• A Million Dollars to Kick Him to the Curb

    Yesterday, scrolling through my husband’s iCloud photos, I found the bed shots. Him and some woman. At that exact moment, he was downstairs playing the perfect dad, helping our son Leo with his online class. When the lesson ended, I heard him laying on the virtue thick: “Hey buddy, did you really listen to the teacher? That story was great, wasn’t it? It’s all about how a man needs to be loyal and dependable.” I snapped a picture of that touching scene and posted it online. My friends flooded the comments with praise for “Dad of the Year.” Including her. … Leo had back-to-back online classes. He hates them. If someone isn’t watching him like a hawk, he’ll either nod off or start tearing into his mystery toy boxes. Seeing Steve glued to Leo’s side in the study, I figured I had some free time. Put on a face mask, browsed Amazon a bit. Ding-dong. “DoorDash!” That’s weird, I thought. Our housekeeper, Maria, cooked today. I didn’t order anything. Not wanting to disturb the class, I rushed to the door. Took the bag from the delivery guy, mumbled thanks, and quietly shut the door. I ripped open the packaging right there in the hall and almost stormed into the study to start screaming. But seeing Leo actually concentrating stopped me. Staring back at me was a box of Plan B. Steve and I have been together for years, and he’s always the one who takes care of protection. Why the hell would he order Plan B and have it sent here? Did hitting the jackpot – marrying into money and finally making his own – go straight to his head? Does this guy, who clawed his way up from nothing, suddenly think he’s some kind of king? But wait, that made no sense either. I’m on my period right now. He knows that. Besides, we just talked about this. His company’s finally stable, my family actually respects him now, and I was ready to focus more on home. We decided we wanted to try for a second kid. So why would he buy me Plan B? Wouldn’t getting pregnant be a good thing according to our plan? Unless… the pill wasn’t meant for me. A cold shiver ran down my spine. Just then, Steve’s phone buzzed on the coffee table. Normally, I wouldn’t stoop to checking his phone. It’s pathetic. But instinct screamed at me, right now, you need to look. I typed in Leo’s birthday. The phone unlocked. A new text message glared up at me. Bright and blinding. “Where’s that Plan B you ordered?? Still hasn’t shown up. Guess I’ll just risk my body so you can get off!” My vision blurred. I bit my lip so hard it hurt. My eyes started to sting. Another message popped up. “Even if the pill doesn’t come, YOU better.” Short texts, but every word stabbed me. I stumbled back, grabbing the coffee table to steady myself. My stomach churned like I’d swallowed acid. So that’s it. He messed up the delivery address. Sent it home by mistake. This Plan B was supposed to be for cleaning up his mess tonight. With his mistress. I glanced towards the study, at the father and son focused on the screen. The rage burning inside me was enough to march in there and tear him a new one, humiliate him completely. But I had to weigh the consequences. Blowing up now… what would I gain? What would I lose? After a moment, I marked the texts as unread and tossed the phone back where I found it. 2 For years, people have looked at my life and thought I had it all, like luck just followed me around. But even if you’re lucky enough to be born rich, you still need the brains and guts to hold onto it. If I didn’t have my own skills, I’d just be another spoiled brat who blew through her inheritance. I wouldn’t have the life I have today. Staying calm under pressure – that’s rule number one for success. I took the box of Plan B upstairs, quietly. After hiding it under the bed, I logged into Steve’s iCloud account. He never really used it. I set it up for him ages ago when I forgot my own password and needed to save some files I bought on Amazon. I remembered clicking “auto-backup photos” back then. Once I logged in, tucked away in the backed-up photos, were pictures and videos you’d usually have to pay to see. Steve, oh Steve. I supported you all the way, helped you climb the ladder, turn your life around, and this is how you repay me? By making your own private porn collection? Honestly, the girl had a killer body. Flawless skin, curves in all the right places. Everything a guy could want. Even as a woman, I had to admire her dedication to fitness. But she had no damn business sprawling that meticulously maintained body all over my husband. When Leo finished his classes, Steve practically sprinted upstairs. He planted a quick kiss on my forehead, fidgeting. “Honey, honey, I’m so sorry He planted a quick kiss on my forehead, fidgeting. “Honey, honey, I’m so sorry, a client just called, a major client. Gotta run, emergency meeting.” I watched him throw on his most expensive suit, slicking his hair back with gel. Right then, he just seemed utterly disgusting. A greasy middle-aged man, losing his mind the second some young girl beckons. A typical scumbag who starts thinking with his dick the moment he gets a little money. How could I have shared a bed with this person for seven years? I flashed back to when that girl interviewed for a job at my company. I was leading the interview panel that day. Steve popped in for a minute while she was there, just to discuss some business stuff with me. She must have clocked him then, targeted him right from the start. Yes. I knew who the girl was. 3 About a year ago, our company was hiring livestream hosts. She applied. She made quite an impression, mostly because everything she wore was a knockoff, right down to the sliver of sock peeking out – a high-end fake of some luxury brand. My guess was, back then, she hadn’t landed a sugar daddy yet, someone dumb enough to buy her the real deal. Anyone decked out head-to-toe in fakes is obsessed with appearances, desperate to look richer than they are. During the interview, I asked her what her dream was. She was surprisingly honest. Without missing a beat, she said it was having guys – “whales,” she called them – shower her with virtual gifts, like rockets, during her streams. Then I asked her what the key to successful livestream selling was. Her answer? Get users to fall for her face and body first. Turn them into fans, get them hooked, and then they’ll blindly buy whatever she pushes. Needless to say, she didn’t get the job. I wouldn’t let someone with that kind of toxic mindset into my company. Later, she added me on social media, asking about the interview status. I politely turned her down. My friends list was huge, I hadn’t cleaned it up in ages, so she was still lurking there. After Leo was asleep, I curled up in bed and scrolled through her profile, post by post. She’d been very active this past year. Photos of thousand-dollar Kobe beef dinners, ten-thousand-dollar-a-night presidential suites, hundred-thousand-dollar limited-edition handbags – she had it all. And in every single one of these “look how rich I am” photos, there was her posing beautifully… and a man’s hand. Others might not recognize that hand, but I knew it instantly. It was the same hand that held mine as we walked down the aisle. Now, that hand was busy exploring another woman’s body, groping and grabbing. So, the Plan B got sent to the wrong address. But maybe showing up without protection was even better for his little plan? Memories flooded back. Me, screaming in agony in the delivery room. Him, kneeling on the floor for what felt like hours, praying. “God, please, keep my wife and child safe. I’ll go vegan, I’ll do good deeds for the rest of my life, just please…” Us, caught in a downpour while picking up inventory. Him, taking off his jacket to cover me, grabbing everything heavy, shouldering the whole load. Family gatherings. Him, constantly saying how lucky he was, how marrying me changed his life, how he owed everything to his wonderful wife. All those moments made me believe he was a good man, someone I could trust my life with. I never, ever imagined my husband would betray our family, betray me. Well, fine. If he had the balls to do it, I had the brains to make them both pay. Neither of them was getting off easy. 4 The next day, Steve dragged himself home, looking exhausted. Must have been quite the workout last night. A 40-year-old man trying to keep up with a girl barely out of her teens. No wonder he looked drained. He must have figured out the Plan B mix-up. He started beating around the bush, avoiding my eyes. “Honey, Maria’s dinner last night wasn’t great, was it? Maybe we should have just ordered takeout.” I wasn’t in the mood for games. I cut straight to what he really wanted to know. “Maria’s food was fine. Didn’t order anything yesterday, but some Plan B showed up. Must have been a wrong address. I told the delivery guy to take it back.” A flicker of awkwardness crossed Steve’s face, but he recovered quickly. Years in business had made him a master of damage control. He put on an exaggerated look of disgust. “Ugh, Plan B? Seriously? Some guys are so irresponsible. Just use protection, you know? That stuff is terrible for a woman’s body.” I changed the subject. “I’m taking Leo to his piano lesson soon, then meeting a friend. You look wiped out from that ‘client meeting.’ Why don’t you go upstairs and rest?” Without waiting for a reply, I went to change, grabbed Leo, and walked out the door. I really was meeting a friend. The only one who could help me with this. 5 My friend, Sarah, is a headhunter. I told her I needed to hire a new female livestream host – drop-dead gorgeous, amazing body. I mentioned I was willing to pay 50% above the going rate. Sarah dropped everything to meet me. Obviously. A higher salary meant a bigger commission for her. We spent the whole morning interviewing over a dozen candidates. They were pretty, sure, but they all looked the same. Same skinny frame, same sharp nose, same big eyes with heavy makeup. And the moment they opened their mouths, the shallowness poured out. I kept shaking my head, making little ‘tsk’ sounds. Sarah finally sighed. “Okay, boss lady, you gotta give me more specifics. What exactly are you looking for?” I snapped my fingers as if an idea just hit me. “Right! You know, that one girl you sent over before… uh… what was her name… Ashley? Yeah, Ashley. She might work. Can you try to get her back in here?” The whole point of the morning’s charade was to make Sarah believe I was genuinely recruiting, not targeting someone specific. Sarah’s sharp as a tack. If I’d just asked for Ashley outright, she’d smell a rat and start digging. And I couldn’t just call Ashley directly. The trap had to be set perfectly, following all the proper channels.

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  • He’s My Friend’s Brother…And My New Crush

