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Too Late, Mr. Husband, She's Hope

Too Late, Mr. Husband, She's Hope

Author: Snooty
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Chapter 1 

Word Count: 1481    |    Released on: Today at 18:07

She cooked, cleaned, and mastered the art of espresso, pouring all her energy into their quiet life. But as she brought him his coffee, she found a bottl

a photo. It was a woman's pink-nailed hand, intimately on Dustin's thigh in his car, his Patek Philippe watch with its tell-tale scratch mocking her-a watch she had ne

m Dustin's study, came a rare, indulgent laugh. He was on speakerphone with his mistress, Jami, promising her the bracelet, and then, the poisoned blade: "Her? She

na stepped out from the shadows, her hand flat against the heav

't realize my recip

pte

a Van

lurring slightly from the rising steam. The machine let out a low, s

er. But when I chose to walk away from my father's arranged marriage and the billionaire heiress title that came with it, I had to learn. I spent weeks perf

f the porcelain, and a sharp sting made me wince. I pulled my hand back, ru

gar bowl. I dropped exactly two sugar cubes into the cup. I

alked out of the kitchen. My slippers made no sound a

rned my head to look at it out of pure habit. We were smiling in the picture, his arm w

was slightly ajar. I freed one hand and pushed the wood panel

t shiver, my shoulders pulling inward. I hated the cold. I had always been terrified of it. But Dustin insisted on keeping the AC at its lowest set

ssive desk. He wore his heavy noise-canceling headphones, his eye

screen, but the moment my shadow fell over his shoulder, his hand jerked on the mouse. He

d spun around in his ergonomic chair. For a fraction

teps faltered. I forced my stiff facial muscl

mask. He let out an annoyed sigh and waved his hand dismissively, gesturin

y-at-home wives, a toxic mix of the inferiority complex he carried from his po

of the desk. As I pulled my hands back, my gaze accidentally

thing s

on the desk. It was jarring, screaming for attention

led to find a logical excuse for it. *Maybe a female emplo

ght beside his mousepad was a delicate shark-bone bracelet.

d on my tongue, but my throat felt like it wa

r his ears and turned his chair around, his eyes locking back on

ried so hard to bury, flared up in agony. I bit down hard on my lower lip, tasting copper, and swallowed every single ques

I turned around and walked backward toward the door, step by step. The

y pulled the mahogany door shut, sealing

as I gasped for air. My heart was hammering against

, acidic sorrow welled up in my throat. I used to love manicures. I used to spend hours at the salon getting th

off the wall and walked back down the hallway.

p *ding*. It was a cheerful sound, reminding me that the elabora

one surface, leaning my weight onto my arms. I stared blankly at the water swir

a piercing buzz. In the dead silence of

iolently. I slowly turned my head

rom an unknown number.

. I swiped the screen to unlock it and tap

kes my

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Too Late, Mr. Husband, She's Hope
Too Late, Mr. Husband, She's Hope
“Eliana, once a billionaire heiress, had given up everything to become the perfect ordinary wife for Dustin, meticulously erasing her elite past for him. She cooked, cleaned, and mastered the art of espresso, pouring all her energy into their quiet life. But as she brought him his coffee, she found a bottle of bright pink nail polish and a delicate shark-bone bracelet on his desk, jarringly out of place, instantly shattering her carefully constructed world. Dustin's cold dismissal stung, yet her corporate upbringing kept her questions silent. Then, her phone buzzed with an anonymous text: "He likes my taste," followed by a photo. It was a woman's pink-nailed hand, intimately on Dustin's thigh in his car, his Patek Philippe watch with its tell-tale scratch mocking her-a watch she had nearly ruined her health to buy him. The elaborate birthday dinner she'd spent hours preparing burned, filling the kitchen with acrid smoke as her marriage turned to ash. Slumped on the freezing floor, a chilling clarity replaced her despair. She clutched the unopened pregnancy test, once a symbol of hope, now a cruel joke. Then, from Dustin's study, came a rare, indulgent laugh. He was on speakerphone with his mistress, Jami, promising her the bracelet, and then, the poisoned blade: "Her? She can't even remember what date it is. She just sits at home all day studying broken recipes." Today was Eliana's 30th birthday, forgotten and weaponized against her. The sorrow evaporated, replaced by cold, absolute resolve. Eliana stepped out from the shadows, her hand flat against the heavy wood, and shoved the mahogany door open with a resounding thud. "Is that so? I didn't realize my recipes were so boring."”