Abandoned by my Husband after being a Contracted Wife
I was the secret wife of Cameron Smith, the billionaire CEO of Smith Enterprises. But I didn't have a dime to my name.
Rule number one of our marriage contract: Absolute public secrecy. No public appearances. No shared bank accounts. No acknowledgment.
Tonight, on the fourth year of our marriage, I walked home in the pouring rain. My bus had broken down two miles away. I didnt call my husband. He hated being disturbed.
I stepped onto the crosswalk. Tires screeched. Blinding headlights pierced the dark.
A luxury car slammed into me. The impact threw me into the air. I hit the wet asphalt hard. My head cracked against the pavement. My vision blurred instantly.
A woman stood over me. Perfect hair, perfect designer coat, untouched by the storm. She looked down at me, her eyes wide with panic.
Camille. Camerons first love. The woman who left him for Paris five years ago. The woman who returned just last week. I knew her face. I had seen it in the locked drawer of his desk. I had seen it in the way he stared out the window at night.
She didn't look at my bleeding head. She looked at the scratch on her bumper.
"Cam... I hit someone," she cried into the phone, her voice trembling, soft, helpless. "I was just driving to see you and... please come. I'm scared."
Minutes later, headlights cut through the dark.
A sleek black Maybach pulled up. My heart stopped. My breath hitched.
Cameron. He stepped out into the rain. Tall, imposing, his jaw clenched in that familiar way when he was worried. But he wasn't worried about me.
Panic clawed at my chest. If anyone saw us, if the press found out, he would destroy me. He promised he would.
My hands shook as I pulled my soaked hood over my head, hiding my face. I curled into a ball on the freezing pavement, holding my bruised ribs. I tried to make myself invisible. Just like always.
He walked past the front of the Maybach. His expensive leather shoes splashed in the puddles. He was walking straight toward Camille.
But then, he stopped.
He looked down.
The streetlamp caught my face under the hood. The fabric had slipped just enough.
His eyes locked onto mine.
I saw the shock register on his face. His breath hitched. He knew it was me. He saw the blood dripping from my forehead. He saw me shivering, broken on the ground. He saw his wife.
For one second, the world stopped.
I waited for him to reach out. I waited for him to call my name. Just once. Just to save me.
Then, his expression hardened.
He looked away. He stepped over the puddle of my blood.
"Cam!" Camille threw herself into his arms.
"Are you hurt?" he asked. His voice was soft. Frantic. The voice he never used with me.
"I'm fine," she sobbed into his chest. "But her... Cam, what about her?" Camille pointed a trembling finger at me. "We need to help her. Should we call an ambulance? I didn't mean to hit her, she just came out of nowhere!"
Cameron didn't even look back at me.
"Don't worry about it," his voice was flat. Cold.
"But she's bleeding..." Camille whispered, burying her face in his shirt.
"I'll just call my bodyguard to pay her," Cameron said, his tone dripping with disgust. "She's just a peasant, Camille. Shell shut up with money."
Just a peasant. The words hit me harder than the car.
My throat closed. I couldn't breathe. Not because of the broken ribs, but because my heart finally shattered into a million unfixable pieces.
He opened the passenger door for her. He helped her inside, making sure she didn't step in the mud. He closed the door.
He pulled out his phone, dialed a number, and spoke a few words. Then he got into the driver's seat.
He didn't look at me again.
The Maybachs engine roared to life.
The tires splashed dirty water onto my face as they drove away, leaving me alone in the dark.
I lay there in the rain, the blood mixing with the puddles. The taillights faded into the distance. The pain in my ribs was nothing compared to the hole in my chest.
Four years of obedience. Four years of waiting. Four years of cooking his meals, warming his bed, and loving a man who never saw me as human.
I pushed myself up with shaking hands. My knees scraped against the asphalt. Blood dripped into my eyes, blinding me.
I didn't cry. I was done crying.
I stared at the empty street.
Our marriage contract had an expiration date. I had promised myself I would endure it for my mother. I had promised myself I could make him love me.
But I didn't need to wait for the date anymore.
I finally accepted it.
Our marriage of four years ended today.