    “Maya.” My friend Chloe was still looking worriedly at me, perched precariously on two stacked kegs of beer, slurring my words. Tonight was the night I officially ended my one-sided crush. Day 365, exactly. Hard to believe, right? Yours truly actually fell for that sly fox for a whole year. Tonight, I’d even drunk myself stupid over him, losing count somewhere between my fingers and toes. “Chloe, your brother… he’s just a… major… player.” I swayed, raising the plastic cup in my hand, still cursing the man I’d silently adored for a solid year. Of course, in that moment, I had no idea. The very man I was cursing out a thousand times over was sitting at the table right behind us. “Mr. Cole, what’s so funny?” One of his employees, sitting with him, looked puzzled at Ethan Cole’s smiling face. The boss had been grinning like an idiot for the past five minutes. Maybe he’d had too much? “Just listening to someone I like tear me a new one.” Ethan picked up his pint glass as he spoke. “Do I really seem like a fox?” He put the glass back down, asking his employee with surprising seriousness. The sun was practically burning a hole through my blinds, but I was still sprawled out like a starfish on my bed. “Ugh… First day of work.” That’s right. Today was my official entry into the real world, and yesterday, I’d gotten blackout drunk and made a fool of myself over some jerk. “Just my luck.” I dragged myself out of bed, muttering another curse at the guy who clearly toyed with people’s emotions. I opened Instagram, checking if I’d missed any DMs from last night, and saw the 99+ notification bubble on my story views and feed. Whoa, did some major drama go down yesterday? Curiosity piqued, I tapped the notification and saw video after video being shared by practically everyone I knew. “Drunk Woman Climbs on Man, Tries to Rip His Clothes Off at Local Brewery.” In the video, some girl was absolutely wasted, practically straddling a guy, and then dramatically smashed his phone onto the hard concrete floor. “What the actual f—?” “This chick is…” Just as the next insult was forming on my lips, I heard a clear voice in the video say, “Ethan Cole.” … “Holy crap, is that… me?” I sucked in a breath, zooming in on every pixelated detail. My face in the video was mercifully blurred out, but Ethan’s shirt was clearly ripped open at the collar, buttons missing. Ding-dong. Just as I was processing the mortifying image of my drunken alter ego, my doorbell rang. “Who is it?” I shuffled over to the door. “Ethan Cole?” I opened the door, and there he stood – the star of last night’s public humiliation, courtesy of me. He was wearing a hoodie, but I could just make out a reddish-purple mark blooming on his neck. Probably… My doing. I swallowed hard. Oh God… I’m screwed. “The player’s here to collect his dues.” He grinned, looking way too pleased with himself. The next second, he pulled a phone out of his hoodie pocket – an iPhone 13 Pro Max with a screen so shattered, little shards of glass were practically flaking off. “My phone. You smashed it yesterday.” He deliberately waved the mangled wreck in my face. “I… I’ll pay you back!” I tried to sound defiant, but I knew I had zero leverage. It’s just, what, over a grand? Worst case, I’d have to swallow my pride and hit up my parents. “Oh really?” He raised an eyebrow, casually leaning one hand against the doorframe, hip cocked. “And the viral video? My reputation? How do you plan on compensating for those?” 2 “I…” My mouth just opened and closed. Ethan straightened up, stuffing his hands in his pockets. “Character defamation, and assault without consent…” “Assault?! Give me a break! I didn’t do anything like that to you!” I cut him off before he could finish. “Didn’t you?” Ethan raised that damn eyebrow again. He looked like the cat that got the cream, absolutely reveling in this. “Maya Bishop, right?” I’d barely stepped into the lobby of my new office building when I ran smack into the HR Director who interviewed me a few weeks ago. “Yes, that’s me.” I managed a tight, awkward smile. I’d finally managed to get rid of Ethan, that smug fox, at my apartment, only to immediately run into this woman who radiated stern high school principal vibes. Ethan Cole is definitely bad luck for me, I thought grimly. “The CEO wants to see you in his office. I’ll take you up.” The woman adjusted her glasses, her tone clipped and slightly annoyed. “The CEO?” Little old me, fresh out of college, getting summoned by the CEO on day one? “Not the Marketing Department…?” I tried to keep my voice pleasant and polite. “Just go when you’re told. Stop asking so many questions.” She gave me a dismissive look, clearly unimpressed. “Okay then.” I swallowed my irritation. This battle-axe… if this wasn’t a professional setting, I’d be tempted to give her a piece of my mind. I followed her through a large open-plan office area. The unfriendly stares from nearby desks finally made me realize something was off. Oh God… did they see the video too?? My steps grew heavier, my anxiety spiking. No way. Am I going to get fired before I even log into my work computer? 3 “Ethan Cole?” The HR Director pushed open the door to the CEO’s office, and I blurted out his name like I’d seen a ghost. So much for making a professional first impression. Ethan was lounging in his chair, still wearing the same hoodie from this morning. He glanced up, sizing me up. “Lorraine, you can go.” He cleared his throat, waving dismissively at the HR Director beside me. The woman, apparently named Lorraine, shot me another dirty look before turning and stalking out of the office. Inside the company, Ethan’s looks apparently won him legions of female admirers. Honestly, who wouldn’t fall for a ridiculously good-looking guy like him? Of course, I never imagined this Ethan Cole, Chloe’s brother, was actually the honest-to-God CEO. “You have three meetings today. You’ll need to take notes on your laptop.” Ethan clicked his mouse, bringing up his schedule, acting as if our conversation this morning never happened. “Me?” I pointed at myself, then glanced back at the closed office door. “I’m just an intern… assigned as the CEO’s Executive Assistant?” “Mm-hmm. Problem?” Ethan looked up, arching an eyebrow. “Not happy about it?” The salary for an EA to the CEO was way higher than a regular assistant gig. Who wouldn’t bow down to the almighty dollar? Me, Maya Bishop… Of course, I was the first one bowing. “Happy! Very happy!” I nodded repeatedly, my smile feeling incredibly fake. Okay, maybe Ethan was capable of acting like a normal human being after all. “Ahem, shouldn’t I have an experienced assistant train me first?” Normally, even an intern assistant position would involve shadowing someone senior to learn the ropes. Especially for the CEO’s assistant. “Little Maya, having me train you shouldn’t be a problem, right?” Ethan rested his chin on his hand, his tone deliberately teasing. I was wrong. So, so wrong. How could I ever treat this calculating fox like a normal person? Fine. Deep breaths. Keep the peace. Besides, he was technically the “victim” of my drunken antics. And… my direct boss. “No problem, no problem at all!” I forced another bright smile and pulled my laptop out of my bag. “Right, since I’ll be personally training you for the next few days, your temporary workspace will be… over there in the corner.” He raised his eyebrows again, a knowing smirk playing on his unfairly handsome face. I followed his gaze to the spot he indicated. A simple, small wooden desk crammed next to a large potted plant. “Are you kidding me?” I pointed, barely managing to hold back the string of curses already queued up in my head. 4 “How is this kidding?” Ethan slowly took off his non-prescription glasses (definitely just for show), steepling his fingers under his chin. The next second, that damned fox! He tugged the collar of his hoodie down again! “Now this is kidding. Oh wait, no, it’s teasing.” The fox even craned his neck, practically daring me to get a good look at the angry, purplish hickey. “Ethan Cole!” I stomped my foot, wanting nothing more than to hurl my laptop straight at his face – the face that probably broke hearts daily. “Don’t think just because you’re letting the other stuff slide—!” I surged forward, ready to grab his non-existent tie, but just as I lunged… The office door opened. “Mr. Cole…” The man poking his head in was balding, looking a bit older than Ethan. His eyes widened as he took in the scene: me with one knee practically planted on Ethan’s stomach (from the lunge), my hand fisted in the collar of his hoodie. Yep, balding guy totally got the wrong idea. The spectacularly wrong idea… “Sorry to interrupt, Mr. Cole… I’ll come back later…” The man retreated faster than seemed physically possible, carefully shutting the door behind him. Oh, fantastic. I could already hear the office gossip: New assistant tries to sleep her way to the top on day one. This was going to be even juicier than the brewery video. “He’s gone. Feel free to continue.” Ethan just smirked, those sharp eyes of his crinkling at the corners with that foxy charm. “Continue what?! I was about to punch you!” I scrambled back, smoothing down my white button-down shirt. What a jinx. My first day, and already caught in two compromising situations. As I meticulously straightened the wrinkled hem of my shirt, Ethan stood up and smoothly cornered me against the wall. “Little Maya, there’ll be plenty of time for you to ‘punch’ me later. No need to rush.” He leaned in close, his dark eyes meeting mine, and for a second, it felt like sparks flew. “You… stop talking like that. It’s creepy.” I glared back, refusing to be flustered. Later that evening, the viral video that had taken over my feed was suddenly gone. Vanished without a trace. Figures. The internet’s attention span is short. I stared at my phone screen, finally breathing a sigh of relief. Okay, note to self: No more binge drinking. Ever. My face can’t handle another round of pixelated internet fame. I’d lived a relatively drama-free life until now, and somehow, this damn fox tripped me up completely. “Sly fox…” I muttered at my phone screen, then went into my photo gallery and deleted every picture I’d saved of him over the past year. This past year, I’d poured everything into liking him. Even people around us knew how I felt about the ‘fox.’ If it hadn’t been for that day I accidentally overheard he liked someone else, I wouldn’t have given up so quickly. Having someone he liked, yet still accepting gifts from other girls… seriously, what a player. The thought made me snort in disgust. Ping. Late at night, my phone chimed. “Who the heck is messaging me this late? So annoying.” I rubbed my eyes, reluctantly grabbing my phone. The screen flared brightly. A single red notification dot next to Ethan Cole’s contact.

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  • Betrayal in the Marriage Bed: My Husband’s Secret Plan

