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THE EX WIFE WHO ROSE FROM THE ASHES Novel Cover

THE EX WIFE WHO ROSE FROM THE ASHES

Luna’s perfect life shattered when her husband abandoned her for her stepsister. Betrayed by her family and left with nothing, she is rescued by a mysterious, powerful trillionaire who offers her a path to reclamation. No longer a victim, Luna seeks vengeance against those who mocked her suffering. As she targets her ex-husband and spiteful relatives, she uncovers dangerous secrets about her savior that could either liberate her or ruin her forever.
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Chapter 6

SARA'S POINT OF VIEW

The drive home felt longer than twenty minutes.

It should not have.

I had taken that road too many times to count. I knew every turn, every traffic light, every stretch where the streetlights flickered a little before settling. It was a familiar path. A simple one.

But tonight it dragged.

The silence inside the car pressed against my ears until it felt loud.

No music.

No calls.

No distraction.

Just me.

And that moment.

Again.

And again.

And again.

My grip tightened on the steering wheel.

I could still hear it.

That sound.

That sharp, clean crack that cut through the room and split the night open.

My jaw clenched.

I swallowed hard, but it did nothing. The memory stayed. It clung. It replayed without mercy.

Her hand.

Luna's hand.

I saw it clearly.

Not shaking. Not hesitant. Not unsure.

Steady.

Certain.

Like she had every right to do it.

My chest tightened.

I stopped at a red light and exhaled slowly, forcing my fingers to loosen just a little from the wheel. They had gone stiff without me noticing.

My cheek still burned.

I raised my hand and pressed two fingers lightly against it.

Warm.

Still warm.

Like the heat had settled deep under my skin and refused to leave.

I closed my eyes for a second.

And the room came back.

Every face.

Every pair of eyes.

Watching.

Not one person moved to stop it.

Not one person spoke.

They just watched.

Watched me get slapped.

Watched me stand there.

Watched me become something small.

Something embarrassing.

Something not worth defending.

My fingers pressed harder into my cheek.

I could feel the shape of it. Not the hand itself, but the memory of it. The outline. The humiliation.

I dropped my hand.

The light turned green.

I drove.

Luna had never done that before.

Not once.

Not in all the years I had known her.

She had always been quiet. Soft in a way that made people think they could say anything to her and get away with it.

She never raised her voice.

Never pushed back hard enough to matter.

She would look at you with those calm eyes and take it. Always take it.

That was her strength, people said.

Patience.

Endurance.

It had always annoyed me.

There was nothing clean about it. Nothing sharp. Nothing I could fight properly. It was like trying to hit water. You swing, and it just moves and settles again.

I preferred people who fought back.

At least then you knew where you stood.

At least then there was a line.

With Luna, there had never been a line.

Until tonight.

Tonight she drew one.

And she did it in front of everyone.

My hands tightened again.

The steering wheel creaked slightly under my grip.

She did not even look sorry.

That was the part that would not leave me alone.

Not the slap.

Not the silence after.

Not even the way people stared.

It was her face.

Calm.

Still.

Like I was not worth the effort of regret.

Like I had finally become something she could erase.

My chest tightened again.

I inhaled sharply and forced myself to focus on the road.

The house came into view.

Lights on.

Everything normal.

Everything unchanged.

It made something twist inside me.

How could everything look the same when I felt like something had shifted?

I parked the car and sat there for a second.

Just one.

My fingers rested on the wheel.

Still.

I did not move.

Then the moment passed.

I opened the door.

Stepped out.

Closed it harder than I needed to.

The sound echoed slightly in the quiet street.

Good.

Let it.

The door had barely closed behind me when Mom appeared.

She always knew.

It was not magic. It was attention. She watched everything. She noticed shifts before they became obvious.

Her eyes moved over my face.

Paused.

Sharpened.

"What happened," she said.

Not worried.

Not soft.

Direct.

I dropped my bag on the chair near the entrance.

I did not ease into it.

I did not soften anything.

I told her.

Everything.

Walking in with Ethan.

The way the room reacted.

The way Emily smiled like she had been waiting for that exact moment.

The whispers.

The bar.

Luna standing there like she belonged.

Like nothing could shake her.

My voice slowed when I reached that part.

Something in my chest tightened again.

I forced myself to keep going.

I told her what I said.

Every word.

I did not change it.

I did not pretend I had been kinder than I was.

Then I told her what Luna did.

The slap.

The silence.

Rose stepping in.

Ethan's hand in the air.

The assistant stopping him.

Rose's voice cutting through the room.

The words.

Every single one.

And then being walked out.

Escorted.

Like I was nothing.

Like I was not supposed to be there.

Like I had no place in that room.

I stopped talking.

The kitchen felt very quiet.

Mom did not react immediately.

She did not gasp.

She did not get angry in that loud, obvious way some people did.

She stood there.

Thinking.

Her eyes were calm, but I knew her well enough to see what sat underneath.

Calculation.

"This is not good," she said finally.

I let out a short, humorless breath.

"Not good," I repeated. "She humiliated me. In front of everyone that matters."

"I know."

"And Ethan just stood there."

That part came out sharper than I intended.

I could not stop it.

"He did not say anything. He did not stop them. He just watched."

Something moved behind my ribs.

Something tight.

Something I did not want to name.

Mom opened her mouth.

The study door opened.

We both turned.

Dad stepped out.

He was still in his house clothes. The ones he wore when he had just returned from a trip and wanted to be comfortable.