I just needed to get back to that cold mansion. Pack my bags. Leave.
Then, my phone buzzed in my pocket.
The screen was shattered, but the caller ID glowed through the cracks.
City General Hospital.
"Hello?"
"Ms. Vina?" It was Dr. Arisa. "Your mother just went into cardiac arrest."
The world stopped spinning. It just fell away.
"We are resuscitating her now, but her organs are failing."
Four years ago, I was drowning. My mothers medical bills were piling up, and the hospital was threatening to stop her treatments. I was desperate.
Cameron Smith was desperate, too. He didn't need love. He needed a respectable, invisible wife to appease his company's strict board of directors and his ailing grandfather.
We made a deal. I would be his shadow wife. In exchange, I received a monthly stipend to keep my mother alive, and a five million dollar severance when the contract ended.
In the beginning, it wasn't a nightmare. Cameron was actually gentle. He thanked me for the meals I cooked. He asked about my mother. I was young, naive, and I foolishly fell in love with my own husband.
Then, I made the mistake of acting like a real wife.
I saw a text message light up his phone. The name Camille flashed on the screen.
"Who is she?" I asked.
Camerons gentleness vanished instantly. His eyes turned to ice. He ruthlessly shut me down.
He grabbed my arm and dragged me down the hall to his locked home office. He threw open the bottom drawer of his mahogany desk.
Inside were dozens of envelopes.
"Look at them," he ordered.
He showed me every single letter Camille had ever sent him from Paris. He had kept them all. Perfectly preserved.
"I am only waiting for her return," he stated coldly, looking at me with pure disgust. "Don't ever question me again."
The next day, his lawyer handed me a revised contract. Cameron had added a humiliating clause: Absolute secrecy and no emotional demands. Any breach of these terms, and the five million dollar final payout is completely forfeited.
I signed it. I swallowed my pride, my tears, and my broken heart.
Since that day, I became the perfect, robotic wife. I never asked questions. I never showed emotion. I stayed in the shadows where I belonged.
But the shadows couldn't protect my mother.
I dragged my broken body back to the penthouse. I didn't call him. Instead, I went straight to the safe and pulled out the flawless, five-carat diamond necklace he forced me to wear for public appearances.
I called a black-market jeweler who asked no questions. I sold a two-million-dollar piece for exactly three hundred thousand in cash, wiring it to the hospital with barely ten minutes to spare.
The emergency bypass was successful, but her condition remained critical. The doctor warned me her brain tumor was swelling from the trauma of the cardiac arrest.
She desperately needed the VIP recovery suite I had secured weeks agothe only room on the floor equipped with the specialized neurological life-support she required.
I rushed to the hospital, ignoring the throbbing pain in my ribs and the bandage hidden under my wet hair.
But when I arrived at the front desk, the head nurse wouldn't look at me.
"I'm sorry, Mrs. Smith. The suite was reassigned."
"Reassigned?" My voice was dangerously low. "To who? My mother is on life support."
"To a Mrs. Laurent. She was admitted for mild exhaustion."
Camille's mother.
"Who authorized this?" I demanded, my hands shaking so hard I had to grip the counter.
"Mr. Smith's executive assistant."
Cameron. He gave my dying mother's life-support room to Camille's mother for a nap.
I wanted to scream. I wanted to tear the hospital apart. I wanted to march into that suite and drag that woman out of the bed myself. But my phone buzzed.
A text from Camerons assistant: Car is waiting downstairs. You have thirty minutes to get ready for the foundation gala. Do not be late.
I swallowed the blood and bile in my throat. If I breached the contract now, if I caused a scene, he would cut off my mother's medical care entirely. I had to buy her time.
That evening, I plastered on a fake smile. I covered my bruises with heavy makeup and squeezed my fractured ribs into a tight, long-sleeved designer gown.
I took Cameron's arm at the high-society charity gala as if he hadn't left me to die in the street hours ago.
Another rule: Play the part when required.
We stood under the crystal chandeliers, the picture-perfect billionaire couple.
"Cameron, Vina," a senior board member approached, swirling his champagne. "Four years married. When are we going to see an heir? What does the future hold for you two?"