    I was doing laundry when I found a pregnancy test report in my husband’s pants pocket. I glanced at it. The name was Jessica Bell, four months pregnant. My husband, Mark Miller, is an OB/GYN. Logically, finding a patient’s report left in his pocket could happen. But my gut screamed something was wrong. The report had a faint perfume smell I didn’t recognize. Clutching the paper, I walked out into the living room. As I passed my mother-in-law’s room, I heard her voice. Her usual booming tone, completely ignoring my presence. “Jessica, honey, you just focus on taking care of yourself, give me a big healthy grandson.” She was on the phone. I couldn’t make out the voice on the other end. “That Sarah is just bad luck, a jinx. Married three years and hasn’t produced a damn thing. A barren hen, trying to end the Miller family line.” Her vicious words kept coming, but I couldn’t really hear them anymore. A cold numbness washed over me, like I’d been hit over the head. I looked down at the name on the report again. Jessica Bell. The letters burned my eyes. When Mark and I first started dating, his mother couldn’t stand me. Said I was too skinny, wouldn’t be good for childbearing. She even brought over some quack herbalist to check my pulse. After the guy left, she pointed at me, furious, yelling that I’d definitely end the Miller line, ruin the family legacy, make them a laughingstock. It was Mark who gently held me, reassuring me. He said having kids was his department; with a professional OB/GYN in the house, what was I worried about? His mom was just superstitious, don’t take her words to heart. Because of Mark’s tenderness, I married him. For three years, I came home from work, immediately hit the grocery store, cooked dinner, did the dishes, served soup – taking perfect care of Mark and his mother. I figured if I worked hard, put in the effort to build our little family, maybe time would soften his mother’s heart. I never imagined my three years of sweat would lead to this. Mark cheated. Had a child with another woman. He knew. His mother knew. I was the only one completely in the dark. I bit my lip hard, trying not to make a sound. Tears welled up, streaming down my face. But I knew this wasn’t the time to blow things up. Besides, a tiny sliver of hope remained. I still wanted to believe in Mark, that he still loved me. I had to wait. 2 That evening, when Mark got home from work, he went straight to his mother’s room, telling me to start warming up dinner. Because of what happened earlier, I crept over and pressed my ear to the door, hearing Mark’s hushed voice. “Mom, I haven’t gotten the money yet. Tell Jessica to just hang tight.” “Mark, Jessica’s starting to show. You need to make a decision soon. I want to be a grandmother already. Sarah, that jinx, can’t have kids anyway, and she’s bad luck. She already caused her father’s death; I’m worried she’ll bring us down too.” His mother, despite her country background, always tried to act sophisticated, usually speaking politely. But when it came to me, she turned into a viper, spitting pure venom. Mark hadn’t answered yet, but I already had my answer. He knew. Not only was he cheating on me, doing this disgusting thing behind my back, but he was also plotting with his mother to keep deceiving me. My last shred of hope vanished. But I still underestimated him. “Mom, I only married her for the money! If her dad wasn’t rich and connected, I wouldn’t be Head of OB/GYN now. Her dad’s gone, yeah, but the money isn’t in hand yet. We’ve waited three years; divorcing now means it was all for nothing. Just be patient a little longer. Okay, I’m heading back out. Can’t let her get suspicious.” Mark’s voice was still soft and gentle, just like his clean-cut, respectable appearance. But now, those gentle tones delivered the coldest, most heartless words imaginable. Each syllable was a knife, slicing my heart to pieces. I trembled with rage, feeling like ants were crawling under my skin, a twisting, pounding pain that almost made me pass out. Hearing him about to come out, I forced myself to pull it together and rushed into the bathroom. I turned on the faucet, burying my face in the sink full of icy water. The biting cold shocked me back to a semblance of calm. Disappointment and helplessness receded, replaced by a surge of hatred. I, Sarah Davis, wasn’t some pushover people could walk all over. If Mark Miller dared to treat me like this, he shouldn’t expect any mercy! I fixed my appearance, plastered on my standard devoted wife smile, and walked out. “Honey, I made a big dinner for you, all your favorites.” I choked back the nausea, gently rubbing his shoulders, whispering sweet nothings near his ear. I had to keep him calm for now. I also poured him a glass of red wine. He seemed to be in a good mood today, and because I’d always been so docile, he wasn’t suspicious at all. I kept pouring, glass after glass, until Mark was drunk. He was much bigger than me, taller too. It was a struggle, but I managed to haul him back to the bedroom and dump him on the bed. “Mark? Honey?” I whispered his name a few times. No response. Carefully, I reached into his pants pocket for his phone. He rolled over, pinning my hand. My heart leaped into my throat; I thought I’d been caught. I steadied myself, gently stroking his arm, murmuring soothing words. After a moment, he settled back into a deep sleep. I gently tried for the phone again. This time, I got it. I held it up to his face. Face ID unlocked it. I opened his messaging app, scrolling through his chats with Jessica Bell, looking at her posts. The further back I scrolled, the more horrified I became. It wasn’t that he’d changed his mind about me. He was a snake from the start. Three years ago, he and Jessica were already together. The moment he saw me, I became their target. So, I was the “other woman” in their relationship? I remembered how Mark had played the hero, rescuing me from some minor trouble, then pursuing me relentlessly. Falling in love, getting married… it was all calculated. He wanted my family’s money. He wanted my dad, who was his direct supervisor at the hospital back then, to help him climb the ladder, secure the Head of OB/GYN position. His little scheme, ticking away like a clock. He’d been planning this from the very beginning, targeting me, targeting my family’s wealth! I hated him. Hated myself for being so blind, fooled by his gentle act, letting a wolf into my life. But it wasn’t too late. I gently slipped the phone back into Mark’s pocket. My knuckles turned white as I clenched my fists, then slowly relaxed. They wanted to use me? I’d make damn sure their plans blew up in their faces, leaving them with nothing. I knew what mattered most to Mark and his venomous mother right now: the baby in Jessica’s belly. 3 Three days later. “Honey, I’m off to work,” I said, grabbing my car keys, pretending to head to the office. In reality, I hid in the underground parking garage, waiting for Mark to take the bait. Sure enough, moments after I supposedly left, he and his mother came out. I quietly tailed them. I watched him go into the apartment complex across the street and soon emerge, supporting a heavily pregnant woman. So, this was Jessica Bell. Definitely young and pretty. Even with the large belly, she wasn’t ungainly; she had a certain mature allure. I watched Mark’s mother grasp the other woman’s hand, her face creased into a thousand wrinkles from smiling so broadly. A picture-perfect happy family. She had never, ever looked at me like that. In three years of marriage, my mother-in-law hadn’t shown me a single shred of kindness. Ice filled my veins. Any lingering hope for Mark, this vile man who used me to get ahead and now plotted to steal my inheritance, vanished. All I felt was disgust. Right now, I just wanted to ruin him completely. They wanted their happy little family of four? Not on my watch! I snapped a few pictures with my phone for evidence, took a deep breath, gathered all my strength, and charged out, slapping Mark hard across the face. Five bright red finger marks instantly appeared on his clean-shaven cheek. He looked pathetic. “Who is SHE?” I pointed at Jessica, yelling loud enough to attract the attention of passersby, drawing an audience for the drama. Mark, stunned by the slap, was about to explode. When he turned and saw it was me, he froze, dumbfounded. His mother saw me hit her precious son and lunged at me, trying to grab my hair. I was ready. I dodged sideways quickly. In the shuffle, her elbow accidentally bumped Jessica. Jessica, already unsteady with her pregnancy, stumbled and fell, her belly hitting a decorative rock on the edge of the walkway. “Mark, my stomach hurts so bad! I’m bleeding!” Jessica clutched her belly. Bright red blood seeped out from under her dress, staining the pavement. “Who are you calling Mark? You shameless homewrecker! You’re disgusting, seducing my husband!” I moved towards her, ready to slap her too. Seeing Jessica bleeding seemed to snap Mark out of it, revealing the snake beneath. His face darkened, and he moved to grab me. By now, a small crowd had gathered. People were pointing at Jessica on the ground, muttering about how shameless mistresses were getting these days, flaunting themselves in public. I took the opportunity to melt back into the crowd. Unable to get to me, and with Jessica and his mother fuming, Mark frantically scooped Jessica up, hailed a cab, and rushed off towards the hospital. Watching that cheating pair leave, I rubbed my stinging palm. There was no satisfaction, only a deep sadness. Who would have thought that I, Sarah Davis, would end up in some trashy soap opera plot, fighting a scumbag husband and his mistress? But there was no turning back now. 4 Mark didn’t come home until the next morning, dragging himself in looking exhausted. “Let’s get a divorce.” I slapped the divorce papers down on the table. Mark looked like he hadn’t slept all night, his face pale, covered in stubble. He suddenly dropped to his knees, crawling towards me, grabbing my feet, sobbing and begging. “Sarah, I know I messed up. I’m an idiot. I’m so sorry.” He started slapping himself across the face, hard. “Trust me, Sarah, please trust me. It was just that one time with her.” “The baby’s almost due, and it was ‘just one time’? Who do you think is stupid, you or me? You think I’m that easy to fool?” This snake was still so good at putting on an act, all fake sincerity. If I didn’t already know his real motives, I might have believed him. “I was drunk on that business trip. I don’t know how, but she ended up in my bed. After it happened, I didn’t dare tell you. Then she found me later, said she was pregnant. We’ve been married so long without kids… I felt bad for you, didn’t want you to go through the pain of pregnancy and childbirth. I thought… I thought I’d let her have the baby, then we could raise it together, like our own.” Mark’s voice grew even softer, his eyes welling up as he looked up at me, playing the devoted husband. He knew I usually fell for this routine. Ha. So he definitely didn’t want a divorce. Plan was to keep me placated until he got the money, then kick me to the curb. Appearances, the mistress, the baby – none of it mattered as much as the money. I sneered inwardly. Pathetic. He wants to act? Fine, I’ll play along. “Then you have to cut off all contact with her. Completely.” I pretended to give in. Mark, thinking I’d softened, let out a visible sigh of relief. He swore up and down, promising he’d break it off completely, that I was the only one he loved. His phone kept vibrating. He ignored it twice, but it rang again persistently. I decided to help his charade along. “Maybe it’s work calling? Since you missed yesterday.” “Right, right,” he agreed quickly. He went out onto the balcony, pretended to take a call, didn’t even bother changing his excuse – claimed there was an emergency meeting at the hospital – and rushed out. I knew exactly where he was going.

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  • Two Years of Dating…And He’s Been Married the Whole Time?

    I never thought the next time I’d hear about Mark Hughes would be like this. My best friend forwarded me a photo. There was Mark, looking all gentle and patient, accompanying some woman at a prenatal appointment. The sick joke? The woman in the picture wasn’t me. “Claire, is this Mark? Did something happen between you two?” Jess texted me, but I couldn’t bring myself to reply. A week ago, my period was over ten days late. The pregnancy test showed two solid lines. Mark had gone with me to the clinic. Confirmed: three weeks pregnant. And since that day, I hadn’t seen my boyfriend. Calls went straight to voicemail, texts unanswered. It was like he’d vanished off the face of the earth. I was running around like a headless chicken trying to find him, but nothing. My heart sank, lower and lower. A chilling cold seeped into my bones, an icy ache spreading through me. It felt like a thousand-pound weight was crushing my chest, making it hard to breathe. I took a deep breath, let it out slowly, trying to piece my shattered self back together. We’d been together two years. Met the parents. All our friends knew. This couldn’t be happening. Not like this. I forwarded the picture to Mark. “Who is this woman? How long were you planning to hide this from me?” A moment later, my phone buzzed. Caller ID: “Mark (Older Guy).”

  • After All This Time, He Says He Loves Me…Is It Too Late?

