On our wedding night, celebrating a billion-dollar family merger, my new husband Coleton stepped out of the shower. Suddenly, his phone rang. It was his dead brother's widow, Hana, crying that her five-year-old had a fever. Without hesitation, Coleton shoved me hard into the wall to get out the door. "Are you seriously jealous of a sick five-year-old kid?" he spat. He abandoned me in the bridal suite. I immediately filed for divorce and leaked it to the press. To save the merger and their stock prices, both our families rushed in to force me to back down. My own father raised his hand to slap me for my "petty female jealousy." Coleton's grandfather brutally beat him with a heavy wooden cane right in front of me, trying to use a twisted debt of honor to guilt-trip me into staying. Through a hidden dumbwaiter shaft, I overheard their secret meeting. They were plotting to use Coleton's bloody photos to paint me as a cold-hearted villain to the media, trapping me in the marriage through public shame. My own brother nodded along to this plot just to secure his CEO bonus. Coleton only begged for my forgiveness because he was terrified of losing his trust fund to an illegitimate heir. In their eyes, my dignity was just a cheap commodity with a price tag. But I am a Pennington, raised in a world where trust is a liability. I calmly saved the audio recording of their plot, packed my Hermes suitcase, and emailed the most ruthless divorce litigator in Manhattan.
Katrina sat on the edge of the French velvet bed.
The heavy layers of her custom Vera Wang wedding dress pressed down on her thighs. The fabric was beautiful, but right now, it just felt like a suffocating weight. The air in the Hampton bridal suite was thick, almost too warm. She took a slow breath, feeling a subtle, nervous flutter in her stomach. This was her wedding night. The culmination of a two-year engagement and a billion-dollar merger between the Pennington and Meyer families.
The bathroom door clicked open.
Coleton stepped out. He was rubbing a white towel vigorously through his wet hair. Drops of water fell from his shoulders, soaking into the priceless Persian rug beneath his bare feet. The quiet, expectant atmosphere of the room shattered the second he walked in.
Then, the phone on the nightstand vibrated.
It wasn't just a buzz. It was a violent, continuous rattling against the mahogany wood. The harsh ringtone sliced through the silence. Katrina's nervous flutter instantly turned into a sharp, cold knot in her chest.
The screen lit up in the dim room.
The name Hana Campos flashed in bright white letters.
The temperature in the room seemed to plummet. Katrina's fingers dug into the mattress. Hana. His dead brother's widow.
Coleton's face changed. The relaxed, post-shower ease vanished. Without caring that his hair was still dripping, he lunged for the nightstand. His fingers snatched the phone with a desperate, frantic energy that made Katrina's stomach twist.
She narrowed her eyes. Her spine stiffened. A dark, heavy premonition spread through her ribcage, making it hard to draw a full breath.
Coleton pressed the answer button. He immediately turned his back to Katrina, his shoulders hunching forward. It was a posture of exclusion. A physical wall built to keep his new wife out.
That single movement made the blood in Katrina's veins run ice-cold.
"Hana?" Coleton whispered.
Even without the speakerphone on, the hysterical sobbing from the other end pierced the quiet room. It was a loud, jagged sound that hit the walls and bounced back, heavy and suffocating.
"Coleton! It's Leo! He's burning up!" Hana's voice cracked, dripping with a desperate, calculated helplessness. "He's having a seizure! I don't know what to do! You have to come!"
The moral kidnapping hit its mark instantly. Coleton's defenses crumbled like dry dirt.
All the color drained from his face. His chest heaved with rapid, shallow breaths. He completely forgot about the woman sitting on the bed behind him. He forgot the vows he had spoken six hours ago.
"I'm coming," Coleton said into the receiver. His voice was breathless, frantic. "Just hold him on his side. I'm leaving right now."
The urgency in his tone was a physical blow to Katrina's pride. It felt like a slap across the face.
Coleton hung up. He spun around and sprinted toward the walk-in closet. His wet feet slipped slightly on the floor, crushing the expensive red rose petals the staff had scattered for their romantic night.
Katrina stood up. The heavy dress dragged against the floor.
"Where are you going?" she asked. Her voice was flat, devoid of the warmth it had held five minutes ago.
Coleton didn't look at her. He grabbed a custom dress shirt off a hanger and shoved his arms into the sleeves. "Leo is sick. He's having a febrile seizure. I have to go."
He said it like it was the most obvious thing in the world. Like her presence in this room meant absolutely nothing.
Katrina took a step forward. Her heels sank into the carpet. "It is our wedding night, Coleton."
She spoke the words clearly, trying to use the weight of their marriage contract to pull him back to reality.
Coleton froze. His hands stopped buttoning his shirt. For a fraction of a second, a flicker of guilt crossed his features. But it was immediately swallowed by a blind, irrational need to play the hero.
"He is my dead brother's only blood!" Coleton yelled, his voice echoing off the high ceiling. "I can't just leave them alone!"
He was trying to use the moral high ground to crush her entirely valid anger.
Katrina didn't back down. She walked straight to the bedroom door and positioned herself in front of it. The last flicker of hope in her chest died, turning into cold, hard ash.
"If you walk out that door right now," Katrina said, her voice eerily calm, "I will start the divorce proceedings tomorrow morning."
Coleton stared at her. His eyes widened in disbelief. The guilt on his face morphed into defensive, ugly anger. He looked at her like she was the one being unreasonable.
"Are you seriously jealous of a sick five-year-old kid?" he spat.
The viciousness of his words tore down the last shred of decency between them.
Katrina didn't flinch. Her expression remained frozen. She looked at the man she had just married, and she saw a stranger. A weak, easily manipulated fool.
Coleton clenched his jaw. He needed to get to his sister-in-law. Without a second thought, he reached out and shoved Katrina's shoulder.
It was a rough, forceful push.
He broke past her blockade and stormed out of the bedroom. He didn't look back. He left his bride standing there like a piece of defective merchandise.
The heavy oak door slammed shut behind him. The impact was so violent that a decorative ribbon fell from the doorframe and fluttered to the floor.
Katrina stumbled back half a step. Her shoulder throbbed with a dull ache, but it was nothing compared to the freezing void expanding in her chest.
She stared at the closed door. A sharp, mocking smile pulled at the corner of her mouth. Every illusion she had about this marriage was dead.
She turned around and walked to the vanity mirror.
She reached up and grabbed the antique lace veil pinned to her hair. It was a priceless family heirloom. She ripped it out. The bobby pins pulled at her scalp, but she didn't care.
She threw the veil onto the floor. It landed in a heap, mixing with the crushed rose petals. A perfect symbol of her trampled dignity.
Katrina picked up her phone from the vanity. She ignored the time flashing on the screen. It was 2:00 AM.
She dialed the emergency line for her private lawyer. "I need you to draft the papers," she instructed, her voice steady despite the adrenaline. "And document this: he became physically violent. He forcefully shoved me to get out the door. I want that assault on the record."
The Jilted Bride's Billion Dollar Revenge
Xiao Youzi
Modern
Chapter 1
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Chapter 2
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Chapter 3
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Chapter 4
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Chapter 5
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Chapter 6
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Chapter 7
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Chapter 8
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Chapter 9
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Chapter 10
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