LOGIN"You aren't a wife, Adeline; you're just a pawned trinket your father sold to me to settle a debt he couldn't afford. So, just fucking sign this divorce paper!" To Rogue Sterling—the ruthless billionaire CEO—Adeline Marcus was nothing more than a contract he never wanted. For two years, she endured humiliation, betrayal, and the cruel indifference of the man she loved even after he announced that he impregnated his beloved ex and forced her to sign the divorce paper…pregnant she chose to leave... until a tragic plane crash took her from the world. The elites mourned. Rogue celebrated—with his pregnant mistress on his arm. But death can be a powerful disguise. Years later, she returns. A new name. A hidden heiress. Untouchable. Cold. Dangerous. And Rogue Sterling? The moment he sees her, regret crashes through him like a storm. The wife he abandoned is alive… and more powerful than he ever imagined. This time, she won’t beg for love. She won’t forgive. She’ll take everything—and he’ll realize too late what he lost.
View More"She's nothing. Ignore her."
I heard my husband's voice. I should be excited because I've been waiting for him to go home since 2 PM. It's already 7 PM and I'm almost done cooking our dinner. His words hit me like a punch in my stomach, taking the air out of my lungs. I chose to leave what I was doing and walk towards the door to check. Istopped at the kitchen door, my hand shaking as I held the spatula I had been using to make dinner that I hoped he would finally share with me tonight. Upon peeking, I saw my husband and he was not alone. Rogue was kissing a woman in the middle of our living room. He kissed her with a passion that he never showed me. He wouldn't even touch me, as if I had a disease that could get him infected. I saw their kiss turn wild through a blur of hot, stinging tears formed in my eyes. They moved with a wild heat, taking over the space as if I were a ghost haunting my own life. Rogue didn't just forget I was there; he used my presence to humiliate me. Just like what he always do in our two years marriage. "A-Are you sure?" the woman gasped, her breath catching as Rogue's hands started to pull her clothes off her. "She's just the maid, Cecille. Keep going." Rogue didn't even look at the kitchen. His voice was like a sharp, cold knife that cut right through me. When I feel the familiar suffocation, I turned around and ran back into the kitchen's shadows as the sounds of their pleasure grew louder, filling the apartment like a thick fog. My heart raced against my ribs like a scared, hurt animal. I leaned against the cold marble counter, and my stomach churned with a nausea so strong that I thought I might pass out. I looked down at the Chicken Tikka Masala that I had spent all afternoon making perfect. I had watched tutorials for hours because I wanted to make him his favorite meal. The fragrant steam now felt like a joke. Every moan and every sound of skin hitting skin from the living room made me want to scream. I stood there, shaking, and held back my tears with my hand. I had loved him since college. I had spent years dreaming of living in his world, but when I got there, I found it was a frozen wasteland where I would die of pain. "Are you done? Cecille is hungry." His voice boomed from behind me, sharp and impatient. I flinched violently. I didn't even notice how long I was trying to ease the pain there, that I didn't realize they're already done. I could feel the raging disgust at the thought of him releasing on her. We never had sex before. He wouldn't share bed with me, as he always slept at the guest room. I had no choice but to let him, because the last time I tried to request, he just scolded me. I scrambled to wipe my face, keeping my back turned so he wouldn't see the wreckage of my dignity. "A-almost," I whispered, my voice cracking. "I'll set the table. I'll call you when I'm done." "Hurry up. This is the only thing you're actually good for, and you're still pathetic at it," Rogue said. Every word was like a new cut. "You are really useless, Adeline." useless. Funny. I've been doing everything for him. Following his commands, like an errand girl. He even said that I'm his maid. I do all the things a housewife do for her husband, and he wouldn't even appreciate it. Well, I'm not the one he loves after all. When his first love... come back? I know...it would be the end of this. I bit my lip so hard that it tasted like metal. I couldn't fight back. I couldn't get away. Even now, in the ruins of my heart, the foolish girl inside me still remembered the man I thought he was. I had prayed to God for this marriage. I had begged the universe for a chance to be with him. I could hear his footsteps getting quieter, and I knew that the gods had finally heard my prayer, but only to punish me for it. "I'm sorry," I said, my voice breaking in the empty room. "I'll do it, quick. I'll just call you." He didn't say anything. I can only hear him walking away from the kitchen. I took a very deep breath and forced myself to calm down before I finished what I was doing. The smell of the Chicken Tikka Masala I'd worked so hard on filled the kitchen, but as soon as the woman, I remember, the name was Cecille, that he brought here walked in, the smell turned to ash. She looked at the table I had carefully set, and her mocking eyes were calculating. She stepped into my space and whispered, "You really think a home-cooked meal will make him forget everything else?" I could tell she was making fun of me. Of course. She feels so good about herself right now because Rogue can't even treat me better than a used rag. She grabbed a heavy crystal glass off the table and threw it on the floor before I could even think of a response. It sounded like a gunshot when it crashed. She kicked over a chair and threw herself against the counter in one smooth, blurry motion, letting out a scream that was both terrified and piercing. She's out of her mind! "Rogue! Please help me!" "What the heck?" was all I could say as I started to panic because I hadn't done anything. The sound of heavy, scared footsteps echoed down the hall. Rogue burst into the room with wild eyes and saw the mess. . . the broken glass at my feet, the chair that had been knocked over, and the woman in the corner, clutching her arm as if I had hit her. Rogue's voice was a low, jagged growl that made my hair stand on end. "What happened here?" "I just came in to help her," she cried. I was horrified to see her hold up her hand and see bright red blood spreading across her palm. My heart didn't just drop; it shattered. "Rogue, t-that's not true. She did it to herself! I was