    What’s it like being married to someone who doesn’t love you? Evening rush hour. I’m sitting in the passenger seat of my husband’s car, typing out an answer to that exact question on my phone. My fingers fly across the screen as memories from high school flood back. Suddenly, the guy next to me glances over, casually asking, “What are you writing that’s got you so focused? You didn’t even hear me talking to you.” My heart skips a beat. I fumble, quickly closing the app, and force a smile. “Oh, nothing much. Just chatting with a friend.” I turn to him, putting on my most innocent face. Ethan narrows his eyes slightly, clearly not entirely convinced, but lets it go. He sighs deeply, launching back into his rant about his ex-ex-girlfriend—the one who’d been clinging to him for the past six months. “Seriously, this woman is unbelievable. It’s not like I treated her badly when we were together, right? But she’s like Krazy Glue, totally driving me nuts. Now she’s texting me asking why I married you…” I listen intently, like I’m getting the inside scoop on the hottest guy from high school. All I need is a bag of popcorn. Hearing him talk, you might think Ethan was deeply in love with me. Only I know the truth: he married me because he thought I didn’t love him either. Someone who didn’t love him wouldn’t get clingy or jealous, wouldn’t cause him any trouble. What he doesn’t know is that I’ve been crushing on him since seventh grade. I’ve just gotten really good at hiding it. While he’s distracted by traffic, I quickly reply to a particularly intense comment on my post: He’s not bad to me. He gives me plenty for spending money, picks me up from work… he just doesn’t have feelings for me, that’s all. Another commenter earnestly offered to drive a bulldozer over and help me escape. I almost snort with laughter. We get home. Ethan eats a quick bite and then heads back out to the office to work late. I hand him some fruit to take with him, walking him to the door like I always do. “Drive safe.” He nods, opening his umbrella and stepping out into the rain. I watch his car disappear down the street before heading back inside. Lately, I’ve been playing this online game Ethan used to be obsessed with back in high school. When he found out, he just lent me his old account. He was totally nonchalant about it. “That game has a ton of boring starter quests. Just use my account; I haven’t played in ages anyway.” I knew about his reputation back then, and even before we got married, he was upfront about his past – lots of ex-girlfriends, lots of online “friendships.” He’d said if his history bothered me, we shouldn’t get married. So, logging into the game and seeing a friends list full of female avatars wasn’t exactly a shock. It did sting a little, though. Thinking about it, he probably doesn’t even remember half the girls he flirted with using this account. I eventually managed to tease him about it, trying to sound casual. “Wow, you were quite the popular guy back in the day.” He just laughed. “That was a long time ago.” Tonight, like usual, I log into the game. Suddenly, I get an invite from a player with a little kitten avatar. My finger slips while trying to decline, and I accidentally accept, landing right in her private lobby. Thankfully, I hit the exit button fast. All I hear is a tearful “Ethan?” before I’m back on my own screen. But she’s persistent, spamming me with party invites. Fine. I type back: Not him. He sold the account. The girl fires back immediately: You say that on every account… Are you that scared of me? Ugh. Not sure what to do, I screenshot the chat and send it to Ethan. What now? He replies with a string of periods, followed by three words: Delete her. So ruthless. I hesitate. I mean, technically she’s a rival, but she’s still just a girl. I try a gentler approach: Ethan’s married now. You shouldn’t waste your time hanging onto him. There are plenty of other fish in the sea, better ones too. Her response is instant: Who are you to him? She types fast. Girl: Like I care. That’s hilarious. People get divorced all the time, you know? Her audacity leaves me speechless. Okay, no more Mrs. Nice Guy. Me: I’m his wife. Silence from her end. A long silence. I start to think maybe she’s finally given up. Then, a new message pops up. Her: Are you Jessica? … Let me tell you a joke. Jessica is my husband’s “one that got away.” One of them, anyway. 2 It’s totally normal that she doesn’t recognize the name of my husband’s actual wife. Me and Ethan getting married was pure luck. Like, win-the-lottery kind of luck. Dumb luck. It was Memorial Day weekend. My parents, who live out of state, were visiting the family plot at the cemetery, lighting incense for my grandpa and other relatives. Right next to them, my future mother-in-law was doing the same for her family. My mom overheard her muttering to a headstone about how Ethan was almost thirty and still single. One thing led to another, my mom heard her, and the two of them started chatting. They compared notes, realized Ethan and I lived in the same city. Then came the photo exchange. Both moms were thrilled. Before I knew it, they’d orchestrated a blind date for us. It wasn’t until Ethan and I added each other on WeChat—yeah, we still used that sometimes—that we realized we’d gone to the same middle and high school for six years. Now we even worked in the same city. The only part of his life I missed was college. We went out for dinner once. Afterward, Ethan sent me a voice message on WeChat. I can still remember the deep, magnetic quality of his voice. He said, “Let’s be honest. I just need to get married to satisfy my family. I’ve dated a lot of people, and fair warning, I probably won’t fall in love with you. If we get married, the house will be in your name, and you won’t have to worry about chores or anything. If you’re okay with all that, and you’re interested, maybe we could give it a shot.” So, this marriage was basically optional for him. He was willing to marry me purely because he thought I didn’t love him either. His last girlfriend, the one he dated for six months, wanted to talk marriage. He thought she was too dramatic and needy, so he broke up with her. In his eyes, I was different. Anatomically female, sure, but otherwise, just like one of the guys. Loved gaming, kind of oblivious, seemed totally uninterested in romance. I know that the second I show any sign of actually loving him, he’ll file for divorce without hesitation. Ethan often reminds me, “If you meet someone you like, just tell me. Don’t cheat. We can get divorced amicably. Same goes for me.” I’ve heard it so many times my ears are practically calloused. I play along, pretending to be indifferent. “Nah, I’m good. Life’s pretty free right now, it’s great. I’m perfectly happy.” He seems satisfied with the status quo too. Even though he was the backdrop to my entire middle and high school existence. Somehow, we always just missed each other. I was completely insignificant in his world. Fine. Jessica it is, then. Jessica’s name carries more weight than mine, apparently. I type back to the kitten avatar girl: Yeah, that’s me, Jessica. We’ve been married for two years. She finally shuts up. A moment later, I check my friends list – she’s deleted me. Clearly, she knew when to back down. Gaming is my biggest passion, besides Ethan. I get completely absorbed and, oops, it’s suddenly past 1 AM. Just as I shut down the computer, I hear the front door open. Ethan is taking off his shoes in the entryway as I emerge from the study, heading towards the bedroom. Seeing me still awake, he frowns. “Playing games this late? Still not asleep?” I yawn. “Yeah. Going now.” “You haven’t changed into pajamas,” he notes, his expression disapproving. “Haven’t showered either, have you?” I know about his neat-freak tendencies. Caught, I nod awkwardly. The next thing I know, he’s dragging me towards the bathroom. “Get cleaned up before you get into my bed.” Showering with my high school crush… another win for today.

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  • Love at First Sight, Three Years of Forever

    That night, the moon was hidden, and the wind was kicking up. I downed that stuff—the kind that makes your whole body flush hot—and staked out the path my dream guy always took. It hit me faster than I expected; I was already feeling dizzy. But hey, persistence pays off, right? That had to be him up ahead. Same jacket, same ridiculously handsome profile. A wicked grin spread across my face as I charged forward and tackled him. There was no way he wouldn’t be mine once we crossed that line. Force his hand, make it a done deal. “Hey, Maya—” Whatever he was about to say got cut off when my overheated brain decided planting a kiss on him was the only logical next step. I didn’t really register his voice, just… wait, did my crush get taller? Whatever. No turning back now. Go for it, girl! Opportunity knocks but once. The next morning, I woke up and stared in horror at the handsome head belonging to my long-suffering best guy friend, Ethan. I glanced down at myself. Bra still on. No aches, no pains. Did anything actually happen last night? It felt like… nothing happened? Honestly, I couldn’t remember a single thing, except that my head was pounding. Snapping back to reality, looking at that annoyingly good-looking head, I wanted to cry. I’d ambushed the wrong guy. All that courage I’d scraped together, wasted! Does anyone understand my pain?! Furious, I gave Ethan a light kick. He grunted and rolled over. Okay, good, still asleep. I smacked my forehead. Right, escape! Now’s the time to bail. I scrambled into my clothes, eased the door shut behind me, and mentally whispered, Ethan, please don’t hate me for this. Naturally, I didn’t see the smile spread across the face of the man on the bed as soon as I was gone. 2 I mentally kicked myself over and over again. I picked up the pace. Today was the day Alex—my crush—had invited everyone to tour the Northgate Project. It was a design project Alex had landed two years ago, and the building was finally complete. The client invited our team for a tour and the ribbon-cutting ceremony. Since most of the design group was in Crestview anyway, pretty much everyone was going. Right now, all I felt was immense regret for whatever I thought I was doing last night trying to lure Alex out. Not only did my master plan spectacularly fail, but now I had to drag myself to this ceremony, exhausted and full of dread. And the worst part? Ethan would be there too. When it rains, it pours. That was my life right now. But time waits for no heartbroken idiot. I touched up my makeup and rushed over to Northgate. “Maya, you made it! Come on, we were just waiting for you,” Alex said with a smile, standing by the entrance. My crush, ever the responsible team lead! God, he was perfect! The man I loved! Damn it. But thinking about last night brought a wave of guilt crashing over me. Ugh, Alex, I’m so sorry! “Morning, Alex…” I managed, forcing a smile. “Morning. Hey, you’ve got dark circles. Didn’t sleep well?” It was a normal question, but it sent me into a minor panic. “Were you too excited about seeing Northgate? There’ll be plenty more moments like this. Getting enough sleep is important.” Leave it to Alex to be so thoughtful. He always knew how to smooth things over. I gratefully took the out he offered. “Yeah… yeah, that was it.” He patted my shoulder reassuringly. “Relax.” We walked inside and… oh, crap. The first person I saw was Ethan. He was lounging in a chair, yawning repeatedly. His expression flickered slightly when he saw me. Ethan raised an eyebrow. “Well, look who decided to show up…” I couldn’t meet his eyes. Cold sweat started prickling my skin. In that instant, I was so embarrassed I could have dug a hole to China with my bare hands, or maybe just carved out a Barbie Dreamhouse with my toes. Alex, the things I do for you. Taking advantage of the moment, I snuck a glance at my crush. His face was bathed in the soft morning light, his eyes warm and smiling. Handsome from literally every angle. Definitely the man I loved. Worth it! Sob. “Why are you blushing?” Ethan unfolded his long legs, strolled over, and teased, “Looks like someone had a rough night. Got into some trouble?” Oh god, oh god. I instinctively edged closer to Alex, my face turning the color of a boiled lobster. Ethan’s expression darkened for a split second before his smile returned. “Still blushing? What, did you finally notice how incredibly handsome I am?” He smirked, moving closer. Somebody save me! I didn’t dare answer anything Ethan said, couldn’t even look at him. 3 “Okay everyone, looks like you’re all here? If you’ll follow me this way,” the project manager announced, stepping into the room. I looked at the manager like he was an angel, my savior! I nodded eagerly. Alex nodded to the group. “Let’s go.” The manager wanted to chat with Alex, so I naturally got separated from him. Desperate to avoid Ethan, I grabbed Chloe, the youngest girl on the team—a freshman—and started chatting frantically. She was one of the few people I felt comfortable with. The rest were seniors like me. Thinking about graduation hitting us soon… time really flew. Chloe barely got a few words in before she winked at Ethan over my shoulder. What?! Alarm bells went off in my head. Oh God, give me a break. Ethan immediately caught her drift and ambled over to my side. Figures his brain would work fast now. I instantly turned my head to stare out the window, pretending I hadn’t seen a thing. “Hey, what’s with the cold shoulder?” Ethan tapped my shoulder. I jumped like he’d electrocuted me and put some distance between us. He immediately closed the gap. After a few rounds of this awkward dance, my back was practically against the wall. Trapped, I mumbled without looking up, “Nothing. Why would you think that?” “See? You won’t even look at me,” Ethan said, leaning down, trying to see my face. “Hey!” I yelped, slapping his hand away without thinking. Instantly, all eyes were on us. Alex shot me a questioning look. What’s going on? I shook my head, mortified, and buried my face in my hands. Ethan looked puzzled. “Did you take something weird today?” I didn’t even want to bother answering him. Wait a second. Ethan seemed… normal? Just like his usual annoying self. Could it be… he didn’t remember last night? If that was true… my heart leaped with joy. But I couldn’t be sure. What if he was just messing with me? After mulling it over, I decided silence was the best strategy. Ethan’s voice actually sounded concerned. “Are you actually sick? Whoa, if you are, you’ll have to miss the secret activity tonight.” He winked. “Secret activity? What secret activity?” His words immediately piqued my interest. I looked up sharply. Ethan just shrugged nonchalantly. “You’ll find out tonight.” “And,” he leaned closer, whispering near my ear, “it involves Alex.” His breath tickled my ear. I couldn’t help but rub it, a faint blush creeping up my neck. Ethan chuckled softly beside me, then mercifully left me alone. What was that about, leaving me hanging? Jerk! I desperately wanted to ask Alex, but he was swamped, and so were we. No chance. I guess I’d just have to wait impatiently until the big secret reveal tonight.

