Reborn From Heartbreak: The Genius Ex-Wife

Reborn From Heartbreak: The Genius Ex-Wife

Hui Hui

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I am the Sterling family's "disposable" wife. For three years, I played the perfect, invisible wife to Heathcliff Sterling, swallowing every insult and giving up my entire life just to earn a shred of his affection. My reward? On our third anniversary, I found him in a luxury suite, wrapped around my ballerina sister, Georgiana. My parents sneered, "Georgiana is a swan; you're just the mud beneath her feet. You should be grateful you were even allowed to be her placeholder." My husband spat, "You're an uneducated parasite. What good are you besides spending my money?" Everyone waited for me to crumble. Everyone waited for me to beg. They were wrong. When the once-timid placeholder finally tears off her mask and returns with a plan to dismantle their world, those who mocked me, betrayed me, and looked down on me will finally learn the meaning of fear. Divorce? Absolutely. But I'm not just leaving-I'm leaving behind a reason that will destroy his reputation. Spending his money? Naturally. I'll drain his accounts until he's nothing but a laughingstock at every gala he attends. "Heathcliff, are you finished playing?" I swirl my wine, watching the color drain from their smug faces. "Because now, it's my turn."

Reborn From Heartbreak: The Genius Ex-Wife Chapter 1

Ada Kowalski stared at her husband's phone, the glowing screen revealing a truth that shattered her quiet life: Heathcliff was having an affair with a college student.

The phone on the desk lit up, a slash of white in the dim study. "Thinking of you. Same old place. The St. Regis, Room 2501." Ada's hand froze, the dust cloth hovering inches from the polished mahogany. Her throat tightened. Her fingers fumbled, the cloth slipping to the floor. She reached for the phone. It wasn't locked. Heathcliff Sterling never bothered with a password around her. She was part of the furniture. She tapped the screen. The contact name glaring back at her was "College Girl." The two words were a brand on her skin. A mockery of her quiet existence, the degree she never earned, the small town the Sterlings never let her forget. Heat crawled up her neck, burning her cheeks.

Her hand trembled as she set the phone down. She tried to breathe, but the air felt thin, stolen. On her own phone, she opened an app she'd installed three years ago, a week after their wedding. A GPS tracker, buried in the chassis of Heathcliff's Mercedes. A secret she had prayed she would never need.

The red dot pulsed. Parked on East 55th Street.

Adjacent to The St. Regis.

She moved through the house on stiff limbs, each motion detached, mechanical. In their bedroom, she went to her jewelry box, pushing aside the cold diamonds Heathcliff had bought for occasions he barely remembered. Her fingers dug into the velvet lining at the back, closing around a thin piece of plastic. A master keycard for The St. Regis presidential suites. A contingency from a life he knew nothing about.

She stripped off her simple housedress, pulling on worn jeans and a plain gray T-shirt. A pale woman with hair pulled into a severe bun stared back from the mirror. She put on the large, black-framed glasses she always wore.

The drive was a smear of slick streets and distorted lights. Three years of marriage compressed into a single, sharp point: the burn of spices on her tongue from a meal she'd learned to cook for him, a meal she hated.

She parked and walked into the lobby, the frantic beat of her own blood loud in her ears. She didn't need to ask for the floor. 2501 was already burned into her mind.

The elevator ascended in silence, her own reflection a ghost in the gilded walls. The doors slid open onto plush carpet that deadened the sound of her footsteps. Outside the suite, she could hear it. A low murmur of voices, then a woman's laugh-light, carefree.

Bile rose in her throat.

She raised the keycard, her hand shaking so badly she had to steady it with the other. The lock clicked green.

She pushed the door open.

A man's suit jacket-Heathcliff's-was tossed over a chair. A pair of his Italian leather shoes were kicked into a corner. Beside them, a silk slip dress the color of champagne.

The living room was empty. The sound of running water came from the bathroom, along with the soft humming of a woman.

Ada stood in the center of the room. The ticking of a clock on the wall was a sharp, steady count against her skull. She waited.

The bathroom door swung open. A woman emerged, long dark hair pinned up, a silk robe cinched at her waist. Through the crack of the open door, Ada caught a glimpse of a familiar blue and white pleated skirt tossed on the counter-the exact uniform of a local college girl. She was dabbing perfume onto her wrists, her head down.

Then, she looked up.

Her eyes met Ada's. There was no shock. No panic. Just a flicker of amusement, a slow, cruel smile spreading across her lips. "Oh, don't look so tragic, Ada," Georgiana purred, her voice dripping with practiced sweetness. "It's not as if you ever actually knew how to keep him satisfied. Did you honestly think he'd stay with a ghost like you forever?"

The air punched out of Ada's lungs. A deep, icy shudder violently ripped through her core, freezing the blood in her veins. The woman wearing the college girl outfit wasn't a stranger. It was her own sister, Georgiana Kowalski. Georgiana was a born beauty, universally hailed as the city's Red Rose. With her captivating grace and absolute perfection as a dancer, men had always fallen helplessly at her feet. And now, her darling sister had used that exact same undeniable charm to seduce her own brother-in-law.

