His Unwanted Wife, My New Dawn

His Unwanted Wife, My New Dawn

Katie Oettgen

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For six years, I was the wife of a tech billionaire with crippling mysophobia. To my husband, Killian, I was a contaminant he was forced to tolerate for a business merger, a ghost in my own home. But for his mistress, the influencer Isabel, every rule was broken. He worshipped her, believing she was the angel who' d saved him from a near-fatal climbing accident two years ago. The truth was, I was the one who braved a blizzard to rescue him, suffering severe frostbite in the process. But he laughed in my face, calling me too fragile. He knelt on a filthy police station floor to touch her bare feet, yet he' d recoiled from my touch for years. He destroyed my grandmother' s priceless locket because she wanted it. He forced me to kneel and apologize for her lies, threatening my family's company if I refused. The final humiliation came when he publicly declared her the true mistress of the house and made me climb a dangerous, thorny hill on my injured ankle to pick roses for her. As I stumbled back, covered in mud and blood, I felt nothing. The love I had stubbornly held onto was finally, completely dead. I walked away that night with the signed divorce papers in my hand. My old life was over, and my fight for a new one had just begun.

Chapter 1

For six years, I was the wife of a tech billionaire with crippling mysophobia. To my husband, Killian, I was a contaminant he was forced to tolerate for a business merger, a ghost in my own home.

But for his mistress, the influencer Isabel, every rule was broken. He worshipped her, believing she was the angel who' d saved him from a near-fatal climbing accident two years ago.

The truth was, I was the one who braved a blizzard to rescue him, suffering severe frostbite in the process. But he laughed in my face, calling me too fragile. He knelt on a filthy police station floor to touch her bare feet, yet he' d recoiled from my touch for years.

He destroyed my grandmother' s priceless locket because she wanted it. He forced me to kneel and apologize for her lies, threatening my family's company if I refused.

The final humiliation came when he publicly declared her the true mistress of the house and made me climb a dangerous, thorny hill on my injured ankle to pick roses for her.

As I stumbled back, covered in mud and blood, I felt nothing. The love I had stubbornly held onto was finally, completely dead.

I walked away that night with the signed divorce papers in my hand. My old life was over, and my fight for a new one had just begun.

Chapter 1

AVA DODSON POV:

The phone rang, shattering the dead silence of 2 AM. My heart didn' t even flinch. It was always 2 AM, and it was always the same caller. My assistant' s number flashed on the screen, but I knew who the call was truly from.

"Mrs. Rutledge, I am so sorry to disturb you," a harried voice mumbled. "But Mr. Rutledge and Ms. Griffin... they' ve been detained."

I closed my eyes, a dull ache settling behind them. Detained. Again. For public indecency. Again. My world had shrunk to this predictable cycle of chaos and cleanup, a routine I was so used to, it barely registered anymore. It was just another Tuesday.

"Where are they?" I asked, my voice flat. I was already reaching for my coat, my body moving on autopilot.

The police station was a sterile, unforgiving place. The fluorescent lights hummed, washing out the already pale faces of the officers and the grimy walls. I walked through the heavy doors, my heels clicking on the linoleum, a sound that felt too loud, too sharp in the quiet despair of the night.

And then I saw them.

Killian, my husband of six years, was leaning against a chipped Formica counter. His usually immaculate clothes were rumpled, his dark hair falling over his forehead. He looked disheveled, yes, but not unhappy. Not really. Isabel Griffin, the influencer who had effortlessly stolen his attention, was clinging to his arm. Her silk dress was torn at the shoulder, her mascara smudged, but her eyes held a triumphant glint. They were laughing, a low, intimate sound that scraped against my eardrums.

My stomach dropped, a sickening lurch. It wasn't the first time I'd seen them like this, but it never got easier. Each time was a fresh wound, twisting the knife a little deeper into the dead space where my love used to be.

Isabel let out a little shiver, pressing closer to Killian. "My feet are freezing, baby. I lost my shoe out there."

Killian immediately knelt, without a moment' s hesitation. He checked her foot, his fingers gently tracing her ankle, oblivious to the eyes around them. His face, usually a mask of detached indifference, softened into a look of profound concern. He looked at her as if she were the most fragile, precious thing in the world. He spoke to her in a murmur I couldn' t quite catch, but the tone was unmistakable: pure, unadulterated devotion.

A bitter laugh threatened to escape my lips. My husband, the man who couldn' t stand a speck of dust, whose OCD and mysophobia were legendary, was kneeling on a dirty police station floor, touching another woman' s bare, mud-stained foot. For her, every rule was broken. For her, every boundary dissolved.

I remembered the early days of our marriage. He had a rule for everything. I wasn' t allowed to touch his clothes without wearing gloves, lest my "unclean" hands contaminate them. I once reached for his jacket on a hanger, my bare fingers brushing the sleeve, and he recoiled as if stung.

"Ava, what are you doing?" His voice was sharp, laced with disgust. "Do you know how many germs are on your hands? Don' t touch my things."

I had tried, then, to understand. To adapt. I learned to use separate towels, separate soaps, to never leave a single item out of place in our shared space. Our intimacy, even the most chaste touch, was always carefully orchestrated, often prefaced by a sterile hand-washing ritual, or simply avoided altogether. "You' re not... clean," he' d said once, his eyes cold, when I tried to initiate a simple hug. Those words had carved a hollow in my chest that time could never fill.

