

Twenty minutes later, his assistant Daniel appeared in the doorway holding a white envelope. He wouldn't meet my eyes. He set it on the nightstand with a murmured apology and left so quickly the door was still swinging when my phone rang.

Unknown number.

I answered.

The voice on the other end was old. Slow. Patient in the way that only comes from years of waiting.

"Child," he said.

I closed my eyes.

Four years. I had not heard that voice in four years — not since I had left everything I knew to follow a man who never once looked back to check if I was keeping up.

"Come home," my grandfather said. "It's been enough. It's been enough for a long time. Come home."

I lay in the hospital bed with the white envelope on the nightstand and the gray sky in the window and the clean, hollow space where something had been living inside me just this morning.

"Okay," I said.

One word.

But it was the first thing I'd said in three years that belonged entirely to me.

———

The divorce papers arrived the morning I was discharged.

I sat on the edge of the bed in the clothes Daniel had bought me — something off a department store rack, stiff and slightly too large, the tags still attached — and I read every page. The settlement was generous. The house. Monthly support. Three percent of Hargrove Group stock. A separate sum listed under a euphemism I recognized immediately as what it was — money to stay quiet.

I signed every page.

At the end, there was a blank field for additional remarks. I picked up the pen and wrote in the steadiest hand I had.

Net settlement: zero. I want nothing. Not one dollar. Not one square foot. Whatever I leave behind in that house, you and Sophia can keep. Including the man I tried to love for three years. He was never mine to begin with. — Elena Miller

I set the signed papers on the nightstand. I placed the white envelope — still sealed, the check inside untouched — on top of them.

Then I picked up my bag and walked out.

The rain had stopped. The air outside the hospital smelled like wet concrete and something faintly green, the way the world smells after a long storm finally breaks. I didn't look back at the building. I didn't think about the house, or the ivory curtains, or the seventeen silver links still scattered across the cobblestones.

My phone buzzed. A message from an unknown number — the same one as last night. A single address. A flight number. Departure in six hours.

Welcome home, child. Welcome home.

I started walking.

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