分享

His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress
His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress
作者: A. Leilani

Chapter 1

作者: A. Leilani
last update publish date: 2026-02-09 20:15:13

Chapter 1

ADRIA

I stood outside the VIP room with trembling hands, clutching the thermos of soup that still burned my palms through the insulated container. The hallway of Eclipse Club reeked of expensive cologne and poor decisions, much like my marriage.

"Sir, your wife is here with the soup for Miss Amber," Adina's voice filtered through the slightly ajar door before I could knock.

My husband's secretary. Always so efficient, always so beautiful in her tailored suits that probably cost more than my entire wardrobe. I'd tried befriending her once, during the first month of our marriage. She'd looked at me the way one might look at a stray dog—with pity and mild disgust.

"Tell her to leave it with you," Damien's voice replied, cold and dismissive. "I don't want her embarrassing me in front of everyone."

I should have left. God knows I should have turned around, gone home, and pretended I hadn't heard that. But my feet remained rooted to the plush carpet, and my heart—that stupid, desperate thing—still held onto the foolish hope that maybe, just maybe, he didn't mean it the way it sounded.

"Come on, Damien," another male voice laughed. "Your wife isn't that bad. She's pretty easy on the eyes, at least."

"Easy on the eyes?" Damien scoffed. "Marcus, the woman has zero personality. She follows me around like a lost puppy, agrees to everything I say, and has absolutely no backbone. Do you know what it's like being married to someone so... bland?"

The thermos nearly slipped from my grip. I pressed myself against the wall, hidden by the decorative column, my breath caught somewhere between my throat and my breaking heart.

"Then why'd you marry her?" This voice belonged to Kieran, Damien's childhood friend. I'd met him twice, both times brief and unmemorable.

"Honestly? I felt sorry for her." Damien's laugh was cruel, sharp enough to cut through whatever remained of my dignity. "She was so pathetic, always showing up wherever I was, looking at me with those desperate eyes. I figured she was an orphan with nothing going for her, and I thought... why not? A wife who worships the ground you walk on and asks for nothing? Seemed like a decent arrangement."

"An arrangement that's about to get complicated now that Amber's back," Adina chimed in, her voice carrying a smugness that made my stomach churn.

Amber. His first love. The woman whose photos I'd found tucked in his study drawer three months into our marriage. The woman who looked eerily similar to me—same dark hair, same petite frame, same wide eyes. I'd convinced myself it was coincidence, that maybe he saw something in me he'd loved in her.

What a fool I'd been.

"Amber and I have unfinished business," Damien said, his voice softening in a way it never had when he spoke to me. "She left for Paris before we could make things official. Now she's back, and—"

"And you're married to her knockoff version," Marcus interrupted with another laugh. "Man, that's cold even for you."

My vision blurred. Sixteen years. I'd waited sixteen years to find the boy who saved me.

I was six years old when it happened, burning with fever in that abandoned warehouse where my kidnappers had left me. The memories were fragmented, fever-distorted, but I remembered the feel of cool water on my cracked lips, gentle hands checking my pulse, and a voice—young but steady—telling me I'd be okay. Before he left to get help, I'd pressed my most precious possession into his palm: my mother's necklace, a delicate silver chain with an emerald pendant shaped like a teardrop.

"Find me when you're older," I'd whispered in my delirium. "This is a promise."

He couldn't have been more than eight, but he'd nodded solemnly and disappeared into the night. By the time the police found me, he was gone. The authorities assumed he was another street kid, impossible to trace. My parents had been frantic, grateful I was alive but unable to comprehend why I kept crying about a necklace and a boy with kind eyes.

Eighteen months ago, I'd bumped into Damien outside a coffee shop in the financial district. Literally bumped into him, my latte splashing across his expensive suit. I'd been stammering apologies when I saw it—the emerald teardrop pendant hanging around his neck, slightly hidden beneath his collar.

My necklace. My promise. My savior.

Everything else had ceased to exist in that moment. I didn't see the irritation on his face or hear his sharp words about the stain. I only saw salvation, destiny, the answer to sixteen years of searching.

