The Betrayed Wife’s Million-Dollar Revenge

The Betrayed Wife's Million-Dollar Revenge

Jun Shangye

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Beverly Greene spent eleven years being the perfect wife. She gave up her career, raised their daughter, cared for her husband's dying mother, and clipped coupons while Warren Hicks built the life they were supposed to share. Then, while cleaning his spotless SUV, Beverly found a torn condom wrapper in the glove box. And a strand of honey-brown hair wedged deep in the passenger seat. The dashcam told her the rest. Warren wasn't just cheating. He was waiting for his bedridden mother to die so he could inherit her estate. He had delayed the medical care that might have saved her, then hid over a million dollars in secret accounts while Beverly served as his unpaid caregiver. To his mistress, Warren promised everything. To his wife, he offered lies. And behind her back, he called Beverly a "clueless housewife" who would be lost without him. For one night, Beverly shattered. Then she stopped crying. Divorce would have been easy, if their terrified young daughter hadn't begged her not to break their family apart. So Beverly stayed in the same house with the man who had betrayed her, smiled across the dinner table, and quietly became the most dangerous woman he would ever underestimate. She backed up the recordings. She copied the bank statements. She saved every filthy message, every hidden account, every proof of his cruelty. Warren Hicks thought Beverly had nothing. No job. No power. No way out. He was wrong. Beverly was done being the perfect wife. Now she was going to be his reckoning.

The Betrayed Wife’s Million-Dollar Revenge Chapter 1

The small, gold foil packet, torn open at the top, slid out from a stack of insurance papers and landed silently on the black floor mat.

Trojan. Her Pleasure.

Beverly Greene froze in the passenger seat of her husband Warren Hicks's Ford Explorer, one hand still gripping the open glove box.

The squeak of the microfiber cloth against the leather had been the only sound in the garage.

Beverly had moved with an automatic, practiced rhythm, wiping down the interior of the SUV while the afternoon sun cut through the garage window, illuminating dust motes dancing in the air. It was a perfect suburban Tuesday. Perfect and suffocating.

She had slid across the driver's seat to tackle the passenger side, her movements slowing when she noticed the seat was pushed far back, much farther than she ever set it. A knot of unease had tightened in her stomach. Warren Hicks was meticulous about his car. He would notice if she'd moved it. But she hadn't.

She had leaned over to grab a fresh cleaning wipe from the glove box, a motion she'd performed a thousand times.

And then the wrapper had fallen out.

The air in the garage suddenly felt thick, heavy, impossible to breathe. Her heart didn't race; it stopped. A block of ice formed in her chest, sharp and painful.

Her hand trembled as she reached down and picked up the wrapper. The lot number and expiration date were printed in crisp, black ink. It was new. Very new.

A slideshow of the past few months flashed behind her eyes. Warren's late nights at the office. The sudden "business trip" to a conference she'd never heard of. His phone, always face down on the nightstand.

Every excuse, every plausible explanation, now reeked of lies.

A wave of nausea rose in her throat, hot and acidic. She scrambled out of the SUV, stumbling into the backyard. She bent over the manicured lawn, her body convulsing in a series of dry, wrenching heaves. Nothing came up but shame.

Humiliation burned hotter than the afternoon sun. They hadn't been intimate in months. He always said he was too tired, too stressed from work. And they certainly hadn't used one of these since their daughter was conceived.

Eleven years of marriage. A home. A child. All of it felt like a stage set for a play she didn't know she was acting in.

She pulled out her phone, her thumb hovering over Warren's name. Her breath hitched. What would she even say? Accuse him? He'd deny it. He'd lie. He was good at lying.

No. She couldn't be impulsive. An accusation without more proof would only give him time to cover his tracks.

She took a ragged breath, then another. Calm. She had to be calm.

She wrapped the foil packet in a tissue from her purse and shoved it deep into the pocket of her jeans. It felt like a live grenade against her thigh.

Forcing her legs to move, she walked back into the garage, back to the car. She had to finish. Normalcy was her armor now.

Her eyes, however, betrayed her. They scanned every inch of the passenger side. A glint of something not black or beige caught her eye.

Wedged deep in the crease between the seat cushion and the backrest was a single strand of hair.

It was long. Longer than hers. And it was a light, honey brown.

Her hair was dark, almost black.

The fragile dam of her composure shattered. Tears, hot and silent, streamed down her face. This was real. It wasn't a mistake, a misunderstanding. It was a fact, written in a strand of hair and a piece of foil.

