LOGINThey took her daughter— They thought they won. They underestimated her. Roberta Riggs was the invisible wife of a powerful billionaire—silent, obedient, and easy to overlook. When her husband, Jace Riggs, reveals he has a secret son with another woman, Roberta’s world cracks. When he demands that their seven-year-old daughter, Ziva, risk her life to save that child… it shatters. And when Ziva dies—after the hospital neglects her for a VIP patient—something inside Roberta breaks beyond repair. Betrayed by her husband. Destroyed by the people she trusted. Silenced by a powerful family. Roberta loses everything. Until she meets him—Brett Temples. The man she had a reckless one-night stand with years ago. The man who unknowingly played a role in her daughter’s death. He’s powerful. He’s married. And he doesn’t remember her. But he will. And when he does, he offers her something dangerous: power… and revenge. But revenge is never simple. And when their love begins to grow in the ashes of betrayal, one final truth threatens to destroy it all. They made one mistake— they didn’t make sure Roberta stayed broken. She rose. Now she is done begging. Done forgiving. Done being the woman they could control. She’s coming back with power. With secrets about her past, they tried to bury. With a truth that can burn an empire to the ground. And this time— She’s ruthless. She’s not asking for justice. She’s taking it.
View MoreRoberta's POV
"Someone help me!"
My voice ricocheted off the hospital walls. Ziva burned in my arms—five years old, skin like paper, breath shallow enough to stop my heart.
The nurse at the front desk set down her pen. Slowly. Like I was an interruption.
"Ma'am, please lower your"
"Don't." I slammed my palm on the desk. Ziva's head lolled against my shoulder. Her lips were pale. Her eyelids bruised purple underneath. "She had surgery. Something went wrong. She needs a doctor now."
The nurse's fingers hovered over her keyboard. "What kind of surgery?"
"Bone marrow transplant."
"Which hospital?"
The question landed like a slap.
I opened my mouth. Nothing came out.
"Ma'am. Which hospital performed the procedure?"
My throat closed. How do you explain that your husband took your daughter—your daughter—to save his bastard son and you weren't allowed to come? How do you say those words out loud without sounding like a monster?
"I don't know."
Both nurses looked up.
"You don't know."
"No."
The older one folded her hands on the desk. Her patience was an insult. "Your daughter had a bone marrow transplant, and you don't know which hospital?"
Jace's voice echoed in my skull: You'll only make it harder for her. Stay home and wait.
And I had stayed. Like a fool. Like a wife. Like someone who still believed he wouldn't destroy everything.
"Ma'am"
"I don't know the hospital." My voice cracked open. "I don't know the doctor's name. All I know is my daughter has been suffering for over a week, and she needs help now."
A younger nurse moved fast around the desk. She didn't ask. She took Ziva's wrist, lifted one eyelid, and pressed fingers to her neck.
Her face shifted.
"Get a gurney. Now."
They lifted Ziva from my arms. The weight left me like a missing limb. I followed, half-running, past double doors, down a corridor.
"ICU," someone said ahead.
I stopped breathing.
"That's my daughter"
"Wait here."
The doors swung shut.
I stood in the hallway, staring at my empty hands. Her warmth still in my palms. Her absence already unbearable.
I walked back to the lobby. Paced. Prayed to a God I'd stopped believing in. Checked my phone. Paced again.
Then I saw him.
He came through the main entrance with long, controlled strides. The hallway parted around him. One hand gripped the limp fingers of a woman on a stretcher. His jaw was tight. His eyes—sharp, dark, focused—never left her face.
I knew him before my brain caught up.
Brett.
Eight years dissolved.
I was twenty. Reckless. Hollow from a year that had gutted me. A one-night stand with a stranger who had been gentle in ways I didn't deserve. I gave him my virginity because I didn't know what else to do with the pain.
His card fell from his jacket. I memorized his name. Brett, something.
I never called. I never forgot.
His eyes swept the corridor. Landed on me for half a second.
Then moved on.
