I thought I had the perfect marriage with my billionaire husband, Hartwell, who treated me like a priceless artifact, even though he had a strange obsession with me wearing only cornflower blue. That was until an anonymous text called me a "pathetic substitute" for a dead woman, and I broke into his locked attic to uncover the terrifying truth. Under a dusty sheet, I found a life-sized portrait of a woman who looked exactly like me. Her name was Georgia Freeman, his dead lover, and my entire three-year marriage was a meticulously crafted lie. When I tried to rebel by wearing a different color, Hartwell violently tore the clothes off my body in disgust. Even worse, his entire elite family knew the secret all along, secretly mocking me as a clueless stand-in used to keep a ghost's memory alive. I was nothing but a prop to them, a hollow vessel chosen to replace a dead woman, and I couldn't understand why I had to sacrifice my identity for his twisted, obsessive grief. I shredded every blue silk gown he forced me to wear and threw his million-dollar sapphire down the trash chute. "I want a tubal ligation because I will never bear a substitute child." Watching all the color drain from his suddenly terrified face, I knew the game was over, and I was going to completely destroy his perfect illusion.
I had been married to Hartwell William for three years when I finally understood why he only let me wear cornflower blue.
It was the color his dead lover wore. The woman whose portrait he kept locked in the attic. The woman whose face was identical to mine.
An anonymous text called me a "pathetic substitute." That night, I broke into the attic and found her-Georgia Freeman, frozen in oil paint, smiling in a field of sunflowers. Same dark eyes. Same curve of lips. Same small mole above the eyebrow. Someone else had worn my face first.
For three years, I had been dressing myself in a dead woman's color and calling it love. For three years, his entire family had watched me play the part of the happy wife, knowing I was nothing but a stand-in.
When I tried to wear magenta, he tore it off my body.
So I shredded every blue silk gown. I dropped his million-dollar sapphire down the trash chute. I looked the most powerful man in Manhattan in the eye and said, "I want a tubal ligation. I will never bear your substitute child."
He went pale. For the first time in our marriage, Hartwell William looked afraid.
That was when I knew: the game wasn't over.
It was just beginning.
And I was done being the replacement.
...
Ellie stepped out of the marble bathroom, steam clinging to her skin. A thick white towel was wrapped around her body, water tracing slow paths down her collarbone.
Hartwell William was in the velvet armchair by the bed, whiskey swirling in his hand. Low lamplight caught the amber liquid, making it glow.
His eyes-deep, consuming gray-traveled over her slowly. Then they flicked to a specific drawer in the walk-in closet. Not a suggestion. A command.
Ellie's body understood before her mind did. Her feet were already moving.
She padded across the plush carpet and pulled open the drawer. Inside, a collection of nightgowns lay perfectly folded. All identical. Same cut. Same silk. Same shade of cornflower blue.
She slipped one on. The fabric was cool and liquid against her warm skin. In the mirror, a woman stared back-elegant, dark hair stark against the soft blue. A portrait of quiet grace.
A portrait someone else had painted.
When she turned, Hartwell had set his glass down. The ice clinked. A familiar fire had ignited in his eyes-heat reserved exclusively for these moments.
He crossed the room in three long strides. His fingers traced the delicate strap on her shoulder, reverent and possessive, like a collector handling his most prized acquisition.
"Only this color," he murmured, voice low and thick. "It's the only one that truly suits you."
Her breath hitched. It was a compliment. It always was. But tonight, for the first time in three years, something in her stomach curled.
He lifted her into his arms and carried her to the bed, laying her down as if she were made of glass.
Outside, Manhattan glittered. Inside, the air thickened with his intent. His kiss tasted of whiskey and control-a combination that had always silenced the small, questioning voice in her mind.
Later, wrapped in his arms, his breathing deep and even against her hair, Ellie lay wide awake. She studied the sharp line of his jaw, the dark sweep of his lashes. He was beautiful. Their life was beautiful.
So why did this one small thing feel so profoundly, inexplicably wrong?
"Why this blue?" she'd asked once, early in their marriage.
He'd smiled-a rare, unguarded expression. "The first time I saw you, you seemed as serene as this color."
She'd accepted it then, tucked it away as a piece of their private love story. An endearing quirk of the man she loved. She was convincing herself of it again now.
She slipped from his hold and went to the living room for water. Her phone, left on the sofa, lit up.
A new message. Unknown number.
Curiosity-that dangerous, primal impulse-made her slide her thumb across the screen.
The message was a single sentence. The words hit like ice shards piercing skin.
"He only loves you in that blue nightgown. Pathetic substitute."
Her fingers went numb. The water glass slipped-she barely caught it. A chill spread from her feet through her entire body, venomous and creeping.
Substitute.
The word pulsed in her skull.
Substitute for what? For whom?
Her thumb hovered over delete, trembling. A prank. It had to be. Someone jealous. Someone cruel.
But the message had a terrible, ringing precision. It had targeted the one hairline crack in the flawless facade of her marriage.
She deleted it. Then deleted it from the trash-as if erasing pixels could erase the poison.
She walked back to the bedroom on unsteady legs. Hartwell hadn't moved. He slept peacefully, the picture of a man without a single secret in the world.
Ellie slid back into bed, careful not to touch him. His warmth felt alien now.
The perfect life she had so carefully curated had just fractured. A tiny, almost invisible crack.
But she knew, with terrifying certainty, that it went all the way to the foundation.
The Billionaire's Substitute Wife Demands Divorce
Pike
Romance
Chapter 1
09/06/2026
Chapter 2
09/06/2026
Chapter 3
09/06/2026
Chapter 4
09/06/2026
Chapter 5
09/06/2026
Chapter 6
09/06/2026
Chapter 7
09/06/2026
Chapter 8
09/06/2026
Chapter 9
09/06/2026
Chapter 10
09/06/2026
Chapter 11
09/06/2026
Chapter 12
09/06/2026
Chapter 13
09/06/2026
Chapter 14
09/06/2026
Chapter 15
09/06/2026
Chapter 16
09/06/2026
Chapter 17
09/06/2026
Chapter 18
09/06/2026
Chapter 19
09/06/2026
Chapter 20
09/06/2026
Chapter 21
09/06/2026
Chapter 22
09/06/2026
Chapter 23
09/06/2026
Chapter 24
09/06/2026
Chapter 25
09/06/2026
Chapter 26
09/06/2026
Chapter 27
09/06/2026
Chapter 28
09/06/2026
Chapter 29
09/06/2026
Chapter 30
09/06/2026
Chapter 31
09/06/2026
Chapter 32
09/06/2026
Chapter 33
09/06/2026
Chapter 34
09/06/2026
Chapter 35
09/06/2026
Chapter 36
09/06/2026
Chapter 37
09/06/2026
Chapter 38
09/06/2026
Chapter 39
09/06/2026
Chapter 40
09/06/2026