From that day forward, I'd dedicated myself to being near him. I'd learned his routine, showed up at his favorite restaurants, joined the same gym, volunteered at charity events his company sponsored. People called me obsessed. My friend Maya called me insane. But how could I explain that I wasn't chasing a stranger? I was chasing the boy who'd saved my life, the promise I'd made to a feverish child's dream.

When he'd finally acknowledged my existence, I'd been ecstatic. When he asked me out, I'd cried. When he proposed after only eight months—a rushed, practical proposal in his office with no ring and barely any emotion—I'd said yes before he could finish the sentence.

I'd molded myself into whatever he wanted. Quiet when he wanted peace. Absent when he wanted space. Agreeable when he wanted compliance. I'd buried Adriana Salvadore, secret heiress to the Salvadore empire, and become Adriana Chen, orphaned nobody, because he'd mentioned once that he found wealthy, powerful women intimidating.

All for a boy who'd saved me.

Except he wasn't that boy.

"Hey, Damien, where'd you get that necklace anyway?" Kieran's question pierced through my spiraling thoughts. "I've never seen you take it off."

My heart stopped.

"This?" Damien's voice carried confusion. "A friend lent it to me, what, two years ago? Said it made me look more sophisticated for the Singapore deal. I just never got around to returning it."

The hallway tilted. Or maybe I did.

"Dude, you've been wearing a borrowed for two years?" Marcus laughed. "

The thermos slipped from my hands, hitting the carpet with a muffled thud. Soup seeped through the lid, spreading across the burgundy fibers like blood.

Everything I'd sacrificed. Everything I'd endured. Every piece of myself I'd carved away to fit into his life.

For a borrowed necklace and a man who'd never saved anyone but himself.

在 APP 繼續免費閱讀本書
掃碼下載 APP

最新章節

  • His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress   Chapter 142

    Chapter 142ADRIANMarcus had his hand over his face.Elijah was looking at his phone, which was the thing Elijah did when he was feeling something he didn't have a protocol for.My father had turned from the window.He watched his daughter held by his wife for a moment and then he crossed the room and put his hand on her back, and she turned from our mother and went into his arms, and he held her the way fathers held their children when the children had been somewhere difficult and had finally come home—not saying anything, just present, just there."Papa," she said."I know," he said."He gave me—" She stopped. "He said—""I know," my father said again."He's lying," she said. And then: "I know he's lying. I know why he's lying. And I'm still—I'm still—""I know," my father said.She pulled back. Looked at the room. At all of us."When did you—" she started.

  • His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress   Chapter 141

    Chapter 141ADRIAN"She's going to be more upset about the divorce papers," my mother said, from the armchair she had claimed with the authority of a woman who chose armchairs permanently. "Our arrival will be a secondary concern.""We don't know about the divorce papers," I said. "Officially. We haven't talked to her since this morning.""We know about the divorce papers," Elijah said. "I've been monitoring—""We know about the divorce papers," my mother agreed. "Let's not pretend we don't."My father had not said anything since we entered the house. He was standing near the window, looking at the garden, with the expression he used when he was thinking about something he wasn't going to say until he was ready. My father's silences were different from other people's silences. They had weight and direction."Papa," Sophia said."I'm thinking," he said."About what?""About what kind of man," he said slowly, "hands his wife divo

  • His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress   Chapter 140

    Chapter 140ADRIAI walked through the hospital lobby and made my way towards the elevator. I walked through the doors and into the cold outside air and I kept walking until I reached my car and I got in and I sat behind the wheel and I looked at the steering wheel and then I put my head down on it.And I cried. I did not cry for what happened in the corridor or for Marcus or for Amber's presence here, berating me like I was the one who had caused Damien's heart to stop.I had cried because of the argument.For the specific, particular memory of his face when he'd said I never loved you. The repetition of it. The precision and how it hurt each time he said it, as if repeating it was going to make it real. And my own voice saying you're lying, I know you're lying, and the moment everything had gone to shit.I had believed him. For sixty seconds, maybe ninety, I believed him.And then the floor. And his heart giving out at the worst time ever and then the monitor.And then the part of