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  • This Little Brother is Wild and Sweet

    Seriously, out of over 300 million people in the US, you probably couldn’t find someone having worse luck than me. First, I didn’t get into grad school. Then, the guy I chased for three whole years finally became my boyfriend, only to dump me less than three months later to study abroad. Right after that, my own mother, Mrs. Miller, used every trick in the book—threats and bribes—to get me to meet her best friend’s son. Coffee Shop “How old did you say you were?” “Nineteen.” Oh, good grief! I never thought the “accomplished, handsome young man” Mom raved about would turn out to be just a kid! I rubbed my temples, feeling a headache coming on. What do you do when your own mother is completely unreliable? Help needed ASAP, seriously urgent. “What’s wrong? Is there a problem?” “Look, kiddo, do you know how old I am?” “Yeah, twenty-two. They say age is just a number, right? I think it’s perfect.” He adjusted his glasses, flashing this killer smile with two big white teeth. Kinda cocky but charming. I spaced out for a second. “Ahem,” realizing I’d drifted off, I shook my head to clear the thoughts, covering my awkwardness with a cough. “Uh, kiddo, I really don’t think we’re a match. I’m not into younger guys.” “So, what type do you like, then?” Oh my god, oh my god. I didn’t want to swoon, but he was smiling at me. I wanted to control myself, but, but, but… he just had this way about him! Who could resist that? Okay, calm down. I secretly pinched myself. “I like mature, stable guys. Someone who can take care of people. You’re just too young for me, kiddo.” I already had one infuriating younger brother at home; did I really need another one to ruin my peace? Nope, couldn’t let myself be swayed by good looks. Sure, he was handsome, but he was young. Sure, his smile was amazing, but he was young. Sure, his voice was nice, but he was YOUNG! “How do you know I can’t take care of someone? And how do you know I’m not mature and stable enough? Have you tried me out, older girl?” He had a smirk playing on his lips. If I wasn’t mistaken, that was a cold smirk, right? Right? “Chloe? What are you doing here?” That voice. I froze solid. I knew exactly who it was. After hearing it for over three years, it was hard not to recognize. My smile vanished. Honestly, I wasn’t sure what expression was on my face. Anger? Sadness? Disgust? Nausea? This messy mix of feelings peaked when I saw the woman next to him. Mark Davis. The boyfriend I’d chased for three years in college. We were together less than three months before he decided to go abroad, telling me with some twisted sense of righteousness, “I’m worried you’ll fall for someone else while I’m gone, so let’s break up for now. If you still like me when I come back in a few years, we can get back together.” In that moment, I suddenly felt like a joke in Mark’s eyes. No, a joke to the entire English department at Hudson University. Everyone knew how head-over-heels I was for Mark. Everyone knew Mark had ruthlessly dumped his girlfriend right before leaving the country. And the woman beside him, Jessica Bell, was Mark’s childhood friend. She always found ways to trash-talk me in public, saying I wasn’t good enough for Mark. That I didn’t deserve to be his girlfriend. “Chloe?” Suddenly, a handsome face zoomed into my view, startling me so much that the tears welling up in my eyes retreated. I stared blankly at him. “Ex-boyfriend?” he asked. I nodded numbly. His eyes darted around mischievously, then he lowered his voice, “You’ve got three seconds. Be my girlfriend, and I’ll get your back.” The moment I grabbed his hand, I felt like I’d lost my mind. We’d literally broken up yesterday, and today I had a new boyfriend right in front of my ex. But what did it matter? Jerks needed to be put in their place. I turned around gracefully. “Fancy meeting you here. I’m just having coffee with my boyfriend. What about you guys?” “See, Mark? I told you she was easy, didn’t I? You didn’t believe me, but now you see.” The drama queen beside him started her performance, clinging to his arm and putting on a fake sweet act. This kind of insult used to happen all the time. Predictably, Mark would question me about it next. “Chloe, what is really going on?” Yep, there it was. He put on his betrayed, heartbroken, pitiful face. Usually, at this point, I’d frantically explain myself, and only then would his expression soften. But this time, I wasn’t going to. “Ma’am,” before I could even open my mouth, the kiddo jumped in, ready to roast her. “You’re probably getting on in years, maybe your hearing isn’t what it used to be. I suggest you see an ear specialist. Oh, and while you’re at it, maybe get your eyes checked too, since they seem to be just for decoration.” He had somehow moved next to me, stepping forward slightly, one arm around my shoulder, the other hand taking mine. He interlocked our fingers and waved them right in front of Mark and Jessica. “My Chloe already told you, she has a boyfriend now. Don’t go associating any random losers with our Chloe.” He turned slightly to face Mark. “And you… the ex-boyfriend, right? Chloe often says, a good ex-boyfriend should basically be dead. Look, you weren’t great as a boyfriend; now that you’re an ex, you could at least try to be good at that, couldn’t you?” I secretly gave him a thumbs-up. Mark’s face turned livid. He spun around and stormed off, his little follower scurrying after him. 2: Might As Well Give It a Try “Hahahaha, kiddo, you’re absolutely savage! How are you so good at shutting people down? That felt amazing, hahaha…” Suddenly, I felt this huge release, lighter than I had in three whole years. But there was still a knot of something uncomfortable, heavy in my chest. Compared to my roaring laughter, he was completely calm, the earlier aggressive vibe totally gone. He pulled me back down to sit, settling beside me. I was still trying to process his quick changes when he sighed softly, patted my shoulder, and said, “Go ahead and cry if you want to. You can lean on my shoulder for a bit.” That broke me. Tears I didn’t even know were there started streaming down my face. Failing the grad school entrance, getting dumped by my boyfriend… all the stress and hidden emotions I’d suppressed for so long just burst out. “Why are you so annoying?” I glared at him through my tears. He gently turned my head to rest on his shoulder, saying nothing. After pulling myself together in the restroom, he offered to walk me home. On the way, I carefully started, “Um, kiddo… can I, like, take back what I said earlier?” He instantly understood and shot me down firmly, “Nope.” Damn it! I rubbed my temples. What a mess. I must have had a total brain malfunction back there. He suddenly stopped walking. “I’m serious. Even though I’m still in school, I have a steady income every month. You can have my debit card, spend whatever you want. Don’t worry about me not being able to support you, and don’t feel like you need to save my money. I have clear plans for my future, and you’re in every single one of them, so you don’t have to worry about me being immature. As for taking care of someone, I haven’t done it before, but I can learn. Can you give me that chance?” “But… you don’t even like me. Why me?” I was a bit stunned. “How do you know I don’t like you?” he countered. “We just met today! Are you going to tell me it was love at first sight?” He shook his head. “Not exactly. The day you start liking me back, I’ll tell you. For now, can you just give me a chance to be with you? Let’s try things out. If you really feel like you can’t accept me, then you can say you regret it. I won’t stop you.” Seeing the determination in his eyes, somehow, I couldn’t bring myself to say no. Whatever, I thought. Might as well give it a try. When he gets tired of it, I won’t have to deal with rejecting him. He walked behind me all the way home. When we got to my apartment building, I suddenly realized I knew almost nothing about him. I pulled out my phone. “Need your number… boyfriend.” He blinked, then grinned. “Sure.” Kinda dorky, actually cute. “So, may I ask my boyfriend’s name?” “Ethan Shaw. Ethan, like the name. Shaw, like George Bernard.” “I’m Chloe Miller.” “I know.” “Huh? How did you know?” He just smiled without answering. After a moment, he patted my head gently. “Go on up.” Before falling asleep that night, I habitually checked my phone. I saw he’d texted me about ten minutes ago: Goodnight. The next day at noon, heading to class, I was shocked to find him waiting downstairs from my apartment. “What are you doing here?” “Keeping you company in class.” “Oh.” I walked a few steps before it hit me. “Wait, with me? Not just walking me to class?” “Yep.” He repeated it clearly, as if worried I hadn’t heard. “Keeping you company in class.” Just as I expected, the moment he walked into the classroom, there was a commotion. No surprise there – he was ridiculously good-looking and dressed way too cool. Today he wore a blue and white baseball jacket, black casual pants, and still had his glasses on. On the surface, he looked like a good boy, but it couldn’t hide the edgy vibe he gave off. He just had that natural “keep away” aura, especially when he wasn’t smiling, looking like he might pick a fight any second. When the professor came in, he slumped onto the desk and started sleeping. Halfway through the lecture, my phone started buzzing non-stop in my bag pocket. I opened my messenger app to find I’d been added to a group chat, already flooded with 99+ messages. Rolling my eyes, I started scrolling up.

