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Divorced While Dying, Then I Became the Billionaire He Worked For

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Blurb

For seven years, Evelyn Hart gave up everything for love.

She abandoned medical school, walked away from her billionaire family, and devoted herself to helping her husband, Adrian King, build his empire. But on the day she was diagnosed with a life-threatening heart disease, she discovered the ultimate betrayal—Adrian was proposing to her adopted sister.

While everyone expected tears and desperation, Evelyn quietly filed for divorce and vanished.

What no one knew was that the "useless housewife" they mocked had a secret identity.

Three years later, Evelyn returns as the mysterious founder and CEO of the world's fastest-growing biotech empire, a company worth billions. When Adrian's corporation faces collapse, he is forced to seek help from the one person he never expected to see again.

His ex-wife.

Now powerful, untouchable, and standing beside the world's youngest billionaire investor, Evelyn is no longer the woman who loved him unconditionally.

As buried secrets, family conspiracies, and shocking betrayals come to light, Adrian realizes one devastating truth:

He didn't lose a wife.

He lost the love of his life.

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CHAPTER 1 — THE DIAGNOSIS & THE BETRAYAL
The hospital room felt too white, too clean, like it had been scrubbed of anything human. Evelyn Hart sat on the edge of the chair with her hands folded in her lap, forcing them to stay still. The air conditioner hummed softly above her, but she still felt warm, like something inside her body was working against her quietly. The doctor adjusted his glasses and looked down at the file again. “Mrs. Hart,” he said, voice calm in the way only professionals learn to be, “the tests confirm it. It’s a rare cardiac condition. Progressive. Not immediately fatal, but… serious.” Evelyn blinked once. “Serious how?” she asked. He hesitated. Just slightly. “You’ll experience fatigue, chest pain, and irregular heart function. Stress will worsen it significantly.” She nodded slowly like she was listening to instructions for medication, not a sentence written over her life. “Treatment options?” “There are experimental therapies,” he said. “But no guaranteed cure at your stage.” Silence followed after that. Not dramatic silence. Just empty. Evelyn looked at her hands, then back at him. “Okay,” she said gently. “Can I go now?” The doctor seemed caught off guard by how steady she was. “Yes… of course. But Mrs. Hart, you should inform your family. Support is important in cases like this.” Evelyn stood up, smoothing her skirt. “I understand,” she said. “Thank you, doctor.” She walked out without crying. Not because she was strong. But because her body had not decided how to react yet. At the reception, a nurse called her name softly as if expecting a different kind of response. Evelyn only gave a small nod and kept walking. Outside the hospital, the sunlight was too sharp. Cars moved normally. People laughed on phone calls. A vendor shouted about fruit prices like nothing in the world had changed. Evelyn stopped at the edge of the sidewalk and just stood there. Her chest tightened slightly, a dull reminder that the doctor’s words were not imagination. “So this is how it ends…” she thought quietly. “Quietly, in a place no one notices.” A child ran past her, laughing, dragging a balloon that bumped against her leg. The parent apologized without really looking at her. Life continued, uninterested. She looked down at her phone. No missed calls. No messages asking where she was. Only silence from her husband. Adrian King. She exhaled slowly and started walking. Her steps felt normal, but inside, everything was slightly delayed, like her emotions were trying to catch up. She called him once she reached a quieter street. He picked up after a few rings. “Evelyn,” Adrian’s voice came through, low and distracted. Background noise suggested he was in a meeting. “Yes,” she said carefully. “I just left the hospital.” A pause. Then, “Hospital? Are you sick again? You always worry too much. Take some rest and send the report to my assistant.” Evelyn swallowed lightly. “It’s not that simple. I think we should talk when you’re free.” “I’m in a meeting,” he said immediately. “Send it to me later. I’ll handle it.” She hesitated. “Adrian—” “I have to go,” he cut in. No anger. Just absence. “Don’t create unnecessary issues.” The call ended. Evelyn lowered her phone slowly. The world didn’t collapse. It just… continued without her. A faint breeze moved past her, lifting a