Now, watching him minister to Isabel, my vision blurred. The officer at the counter, a kind-faced woman with tired eyes, gave me a sympathetic glance. "Trouble, Mrs. Rutledge?" she asked softly, her gaze flicking between me and the scandalous couple. "They were quite... enthusiastic in the park."

I swallowed the lump in my throat. "I understand," I managed, my voice thin.

She slid a stack of papers across the counter. "They need to be bailed out. And there' s a public nuisance charge."

I picked up the pen. My hand trembled slightly as I signed my name, Ava Dodson Rutledge, on dotted line after dotted line. Each stroke was a fresh humiliation, a public acknowledgment of my husband' s infidelity, a testament to my own powerlessness.

Killian finally stood, his arm still around Isabel. He caught my eye then, a brief, fleeting glance, devoid of any recognition, any guilt. It was as if I were merely a functionary, an invisible force there to clean up his messes. For a moment, I wondered if he even remembered my name.

A black luxury car pulled up to the curb, its tinted windows gleaming. Killian guided Isabel towards it, his hand protectively at her back.

"Oh, baby, I' m so cold," Isabel whimpered, pressing into him. Her voice, usually so high-pitched and bubbly on her social media, was now a seductive purr.

"I know, I know." Killian pulled her closer, rubbing her arms. "We' ll get you home. I' ve already contacted your manager. It' ll all be handled." He gave her a reassuring kiss on the forehead, right there, under the harsh station lights, for anyone to see.

My chest felt like it was caving in. My hands, still holding the signed papers, clenched. The paper crinkled, a sound as brittle as my composure.

"Did you remember the necklace I wanted?" she asked, her eyes gleaming up at him.

Killian smiled, a genuine, warm smile that had never once been directed at me. "Of course, my love. It' s waiting for you."

Isabel squealed with delight, pressing a succession of open-mouthed kisses to his jawline, his neck. "You' re the best, Killian! The absolute best!"

They slid into the back of the car, disappearing behind the tinted glass. But before the door fully closed, I saw Killian' s hand reach for hers, intertwining their fingers, his head bending towards her in an intimate gesture. My legs felt like jelly. I slumped against the cold tile wall, the air suddenly too thin to breathe. My entire body ached, a deep, pervasive pain that had nothing to do with physical injury.

I was the wife of convenience, the daughter of a prestigious family needed to secure a dynastic business merger. I was a tool, a necessary evil, to maintain appearances while he lived his life with another woman. I was a ghost in my own marriage, a silent guardian of his reputation, cleaning up the mess while he reveled in his scandalous affair.

I remembered the wedding day. Our wedding. He had stood stiffly beside me, his gaze distant, his hand barely brushing mine. There had been no tender murmurs, no soft glances, no promises of a shared future beyond the business alliance. I had accepted it then, believing that his coldness was simply his nature, that he was incapable of deep affection for anyone.

I had spent six years trying to be the perfect wife, the perfect housekeeper, the embodiment of his impossible standards of cleanliness. I walked on eggshells, meticulously sanitizing everything, making sure our home was a sterile sanctuary, hoping that adherence to his rules would somehow earn me a sliver of his affection, a hint of the warmth he so freely gave to Isabel.

But then Isabel had arrived, a whirlwind of vibrant chaos, and everything had changed. His rules, his phobias, his carefully constructed world of order-all shattered for her. He reveled in the very public indecency he would have condemned me for in private. He embraced the mess, the scandal, the absolute lack of control, all for her.

My role, however, remained unchanged. I was still the one called to clean up the wreckage, to manage the PR nightmares, to soothe the ruffled feathers of investors and board members. I was the silent, loyal wife, bearing the public shame while he flaunted his affair.

Just last week, he had come home late, reeking of cheap perfume and alcohol. He rarely drank, his OCD usually preventing such indulgence, but with Isabel, he seemed to shed all his inhibitions. He stumbled into my study, where I was working on damage control for his latest public stunt.

"Ava," he slurred, his voice surprisingly soft, though clearly not meant for me. He was looking past me, into some imagined distance. "You don' t understand... Isabel... she saved me."

I stopped typing, my fingers frozen over the keyboard. "Saved you, Killian? From what?"

He sank into the armchair, his eyes hazy. "The climbing accident, two years ago... I was trapped, freezing... thought I was going to die. And then she came. My angel. She found me, kept me warm, got me help." He sighed, a wistful, loving sound. "I owe her everything."

My blood ran cold. The climbing accident. Two years ago. I knew that accident. I knew it intimately.

"Killian," I said, my voice barely a whisper. "It wasn' t Isabel. It was me. I found you. I was the one who climbed up there, who carried you down. Don't you remember?"

He blinked slowly, his eyes unfocused. He let out a harsh laugh, raw and dismissive. "You? Ava, you wouldn' t know a mountain from a molehill. You' re too fragile. Too delicate. Always have been." He closed his eyes, a blissful smile on his face. "No. It was Isabel. My Isabel."

My heart, already bruised and battered, cracked a little more. He didn' t remember. He truly didn' t remember. Or perhaps, he chose not to.

The car carrying Killian and Isabel was long gone. I stood alone in the cold, empty street outside the police station, the signed papers still clutched in my hand, leaving me with only the bitter taste of truth and the crushing weight of his delusion. My love for him, which had stubbornly flickered through years of neglect, had finally, definitively, died.

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