No recognition. No pause. Like I was furniture. That night was nothing. I was nothing.
His hand tightened around the woman's fingers. He bent close to her ear, said something low. Her face was beautiful even unconscious.
The ring on her finger caught the light.
I looked at his hand.
Gold band.
He's married.
Something moved through my chest. Grief with no right to exist for a stranger, for one night, for the girl who had hoped the world contained men who held women like that.
He had found someone. He loved her the way I had spent eight years waiting to be loved.
And here I stood. Roberta Riggs. Wife of Jace Riggs. Billionaire. Architect of his fortune—visible to no one. Trapped. Buried alive. Unhappily married to a man who had never once stood beside me in public.
The stretcher disappeared through another set of doors. Brett followed without looking back.
Then the gurney came back out.
Ziva. My Ziva—being pushed past me, away from the ICU.
"What are you doing?" I ran after them. "She was in the ICU—why are you moving her?"
"We're moving her to Ward C."
"Why? You just said she needs the ICU"
The nurse slowed. Choosing words. "We have one senior physician available tonight. He's attending to a VIP first. She has to wait."
I stopped walking.
"You're moving my daughter out of intensive care for a VIP?"
Silence.
"You took her in. Which means she arrived first. Which means she had that slot. Now you're giving it to someone who came in after her?"
The nurse said nothing.
I pressed my hands to my face. Dropped them.
"My husband is Jace Riggs. Riggs Global. That's his daughter you're denying"
The nurse at the back looked up. Her eyes travelled from my face to my clothes to my shoes. Made a slow, humiliating journey back up.
She laughed under her breath.
"Jace Riggs? That child looks nothing like him."
"She's his daughter"
"Everyone knows Jace Riggs has spoken about his wife in interviews." She tilted her head. "Very sophisticated woman. Very private. Doesn't mean anyone can just walk in here and"
"I am his wife."
The look she gave me was the most complete dismissal I had ever received.
And I understood it. Because Jace had never once stood beside me. Never brought me to an event. Never let anyone photograph us. 'She prefers her privacy '. That's what he always told the press.
I had believed he was protecting me.
I was just a secret he was bored of keeping.
"If he's truly your husband," the kinder nurse said, "call him. Surely a man like Jace Riggs can make a call. Your daughter came in before the VIP—he could arrange for her to be seen first. VIP to VIP."
I was already reaching for my phone.
I dialled.
You've reached Jace Riggs. Leave a message.
I dialled again.
Again.
You've reached
I lowered the phone.
The nurses watched me with flat, patient eyes. People who already believed I was lying.
"Be patient, ma'am." The kinder one gestured toward Ward C. "When the doctor is finished, he'll see your daughter."
I followed them in silence.
Ziva lay in the hospital bed. Small. Pale. Too still. Her chest rose and fell in shallow increments. I sat beside her. Took her hand in both of mine.
I dialled Jace again.
He wasn't picking up.
I knew where he was. I could picture it—his jacket over a chair that wasn't ours, his phone face-down on a nightstand that wasn't ours, his hands on the woman who had given him a son.
The same woman whose son had been saved with my daughter's bone marrow.
And now my daughter lay here, in a general ward, waiting for a doctor who was attending to a VIP, while Jace Riggs sent me to voicemail.
How did I get here?