Cameron stiffened beside me.
I didn't miss a beat. I smiled my perfect, robotic smile. "Cameron is entirely focused on the company's expansion right now. I support him completely. Our future is exactly where it needs to be."
The board member laughed, satisfied. Cameron looked down at me, a strange, unreadable flicker in his eyes.
Two hours later, the gala ended.
The privacy divider rolled up in the back of the limo. The fake smiles dropped. The silence between us was suffocating.
Cameron loosened his tie, staring out the window into the city lights.
I looked straight ahead. "Our contract expires in exactly sixty days."
He froze.
"I have already contacted my lawyer," I said, my voice completely devoid of emotion. "The divorce papers are being drafted. They will be on your desk by Monday."
Cameron slowly turned his head. His jaw clenched so hard a muscle ticked in his cheek. He was inexplicably irritated, his eyes darkening with a sudden, volatile anger.
But his pride won. He let out a cold, mocking scoff.
"Eager to leave, Vina? Don't forget, you don't get a dime of the five million until the clock strikes midnight on the final day."
"I don't want your money," I said flatly. "I just want out."
His eyes narrowed, a storm brewing in them. He opened his mouth to speak, but the limo suddenly jerked to a halt.
We weren't at the penthouse.
Cameron's driver lowered the intercom. "Sir, we're here. Just as Ms. Camille requested."
I looked out the window. We were parked directly outside a luxury maternity clinic.
I stared at the glowing sign through the tinted glass. My stomach twisted into a cold, hard knot.
Cameron didn't offer an explanation. He didn't even look at me. He simply adjusted his expensive cuffs and opened the door.
"Take my wife home," he ordered the driver.
Then he stepped out into the night, walking through the glass doors to meet the woman who had left me bleeding in the street.
"Ma'am?" the driver asked softly. "To the penthouse?"
"No," I whispered, my voice hollow. "Take me back to City General."
I spent the rest of the night sitting in a hard plastic chair outside the ICU. I watched the monitors beep, keeping my mother tethered to this world. By dawn, a small miracle happened. Professor Valles assistant called my name. There had been a cancellation. I finally secured a consultation slot for her surgery.
Relief washed over me, but it was heavy and exhausting. I needed coffee. I needed a moment to breathe.
I walked down the hall and stepped into the empty elevator, pressing the button for the lobby.
The metal doors were sliding shut when a manicured hand shot out, catching the sensor.
The doors slid open.
Camille stepped in, bringing the scent of expensive Parisian perfume with her. Right behind her was Cameron.
I immediately shrank into the back corner. I pulled the collar of my trench coat up and lowered my head, letting my hair fall over the bandage on my forehead.
Camille didn't even glance at me. To her, I was just a stranger. A peasant in the corner.
She leaned heavily into Camerons side, wrapping her arms around his bicep.
"Thank you so much, Cam," she cooed, her voice echoing loudly in the small metal box. "I know mom was just a little stressed and exhausted from the flight, but using your influence to get her that VIP neurological suite... you really spoil us. The nurses are waiting on her hand and foot."
My nails dug so hard into my palms they broke the skin.
A little stressed.
My mother was on life support in a crowded, noisy ward downstairs because Camille's mother needed a quiet place to nap.
I didn't move. I didn't breathe. I acted like a ghost.
Cameron murmured a low response to Camille, but as the elevator descended, his eyes flicked up to the mirrored ceiling.
His gaze locked onto my reflection.
I saw his body go completely rigid. He recognized the coat. He recognized me.
For three agonizing floors, we stared at each other in the mirror. His eyes were dark, unreadable, and intensely focused on me. I stared back with dead, empty eyes. I didn't look away until the doors pinged open at the lobby.
I slipped out before them, disappearing into the crowd without a backward glance.
That night, I didn't go back to the penthouse. The thought of being in his space, smelling his cologne, sleeping in a bed he boughtit made me physically sick.
Instead, I walked three blocks from the hospital and booked a fifty-dollar motel room. The wallpaper was peeling, and the mattress was hard, but it was mine. It was safe.
