LOGIN"Three billion? You've got to be kidding me, Evelyn, I knew you liked the lifestyle but I didn't think you were this greedy, or maybe you really were just a gold digger this entire time like Rebecca always said," he spat, his voice dripping with sudden contempt. "You said I could name my price, Arthur, and that is the price for three years of my life that I can never get back, so either you pay it or we can spend the next year fighting this in court and making sure your precious Samantha has to wait even longer to marry you," I said, picking up the pen that was tucked into the envelope.***** Evelyn spent three years playing the part of the perfect, invisible wife to Arthur Hayes, a man who only married her out of a sense of obligation to his father. She endured the cold nights, the silence, and the constant belittling from his family, hoping that one day he would truly see her. But when his first love returns, Arthur doesn't hesitate to throw divorce papers in her face. After a final, violent confrontation where Arthur chooses a lie over the truth, Evelyn disappears with a secret he was never supposed to know. Five years later, she is back—not as the girl who needed a savior, but as a powerhouse who owns the very debt threatening to sink the Hayes empire. Arthur wants his heir and a second chance, but Evelyn is no longer for sale. This time, if he wants her, he’ll have to survive the wreckage of the lies he once believed.
View MorePOV: Evelyn
The clock on the mantel ticked toward two in the morning, and the tea in my cup had long since gone cold, leaving a bitter film against the porcelain. Arthur had never been this late without calling, not once in the three years we had been married, so I stayed on the sofa with my eyes fixed on the darkened driveway visible through the window. The silence of the house was heavy, only broken by the sharp, rhythmic tapping of heels coming down the hallway.
"Still sitting here like a loyal dog, I see," Rebecca said, leaning against the doorframe with her arms crossed over her designer silk robe.
I didn't turn around to look at her, but I could hear the smirk in her voice as I replied, "Arthur isn't home yet, so I thought I’d wait up to make sure he’s alright."
"He’s a grown man, Evelyn, not a toddler who needs his hand held, but since you’re already making yourself useful as the unpaid night watchman, you can go to the kitchen and make me those lemon tarts I like," she demanded, walking further into the room and tossing a fashion magazine onto the coffee table.
"It’s nearly three in the morning, Rebecca, and the staff have already gone to bed, so perhaps I can have them made for you first thing in the morning," I suggested, trying to keep my voice steady despite the exhaustion pulling at my eyes.
"I didn't ask for them in the morning, I asked for them now, and I don't see why you're acting so high and mighty when we both know my father only brought you into this house out of pity after your parents died," she sneered, stepping closer until she was hovering over me.
I stood up slowly, smoothing out the fabric of my dress, and I looked at her for a moment before nodding because arguing with her had never changed anything in three years. "I'll see if the lemons are still fresh," I said quietly, walking past her toward the kitchen while she laughed behind my back.
I was halfway through zesting the fruit when the heavy thud of the front door echoing through the foyer made my heart jump, and I wiped my hands on an apron before rushing back out to the main hall. Arthur was standing there, his coat slightly rumpled and his tie loosened, but he didn't look tired at all, in fact, he looked more alive than I had seen him in months.
"Arthur, you're finally home, I was so worried because you didn't answer any of my texts and it's so late," I said, reaching out to take his briefcase, but he stepped back, avoiding my touch.
Rebecca came trotting out from the lounge, a fake pout on her face as she looked at her brother and said, "Finally, maybe now you can tell your wife that she's being difficult about my dessert, though I suppose she's just cranky because you weren't here to pat her on the head."
Arthur didn't even look at his sister, and he didn't look at me either as he reached into his inner jacket pocket and pulled out a thick brown envelope. "Go to bed, Rebecca," he said firmly, and once she disappeared upstairs with a huff, he finally turned his gaze toward me, but his eyes were like chips of ice.
"Is everything okay, Arthur, you look so serious and you haven't even said hello yet," I whispered, feeling a cold knot form in my stomach as he thrust the envelope into my hands.
"Just open it, Evelyn, I don't want to spend the rest of the night talking about this when it's already been decided," he said, walking over to the sideboard to pour himself a drink.
My fingers trembled as I tore the seal, and the heavy white paper inside felt like lead as I pulled it out, my eyes scanning the bold letters at the top that read 'Petition for Dissolution of Marriage'. I felt the air leave my lungs, and I had to grab the back of a chair to keep from falling over while I stared at the lines where my name and his were printed side by side.
"What is this, Arthur, is this some kind of cruel joke because I don't understand why you're handing me divorce papers on a Tuesday night after three years of marriage," I said, my voice cracking as I looked up at him.
He took a long sip of his drink and set the glass down with a definitive click, saying, "Samantha is back in town, she reached out to me a few weeks ago and we realized that we never really got over each other, so I'm not going to waste any more of your time or mine."
"Samantha? You mean the woman who left you right before your father insisted we get married, the one you haven't spoken to in years," I asked, the shock making me feel lightheaded and numb.
"She's the only woman I've ever truly loved, Evelyn, and you've always known that this marriage was just a business arrangement my father forced on us to keep your family’s estate from falling apart," he replied, his tone so casual it felt like he was discussing the weather.
"But your father raised me, Arthur, he treated me like a daughter and he wanted us to be happy together, and I thought we were getting there, I thought we were building a life," I argued, stepping toward him with the papers crumpled in my hand.
"You were building a life, maybe, but I was just fulfilling an obligation to a dead man’s wishes, and now that Samantha is here, I realize that I can’t keep living this lie just to make you feel secure," he said, checking his watch as if he were late for a meeting.
