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Wife’s Bitter Revenge Against Neglectful CEO Husband

Teela married King Heavenly because she loved him, but life in the Heavenly household was anything but euphoric. Lettie, her hard-as-nails mother-in-law, treats her like an unpaid servant. The family treats her like an outsider. King treats her like a shadow, transparent and forgettable. When Lettie presses Teela to prove her value to the family or get out, Teela has a decision to make. But she’s not leaving without a fight. King Heavenly rules Heavenly Industries with an iron fist, but he leaves his home life to his mother to manage, and that includes the management of his boring little wife. Teela has never complained. She’s never done anything interesting, for that matter. She’s just one more responsibility in a long line of responsibilities that King shoulders on a daily basis, and that is exactly how he treats her — as a responsibility that he’s delegated to his mother. Suddenly Teela steps out of the shadows and into a fight with him and his whole family, and King is baffled by the ruthless actions of his now daring wife. He’d always heard that vengeance is a dish best served cold, but Teela is coming in hot!

CaseysPen · Urbano
Classificações insuficientes
109 Chs

Please Let Me Go

"King, why don't you focus your attention on Nan instead? She has no negative history with your family, and you like her. In some ways, she's been more of a wife to you than I have."

"I broke it off with Nan last night before I went to the bar. She'll be reassigned to another division at Heavenly as well. You don't have to see her again."

Well, that shut me up. I didn't expect that. The last I remembered, King wanted to keep seeing her while living with me. For the first time, I thought maybe King was serious. Now what?

Did it change anything? No, not really. I still didn't trust him. I was angry not only about the recent torture, and yeah, I saw it as torture, but the cumulation of everything that had happened since I'd married King. No matter what King did to redeem himself, I didn't think I would ever get over it.