At exactly midnight, my shattered phone buzzed on the cheap nightstand.
Cameron.
I stared at it for a long time before answering.
"Where are you?" His voice was low, tight, and demanding. It vibrated through the speaker, filling the tiny room.
"I'm out," I said flatly.
"It's midnight, Vina. The gala is over. Come home. Now."
"No."
I hung up. I turned the phone on silent and stared at the water-stained ceiling until the sun came up.
When I woke up the next morning, there were fourteen missed calls.
As I was packing my small bag to head back to the hospital, he called again. This time, I answered.
"Why were you at City General yesterday?" he demanded immediately. The anger in his voice was barely contained. "You were in the elevator. Don't lie to me."
He was probing. He wanted to know my secrets, even though he refused to share his. He wanted to know if I was spying on him, or worse, if I was going to be a problem.
"I had a minor checkup," I lied smoothly.
"A checkup for what?"
"Nothing that concerns you, Cameron." I kept my voice perfectly level, enforcing the very rules he created. "As per our contract, I am making no emotional demands, and I expect absolute secrecy regarding my personal life in return."
Silence stretched over the line. I could hear his heavy breathing.
"I don't need your help," I added coldly. "I don't need anything from you anymore."
Before he could say another word, I ended the call.
I shoved the shattered phone into my pocket, grabbed my bag, and walked out of the cheap motel. I headed straight back to City General. I needed to see my mother.
I needed to finalize the surgery details with Professor Valle.
As I pushed through the revolving doors of the hospital lobby, my fractured ribs throbbed. I kept my head down, rushing toward the ICU wing.
Suddenly, someone stepped directly into my path.
"Oh my goodness, I am so incredibly sorry!" a soft, melodic voice gasped.
I froze. I knew that voice.
hands. She stood up, holding them out to me with a warm, apologetic smile.
Camille.
"I wasn't watching where I was going," Camille said, her eyes filled with genuine, sickeningly sweet concern. She glanced at the thick bandage on my forehead, her brow furrowing slightly. "Are you alright? You look a little pale."
Before I could snatch my papers from her hands, heavy, familiar footsteps echoed behind her.
"Camille. What's taking so long?"
Camilles face lit up. She spun around. "Sorry, Cam! I just bumped into this poor woman."
Cameron stepped up beside her. He looked down.
His eyes hit mine.
The color instantly drained from his face. His entire body went rigid. He saw the bruises on my neck. He saw the medical files in Camille's hands. He saw his secret wife standing inches away from his first love.
Camille tilted her head, looking back and forth between us, her smile completely innocent.
"Cam?" she asked, her voice echoing in the sudden, dead silence. "Do you two know each other?"
Camerons jaw clenched. His eyes locked onto mine. There was a warning in his gaze, sharp and violent. He was daring me to speak. Daring me to ruin his perfect moment.
Then, his expression went completely blank.
"No," he said, his voice like ice. "I've never seen her before."
The words hit me like a physical blow, right in my fractured ribs. Never seen her before. Four years of marriage. Four years of waiting in the dark. Erased in a single breath.
I snatched my medical files from Camilles perfectly manicured hands. I didn't say a word. I turned my back on my husband and walked away.
I practically ran to the ICU wing. Every second mattered. Professor Raj Valle was the best neurosurgeon in the world, but he was only in the country for exactly twenty-four hours before flying back to Europe. This was my mothers only window.
When I reached her room, two orderlies were already unlocking the wheels of her bed.
Relief washed over me. "You're taking her up now?"
"Yes, ma'am. OR 3 is prepped," one of them replied.
Suddenly, a man in a crisp suit marched down the hall. It was Mr. Ken, the hospital administrator.
"Stop," Ken ordered, holding up a hand. "Leave the patient. The surgery is canceled."
The world tilted. "What?" I stepped in front of my mother's bed. "What are you talking about? Professor Valle is waiting for her!"
"Professor Valles schedule has been subjected to a VIP priority override," Ken said, not even looking me in the eye. "His current slot has been reassigned."
"Reassigned to who? My mothers brain is swelling! She will die without this bypass!"