strand of hair across her face. She didn’t fix it right away. The King Corporation building rose ahead like glass and steel confidence. Evelyn stood outside for a moment, looking up. She wasn’t supposed to be here. Normally, she would send documents through assistants, like a quiet shadow in her husband’s life. But today, she came herself. Inside, the lobby smelled faintly of polished stone and expensive perfume. Security glanced at her and nodded politely, but without recognition. She was familiar here, but not important. “Mrs. King,” one guard said automatically, like a habit. She gave a small smile and continued toward the elevator. No one stopped her. No one asked why she was there. That was the strange part of being someone’s wife in a world like this. You existed everywhere and nowhere at the same time. The executive floor was quieter. Glass walls, soft lighting, controlled silence. Evelyn stepped out holding a thin folder of documents Adrian had asked her to bring. Her steps slowed slightly when she reached the corridor leading to his office. Through the glass, she saw him. Adrian was seated behind his desk, sleeves rolled slightly, posture relaxed in the way he only allowed himself at work. His expression was focused, but not on papers. On someone else. Evelyn’s fingers tightened around the folder. A woman was inside the office too. Vanessa Hart. Evelyn recognized her immediately. Her adopted sister. Vanessa leaned slightly forward near Adrian’s desk, laughing softly at something he said. The distance between them was too close to be professional, too natural to be accidental. Evelyn’s body went still. Not shaking. Not reacting. Just… pausing. Like her mind needed time to accept what her eyes already understood. Vanessa turned slightly, and her smile softened when she noticed something on Adrian’s desk. She reached over casually, adjusting his tie like it belonged to her right. Adrian didn’t stop her. He didn’t even look uncomfortable. Evelyn exhaled slowly. It was not loud. It was not dramatic. But something inside her went quiet in a way that felt permanent. She pushed the door open. Both of them looked up. Vanessa’s smile flickered for half a second before becoming warm again. “Evelyn,” she said softly. “You’re here.” Adrian straightened slightly, as if remembering himself. “Why didn’t you send this through my assistant?” he asked. Evelyn walked in slowly. “I thought I should bring it myself,” she replied. Her voice was steady. Too steady. She placed the folder on his desk. Adrian didn’t open it immediately. He just glanced at it and picked up a pen. “You’re overthinking things again,” he said lightly. “I’ll sign it later.” He didn’t read it. He signed it. Vanessa leaned back slightly, watching quietly, her expression unreadable. Evelyn looked at him. For a brief moment, she thought about telling him. The hospital. The diagnosis. The weight sitting quietly inside her chest. But Adrian spoke again before she could. “Don’t bother me with trivial things,” he said, still signing papers. “I’m busy today.” The words were not cruel. That was the worst part. They were just… normal to him. Evelyn nodded once. “Alright.” She turned away. Behind her, Vanessa’s soft laughter returned, blending with the rustle of papers and the distant sound of city life outside the glass. Evelyn walked out. No confrontation. No tears. Only a strange emptiness spreading quietly through her chest. In the elevator, the doors closed with a soft chime. The descent began. Floor numbers blinked down slowly above the doors, each one feeling slightly heavier than the last. Evelyn finally leaned back slightly, exhaling. Her hand slowly moved to the folder. She opened it again. Her eyes scanned the pages. Something felt wrong. She flipped through quickly. One page was missing. She stopped. Her brow tightened slightly. “No…” she murmured under her breath. Then she found it. The missing page was not missing at all. It had been replaced. A document lay there neatly printed. Divorce Agreement. Her name was already typed at the top. Her signature line was highlighted. At the bottom corner, a small detail she hadn’t noticed before caught her eye: an internal stamp from Adrian’s legal department. Evelyn stared at it without blinking. The elevator moved downward, floor by floor, but she didn’t feel it. Her fingers slowly tightened on the paper. A faint reflection of her face appeared in the elevator doors—calm, unreadable, almost чужer-like. Someone had prepared this. Someone had expected this moment. And somewhere above her, in that glass office, her life had already started ending without her permission.

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