She wiped her eyes furiously with the back of her hand just as the familiar rumble of the school bus reached the end of their street.

Her daughter, Daisy.

Beverly's posture straightened. She sucked in a shaky breath, schooling her features into a mask of maternal warmth. She pasted on a smile that felt like cracking glass.

Her daughter bounced off the bus, backpack swinging, face alight with the freedom of a finished school day.

"Mom, the lunch today was so gross. It was supposed to be pizza, but it tasted like cardboard."

Daisy didn't notice her mother's red-rimmed eyes or the rigid set of her jaw.

Beverly's voice was a stranger's in her own ears as she offered snacks and asked about homework. Her body moved on autopilot, pouring a glass of milk, setting out a plate of cookies. Inside, her world was a smoking ruin.

She watched her daughter chatter about a fight on the playground, her innocence a painful spotlight on the filth Beverly had just discovered.

The word "divorce" surfaced in her mind for the first time, not as a dramatic threat in an argument, but as a real, terrifying possibility. A chasm opened at her feet.

That evening, Warren came home, dropping his briefcase by the door with a weary sigh.

"Long day," he announced, loosening his tie. He leaned in and gave her a perfunctory kiss on the cheek.

It was then she smelled it. A faint, sweet, floral scent clinging to his shirt, struggling to hide beneath his usual cologne. It wasn't her perfume.

The urge to scream, to throw the foil wrapper in his face, was a physical force she had to fight to contain.

"Dinner's ready," she said, her voice flat.

The meal was a study in tension. The clinking of forks against plates was deafening in the silence. Beverly pushed food around her plate, her stomach a tight, painful knot.

"You okay?" Warren asked, not looking up from his steak. "You're quiet tonight. Tired?"

"Maybe a little," she lied, the words tasting like ash. "I think I might be coming down with a cold."

He grunted in response, already lost in his own world.

After dinner, he retreated to his study, claiming he had emails to catch up on. Beverly was left alone in the kitchen, the remnants of their family meal spread across the counter. She stared at her reflection in the dark window above the sink, a tired, pale woman she barely recognized. A fool.

Later, in the king-sized bed that suddenly felt vast and cold, she lay perfectly still, feigning sleep. The sound of his deep, even breathing beside her was a form of torture. It was the sound of a man at peace, a man with no conscience. It was like sharing a bed with a monster.

She had to do something. She couldn't live another day in this lie.

Slipping her hand under her pillow, she pulled out her phone. Her heart hammered against her ribs. She navigated to his contact, her finger shaking as she pressed the call button.

She didn't know what she expected. Maybe for his phone in the study to ring, proving he was just working.

Instead, the call went straight to voicemail.

"The person you are trying to reach is unavailable."

A cold, robotic female voice. It was the most honest thing she had heard all day. He wasn't just busy. His phone was off. Or he had silenced her call.

He was hiding. And she was utterly, devastatingly alone in the dark.

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The Betrayed Wife’s Million-Dollar Revenge The Betrayed Wife's Million-Dollar Revenge Jun Shangye Modern
“Beverly Greene spent eleven years being the perfect wife. She gave up her career, raised their daughter, cared for her husband's dying mother, and clipped coupons while Warren Hicks built the life they were supposed to share. Then, while cleaning his spotless SUV, Beverly found a torn condom wrapper in the glove box. And a strand of honey-brown hair wedged deep in the passenger seat. The dashcam told her the rest. Warren wasn't just cheating. He was waiting for his bedridden mother to die so he could inherit her estate. He had delayed the medical care that might have saved her, then hid over a million dollars in secret accounts while Beverly served as his unpaid caregiver. To his mistress, Warren promised everything. To his wife, he offered lies. And behind her back, he called Beverly a "clueless housewife" who would be lost without him. For one night, Beverly shattered. Then she stopped crying. Divorce would have been easy, if their terrified young daughter hadn't begged her not to break their family apart. So Beverly stayed in the same house with the man who had betrayed her, smiled across the dinner table, and quietly became the most dangerous woman he would ever underestimate. She backed up the recordings. She copied the bank statements. She saved every filthy message, every hidden account, every proof of his cruelty. Warren Hicks thought Beverly had nothing. No job. No power. No way out. He was wrong. Beverly was done being the perfect wife. Now she was going to be his reckoning.”
1

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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