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Never fake a divorce with your hidden billionaire wife Novel Cover

Never fake a divorce with your hidden billionaire wife

Leo ends his three-year marriage to Sarah to pursue his first love, completely unaware that his wife is a secret billionaire heiress. Sarah grants the divorce without revealing her massive fortune or elite status. As she reclaims her powerful identity and returns to her high-society life, Leo finally recognizes the magnitude of his error. He tries desperately to win her back, but the woman he once ignored has become an unreachable icon.
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Chapter 1

I balanced two grocery bags on my hip and pushed the front door open with my shoulder.

"Kevin? I'm home early."

The marble entryway swallowed my voice. No answer. I set the bags on the console table. A sprig of thyme had escaped through the paper and laid itself across my knuckles, green and bright.

Five years married. Three of those, I'd cooked on Saturdays. Kevin had been sleeping at the office for weeks now — red eyes, wrinkled shirts, two text messages a day if I was lucky. Tonight I was fixing that. Filet mignon. The Bordeaux he liked. Two candles in the silver holders his mother had given us before she drove off the bridge.

Then I heard it.

A woman's laugh. Upstairs.

Soft, then sharper, then a moan that came down through the ceiling and landed somewhere under my ribs.

I froze with my hand on the banister.

"Kevin, slow down. Oh, God."

That voice wasn't mine.

A man's grunt answered. Low. Familiar. The exact pitch he used to make against my throat at three in the morning, back when he still came home.

I climbed two stairs before my body caught up with my brain. Three more. Our bedroom door — *our* bedroom door — sat cracked open, and pale lamplight cut a yellow line across the hallway carpet.

I didn't push the door.

I didn't have to.

"What about her?" the woman asked, breathless and lazy, like she was asking what to order for dinner. "She'll be home soon, won't she?"

"Don't worry about that stupid woman." Kevin laughed. Actually laughed. "She already signed the divorce papers. I'll marry you in a few days."

I put my palm flat against the wall.

The wallpaper was textured, thin vertical ribs, and I felt every single one of them under my hand. *I am going to be sick on this carpet*, I thought, very clearly, like reading a sentence off a page.

"A few days?" The woman giggled. "Promise me, baby."

"Sweetheart, I've been waiting two years to say it out loud."

Two years.

The number slid into me like a key into a lock I hadn't known was on my chest. Two years. We'd spent our third anniversary in Capri. I'd been pregnant six weeks and lost it on the flight back, and he had held my hand in the airplane bathroom, and he had *cried*.

My knees went first.

I slid down the wall an inch at a time until the carpet pressed against the back of my thighs. I couldn't hear the bed anymore. I couldn't hear anything except a high thin sound that I finally understood was my own breath whistling through my teeth. There was a smell rising from the grocery bag downstairs — thyme, lemon, butcher paper — and somehow it had become the smell of a stupid woman who didn't know.

I bit down on the side of my hand to stay quiet.

If they came out and saw me, this version of the story would end and a worse one would start, and I needed thirty seconds. One minute. Long enough for my legs to remember how to work.

Through the door, the woman said something low. Kevin answered, easy as anything: "She gets the apartment in Queens. That's what the agreement says. She won't fight. She has nowhere else to go."

*She has nowhere else to go.*

A laugh came out of me — broken, tiny, wrong — and I clamped my hand over my mouth so hard I tasted blood where my teeth split the inside of my lip.

A week ago. Our kitchen. Kevin had set down his coffee and put both his hands on top of mine. His thumbs were cold. I remember that, because I'd thought, *he's nervous, what is he nervous about*.

"Lena. I need you to listen to me."

"You're scaring me."

His thumbs pressed harder, like he was trying to keep me still.

"There's a problem with the company finances. The board is going to come after personal assets. If we're still married when that happens, they take everything that's yours too. Your gallery. Your savings. The apartment your mother left you. All of it."

I'd said nothing. I'd just stared at his thumbs.

"It would be a paper divorce. Six months, maybe less. Then we remarry — quiet, just us, no announcement. Lena, baby, I am not losing you. I swear on my mother, I will never lose you. Tell me you understand."

I'd signed the papers in his lawyer's office on Tuesday.

I had not read them.

*I had not read them.*

Upstairs, the headboard hit the wall — *our* wall, the one I'd painted a soft gray last spring while Kevin steadied the ladder and complained about the fumes — and something inside my chest tore so cleanly I almost looked down to check if it had come through my shirt.

I had married into the Fort family at twenty-two. Old money. Older grudges. Kevin had been twenty the night his parents went off the Tappan Zee in a January ice storm, and I had been the girl from the dorm two doors down who brought him soup. I sat with him through the inquest. I watched the cousins circle him like sharks because a twenty-year-old couldn't possibly hold Fort Holdings, not without a wife from a real family, not without —

I cashed out the trust my mother left me when she died. Forty-two thousand dollars. Every cent I had. I'd handed him the check on the steps of the courthouse, and he'd held my face in both hands, eyes wet, and said the words I had carried in my chest like a small warm coal for five years.

*"Lena. I swear to you. I will be good to you for the rest of my life."*

Five years.

He had been good to me for three and lying to me for two. That was the math.

I don't know how long I sat at the top of those stairs. Long enough that the lamplight under the door changed angle. Long enough that my left foot went numb and my jaw locked from biting down.

When I could breathe, I made myself stand. One vertebra at a time, the way my mother had taught me to get out of a faint. I went back down the stairs without a sound. I'd always known which stair creaked. The fourth one. I stepped over it like I was stepping over a body.

In the entryway, my grocery bag still sat on the console table. Thyme. Bordeaux. Two candles. The card.

I picked up the card.

Cream linen envelope. I'd sealed it this afternoon with a small disc of red wax, pressed with the silver F he'd given me on our wedding day. F for Fort. *F for forever*, he'd said, his mouth against my temple.

I held the wax seal between my thumb and forefinger.

Then I pinched.

The seal cracked across the middle, dry as a fingernail, and a small red flake fell onto the toe of my shoe.

I stared at it. I couldn't seem to look anywhere else.

From the top of the stairs, the bedroom door clicked open.

A woman's voice, closer now, light and unhurried, drifted down toward me. "Babe? Is someone downstairs? I think I heard the door."

Bare feet started down the staircase.

I was still standing in the entryway, holding the cracked seal of a card I had written this morning to my husband, and the fourth stair creaked above me as she came.

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