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  • After Dating a Good Guy

    My fiancé, Alex, after six long years climbing the ladder at his company, finally got promoted from a junior position to department supervisor. At the celebratory dinner, Alex proudly held my hand as we went to toast the Vice President who’d championed him. That’s when I realized the VP who’d been mentoring Alex all this time was a client from my old life. The kind of client who could book me for the entire night for a hefty price tag. 1 I got into the life at eighteen and got out at thirty. Ten years – feels like forever and no time at all. By the time I decided to leave that world behind, I’d managed to scrape together enough for a car, a down payment on a small place, and a little bit in savings. Given my line of work, I didn’t exactly broadcast my modest success. I knew all too well how vicious gossip could be. It could haunt families for generations. The last thing I wanted was for my parents back home to be shamed by the neighbors because of me. So, before I officially “retired,” I lined up a backup plan. No, a future. The classic “solid guy.” His name was Alex Thompson. From the same small town as me. Average looking, a little soft around the middle, not particularly tall – the kind of guy who blends into a crowd. But he was the only person from our town who’d gone to a prestigious university and landed a great job in New York City, even managing to buy an apartment there. Sure, it was a tiny studio, maybe 500 square feet, and he only had the down payment covered, but back in our little corner of the world, that was like reaching the moon. More importantly, he’d been living in NYC for six years. One more year, and he’d have residency, really putting down roots. Besides the NYC stability, what really pushed me towards Alex was seeing what happened to my friend Jenny, who’d gotten out six months before me. She’d been around the block too. She thought she had her escape route planned out – becoming the mistress of some older, moderately wealthy guy. He promised her a house in her hometown and a million dollars if she gave him a son, enough to set her up for life. But before the baby was even born, his wife found out. She showed up, attacked Jenny viciously, and Jenny lost the baby. Worse, the damage meant she could never have kids again. She ended up with nothing. All of us girls at the club heard the story, shared sympathetic sighs, and took it as a hard lesson. So, I pulled out all the stops. I charmed Alex completely. Made him believe I was the only woman for him. Even when his parents argued I wasn’t good enough – wrong background, wrong education, and let’s face it, my looks screamed “trouble” – they figured even if we got married, he couldn’t hold onto me. But Alex didn’t waver. Somehow, he convinced his parents to back down. They set the wedding date for Memorial Day weekend this year. And just a few days ago, he got that promotion. His salary doubled, and his position at the company was more secure than ever. I was starting to genuinely look forward to it – escaping my small-town past, settling down in NYC, starting fresh. But then, that celebration dinner threw a wrench into my carefully constructed, seemingly perfect new life. 2 “Chloe, the VP’s over there. Mr. Henderson. I owe him a lot; he’s looked out for me since I started. This promotion is thanks to him too. Let’s go raise a glass.” That evening, at the department dinner celebrating Alex’s promotion, he pulled me, all dressed up, towards his Vice President. I’d agreed to come mostly because we were getting married soon – seemed like the supportive fiancée thing to do. Plus, I wanted to subtly signal to any hopeful young women in Alex’s department that he was taken. Even a “solid guy” like Alex, especially one who just became a supervisor, could attract attention from newcomers looking for a shortcut up the ladder. “Okay,” I said, getting up gracefully and walking beside Alex towards the circle of people surrounding Mr. Henderson. Even before we reached him, I had a nagging feeling I’d seen this VP somewhere before. Having met countless men over the years, I initially dismissed it as mistaken identity, my memory playing tricks. I didn’t dwell on it. But when Alex and I stopped right in front of him, my blood ran cold. Alex’s Vice President. I had seen him before. Not just seen him – I knew him from the club where I used to work. He’d specifically requested me several times. The all-night kind of request. I never, ever imagined I’d run into a former client like this, in this setting. “Mr. Henderson, thank you so much for your support on our department’s projects. I’d like to propose a toast. This is my fiancée, Chloe Miller.” Alex was so focused on showing his respect that he didn’t notice the color drain from my face. Of course, my years of practice in hiding my true feelings helped immensely. “Alex, my boy, you’re a lucky man. Such a beautiful fiancée,” Mr. Henderson said, his eyes sweeping over me with perfect corporate politeness before landing on the standard compliment. Not a trace of anything inappropriate. The last time I’d dealt with Henderson must have been about a year ago. Back then, I wore the heavy, uniform makeup favored by the club. Maybe he didn’t remember me, or maybe he just didn’t recognize me without the war paint. If he did recognize me, knowing his usual sleazy nature, he wouldn’t be acting this professionally. I tried to reassure myself silently. Focus. Act natural. “You’re too kind, Mr. Henderson. We’d both like to toast you,” Alex suggested respectfully. “Excellent,” Henderson beamed, agreeing readily and clinking glasses. He clinked Alex’s glass, then mine. And in that brief moment, the way his eyes lingered just a fraction too long, the slight pressure as his glass touched mine – I knew. He recognized me. And he already had ideas. 3 “Chloe, what’s wrong? You look pale. Are you feeling okay?” As soon as we were out of Henderson’s direct line of sight, Alex noticed something was off. “No, I’m fine. Just not used to drinking, I guess. I need to use the restroom.” I practically fled. Once inside the ladies’ room, I leaned against the cool tile, forcing myself to breathe, to think. Look, people in my old line of work, even though it’s not something you advertise, generally follow an unwritten code. Outside the club, once the transaction is over, you’re strangers. That goes for us and the clients. It’s an understanding. But Henderson… the reason he made me so nervous, so thrown off, wasn’t just because he was a regular. He was infamous among the girls. The kind of client everyone dreaded. Cheap, demanding, always trying to push boundaries. Always trying to get the most while paying the least. He’d even complain afterwards, trying to get discounts. But we couldn’t refuse clients. And he used to request me specifically. A lot. To save money, he’d tried more than once to bypass the club, suggesting private arrangements. I always shut him down flat. I knew he held a grudge, always looking for a chance to cause trouble for me. It’s just that I’d suddenly disappeared from the scene, gotten out, so he never got the chance. Now, meeting like this, him recognizing me immediately… he wouldn’t let this go easily. Worse, he saw me with Alex. Someone as conniving as him would instantly figure out what I was after with Alex. Alex wasn’t rich, not by NYC standards, and maybe not irreplaceable in the grand scheme of things. But he was the best, most stable option I could realistically find. Plus, he genuinely seemed to love me. We’d been together almost a year, and he happily supported me. Even though my “job” at my boutique barely paid the bills and had flexible hours (meaning I rarely had to go in early or stay late), he never complained. He’d bring me breakfast before he left for work, order lunch delivery for me, come home with groceries and cook dinner. He even did the dishes. Never asked me to lift a finger around the house. A whole year, day in and day out, without a single complaint. He was the definition of a solid, dependable guy. On top of that, Alex was an only child. His parents ran a small business back home, enough to support themselves in retirement. They could even help with childcare when we eventually had kids. Alex and his family represented a future I couldn’t afford to lose. It felt like my one and only chance. So, I absolutely could not let Alex find out about my past. I couldn’t let Henderson scare him away. 4 “Honey, my friend back in Chicago, she’s going through a rough patch with her boyfriend. She’s really down and asked if I could come visit for a few days. My boutique… could you maybe check on it while I’m gone? You don’t have to stress about it, the two girls working there are pretty reliable. I’m just worried something unexpected might pop up and they wouldn’t know how to handle it.” After agonizing over it, I caved. I agreed to meet Henderson privately. I knew exactly what that meeting implied. But for the sake of my future, my carefully planned happiness, I felt I had no choice. To avoid suspicion from Alex, I used my friend in another city as an excuse. “Chicago? For how long? Do you have enough money? Let me Venmo you a thousand, just in case. If you need more, just tell me, I get paid again soon.” Alex, bless his trusting heart, was the same as always. Believed whatever I said, never questioned, just did his best to make sure I was taken care of. Before I could even refuse, the notification popped up on my phone. “$1000 received from Alex Thompson.” “No, honey, really. Business at the shop has been okay lately, I have enough. Besides, payday is still two weeks away for you. Keep your money.” A pang of guilt hit me. I genuinely didn’t want his money this time. Besides, I wasn’t broke. Aside from my secret savings, I had the boutique. Right here in NYC. Okay, working nights wasn’t glamorous, but the kind of men who frequented those places often had serious money. I knew my looks wouldn’t last forever, so while I was still “in demand,” I’d deliberately cultivated relationships with a few successful businessmen. Picked their brains about how things worked. One guy, a clothing wholesaler, went from client to business contact. Online shopping hit my little brick-and-mortar store hard. It wasn’t making me rich, but it paid the bills. Just enough to survive. Which, conveniently, fit perfectly with the backstory I’d crafted for myself – ten years working dead-end retail jobs back home. Nobody in our hometown suspected a thing. “Baby, your money is your money. Keep it for yourself. My money is for taking care of you.” Alex refused when I tried to send it back. “Don’t worry about me. I don’t smoke, I eat at the company cafeteria for lunch and dinner. I just need a few bucks for the subway. You go have fun with your friend. And hey, if she wants to come here to clear her head, just let me know ahead of time, I can crash at the office or find somewhere else to stay.” He’d thought of everything, anticipated potential issues, and had solutions ready. So considerate. “Alex…” Moved by his simple, steady kindness – a stark contrast to the world I came from – I wrapped my arms around him. “Don’t get emotional over little things, Chloe,” he said softly, patting my back. “This is just what you do for someone you love. And I promise, I’m going to work even harder, make more money, so I can provide for you and our future kids. As long as I’m around, you won’t have to worry about a thing.” He spoke with such sincerity. No flowery promises, but it meant more than any fancy words could. “Okay,” I nodded, burying my face in his shoulder. At that moment, whatever my initial reasons, I truly wanted this life with Alex. I would find a way to deal with Henderson, to remove any obstacle standing between us. 5 “Mr. Henderson. Long time no see. Hope you’re well.” Arriving at the hotel room he’d specified, I switched on my old professional persona. Bright smile, warm greeting, perfectly poised, just like back at the club. Even though looking at him made my stomach turn. “Chloe, my dear. It has been too long. I’ve missed you terribly.” Before the words were fully out of my mouth, Henderson lunged towards me, grabbing, just like he used to at the club – pay the money, then immediately try to get his hands on you, afraid of missing a second of what he paid for. Except this time, as he clearly intended, it was supposed to be free. Too bad for him. I was out of the life. And I’d found a man who treated me right. I was determined to be better now. I sidestepped him smoothly, almost instinctively. Besides wanting to protect myself and my future with Alex, I knew that if I let Henderson get what he wanted today, he’d be like gum stuck to my shoe. Impossible to get rid of, ever. “Chloe, what’s this? Think just because you snagged some up-and-comer, you can forget what you are?” Predictably, Henderson’s face changed instantly. The mask dropped, replaced by a sneer. The insults started. “Mr. Henderson, it’s good to see you again,” I began, keeping my smile fixed, professional. “But as you noted, I haven’t worked in that capacity for a long time now. And if I recall correctly, our past interactions were always strictly business. Settled upon completion.” Maintaining composure was rule number one from day one in that business. Besides, my goal today was to solve a problem, not start a fight. “You’re not working, yet you came. So, you have something you want to discuss.” Henderson hadn’t gotten to his position at a Fortune 500 company just by being cheap. He wasn’t stupid. “Mr. Henderson, you have a beautiful family, a successful career. You can afford any companion you desire at those clubs. Surely, you don’t need to waste your time on me. Of course,” I lowered my voice slightly, adopting the deferential tone he clearly craved, “if I somehow offended you in the past, please, tell me now. I sincerely apologize for any past indiscretion on my part. I was young and foolish. I’d like to make amends.” I practically bowed, trying to give him the sense of power he seemed to need. “But right now, Chloe,” he said, eyes glinting with amusement, “I want you.” He looked at me like I was a trapped animal, enjoying my futile struggles. “Mr. Henderson, why risk complications? Why risk upsetting your home life over someone insignificant like me? Surely, this is something money can resolve. No need for unnecessary drama.” I hinted, not too subtly, at buying his silence. “Ah, Chloe. Do you know why, out of all the girls at the club, I always preferred you? Besides that pretty face, you were always the smartest one. But intelligence used wrongly is useless.” “You think my wife,” he scoffed, “is the kind of woman who’d cause a scene over some girl from a club? You think she doesn’t know men have their… diversions? If she couldn’t handle that, she wouldn’t have lasted this long as Mrs. Henderson.” He saw right through my veiled threat about his wife, and he didn’t care. He looked smug, as if he’d anticipated my every move. “But you, Chloe, you’re different. No, wait. Alex is different. Alex is a decent guy, building his life through hard work. A man like that, a successful, driven man? He could never tolerate his wife being… well, being someone like you. Someone available to any man with the right amount of cash.” “If I remember correctly, Alex just bought property in the city. Another year, and he’s fully established. Marry him, and you’re set for life. NYC residency, financial security.” “But,” he leaned in slightly, “if Alex breaks up with you now? You get nothing. You won’t find another guy like him. You’ll end up back looking for sugar daddies, or marrying someone old enough to be your father.” He had it all mapped out, my potential futures laid bare. In his eyes, I was a cornered fox, no match for his cunning. Completely at his mercy. “What do you want?” I finally asked, my voice tight. My options were dwindling fast. Besides, Henderson was right. Society judges women far more harshly than men for the same behavior. A man’s indiscretions are often forgiven. A woman’s past? It can destroy her. “Simple,” he purred, leaning back, confident. “You just be a good girl. Be available when I call. Be as… accommodating… as you were back at the club. Do that, and I guarantee, Alex will never know your little secret. Everything you want from him, you’ll get.” The disgusting pig. He wanted a mistress without paying the price. “I… I need to think about this, Mr. Henderson,” I stammered. Even though it felt like there was only one path left, I couldn’t bring myself to agree immediately. “Fine,” he smirked, clearly sensing victory. “After all, you’re a respectable lady now. Besides your fiancé, I’ll be your only other man.” His tone dripped with smug satisfaction. “But don’t take too long deciding, Chloe. Otherwise, Alex might receive some… interesting information. And then, poof! All your carefully laid plans go up in smoke.”