  • His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress   Chapter 139

    Chapter 139ADRIAAmber arrived at two in the afternoon.I knew before she came through the doors that she was coming—Marcus had said something in the room about calling her, which I had filed and not yet addressed because I was operating in a dazed state, not yet ready to process anything else that was happening.She came inside the ward with the posture of someone who had been given a reason to arrive and had arrived purposefully. She was dressed as she always was, perfect as usual, someone who always used dressing as an armour to do certain things.She saw me.Something moved through her expression. Not softness. Not quite the hostile calculation from the house either. Whatever it was,she had noticed or known that being hostile and forward with it, will get her on Damien's bad side and now she was trying to act civilised, in order to keep a good appearance in front of him."What happened?" she said. To the room in general."He collapsed," Marcus said. "He's stable. They're monitori

  • His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress   Chapter 138

    Chapter 138ADRIAI screamed for help.Not a performance. Not the calculated deployment of distress for operational effect. The raw, involuntary sound of a person watching someone collapse in front of them and understanding in the same moment that they caused it and cannot undo it and need someone else immediately.The nurses came fast. The doctors faster. The room filled with the specific controlled urgency of medical professionals executing a protocol they had practiced until it was reflex, and I was pushed to the wall beside the door by someone's firm and impersonal hand, and I went because there was nothing else to do, because the alternative was to be in the way of people trying to keep my husband alive.The monitor was doing something.I looked at it and understood what I was seeing because I had spent the last day learning to read the monitor and what it was doing now was not what it was supposed to be doing.Flatline was the word that arrived in my mind with the specific clari

  • His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress   Chapter 137

    Chapter 137DAMIEN"You're lying to me." Her voice was rising now, losing the carefully maintained evenness that I had learned to recognize as her default. "You were in a hospital room yesterday and you asked me to stay. You said—""I was on pain medication," I said. "I wasn't thinking—""You were thinking perfectly clearly when you looked at me and said you wanted me there," she said. "You are thinking perfectly clearly right now. And you are lying.""I never loved you," I said. "Not the way you deserved. I married you because it was—because you were—" I stopped."Say it," she said. "If you're going to do this, say all of it.""Because you were convenient," I said. "And I was lonely. And I thought I could—I thought it would work, even without—even without loving you properly. And I was wrong. And now I'm trying to—to give you something better than what I've been giving you. The papers are fair. The settlem

  • His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress   Chapter 49

    Chapter 49SOPHIAAdria slipped out first, heading back to the ballroom. I waited a full minute before following, making sure we weren't seen emerging together.The ballroom was even more crowded now. I scanned the room, trying to orient myself and figure out where I should go. As Adriana Chen, I w

    last update最後更新 : 2026-04-05
  • His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress   Chapter 50

    Chapter 50ADRIABecause the last thing I needed was for my sister's husband to get a good look at me and realize that something was off. That the woman he'd married looked right but felt wrong. That the eyes staring back at him weren't quite the right shade, that the voice was a fraction too confi

    last update最後更新 : 2026-04-05
  • His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress   Chapter 47

    Chapter 47SOPHIAThe Met Gala was exactly as pretentious as I'd expected—all glittering chandeliers and designer gowns and people who thought their net worth was a personality trait. I stood near the entrance in my navy dress, the brown wig perfectly styled, green contacts transforming my blue eye

    last update最後更新 : 2026-04-04
  • His Tamed Wife, The Wild Heiress   Chapter 28

    Chapter 28ADRIAThere was something protective in his tone, even through text. Something that made me think of the boy from my memories—gentle hands, a kind voice, someone who helped without expecting anything in return.Kieran: And Adriana, if Damien ever... if he ever hurts you or treats you bad

    last update最後更新 : 2026-03-25
更多章節
探索並免費閱讀 優質小說
GoodNovel APP 免費暢讀海量優秀小說,下載喜歡的書籍,隨時隨地閱讀。
在 APP 免費閱讀書籍
掃碼在 APP 閱讀
DMCA.com Protection Status