"You're asking me to just sign these and walk away from everything, from our home and our history, just because she decided to show up again," I said, the tears finally starting to spill over.
"I’ve already had my lawyers draw up a very generous settlement, so you won't be left with nothing, but I need those papers signed by tomorrow morning because I’ve already promised Samantha that we can start our life together immediately," he insisted, moving toward the stairs without a second glance.
I stood there in the middle of the foyer, the divorce papers fluttering in the draft from the hallway, and I looked at his retreating back, wondering how a person could turn into a stranger in less than five minutes.
"Arthur, wait, please just talk to me for a second," I called out, but he didn't stop, and the sound of his bedroom door locking echoed through the house like a gunshot.
I looked down at the signature line, the empty space waiting for my name, and then I noticed something tucked into the very back of the envelope that I hadn't seen before, a small, handwritten note that wasn't in Arthur’s handwriting at all.
POV: EvelynThe strange thing about happiness was that it never arrived the way I imagined it would.When I was younger, I thought it would be loud.Some dramatic moment where everything suddenly became perfect.Instead it arrived quietly.On a Thursday.While I stood barefoot in the kitchen making pancakes because Toby had declared cereal "an insult to recovery.""You burned one."I looked over my shoulder."I did not."Leone walked over, stole the pancake straight from the pan and took a bite.He chewed thoughtfully."It's... enthusiastically cooked.""You mean burned.""I was trying to protect your feelings.""My feelings were doing fine until you showed up.""They're still doing fine."He kissed my forehead before taking another bite of the ruined pancake."I'll eat this one.""You don't have to.""I know."He smiled."I want to."That was Leone.He had a way of making tiny things feel important.Toby wandered into the kitchen still wearing yesterday's oversized shirt."Morning."
POV: EvelynI thought I was prepared.After everything we'd survived, I honestly believed there wasn't much left that could make me nervous.I'd faced courtrooms.Lawyers.Reporters.DNA tests.Hospitals at three in the morning.Phone calls that changed entire lives.One little follow-up appointment shouldn't have been enough to make my stomach twist itself into knots.Apparently my body disagreed."You've checked the appointment time six times."Leone's voice carried across the kitchen as he poured coffee into a travel mug."I've checked it twice."He looked at me over the rim of his cup."Evelyn.""Fine. Maybe six."He smiled without saying I told you so. One of the things I loved most about him was that he rarely needed to win little arguments. He just let me arrive at the truth on my own.Toby wandered into the kitchen a second later, backpack slung over one shoulder even though we weren't going anywhere near school."Why does everybody look like they're about to write an exam?"I
POV: RebeccaThe porch light had dimmed to a soft amber glow by the time we finally stood up. Nina’s hand stayed laced with mine as we stepped inside, the screen door clicking shut behind us like a quiet promise. The house was silent except for the low hum of the refrigerator and the distant murmur of neighborhood life. No emergencies. No ringing phones. Just us.I followed her down the hallway, my thumb brushing over her knuckles. In our bedroom, Nina turned on the small lamp on the dresser. Warm light spilled across the bed, catching on the soft linen sheets we’d bought together last month. She looked at me over her shoulder, that knowing little smile playing at the corners of her mouth.“Come here,” she said softly.I crossed the room without hesitation. When I reached her, she cupped my face with both hands and kissed me again—deeper this time, slower, like she had all the time in the world. Her lips were warm, tasting faintly of the iced tea we’d shared on the porch. I melted in
POV: RebeccaThe strange thing about surviving a disaster was realizing you suddenly had free time.For months every morning had started with another crisis.Another phone call.Another emergency meeting.Another witness.Another document.Another reason to believe the world was about to collapse all over again.Now...My biggest problem was deciding what to do on a Saturday.It felt suspicious.Nina looked up from the kitchen counter where she was making coffee."You've been staring at that calendar for five minutes."I looked down.I had."I think something's wrong."She frowned immediately."What?""We don't have anything scheduled."She blinked."That's the problem?""I feel like I'm forgetting something."Nina walked over, took the calendar from my hands and looked at it herself."No meetings.""No investigations.""No interviews.""No lawyers."She smiled before handing it back."Rebecca.""What?""I think that's called having a life."I stared at her."I remember hearing about
Rebecca~The first notification arrived at 8:17 in the morning. I only remember the exact time because it seemed completely harmless. One message. One alert. One tiny interruption. Nothing important.By 8:45, the entire company was on fire.My phone started vibrating before I even stepped out of th
POV: EvelynAfter the long day out, Toby was completely worn out. I tucked him into bed, kissed his forehead, and waited until his breathing grew steady and deep. The house finally fell quiet, the only sound the distant crash of waves outside. I closed his door softly and leaned against the wall fo
Arthur~By the time the investigator arrived at my office, I was already running out of explanations that made sense. The problem was no longer Toby. Five days earlier, Toby had been at the center of everything—the blood match, the hospital records, the conflicting dates, and the shocking possibili
POV: EvelynBy the time I saw Arthur again, I already knew it wasn’t going to be a normal conversation, because nothing involving him ever came with normal anymore, it always came with pressure I didn’t ask for and choices I didn’t get to prepare for.He showed up in the hospital corridor like he












Welcome to GoodNovel world of fiction. If you like this novel, or you are an idealist hoping to explore a perfect world, and also want to become an original novel author online to increase income, you can join our family to read or create various types of books, such as romance novel, epic reading, werewolf novel, fantasy novel, history novel and so on. If you are a reader, high quality novels can be selected here. If you are an author, you can obtain more inspiration from others to create more brilliant works, what's more, your works on our platform will catch more attention and win more admiration from readers.
reviews