Clara Felix Elara NovelRevenge of the Wrongful Marriage

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Story Summary

On her seventh wedding anniversary, Clara discovers a staggering dowry list in her husband Felix's safe, intended for his ex-girlfriend Elara. The list includes assets identical to those explicitly denied to Clara in their prenuptial agreement. Realizing her entire marriage was a lie built for another woman, Clara calmly requests a divorce. As she proceeds with the legalities, painful details emerge, such as their Wi-Fi password "FLovesEM," confirming Felix's enduring love for Elara and Clara's role as a placeholder in a wrongful marriage.

Tags:

  • Clara
  • Clara and Felix
  • On our seventh wedding anniversary, I found a dowry list in my husband Felixs safe.
  • what happens to Clara in the discovery of the dowry list

Character Relationship Map

  • Clara (Protagonist) -> Wife of Felix, discovers the truth about her marriage.
  • Felix (Antagonist) -> Husband of Clara, secretly in love with his ex-girlfriend Elara.
  • Elara (Unseen Character) -> Felix's ex-girlfriend, the intended recipient of the dowry.
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On our seventh wedding anniversary, I found a dowry list in my husband Felixs safe.
It wasn't for me. It was for his ex-girlfriend.
The list was staggering: an 3333-77778.88 million settlement, ten sets of limited-edition designer jewelry, and two luxury condos in New York City.
A stark contrast to my own marriage. When I married Felix, I signed a prenuptial agreement. No dowry, not even a single piece of jewelry. Even the house we lived in, our supposed marital home, wasn't mine.
"What do you think you're doing, going through my things again?"
I turned to see him standing in the doorway, his face a mask of cold annoyance. I didn't scream. I didn't cry. I simply looked at him, my voice eerily calm.
"Felix, let's get a divorce."
His brow furrowed slightly. He strode into the room, snatched the crimson list from my hand, and ripped it into confetti.
"It's an old relic. Are you really going to blow this out of proportion?"
He didn't spare me another glance, turning his back and walking away as if I were nothing more than a minor inconvenience.
And just as calmly, I picked up my phone and called my lawyer.
I was leaving with nothing.

1
My lawyer was efficient. By six that evening, the divorce papers were in my inbox.
He must have felt a pang of guilt, drafting such a simple agreement for a client who was walking away empty-handed from a marriage to a man of Felix's stature.
"Clara," he began, his tone hesitant, "are you absolutely sure about this? Given your husband's net worth, you could fight for a much more substantial settlement."
A bitter smile touched my lips. A settlement? There was nothing to settle.
For years, Felixs official salary had been a symbolic one dollar. As for his company dividends, he had made it crystal clear before we married: they were pre-marital assets. They had nothing to do with me.
So while other brides got lavish European weddings and honeymoons, I got a stack of legal documents to sign, meticulously detailing the division of property that left me with none.
I never thought much of it. Felix was a businessman, after all. Calculating, meticulousI understood that.
But that dowry list shattered my understanding. It turned my entire marriage into a cruel joke.
Because every single item on that listthe jewelry, the condos, the cashwas identical to the assets listed in the prenup I signed. The assets that were explicitly not mine.
The wedding ring on my finger? It wasn't for me. It was meant for her.
The ten sets of designer jewelry I had so carefully cleaned and stored? They were hers.
This very house, our home? It was bought for her.
His ex-girlfriend never claimed them. But even as his wife, I could never have them either.
A suffocating pain tightened around my chest, making my hands tremble. Still, I managed to keep my voice steady as I spoke to my lawyer. "No, this is enough."
I ended the call and connected my phone to the printer. But as my finger hovered over the Wi-Fi password prompt, another wave of bitterness washed over me.
The password: FLovesEM.
I never understood it before. But now, it hit me with the force of a physical blow. Felix loves Elara. Elarathe name elegantly scrawled at the bottom of the dowry list.
It all clicked into place. Three years ago, the Wi-Fi went out. I called a technician, had a new router installed, and changed the password to something simple.
When Felix came home that night, he couldn't connect. His rage was immediate and terrifying. He stormed into the bedroom and yanked me from a deep sleep.
"Did you change the Wi-Fi password?" he demanded, his face a cold, hard mask.
His fury jolted me awake. "The old router was broken," I stammered. "I had it replaced."
He said nothing more that night, but his silence was a weapon. He immediately called the provider, paying a ridiculous fee to have a technician come out in the middle of the night and change the password back.
For the next seven days, he treated me like I was invisible. He refused the food I cooked, slept in the guest room, and ignored every word I said.
The silence became unbearable. I finally broke down, apologized, and promised never to touch his things again. Only then did he deign to speak to me.
The memory was a fresh stab of pain. I squeezed my eyes shut, forcing the past away, and hit "print."
Once the documents were ready, I signed my name on the dotted line.
Then I called a friend in real estate. It was time to find a new place.

2
Thanks to my friend, the search was quick. I wasn't picky. By that afternoon, I had paid the deposit and first month's rent on a small apartment.
It was eight o'clock by the time I got home, but I stopped at the market anyway. Divorce or not, I wanted this to end with some semblance of peace.
I cooked his favorite meal and waited. Ten o'clock came and went. Then eleven.
Just after midnight, the front door finally opened. Felix walked in, his expression souring when he saw me on the sofa.
He tossed his suit jacket onto a chair, already loosening his tie. "That's enough, Clara. Stop this little drama."
He started towards the bedroom, not even glancing at the untouched dinner on the dining table. He didn't say another word to me.
My fists clenched.
"Felix," I called out, my voice cutting through the silence. "Here are the divorce papers. Please sign them."
He froze, his body tensing. He turned slowly, his eyes burning with irritation.
"Is this still about that list? Fine. You want the house? I'll add your name to the deed. Is that what you want?"
I almost laughed. Did he really think this was about money? If I had been after his money, I never would have married him in the first place.
He would never know. He would never understand the years I spent loving him from afar, a secret I had carried from middle school through graduation. My entire youth was a quiet orbit around him. I wrote 999 love letters I never had the courage to give him. For six years, I made sure there was milk and bread on his desk because he always forgot breakfast. I was a silent, lovesick guardian, content to just watch over him.
Then, after college, a twist of fate brought us together on a blind date.
So I endured it all. The dates he stood me up, leaving me waiting alone outside the movie theater. The rainy nights he promised to pick me up, leaving me soaked and shivering on the curb. I never once thought of leaving.
When he proposed, without a shred of genuine ceremony or warmth, I said yes.
There was no grand reason. Its just who I amthe kind of person who has to crash into a wall to finally learn to turn back.

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