icon 0
icon TOP UP
rightIcon
icon Reading History
rightIcon
icon Sign out
rightIcon
icon Get the APP
rightIcon

The Mute Wife's Silent Revenge

Chapter 3 3

Word Count: 559    |    Released on: 03/02/2026

over the screen. She

scode. 4 atte

edding anniversar

scode. 3 atte

the hospital. The date on the card. She didn't k

yped

hed. Biometric

e display. It required

ace, a desperate, irrational attempt

on the plush carpet was

nst the doorframe. He held a tumbler of whiskey

mb fingers and landed on the

ou looking

e softness of a predator watc

. She was a child caught stealing candy, bu

picked up the phone. He wiped the screen on

e said. "The FBI would need a week. You have a

stripped her bare, reducing

h," he said. "I don't like

wife. Not par

whiskey, the ice clin

uld discuss your father's dialysis treatments

rom her face. It was his fav

r hands in front of her, assuming th

It was a dry, h

d gi

p, but kept his back mostly to her, angling the device so she couldn't see the s

ed to look presentable tomorrow

ut, taking the whiskey

hattering. But he had made a mistake. He thought she was looking at the screen. She

aintest traces of underdrawings beneath layers of paint, reconstructed the motion. A swipe.

Bottom left. Top right.

. Now she just

Claim Your Bonus at the APP

Open
The Mute Wife's Silent Revenge
The Mute Wife's Silent Revenge
“I haven't spoken a word in three years. As a professional art restorer, I spent my days fixing seventeenth-century Dutch oils and playing the role of the perfect, silent wife to billionaire Arno Rutledge. I thought our marriage was a cold but stable arrangement, a gilded cage I had accepted to keep my father's medical bills paid. That illusion shattered when I found a VIP hospital pass in Arno's suit pocket. Following the trail, I discovered my husband was keeping a woman named Serena on life support in a restricted wing. He wasn't just paying for her care; he was micromanaging her vitals from a tablet like a volatile stock portfolio, obsessed with controlling her every breath while lying to me about late-night board meetings. When I confronted him at the hospital, the mask of the refined businessman slipped. He didn't offer an apology; he offered a violent shove. I crashed into a glass display case, the shards slicing deep into my dominant hand-the hand I used to restore history. As blood pulsed onto the white tiles, Arno didn't even look back. He was too busy cradling the other woman's hand, leaving me to stitch my own mangled flesh together with industrial glue in a public restroom. Back at the penthouse, the nightmare only escalated. When I tried to pack my bags, Arno froze my bank accounts and reminded me that he controlled the ventilator keeping my father alive. He dragged me into my studio, snapped my custom sable brushes in front of my face, and forced himself on me atop my own workbench. "You're an asset, Edlyn," he whispered against my skin. "And right now, you're underperforming." He told me that since my hands were now "broken equipment," I had to find other ways to compensate for my lack of value. He thought he had successfully liquidated my soul, leaving me a hollow shell trapped in his high-rise fortress. But Arno made one fatal mistake. He thinks because I am mute, I am also blind. He thinks because he broke my hand, I have lost my touch. He doesn't realize that a restorer's greatest skill isn't her hands-it's her ability to see the hidden rot beneath the surface. He wants to treat me like a line item on a balance sheet? Fine. I'm about to show him exactly what happens when an asset decides to set the entire portfolio on fire.”