"I'm sorry, Ms. Vina. The slot was claimed by a Mrs. Laurent. It comes straight from the top."
Mrs. Laurent. Camille's mother.
"For what?" I demanded, my voice shaking with pure rage. "What life-threatening condition does she have?"
Ken shifted uncomfortably. "A... minor nerve compression in her wrist. She requested the best surgeon available."
A wrist procedure. Camille had used Camerons name and executive privileges to hijack a world-renowned neurosurgeon for a minor wrist ache, leaving my mother to die.
I pulled out my shattered phone. I dialed Camerons number.
Straight to voicemail.
I dialed again.
Voicemail.
He was ignoring me. He was standing in the lobby with Camille, playing the devoted hero, while he let my mother suffocate.
I looked through the glass partition. My mother looked so small, so fragile amidst the tangle of tubes and wires. The heart monitor beeped erratically, a terrifying, uneven rhythm.
Something inside me snapped.
The obedient, robotic, shadow wife died in that exact moment.
I didn't care about the five million dollars anymore. I didn't care about his pride, his rules, or his wrath.
I unzipped the hidden lining of my leather tote bag. My fingers brushed against a thick, folded document. The one piece of paper I was sworn under penalty of absolute financial ruin never to reveal.
I gripped it tight, turned on my heel, and marched toward the executive wing.
I bypassed the receptionist, ignoring her protests, and shoved open the heavy oak doors to the Hospital Directors office.
Director Jack looked up, startled, spilling coffee on his tie. "Excuse me! You can't just"
I slammed the document onto his mahogany desk.
"Read it," I commanded.
Jack blinked, adjusting his glasses. He looked down at the gold-embossed paper. His eyes widened. He read the names. Cameron Smith and Vina Smith. Date of Marriage: Four years ago.
"I am Cameron Smiths legal wife," I said, my voice dripping with venom. "Not Camille. Me. And you just canceled my mothers life-saving brain surgery for a minor wrist procedure."
Jack swallowed hard, sweating. "Mrs. Smith, I... the override came from Mr. Smith's assistant. We assumed"
"I don't care what you assumed," I cut him off, leaning over the desk. "You will reinstate my mother's surgery immediately. If she is not in OR 3 in the next five minutes, I will personally see to it that Smith Enterprises pulls every single cent of funding from this hospital by morning. I will ruin you."
Jack didn't hesitate. He grabbed his desk phone, his hands shaking violently. "OR 3? Get the bypass patient up there now. Yes, right now! Cancel the Laurent procedure!"
I stood up straight, my heart pounding against my bruised ribs. I had done it. I had saved her.
But I was still standing at the desk, signing the emergency consent forms, when the office door flew open.
"Director Jack!" a shrill, furious voice echoed through the room.
Camille stormed in, her perfect face twisted in ugly rage. "How dare you bump my mother's procedure? Do you know who I am? Do you know who I am with? I will call Cameron Smith right now and have you fired!"
Camille finally noticed me standing there. She scoffed, rolling her eyes. "You again? What is this peasant doing in here? Get her out!"
Camille stepped forward, slamming her designer bag onto the desk. As she did, her eyes fell onto the document lying right in front of her.
She froze.
Her eyes darted across the gold seal. The official signatures. The names.
Cameron Smith. Vina Smith.
The silence in the room was deafening. I watched the realization hit her like a freight train. The arrogant flush vanished from her cheeks, replaced by a sickly, ghost-like pallor.
Her hands began to shake. She stumbled backward, bumping into the doorframe.
"No..." she whispered, her voice cracking. "No, this is a fake. Cam wouldn't..."
She pulled out her phone with trembling fingers and hit speed dial.
He answered on the first ring.
"Camille?" Camerons deep voice drifted through the phone's speaker.
"How could you?" Camille screamed, bursting into hysterical, dramatic sobs. "You lied to me! You humiliated me! You made me look like a cheap mistress in front of the entire hospital!"
"Camille, what are you talking about? Where are you?"
"I'm in the Director's office!" she wailed, tears streaming down her perfect face. "Looking at your marriage certificate! Looking at your wife!"
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