Roberta's POVThe kiss consumed me—his lips warm and insistent, his hand cradling the back of my neck like I was something precious. For a heartbeat, I melted into it, kissing him back with every fractured piece of myself. Then reality crashed over me like ice water.I pulled away abruptly, stumbling to my feet. My lips tingled. My chest heaved.Brett’s eyes widened, filled with immediate regret. “Roberta… I’m sorry. That shouldn’t have happened. It won’t happen again. I crossed a line.”I nodded quickly, unable to meet his gaze. “I… I should put the first aid kit away.”I gathered the supplies with shaking hands, clearing the table in mechanical motions. I could feel his eyes on my back the entire time—heavy, worried, longing. It made my skin burn. When I finished, I paused at the doorway.“I’ll be in my room,” I said softly, without turning around.***I closed the door behind me.I leaned against it. My chest was heaving. My heart was pounding.I pressed my fingers to my lips. I co
Roberta's POVJace stared at him. His nose was broken. Blood dripped down his chin."You're going to regret this," Jace said. His voice was nasal. Gurgling. "Do you know who I am? Do you know what I can do to you?""I don't care who you are." Brett stepped closer. "I don't care what you can do. If you ever come near her again—if you ever lay a hand on her again—I will end you. I don't care what it costs me."Jace laughed. It was wet and ugly."She's not worth it," he said. "She's nothing. She's garbage. She's—"Brett hit him again. Harder this time. The sound of flesh against flesh echoed through the quiet cemetery. Jace's head snapped back. He stumbled. Jace swung back wildly. His fist landed on Brett's jaw. A glancing blow, but enough to split the skin. Brett's head turned with the impact, but he didn't stagger. He didn't even blink.Then he moved.He grabbed Jace by the collar. Slammed him against the ground with so much force that Jace's head bounced off the dirt. Brett's knees
Roberta's POVMy heart was racing.Why are you lying to me, Roberta?His question hung in the air between us. His face was still close. His eyes were still searching mine.He knows. He knows I'm keeping something. "I really need to sit down," I said. I couldn't manage to tell him that I wasn't lying to him. that would be a double lie.Brett nodded slowly. He guided me to the edge of the bed. His hand was on my lower back. His eyes never left my face.He helped me sit. Then he crouched in front of me. His hands rested on my knees."I'm going to give you some space," he said. "But I'm right downstairs. If you need anything—anything at all—you call for me."I nodded.He stood up. Walked toward the door. He paused at the threshold and looked back at me."I'll be here," he said. "Whenever you're ready."Then he was gone.The door clicked shut.My hand flew to my mouth. The tears came before I could stop them.What is wrong with me?Why do I want him to kiss me? Why do I want him?I presse
Roberta's POV "What's mine?" Brett said again.He was still in the doorway. The phone in his hand had gone dark in his grip, forgotten. His eyes were on my face, and whatever he saw there had stopped him from coming any closer too fast.I looked at my own phone. The screen had dimmed, but I knew what was still on it.*99.97%.*"Nothing," I said."Roberta.""It's nothing, Brett." My voice didn't sound like my own. "I just — I said something out loud. To myself. It wasn't—""You said my name. I heard you say something was mine." He stepped into the room slowly, the way you approach something fragile. "You were holding your chest. You looked like the floor had opened under you." He crouched slightly, his eyes level with mine. "Please. Whatever this is — I'm not going to make it worse. I just want to understand."I looked at him.At the genuine, unhurried concern in his face. The same patience he had carried through every hard moment since the hospital. He had never once demanded anythin
Roberta's POV The cab was still there when I pulled into the driveway.The driver leaning against the door, arms crossed, watching my house like he wanted to leave.I barely parked. The engine was still running when I ran.“Ziva!”The back door opened.She stepped out slowly—one hand gripping the d
Connor was almost smiling, holding Ziva's iPad when he pushed open the door."I found it," he called out. "Ziva, I found your."Her bed was empty."A nurse was tucking the corner of the sheet.Connor stood in the doorway."Where is she?"The nurse glanced up. "Dr. Sammy discharged her about ten min
Ziva's POV My eyes were so heavy. Like someone had tied weights to them. The ceiling blurred."BP dropping. Forty-four over twenty-eight.""Push another fluid bolus. Wide open.""Her heart rate is fifty and falling.""Atropine. 0.2 milligrams. Slow push."Something cold went into my IV. I felt it
Roberta's POV The concrete scraped my knees.I sat there, staring at the corner where the cars had vanished. The morning sun was too bright. Birds were singing somewhere. The world continued like my daughter hadn't just been stolen.Why?Millie's voice echoed: He's brainwashed you.She was right.






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