The bedroom door opened. Heathcliff walked out, dressed in suit trousers and a crisp white shirt, his tie loosened. He saw Ada, and his face-the face she had loved with a desperate, foolish hope-tightened not with guilt, but with sharp annoyance. Georgiana immediately glided toward him, wrapping her slender arms around his waist and resting her head against his chest with a possessive, smug look cast over her shoulder at Ada.

Across the room, two untouched glasses of wine sat on a coffee table. His jacket was draped neatly over the arm of a chair, as if he had been sitting there, maintaining a careful distance. He had come, but he had not crossed a line he'd drawn for himself.

"What are you doing here?" he asked, his voice cold.

Ada couldn't draw a breath. No scream came. No tears. She just turned and walked out.

She didn't drive back to the manor. Her hands steered the car toward the one place that was supposed to be a sanctuary. Her mother's house.

She burst through the door. Leanne was in the living room, trimming the stems of white roses, her movements precise. She didn't look up.

"Mom," Ada choked out. "Heathcliff... Georgiana..."

Leanne set down her shears and sighed, a sound of weary patience. "Henry," she called. "Come in here."

Her stepfather appeared. He looked at Ada, his lips thinning in distaste.

"Ada, Heathcliff never actually liked you, and you know it," Henry said, his tone sharp and dismissive. "Do you have any idea how many women in this city are desperate for a man like him? Rather than letting some stranger have him, it's better to keep him in the family and give him to your sister."

Ada's hands clenched into tight fists, her nails biting into her palms. "Mom, Dad... I am your daughter too!"

She turned to leave, suffocating in the toxic air of the room. Leanne's voice cut through the silence, stopping her in her tracks. "Ada, let me ask you something. Has Heathcliff even touched you?"

Ada froze, a humiliating heat rising to her face.

Henry scoffed, his words feeling like twisted blades. "Don't act like we owe you anything. Heathcliff and Georgiana were the golden couple of high society. She just didn't want to give up her position as principal dancer, which is the only reason we let you take her place as a substitute bride."

Leanne looked Ada up and down, her gaze dripping with blatant disgust. "Look at yourself, Ada. For the past three years, you've been nothing but a drab housewife orbiting her husband. Meanwhile, Georgiana is a star, the absolute center of the stage. You are an ugly duckling, and she is a swan. How could you possibly compete with her? Do the right thing and give Heathcliff back."

Every word was a jagged knife twisting deep into Ada's chest. Her eyes burned with unshed tears as she realized the harsh truth. Her marriage was a transaction. She was a substitute. A placeholder.

She looked at their faces. No sympathy. Only irritation at the disruption. She wasn't their daughter. She was a complication.

The tears stopped. A terrifying calm settled over her, cold and heavy.

She stood up and walked out of the house that had never been a home.

Outside, a cold rain had begun to fall. The drops hit her skin, but she felt nothing. She stood on the manicured lawn, looking up at the gray, unforgiving sky.

A sound tore from her throat-not a sob, but a raw, broken laugh.

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Reborn From Heartbreak: The Genius Ex-Wife Reborn From Heartbreak: The Genius Ex-Wife Hui Hui Modern
“I am the Sterling family's "disposable" wife. For three years, I played the perfect, invisible wife to Heathcliff Sterling, swallowing every insult and giving up my entire life just to earn a shred of his affection. My reward? On our third anniversary, I found him in a luxury suite, wrapped around my ballerina sister, Georgiana. My parents sneered, "Georgiana is a swan; you're just the mud beneath her feet. You should be grateful you were even allowed to be her placeholder." My husband spat, "You're an uneducated parasite. What good are you besides spending my money?" Everyone waited for me to crumble. Everyone waited for me to beg. They were wrong. When the once-timid placeholder finally tears off her mask and returns with a plan to dismantle their world, those who mocked me, betrayed me, and looked down on me will finally learn the meaning of fear. Divorce? Absolutely. But I'm not just leaving-I'm leaving behind a reason that will destroy his reputation. Spending his money? Naturally. I'll drain his accounts until he's nothing but a laughingstock at every gala he attends. "Heathcliff, are you finished playing?" I swirl my wine, watching the color drain from their smug faces. "Because now, it's my turn."”
1

Chapter 1

27/05/2026

2

Chapter 2

27/05/2026

3

Chapter 3

27/05/2026

4

Chapter 4

27/05/2026

5

Chapter 5

27/05/2026

6

Chapter 6

27/05/2026

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Chapter 7

27/05/2026

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Chapter 8

27/05/2026

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Chapter 9

27/05/2026

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Chapter 10

27/05/2026

11

Chapter 11

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Chapter 12

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Chapter 13

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Chapter 14

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Chapter 15

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Chapter 16

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Chapter 17

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Chapter 18

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Chapter 19

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Chapter 20

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Chapter 21

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Chapter 22

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Chapter 23

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Chapter 24

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Chapter 25

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Chapter 26

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Chapter 27

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Chapter 28

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Chapter 29

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Chapter 30

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