LOGIN"I thought I was his wife. To him, I was just a placeholder for the woman he actually loved." For three years, Evelyn lived as a ghost. To the world, she was the penniless orphan who hit the jackpot by marrying the cold, ruthless billionaire Caleb Knight. She played the part of the perfect, drab wallflower, cooking his favorite meals, enduring his family’s sneers, and secretly using her hidden Sterling Empire connections to save his company from the brink of bankruptcy. But on their third anniversary, the fairy tale shattered. Instead of a gift, Caleb handed her divorce papers. "Seraphina is back," he said, his voice as cold as ice Humiliated and discarded, Evelyn signs the papers and vanishes without a trace, leaving behind a positive pregnancy test in the trash, a secret Caleb wasn't worth knowing. Two years later, Caleb Knight’s "luck" has run out. His empire is bleeding, and his only hope is a merger with the mysterious, untouchable Sterling Global Group. Gone is the shy, plain girl in the $10 dress. Standing there in couture diamonds, flanked by three of the world's most powerful men, is his ex-wife. She is radiant, she is powerful, and she returns with a little boy who looks just like him and a girl who shares her aura. "Evelyn?" Caleb gasps, falling to his knees. "I... I’ve been looking for you. Please, come home." She steps over his hand as if he were a piece of trash. "I’m sorry, Mr. Knight,"she purrs, her voice dripping with lethal indifference. "The wallflower you threw away is dead. This is the Empress speaking and she finds you quite... boring." He broke her heart. Now, she’s going to break his empire!
View MoreChapter 1
Evelyn’s POV
The house smelled like rosemary and butter, warm, familiar, careful.
It was the kind of scent that clung to walls and memories. The kind that suggested devotion. Effort. A woman who tried.
I stood barefoot on the marble floor of the Knight villa’s kitchen, stirring a pot of risotto with slow, precise movements. The wooden spoon moved in smooth circles, never rushing, never stopping.
The sleeves of my faded cream sweater were pushed up to my elbows, exposing wrists that had always been too delicate for the life I’d chosen and the faint burn scar I’d earned two years ago learning to cook Caleb’s favorite meals exactly the way he liked them.
Not too salty.
No truffle oil.
Stir clockwise.
Never rush.
Three years of marriage had trained me into rituals no finishing school ever could.
The villa itself was modest by Chicago’s billionaire standards. Caleb had insisted on it. He called extravagance a distraction.
A weakness. I’d agreed with him back then, nodding along, pretending I didn’t know what real extravagance looked like.
The irony never failed to curl my lips into a quiet, humorless smile.
If only he knew that the woman he dismissed as a penniless orphan had grown up in palaces that made this place look like a guesthouse. If only he knew how carefully I’d chosen this life. How deliberately I’d shrunk myself to fit beside him.
But tonight wasn’t about irony.
Tonight was our third anniversary.
I glanced at the clock mounted above the stainless-steel oven.
7:42 p.m.
Caleb was late.
Again.
I didn’t sigh. I didn’t frown. I didn’t allow disappointment to show on my face, not even when no one was watching. Instead, I adjusted the table setting. White plates.
Silver cutlery polished by my own hands. A single vase with pale lilies I’d arranged myself earlier that afternoon.
No candles.
Caleb found them impractical.
On the counter, just out of sight, lay a small white envelope and a folded piece of glossy paper tucked carefully beneath it. I’d hidden them there deliberately, like a secret waiting for the right moment.
My fingers brushed the edge of the counter as I turned away, a protective instinct flaring deep in my chest.
Tonight, I told myself. Tonight I’ll tell him.
I’d rehearsed the words a hundred times in my head.
Caleb, I’m pregnant.
Not dramatic.
Not emotional.
Just honest.
Something he could process.
I’d imagined his reaction in a dozen different ways. None of them overly tender, Caleb wasn’t that kind of man but not cruel either. Surprise. Silence. A slight frown as he recalculated his future. Maybe, eventually, approval.
He valued legacy. Continuity. A child would fit neatly into his worldview.
And maybe, just maybe he would finally see me.
I wiped my hands on a towel and walked through the living room, my bare feet soundless against the marble floor. The walls were decorated sparsely. Abstract art chosen by a designer. Furniture chosen for comfort rather than beauty.
There were no photographs of us.
Caleb said memories were private things. Not decorations.
I had believed him.
In the bedroom, I checked my reflection in the mirror. My dress was simple, a soft blue, knee-length, something I’d bought off the rack months ago. No jewelry except my wedding ring, a modest band I’d insisted on even when Caleb offered something far more expensive.
No distractions, I’d told him then, smiling shyly.
He’d kissed my forehead like one might pat a loyal pet.
“You’re different from the others,” he’d said. “That’s why this works.”
At the time, I’d glowed at the words.
My phone buzzed on the dresser.
For one foolish, hopeful second, my heart lifted.
Then I saw the name on the screen.
Julian.
I didn’t answer.