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  • Planning a Wedding for My Husband and His Old Flame

    I was sick. The doctor frowned, shaking his head as he looked over the test results. “If there are any loose ends you need to tie up, you should do it soon. It’s only a matter of days now.” I stared blankly at the pale white wall, lost in thought. Handed a death sentence, what did I want to do most? What I wanted most was probably to help my husband, Lucas, find the woman he’d never stopped thinking about, his old flame, and throw them a huge wedding. Let them live happily ever after once I was gone, forever together. Bang! The examination room door flew open. Lucas stormed in and immediately punched the doctor. “You quack! Do you even know how to read results?! What the hell are you talking about? I oughta beat the crap out of you!” I sighed, rubbing my temples. The noise was giving me a headache. I waved my assistant forward to pull the flailing Lucas away, apologized to the doctor as he left, and the room fell silent. “How old are you, still starting fights like this? Think you’re still twenty-something, taking on three guys at once?” I pulled out a tissue to wipe the blood from the corner of Lucas’s mouth. “Dr. Miller knows how to handle himself, you know. If he hadn’t cut you some slack because of me, you’d be short a few teeth right now.” Lucas’s eyes turned red, his dimples deep enough to drown in. “He had it coming, running his mouth like that! What kind of illness hits that fast? No time for treatment even? He was basically cursing you! I swear, I won’t feel better until I teach him a lesson!” Lucas stood up to leave again, but I held him back tightly. Still, being sick, I didn’t have much strength. After a few tugs, I started gasping for air, coughing violently. The tissue in my hand instantly bloomed red. Only then did Lucas start to believe it might be real. He helped me into a chair, and I caught my breath, finally able to speak in broken sentences after a long pause. “Honey, this sickness… it didn’t just start. I started coughing up blood a month ago, but we were both so busy then. Too busy to even notice what was happening to our own bodies. Thinking back now, I guess we brought this on ourselves.” Fat tears rolled down Lucas’s cheeks. He squeezed my hand, his eyes filled with pain and reluctance to let go. “There has to be a way! There has to be! We’ll go abroad. The medical care overseas is so much better, they can definitely…” I placed my hand over his mouth. “It’s no use, honey. I already consulted specialists abroad. Even if we sell the company, spend every penny we have, it would only buy me maybe another month. Is that worth it?” Faced with my question, Lucas’s loving gaze filled with hesitation. Risking the empire we’d built over fifteen years on someone who was definitely going to die… that wasn’t a good deal. But in front of the assistants, Lucas couldn’t admit that money mattered more than my life. Besides, we were always seen as the perfect, devoted couple. Even if he didn’t want to spend the money, he couldn’t be the one to say, “Let’s stop treatment.” Those words had to come from me. 2 “Lucas, honey, I know you love me. But I can’t bear to watch everything we built crumble. If that happened, I wouldn’t be able to rest in peace.” Lucas’s tears fell like broken strands of pearls onto my hand. He just shook his head, crying, not saying anything. I had to keep going. “Honestly, I’ve made peace with it. Everyone dies eventually, it’s just a matter of when. Meeting you was the best thing that ever happened to me. We’ve had fourteen years together. What more could I regret?” Hearing this, Lucas looked up. “Evelyn, don’t talk like that. I won’t let you.” I looked at his tear-streaked face and managed a small smile. “Lucas, saying I have no regrets is a lie. There is actually one thing you could help me fix.” Lucas’s tears stopped instantly. A flash of panic crossed his eyes. He was afraid I’d bring up money. I gently patted his head to soothe him. I wouldn’t. I didn’t want to talk about money right now. I only wanted to talk about feelings. “I’m worried that after I’m gone, there won’t be anyone to take care of you the way I do. I can’t stand the thought of you being alone for the rest of your life. If that happened, I wouldn’t be able to close my eyes, even in death.” I dabbed my eyes with a tissue, catching Lucas’s reaction out of the corner of my eye. He was wary, suspicious of every word coming out of my mouth. My hands slid from his head to his face. Lucas flinched like a startled puppy. “Take me to find Olivia Vance.” Lucas turned pale, but he forced a smile, pretending ignorance. “Olivia… Olivia Vance? Who’s that? A friend of yours?” I tapped his forehead playfully. “Isn’t she the one you could never forget?” “A week ago, you got drunk. You said her name all night long. I figure this girl must be someone I can trust.” “Putting you in her hands, I can rest easy.” My cold hand slid to Lucas’s neck. He swallowed hard, his lips trembling as he tried to explain. “I… I don’t… remember that? You must have misheard… yeah, misheard… You were my first love, Evelyn. How could I have some old flame? Impossible… there’s no one…” I cupped his face, offering what I hoped was my kindest smile. “Why are you so flustered, honey? Don’t be scared. I don’t mean any harm.” “Honestly, when I first heard you had someone else in your heart, I couldn’t handle it. I even thought about just… ending you in the middle of the night.” My cold hand tightened instinctively. Lucas shivered. “But when I actually had the chance, holding the knife over you, I couldn’t go through with it. Because I love you, you know?” Lucas nodded quickly. I stared straight into his eyes. “So now, I’ve let it go. Since I love you, I want you to be happy. Having a woman you love you for the rest of your life, taking care of you for me… I should be thanking her. Why would I do anything to hurt her?” “Lucas, they say people speak truthfully when they’re dying. I’ll arrange everything for the handover between me and Olivia. You won’t have to lift a finger. You’ll come out of this looking like the perfect, loving husband. You won’t be hurt at all.” “Can you just grant me this last wish?” Lucas nodded. I beamed, my smile as bright as a flower. 3 “Go now? Isn’t that too soon? Maybe you should rest tonight, let me prepare.” Lucas started panicking again when he saw me calling my assistant to bring the car around. “You heard the doctor, I don’t have much time. In a few days, it’s the anniversary of when you first told me you loved me. That day means the world to me. So, fourteen years later, on that same day, I want to hand you over to the woman you love. Then I can die without regrets.” Lucas fidgeted with the ring on his finger, mumbling, “Evelyn, stop talking about dying all the time. It’s bad luck.” Am I really in a position to care about bad luck anymore? Lucas said he’d arrange the car, told me to wait a bit. I sat calmly in the hospital’s VIP lounge and ordered something super spicy to eat, giving Lucas plenty of time to make his arrangements. I hoped he could come up with a good plan. I ate until I was so full I could barely move. Finally, Lucas ran back in. He frowned looking at the fiery red sauce in my takeout container. “Isn’t that too spicy for your stomach?” Lucas doesn’t eat spicy food, so I never did either. “Compared to the virus inside me, what’s a little spice?” “Does just seeing peppers upset your stomach?” Lucas quickly moved his hand away from his stomach. He’d had stomach problems for years. “Let’s go, the car’s ready.” Lucas took my hand and helped me into a warm RV. The hand I’d held for fourteen years felt as familiar and unexciting as holding my own. It’s funny I only realized that recently. Lying down in the RV, the exhaustion of the past few days finally caught up with me, and I fell asleep. I don’t know how long passed before the RV stopped, and Lucas gently shook me awake. “Evelyn, we’re here. Wake up, wake up.” I decided to scare him. I waited until he put his fingers under my nose to check my breathing, then suddenly snapped my eyes open, staring straight at him. “Don’t worry. I won’t let myself die until this is done.” Lucas awkwardly grabbed a coat and draped it over my shoulders. “It’s cold out, wear more.” He was always so considerate. That thoughtfulness and patience were part of why I chose him back then. Chose to start a business with him right after graduation, chose to live in a tiny $300-a-month basement apartment, chose to eat instant ramen for a year until I threw up just looking at it, chose to hide out sleeping in the car to dodge creditors over the holidays, chose to mortgage my parents’ house to help him rebuild… It was all my choice. I took his arm as I got out of the RV. The view that greeted me was genuinely shocking. “This… this is a cemetery?” 4 I looked at Lucas, confused. His eyes were red again, his voice choked with sobs. “Evelyn, I’m sorry. I did lie to you about this. Before you, I was involved with Olivia. But once I got together with you, we broke it off completely.” “The night I got drunk and called out her name… it was because she had passed away. I heard the news, and it hit me hard. She was so young, and we did love each other once. So… so I misspoke…” “I swear! I never thought of her as the one that got away! You’re the only one for me, Evelyn!” In the dark cemetery, Lucas raised his right hand, swearing an oath. He wasn’t afraid of getting struck by lightning, but I was. I let go of his arm and walked over to the gravestone engraved with the name OLIVIA VANCE, studying it closely. There was no photo on the headstone. No “daughter of,” no “wife of.” Just a solitary name. The ground around it was covered with fresh sod, sprinkled with old, dry dirt, but even so, you could tell the grave was new. This was what Lucas prepared during the time it took me to eat? I turned back to look at him. He had that same honest, almost naive look on his face he always wore. He never talked much, was polite to everyone. At thirty-four, he kept himself in good shape; put him in sweats, and he could pass for a college kid. He always told me where he was going when he went out for work dinners. He cooked for me, not just on anniversaries but regularly. He bought my parents a house back home. He was generous to my friends. He doted on me, so much so that everyone said how lucky I was to find such a great husband. But now, regarding my dying wish, he was lying to me. I didn’t know if he was scared of hurting me or worried that I, with nothing left to lose, would try to take his precious Olivia down with me. “Lucas, have I ever lied to you?” I bent down slightly to look him in the eye. “It’s been a while now. The doctors you consulted must have gotten back to you.” His hand was clenched in his pocket around the phone he kept checking. “Am I lying?” “If you still don’t believe me, I can announce to all our relatives that we’re parting ways amicably. Clear the path for your legitimate relationship with Olivia.” Lucas opened his mouth, still hesitating. “After you introduce her to me, I will publicly announce at the next company meeting that I’m transferring my thirty percent stake to you.” “This is the last thing I can leave you. I just want to witness you two getting together. Can’t you even grant me that?” My body trembled, my voice cracking with tears as I pleaded. I had never begged him for anything. This was the first and last time. Lucas finally nodded, but his brow remained furrowed, his hand clutching his stomach, which was clearly bothering him again. I didn’t want to watch. I pretended to faint. 5 When I opened my eyes again, it was to Lucas’s surprise. Family members from both sides were gathered around the bed, watching me intently. “Evelyn, just like you asked, I’ve called everyone here.” I managed a weak smile, patting Lucas’s head, praising him for handling things well. True, in all our years together, Lucas had always done what I asked. Whatever I told him to do, he did. So all our friends and family knew I called the shots in our house. Which meant any blame would also fall on me. I pushed myself up in bed. “Mom, Dad, Aunts, Uncles… Lucas must have told you about my illness. Over the years, Lucas and I went through a lot, suffered quite a bit, but thankfully, things turned around, and we achieved some success.” I lowered my head, chuckling softly. “I guess it’s just my bad luck. Just when things got good, I get sick like this. It doesn’t matter if I die, but I can’t stop worrying about Lucas. He’ll go crazy without someone by his side.” “So, I found someone to take my place. From now on, Ms. Olivia Vance will replace me as Lucas’s new wife. I will bless them always, hoping they stay together forever, happily ever after.” “Evie! How could you do this?!” My parents couldn’t believe their ears. Their daughter wasn’t even dead yet, and she was already arranging a new wife for her husband? What kind of crazy talk was this?! But Lucas’s parents looked pleased. “Folks, this is between the kids. We’re old now. We can’t help them much, so let’s not meddle too much.” “What do you mean ‘meddle too much’? Your son gets his happy ending after all the hardship, carefree and set up. Our daughter is so unlucky, hasn’t enjoyed any of the good life, and still has to worry about finding him a wife? Does the Thorne family get all the luck in the world?!” My dad couldn’t take it. He grabbed the back of Lucas’s neck, demanding an explanation. Lucas didn’t resist, just hung his head, crying silently, not saying a word. “Dad… Dad…” I struggled to get up, grabbing my dad’s arm. “It’s all my decision. I love Lucas. I want him to be happy.” “How can you be so foolish?” Dad let go, supporting my mom, who was close to fainting from crying. They knew I was stubborn; they could only let me have my way. “Lucas, everyone understands now. Aren’t you going to bring Olivia out to say hello?” Another blood-stained tissue dropped to the floor. Lucas looked around; only his family remained. He cautiously stepped out and brought in the long-awaited old flame.

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  • Let’s Go, Girls!