His phone was in his hand.

He looked at me.

Then at my face.

Then back at my eyes.

He stopped walking.

"What is this," he said.

Not angry.

Not concerned.

Assessing.

Always assessing.

I felt something inside me brace.

Still, I told him.

Again.

The same story.

The same humiliation.

But this time, something inside me shifted as I spoke.

I wanted something.

I did not name it at first.

But it was there.

Growing.

I wanted him to react.

Not like a businessman.

Not like a man thinking about consequences.

Like a father.

Like someone who saw his daughter hurt and felt it.

I told him everything.

I did not hold back.

When I finished, I waited.

He looked at me.

Just looked.

And then he spoke.

"Stay away from Ethan."

For a second, I did not understand the words.

They did not fit.

Not with what I had just told him.

Not with what I expected.

"What."

"You heard me."

His voice was calm.

Too calm.

"Stay away from him."

Something snapped inside my chest.

Sharp.

Hot.

"He was my fiance," I said. "Before any of this. Before Luna. Before that arrangement. He was mine."

"He was," my father said.

Was.

The word hit harder than I expected.

"And you left him."

"I had reasons."

"You left," he repeated.

Same tone.

Same calm.

Like it was a fact that could not be argued with.

"And while you were gone, Luna stayed."

My fingers curled slightly.

"She married him when his family needed it. She stood in that house for two years."

Each word felt heavier than the last.

"Ethan is her husband now."

I stared at him.

"That is the reality."

The room felt smaller.

Tighter.

"You are telling me to give up."

"I am telling you to be careful."

He set his phone down.

Slow.

Deliberate.

"You are talking about pursuing a married man. A man married to your sister."

The word cut.

"She is not my sister."

"She is my daughter."

The air shifted.

"Same as you."

Everything inside me went still.

For a second, I could not breathe properly.

I had heard him say things about Luna before.

Small things.

Controlled things.

Checking in.

Sending help.

Doing what was expected.

I had always understood that.

Duty.

Responsibility.

Nothing more.

Not this.

Not this voice.

Not this certainty.

"You cannot be serious," I said.

My voice had gone quieter.

"I am serious."

"You are defending her."

"I am stating the truth."

Truth.

The word felt heavy.

Unwelcome.

"Luna is my daughter," he said again.

Clear.

Firm.

No hesitation.

"And I will not have this family dragged into a scandal because you cannot accept that things have changed."

Each word landed.

Careful.

Measured.

Sharp.

"It stops here, Sara."

Something inside me twisted.

Tight.

Painful.

He picked up his phone.

Looked at me one last time.

Then walked past.

His footsteps echoed up the stairs.

Steady.

Unhurried.

Like nothing important had just happened.

His door closed.

Silence.

Thick.

Heavy.

The kind that presses against your chest.

I did not move.

I stood there.

Staring at nothing.

My cheek still burned.

But that was not what hurt now.

Luna is also my daughter.

The words repeated.

Over and over.

I remembered things.

Small things.

Moments I had not paid attention to before.

The way he would ask about her sometimes.

Casually.

Like it did not matter.

The way he sent money without making a show of it.

The way he never spoke badly about her.

I had ignored it.

Because it did not matter.

Because she did not matter.

Because she was not... me.

My throat tightened.

"He is going soft," I said.

My voice sounded strange.

Mom had not moved.

She was looking at the stairs.

Her expression had changed.

Something colder now.

Something sharper.

"He is," she said.

"He actually believes it," I said. "That she is equal. That she is... the same."

The word stuck in my throat.

Mom turned slowly to look at me.

"He believes whatever lets him sleep at night," she said.

Her voice was flat.

Controlled.

"He has always done that."

She moved to the counter.

Adjusted a glass that did not need adjusting.

A small movement.

Precise.

"He will not decide what happens in this house."

I looked at her.

She looked back.

Something passed between us.

Clear.

Cold.

Final.

"So we do not stop," I said.

"We do not stop," she answered.

But this time, the words felt different.

Heavier.

Darker.

Because now it was not just about Ethan.

Not just about a position.

Not just about what I had lost.

It was about something else.

Something deeper.

Luna.

Standing there.

Calm.

Untouched.

Protected.

Recognised.

Chosen.

My jaw tightened.

She thought tonight meant something.

She thought that slap gave her power.

She thought Rose's words made her untouchable.

She thought she had won.

A slow breath left my lungs.

No.

She had not won.

She had crossed a line.

And she had done it in front of everyone.

That made it worse.

That made it personal.

My fingers curled slowly at my sides.

I could still feel it.

That moment.

That look in her eyes.

Like I did not matter.

Like I had already been erased.

Something cold settled in my chest.

Heavy.

Certain.

If she thought she could take my place.

If she thought she could stand there and act like I was nothing.

Then she did not understand me at all.

I lifted my head slightly.

My reflection stared back at me from the dark window.

My cheek was still faintly red.

My eyes looked... different.

Harder.

Sharper.

Good.

Let it stay that way.

Because this was not over.

Not even close.

She took one thing from me.

I would take everything from her.

Not quickly.

Not carelessly.

Slowly.

Carefully.

In ways she would not see coming until it was too late.

I would take her place.

Her peace.

Her standing.

Her name in that house.

I would take Ethan back.

And when I was done...

There would be nothing left for her to hold onto.

I exhaled slowly.

The house was quiet again.

Normal.

Still.

But something had changed.

Inside me.

And this time...

I was not going to let it go.

Not again.

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