Julian Sterling never called without reason, and tonight, of all nights I didn’t want to hear the restrained fury in my brother’s voice. He had never forgiven Caleb for the way I’d chosen to live. For the way I’d hidden my name, my power, my birthright.
Three years, Julian had said once, his voice ice-cold. You gave him three years of your life. He doesn’t deserve another second.
I smiled then too. Soft. Unwavering.
He loves me, I’d said.
Julian had looked at me like I was a stranger.
The sound of the front door opening cut through the quiet.
My breath caught, not in fear, but in habit.
I turned toward the hallway, smoothing my dress, my expression settling into its usual calm, welcoming mask.
“Caleb?” I called gently.
Footsteps echoed back.
Two sets.
My heart stuttered.
Then I saw them.
Caleb Knight entered the living room first, tall and impeccably dressed in a charcoal suit, his presence commanding as always. His tie was loosened, his expression unreadable. His sharp eyes scanned the space as if assessing value.
On his arm was a woman I recognized instantly.
Seraphina Rossi.
She was draped in red silk, clinging, expensive, deliberate. Her dark hair cascaded over one shoulder, glossy and styled. Her makeup was flawless. Her lips curved into a soft, fragile smile that didn’t reach her eyes.
She leaned into Caleb as if she belonged there.
Like the house, the air, the man himself were all hers by right.
Something inside me went very still.
“Happy anniversary,” Seraphina said first, her voice light, almost musical. She tilted her head, feigning surprise. “Oh. You didn’t tell me she’d be home.”
Caleb’s jaw tightened, not in guilt, but irritation.
“Evelyn,” he said, disengaging his arm from Seraphina’s with deliberate care. “We need to talk.”
Of course we did.
I looked at him for a long moment. Really looked. At the familiar lines of his face. At the man I had loved quietly, completely, foolishly.
Then my gaze shifted to Seraphina, taking in every detail with the cool observation of a woman who had learned long ago how to read rooms and people.
“I made dinner,” I said calmly. “You’re late.”
Seraphina let out a small cough, pressing a hand delicately to her chest. “Caleb, maybe I should sit. The doctor said stress…”
“I’ll be quick,” Caleb interrupted, his eyes never leaving mine.
He reached into his briefcase.
And pulled out a thin manila folder.
Divorce papers.
The world didn’t spin.
There was no dramatic crash of thunder. No cinematic gasp. No scream tearing from my throat.
Just a quiet, clinical understanding that settled into my bones with chilling clarity.
“This is best for everyone,” Caleb said, his tone measured, detached. “Seraphina is back. She needs stability. And you… you’ve always known this marriage wasn’t built for the long term.”
My lips parted slightly.
“I thought…” I stopped myself. Corrected course. “I see.”
“No, you don’t,” Seraphina said softly, stepping forward. Her eyes flicked over my dress, the house, the table set for two. Pity bloomed across her face like a practiced art. “You were never meant for this world, Evelyn. You tried, I’ll give you that. But you’re just background.”
Caleb nodded once.
As if agreeing with a business report.
“You were safe,” he said. “Predictable. I needed that while I built my empire. But Seraphina, she’s a star. She belongs in the spotlight. You don’t.”
The words landed clean and sharp.
I felt my heart crack.
Not shatter.
Not explode.
It fractured neatly down the center.
“And me?” I asked quietly. “What did I belong to?”
Caleb didn’t hesitate.
“You were a placeholder.”
Silence swallowed the room.
In the kitchen, the risotto continued to simmer.
I nodded slowly.
“Alright,” I said.
I crossed the room to the console table where a pen lay beside unopened mail.
My movements were unhurried.
Graceful.
I didn’t cry.
I didn’t beg.
Seraphina blinked, clearly unsettled.
“You’re not even going to ask for alimony?” she scoffed. “Or is pride all you have left?”
I glanced over my shoulder, my eyes cool.
“I don’t want anything that isn’t mine.”
I signed the papers without reading them.
Caleb watched me, something flickering in his gaze. Surprise, perhaps.
Or relief.
“You’ll need to be out by morning,” he said. “I’ll have my assistant arrange…”
“No,” I interrupted gently. “I’ll handle it.”
I set the pen down and looked at him one last time.
“I hope you’re as talented as you think you are, Caleb,” I said softly. “Because starting tomorrow… your luck is gone.”
For the first time, he frowned.
“What does that mean?”
I smiled.
Not the shy, dim smile he remembered.
Something colder.
Sharper.
“You’ll find out.”
I turned and walked past them, down the hallway, into the bedroom that had never truly been mine.
My hands shook as I closed the door.
Only then did I allow myself to exhale.
On the dresser sat the white envelope.
Inside it was the sonogram.
I picked it up, tracing the tiny shape with my thumb. Three years of silence. Three years of sacrifice.
And this, this life was mine.
“I’m sorry,” I whispered to the paper. “But he doesn’t deserve you.”
I folded it once more.
And dropped it into the trash.
When I stepped back into the living room with my suitcase an hour later, Seraphina was perched on the sofa, sipping wine I had bought with my own money. Caleb stood by the window, already on his phone.