    It all started a few months back. One day, I was just killing time scrolling through TikTok when I randomly saw something about applying for a marriage license online through the state website. My boyfriend, Mark Evans, and I had been living together for about six months. We work in the same field; Mark’s five years older and is the associate editor at one of the big city papers. We met covering the same news event. He liked my work ethic and tried to recruit me to his paper. I turned him down, but we hit it off and got close pretty quickly. Mark had that smart, thoughtful vibe you get from guys who read a lot. Plus, he was funny, charming, tall, and handsome. Two months later, things just clicked, and we were officially together. He was driven at work, pulling all-nighters to chase a story, but he was always sweet and considerate to me. In the six months we were together, we never fought once. He remembered every anniversary and holiday, always with a thoughtful gift. Then came the surprise – you play with fire, you get burned. I got pregnant. When I told him, Mark said he was right in the middle of a major career push, and I was still technically an intern at my paper. Having a baby right now wasn’t great for either of our careers. He made sense, so I went to see a doctor. Unexpectedly, the doctor told me I have an arcuate uterus – kinda saddle-shaped. She said an abortion procedure would likely damage it, making it really hard to get pregnant again later. She strongly recommended keeping the baby. I passed the doctor’s advice onto Mark. He hesitated for just a second, then didn’t argue anymore. He promised me that as soon as things settled down at work, we’d go get the marriage license. So, when I saw that online marriage license application thing, it seemed kinda cool, like something fun to try out. I eagerly went to the state services portal, selected “Marriage License Application,” but no dice. I tried a few times, and it failed every time. That felt weird. Usually, if the site’s busy, you get an error message. But this was just… failure, no explanation. Something clicked. I switched over to the “Verify Marital Status” option – I know, kinda sketchy, but I had a bad feeling. The result hit me like a ton of bricks: Mark Evans was already married. I was the other woman?! Touching my belly, I just sat there, stunned, unable to process it. As a journalist, I’ve seen plenty of messed-up situations and ugly truths about people. But I couldn’t believe the man I shared my bed with for half a year could deceive me like this. Mark, the guy I thought was my perfect match, was just another cheating scumbag. I leaned back on the sofa, taking deep breaths to calm the storm inside me. Mark had covered his tracks incredibly well. I even had a few friends at his newspaper, and none of them knew he was married. How could I possibly get justice for myself against someone so meticulous, someone with a decent reputation in the journalism world? Was breaking up my only option? That evening, Mark cooked a nice dinner. I forced a smile while we ate, but my mind was racing. Were all those times he claimed to be working late actually spent with his wife? Did he cook for her at home too, laughing and talking with another woman…? I tossed and turned all night. Once I was sure Mark was fast asleep, I grabbed his phone, unlocked it with the passcode I’d sneakily memorized, and slipped into the bathroom to snoop. Well, wasn’t that a kick in the teeth. Mark wasn’t just married; he had a three-year-old son, a cute little guy. There was a family photo – the three of them, smiling, looking perfectly happy and sweet. Everything proved I was just some homewrecker. My hands wouldn’t stop shaking; I could barely hold the phone. It was almost funny, in a sick way. Usually, it’s the wife checking her husband’s phone for evidence of an affair. Here I was, the mistress, checking his phone for info on the wife. I managed a bitter smirk, but tears streamed down my face, hitting the dark screen. The phone reflected my tear-streaked, pathetic face back at me. That night, Mark slept soundly, his breathing deep and even. I didn’t sleep a wink, just listened to him breathe in the darkness, replaying every moment of our time together. Even now, part of me didn’t want to believe I’d fallen for a complete lie. I remembered that first assignment where we met – there was a minor landslide, and his first instinct was to shield me with his body. When we were out walking, he’d naturally kneel down to tie my shoelace if it came undone. Passing by a bridal shop, he’d excitedly talk about what our wedding would be like. And the ring he gave me – he said it was to lock me down, to cherish me forever… Tears soaked the pillow, dampening that soft spot deep inside me. A desperate, self-deceiving thought popped into my head. Maybe… maybe he and his wife had fallen out of love? Maybe he was planning to divorce her and then tell me the truth? 2 The next day, I put on some light makeup to hide the dark circles from my sleepless night and took a cab to the neighborhood near Mark’s house – his real house. There’s that cynical online joke: How do you deceive a woman? The top answer is: You don’t have to. If she loves you, she’ll deceive herself. My first reaction to seeing that was scorn. I thought I was a modern, rational woman. But faced with this, I realized I was just like most women, clinging to the slimmest hope against deceit. I needed to see what kind of woman Mark’s wife was. If she was crass, or let herself go, maybe my desperate theory held water… A thousand thoughts spun in my head as I slowly walked towards the residential complex. A chilling sensation started low in my belly. Maybe it was the lack of sleep, but I felt dizzy and weak, my breathing getting heavier. A man walking towards me bumped my shoulder lightly. My legs buckled, and I just crumpled to the sidewalk. “What the hell! Are you trying to pull a scam?” The man jumped back, pointing around. “Look, there are cameras everywhere! If you’re looking for a payout, try somewhere else.” I weakly shook my head, trying to ask him to help me up, but he just shot me an annoyed glare and walked off. The cold feeling in my abdomen intensified, followed by a sharp, stabbing pain. Something warm started trickling down my thigh… Blood. My hands trembled as I fumbled for my phone to call 911, but it was like all my strength had vanished. The phone slipped from my grasp, hit the pavement, and the screen went black. “Miss? Miss, are you okay?” An older woman rushed over to help me, but when she saw the blood, she abruptly pulled her hand back, stepped away, and yelled, “Oh my God, blood!” “Help me… call 911…” I begged, my lips trembling, my voice barely a whisper. A crowd was gathering, but no one stepped forward to help. Waves of pain washed over me. As I lost more blood, my consciousness started to fade. Just before everything went dark, someone finally took my icy hand. A gentle but firm voice said in my ear, “Don’t worry, the ambulance is almost here.” Her hand felt warm and steady, giving me a thread of hope to cling to. I looked up fuzzily at her face, and then everything went black… “Nurse, today’s my son’s birthday, I really need to get home. Could you please keep an extra eye on her?” I heard muffled voices outside the hospital room door as I slowly opened my eyes, staring blankly at the white ceiling tiles. “Oh, you’re awake?” A nurse came in and handed me a small piece of paper. “Someone already paid your medical bills. Here’s her contact info. You really lucked out meeting someone so kind.” I nodded my thanks and took the note. Written in neat, elegant handwriting was a name, Jessica Miller, and a phone number. I’d actually been awake for a while, just didn’t know how to face her, so I pretended to be asleep. Jessica Miller. Mark’s wife. I never imagined we’d meet like this. That evening, I didn’t call Mark. I didn’t tell him the baby was gone. Among all those cold, indifferent onlookers, Jessica was the only one who reached out, who offered warmth. Her son deserved a happy, perfect birthday party. Mark needed to be there. Consider it my way of repaying her kindness. 3 Late that night, alone in the cold hospital bed, staring into the darkness, I replayed everything that had happened since I found out I was pregnant. It was laughable how I thought I was so smart. I had to admit it – Mark had played me, completely. Earlier, the doctor had explained something to me. Certain medications, especially when taken improperly or mixed, could be incredibly dangerous during pregnancy, potentially causing severe bleeding if the dosage wasn’t exact. She mentioned something that shouldn’t be ingested during pregnancy. I’d never bought or taken anything like that. I genuinely wanted this baby. Ever since I found out, I hadn’t eaten out once, carefully preparing all my own food. The only person who could have tampered with my meals… was Mark. Thank God they got me to the hospital quickly. The baby was gone, but my uterus was okay. I could still be a mother someday. I calmly thanked the doctor, but inside, it felt like someone was twisting a knife in my gut, shredding everything. This man… he hadn’t just played with my feelings; he’d actively tried to harm my body this way. And I’d actually spent the previous night trying to make excuses for him, hoping he had some hidden reason. The truth was, he wasn’t just a deceitful, cheating liar; he was a cold-blooded monster. No, even animals protect their young. Mark Evans… he was worse than an animal. My fists clenched slowly in the silent darkness, the sound of my knuckles cracking echoing faintly. The next day, still weak, I went back to our apartment. Just as I expected, the kitchen trash was empty. No trace of whatever he might have used. Mark found out the baby was gone and rushed back, pretending to be worried, showering me with fake concern, blaming himself for not taking better care of me. Looking at his phony face made me sick to my stomach. I just told him I was tired and curled up in bed, not wanting to waste a single word on him. Losing the baby that way was hard on my body. I took a month off work to recover. During the first week, I used every contact I had to dig up everything I could on Mark and Jessica. A plan started forming in my mind. My feelings about Jessica were complicated. I was grateful she’d helped me when I was on the verge of death. But she and Mark were husband and wife. My revenge against Mark would inevitably affect her. After thinking it over and over, once I felt physically stronger, the first person I contacted was Jessica. She looked just as she had the first time I saw her – a well-fitting business suit, hair pulled back neatly, projecting an air of sharp, sophisticated beauty that made you look twice. We met at a quiet coffee shop. Jessica ordered an iced Americano after sitting down. I secretly breathed a sigh of relief – if things got heated and she decided to throw her coffee at me, at least it wouldn’t be scalding hot. “Thank you for taking me to the hospital that day,” I started. “Don’t mention it. After all, we’re practically acquaintances,” Jessica replied, a faint smile playing on her lips. I was slightly taken aback. That day was definitely the first time we’d met. Jessica stirred her coffee elegantly. “Chloe Davis, editor at the Metro Journal,” she said slowly, her red lips forming the words clearly. “You’re Mark’s mistress. I’m Mark’s wife. Wouldn’t you say that makes us acquaintances?” I thought Jessica would be the one shocked when the truth came out. Instead, I was the one stunned into silence. “You knew?” I managed to ask, my voice strained. Jessica shook her head. “Not for long. When I took you to the hospital, I was trying to find an emergency contact in your phone. Let’s just say I saw some things I wasn’t supposed to.” “So I hired a private investigator. Looked into you two,” Jessica’s eyes held a flicker of disdain. “Did you ask me here today to lay it all out? Ask me to step aside?” I watched her quietly. Jessica was even smarter than I thought, and she had incredible composure. That was good. It increased the chances of my plan succeeding. “Did your private investigator tell you how I lost my baby?” My voice was ice cold. Jessica raised an eyebrow, shaking her head slightly. “Mark slipped something into my food. Something that caused me to lose the baby. It almost killed me too – I hemorrhaged, nearly bled out.” As a mother herself, the pain of losing a child struck a chord with Jessica. A flash of pity crossed her eyes before she looked down and took a sip of her coffee. My research indicated that Jessica’s father had left her mother for another woman when Jessica was in elementary school. Her mother poured everything into her work, building up her investment company over the years, but had little time left for Jessica. Because of her family history, Jessica had even seen a therapist. Betrayal within a family was something she likely couldn’t tolerate. After a long silence, I laid my cards on the table. “Mark hid his marriage from me. That’s the only reason I dated him. He betrayed his marriage, and he hurt me badly. I don’t plan on letting him get away with it. What about you?” Jessica pressed her lips together, then suddenly looked up, a bright smile spreading across her face. “Perhaps… we should team up.” We looked at each other and smiled, raising our coffee cups in a silent toast. The alliance was formed. Mark Evans. Everything he valued – his career, his ambition, his money, his reputation – we were going to destroy it all. Leave nothing behind.

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