just standing here—" "Shut your mouth!" He didn't just look at me; he looked through me, his eyes burning with a soul-crushing mixture of pure, unadulterated loathing. He lunged past me, his shoulder slamming into mine as he swept the woman into his arms. The tenderness in his touch was a knife to my gut. "I heard the glass break, Adeline. I heard her scream in fear. Why would she hurt herself just to get back at you?" "Because she wants you to hate me!" I yelled back, and the tears finally came, hot and bitter. "Please, just look at the mess! Why would I ruin the only thing I have left to give you? I worked all day on this!" Rogue's eyes flicked to the table, but they didn't soften. It turned into a wall of black ice. "Stop acting like a saint; we both know you're a devil in a cheap dress," he said, his voice full of anger. "You're just a wh*re playing house in these awful clothes. Get out of my sight. Go to your room right now!" I couldn't move, like a ghost in my own kitchen. The next thing I know was my husband, the man I had loved since college, take his woman away and whisper sweet, protective words into her ear that I had been longing to hear. And that woman's secret smug on her face, telling me that she've won. Alone amidst the ruins of my effort, the smell of burnt spices, and the jagged glass, I finally understood. The truth didn't matter. To Rogue, I wasn't just guilty—I was a nuisance he couldn't wait to discard.I thought I would be dealing with pain for hours. The front door clicked shut, and the silence that followed was heavy and suffocating. I lay twisted on the hardwood floor, my knees pulled to my chest as the boiling soup continued to eat through the fabric of my shirt. The blistering heat on my skin felt like molten lead. Every breath I took came out as a ragged, choked sob. I squeezed my eyes shut, my blood-stained fingers weakly crushing the hundred-dollar bills Rogue had thrown at me. Just let me faint, I prayed to the empty room. Please, just let me lose consciousness. Instead, the agony only sharpened. I was trapped in my own burning body, staring at the shattered ceramic shards and the dark puddle of broth mixing with my own blood. Then, the heavy front door clicked again. Panic flared through my chest. Had they come back? Had Rogue forgotten something, only to return and kick me while I was down? I tried to crawl backward, to hide beneath the shadow of the dining table
The heavy scent of Sienna’s perfume seemed to curd the air in the kitchen. I stood over the steaming pot of soup, the rising vapor stinging the raw, split skin of my lips. My vision blurred. Each tear that fell hissed as it hit the hot stove. From the dining room, the clinking of silverware mixed with the low, rumbling hum of Rogue’s laughter. It was a sound he used to give to me, lifetimes ago. Now, it was a weapon. "Is it done yet, servant?" Sienna’s voice chimed from the doorway. I turned slowly. She was leaning against the frame, twirling a strand of her hair. My mother’s silk robe hung loosely off her shoulders. She looked at my swollen, discolored cheek and smiled. It was a small, triumphant curve of her lips. "It's ready," I whispered, my voice hoarse. I lifted the heavy ceramic bowl, my bandaged fingers throbbing with agonizing heat under the weight. I walked past her into the dining room, keeping my eyes glued to the floor. Rogue sat at the head of the table. He was
The next evening, the silence of the house was shattered not by Rogue’s key in the lock, but by a woman’s high-pitched, melodic laughter. I was in the kitchen, my fingers still bandaged from the burns of the night before, trying to swallow a piece of dry toast. My heart seized. He wasn't alone. Rogue walked into the living room, but he wasn't looking for me. He was focused on the woman draped over his arm—a petite brunette with sharp, cat-like eyes and a dress that cost more than my father’s remaining dignity. This wasn't the woman from the office. This was someone new, someone younger. "Rogue?" I stepped into the doorway, my voice barely a thread. The woman stopped, her eyes raking over my faded apron and the messy bun I hadn't had the energy to fix. She didn't look shocked. She looked amused. "Oh, Rogue... is this the 'staff' you mentioned? She looks a bit... haggard, don't you think?" Rogue didn't even glance at me. He was busy pouring two glasses of crystal-clear gin at the b
The stone in my stomach only grew heavier as I drove home. By the time I stepped back into the kitchen, the house felt even more like a mausoleum. I looked at my hands; they were still shaking. I should have stopped. I should have crawled into bed and stayed there until the world ended. But the habit of loving him was a sickness I didn’t know how to cure yet. I told myself that maybe the office was just… work stress. Maybe if I made his favorite—the complex, time-consuming beef bourguignon he used to mention before the marriage became a cage—he would finally see me. I spent four hours in that kitchen. I chopped, I sautéed, I simmered. I burnt my finger on the heavy pot, the skin blistering instantly, but I didn't cry. The physical pain was a grounding wire for the screaming in my head. I set the table with the fine lace runner and the candles we had received as a wedding gift—a gift we had never used. I sat there. I waited. Seven o'clock became nine. Nine became eleven. The can
The sunlight didn’t just wake me; it executed the morning. It cut through the heavy velvet curtains like a serrated blade, exposing the wreckage of a room that had become a crime scene.I reached out, my fingers trembling as they brushed the cold, expensive silk where Rogue should have been. The s
Feeling completely drained, I decided to sleep off the pain after taking a cold bath. My plan was to wait until the others were finished before heading down to eat. I was eventually jolted from my sleep by a soft, hesitant knock on the door. Still barefoot, I climbed out of bed and quickly fixed m
As Rogue’s command echoed in the empty kitchen, I was left with the debris of a life I no longer recognized. I cleaned everything—every plate, every stain, every shattered remnant of my pride. When the house finally fell into a haunting silence, I retreated to the master bedroom, clutching a chemic
I had no idea where Rogue stayed the night. But I already knew the answer: probably tangled up in that woman's sheets. That night, I cried myself to sleep because the pain in my chest was too much to bear. The sun in the morning didn't bring light; it just showed the damage from the night before.


















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