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Ace Suarez, a man who built an empire on cold control, was convinced his wife had betrayed him. He stormed into a Brooklyn warehouse, ready to destroy her, only to see a woman in a silk robe with a man who called her "sweetheart." Blind with rage, he didn't check her face-he didn't need to. He assumed the worst, filed for divorce, and retreated to his glass office, leaving his wife to face the ruins of a life she didn't know was ending. But the coincidence was too perfect. His new assistant, Delinda Howell, lived in that same building. She was quiet, efficient, and bore the exact same name as the woman he had just discarded. I was left wondering, was this a cruel twist of fate, or had he destroyed the wrong woman in his arrogance? Now, as the divorce papers are finalized, Ace begins to notice the assistant he once treated as nothing, and the suffocating realization hits him: the woman he fired, abused, and erased might be the very same one standing right outside his door.
The air conditioning in the midtown Manhattan law firm was set low enough to freeze sweat to the skin.
Delinda Howell pushed open the heavy walnut doors of the conference room.
Her fingertips were ice-cold. She pressed her nails into her palms, using the sharp sting to keep her breathing steady.
She forced her eyes to look across the massive mahogany table.
The man sitting in the shadows of the extreme backlighting was a silhouette of sharp angles. His custom-tailored suit stretched across broad, intimidating shoulders. He didn't move. He didn't speak. The sheer physical weight of his presence made the oxygen in the room feel thin.
The trust lawyer slid a fifty-page prenuptial agreement across the polished wood. It stopped right in front of Delinda.
She didn't look at the asset division clauses. She didn't read the numbers. She flipped the thick stack of paper directly to the last page.
A low, harsh scoff came from the shadows.
It was a sound of pure mockery, as if her rush to sign was exactly the greedy desperation he had expected.
Delinda's jaw tightened. She gripped the heavy fountain pen. The metal was cold against her skin. The nib scratched against the thick paper, loud in the dead silence of the room, as she signed her name.
The lawyer pulled the document away and handed it to the man, his features lost in shadow.
Ace Suarez didn't shift his posture. He took the pen and slashed his signature across the page with violent efficiency.
Then, he stood up.
The shadow cast by his height instantly swallowed Delinda. Her stomach dropped.
He reached into the inner pocket of his suit jacket. He pulled out a Centurion Black Card with no spending limit and tossed it onto the table.
The heavy metal card slid across the smooth wood. It stopped inches from Delinda's hand.
Ace didn't say a single word. He turned his back on her and walked toward the private elevator. The rhythmic, hard strike of his leather shoes against the marble floor was the only sound left in the room.
The elevator doors slid shut.
The rigid tension in Delinda's shoulders finally collapsed. Her lungs burned as she let out a breath she hadn't realized she was holding.
She looked at the Black Card. She didn't touch it.
Instead, she pushed it across the table toward the trustee.
Delinda walked out of the building. The harsh New York sunlight hit her face, stinging her eyes. She pulled her phone from her pocket and dialed the hospital.
"Yes, the funds for my grandmother's intensive care unit have been cleared," she said, her voice finally steady.
She hung up. She opened her wallet, her fingers finding the small, worn photograph tucked into the deepest slot behind her ID. It was a blurry newspaper clipping of Ace Suarez's profile-the only image her grandmother's lawyer had provided before the signing, with a stern note reminding her to at least recognize her husband if they ever crossed paths. She'd kept it more as a tangible reminder of the debt she owed than out of any curiosity. She slid the wallet closed.
One year later.
The lobby of the Suarez Group's New York headquarters smelled of expensive floor wax.
Delinda stepped through the revolving doors. She wore a crisp beige trench coat and three-inch heels that clicked sharply against the granite floor.
Security checked her ID and handed her a gold-embossed, high-level access card.
Above the reception desk, massive Bloomberg terminal screens flashed red and green, scrolling the news of the Suarez Group's latest hostile takeover.
Delinda swiped her card at the executive elevator. The machine shot upward at a speed that made her ears pop and her stomach hollow out.
The doors opened to the top floor. The air up here was different. It was thick with high-pressure panic and the smell of stale coffee.
Victoria, the former executive assistant, walked toward her carrying a cardboard box. Victoria's eyes raked up and down Delinda's outfit with cold assessment.
"The rule on this floor is that there are no rules," Victoria warned, her voice dropping to a harsh whisper. "The CEO is a tyrant. He will chew you up."
Delinda offered a perfectly blank, professional smile. She didn't take a step back.
She walked to her new desk, sat down, and booted up her computer. She logged into the company intranet, her fingers flying across the keyboard.
A sudden, frantic rush of footsteps echoed from the end of the hallway.
Every single executive on the floor instantly stood up, their spines snapping straight.
Delinda stopped typing. She lifted her head and looked toward the heavy double doors of the CEO's office, waiting for them to be pushed open.
His Secret Wife: A Dangerous Game
Blake Jewell
Billionaires
Chapter 1 1
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Chapter 2 2
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Chapter 3 3
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Chapter 4 4
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Chapter 5 5
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Chapter 6 6
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Chapter 7 7
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Chapter 8 8
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Chapter 9 9
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Chapter 10 10
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