Neither of them looked up as I passed.
At the door, I paused.
Not to hesitate.
But to let the last fragment of the woman I’d been die quietly.
The wallflower.
The ghost.
The obedient wife.
When the door closed behind me, I lifted my chin.
The Empress had awakened.
And the world was about to remember my name.
Chapter 230 Luna’s POV One Year Later “The fourth-quarter projections for the North American distribution hubs are hitting a massive bottleneck, Chairperson,” a middle-aged investor in a tailored charcoal suit said, his voice bouncing monotonously off the glass walls of the high-rise boardroom. He adjusted his glasses, tapping a thick index finger against the digital tablet displaying a sea of rising bar charts. “If we do not reallocate the baseline logistics from the Baltic ports by the end of the fiscal week, the entire autumn release is going to face a severe administrative lag. We need your signature on the secondary clearance forms immediately, Miss Prokofiev.” “The numbers don’t lie, Luna,” another board member chimed in, leaning forward with a tight, calculating smile. “ELL Ventures has completely cornered the luxury apparel market, but sustaining this level of global dominance requires immediate, unyielding execution. We cannot afford to let the shipping channels remain sta
Chapter 229Evelyn’s POV“Get the medical team! Push the secondary epinephrine directly into the core line!” I screamed, my fingers tearing fruitlessly at the blood-soaked linen of Leo’s shirt, the absolute panic in my chest completely overriding the aristocratic composure I had spent decades cultivating. “Julian! Where are the parameters for the surgical transit?! Why isn't the auxiliary power grid responding to my communication deck?!”“The local relays are completely fried, Evelyn!” Julian shouted back from the shattered threshold of the western terrace, his voice cracking beneath the weight of the chaotic perimeter. “Marcus is trying to force an administrative bypass through the lower transport block, but the snow is shifting the baseline coordinates! We can’t get a clear transponder signal!”“He’s slipping, Mom! His fingers... they aren't gripping back anymore!” Luna wailed, her entire frame convulsing as she pressed her face into the hollow of Leo’s pale, translucent neck, her h
Chapter 228Evelyn’s POV“Leo, don’t look at the gun,” I hissed, my voice barely vibrating past my teeth as I kept my tactical sights locked onto the bridge of Maeve’s nose. “Look at me. Focus on my perimeter, Leonardo. Keep your feet planted.”“I can’t just watch this, Mom,” Leo whispered back, his voice no longer sounding like a calculated machine, but a broken, bleeding instrument of pure, unadulterated torment. His silver-gray eyes were locked onto the cold metal barrel digging into Luna’s temple, watching a dark tear trace a line through the grime on her pale cheek. “Look at her hair. Look at how hard she’s shaking. She can’t breathe. The air... the oxygen distribution in this sector is too low for her.”“Evelyn!” Julian barked from the left flank, his boots shifting slightly against the shattered display glass. “The rogue security detail is shifting their alignment. They’re preparing an administrative evacuation path toward the lower transport block. If we don’t initiate a physi
Chapter 227Evelyn’s POV“The air pressure is dropping,” Leo whispered, his voice a tight, mechanical raspy line as the wheels of the heavy Sterling transport jet slammed onto the icy tarmac of the private airstrip outside St. Petersburg. “Ground temperature is negative four degrees. Mom, the satellite arrays are showing completely dead sectors across the entire northern perimeter of the Radov estate. No administrative check-ins. No local transport logs. Nothing.”“That is because Silas kept his word,” I said, checking the tactical slide of the small, suppressed firearm tucked beneath my scuffed municipal driver’s coat. I didn't change out of the uniform. It was my armor now. “The global liquidity lines were cut three hours ago over the Atlantic. Every single black-market transit loop bearing the Sterling clearance signature has been systematically locked down. Yamelyan is entirely bled dry. His assets are frozen, his international market algorithms are completely useless, and his boa
Chapter 80The Grand Sterling Gala was not merely a party; it was a high-stakes theatrical production where the costumes cost more than the average Spaniard’s mortgage and the subtext was written in blood. The Villa de Cristal had been transformed into a shimmering cathedral of decadence. Calla l
Chapter 77The invite hadn’t been a request; it had been a summons, delivered on a heavy cream cardstock that smelled of Lucien’s signature vetiver and the quiet threat of a man who was beginning to enjoy the chase a little too much."Staff Appreciation Dinner. The Terrace. 8:00 PM. Dress: Formal."
Chapter 81The silver lace of Evelyn’s dress had long since vanished into the glittering roar of the ballroom, leaving me alone in the shadows of the service corridor. My heart was still a frantic bird trapped in the cage of my ribs, and the Pancreas Prime, that disastrous, biological betrayal was
Chapter 74If Julian’s intrusion was a cold splash of water, Lucien’s presence was a slow, creeping fever.I was back in the nursery, the Navarino brace cinched so tight I could barely draw a full breath. I was bent over a low table, pretending to organize a stack of Leo’s complex architectural blu






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