The Wife He Humiliated Was The Billionaire Behind His Company-nhu9999 - Chainityai

The Wife He Humiliated Was The Billionaire Behind His Company-nhu9999

Elle Collins had spent years perfecting the art of being underestimated. She did not inherit her fortune with cameras waiting outside a courthouse. She built it quietly, through private acquisitions, hidden holdings, and signatures Ryan never bothered to read.

Vertex Dynamics was the crown jewel of that hidden empire, a technology company with sleek offices, powerful investors, and a board that understood one thing clearly: the owner preferred anonymity, and that preference was not negotiable.

Ryan knew the company as the mountain he wanted to climb. He knew its lobby, its executives, its politics, and its glossy investor decks. What he did not know was that his wife owned the mountain.

Image

At home, he called her simple. He said it like a joke at first, then like a fact. After the twins were born, the jokes sharpened until they became little knives disguised as comments.

Elle had given birth to two babies four months earlier, and her body still carried the truth of that survival. Some mornings, her hands shook from exhaustion before she could even lift a bottle.

Ryan noticed none of that. Or worse, he noticed and resented it. He saw milk stains, soft skin, dark circles, and laundry piles. He did not see recovery. He did not see sacrifice.

The gala was supposed to be his triumph. Vertex Dynamics had promoted him into a role he believed would finally place him close to the mysterious Owner, the figure everyone whispered about but no one outside the board had met.

He dressed that night like a man stepping into destiny. Black tuxedo, polished shoes, expensive watch, practiced smile. He kissed neither Elle nor the babies before leaving their bedroom suite at home.

Elle arrived later because both infants had cried through their feeding. By the time she reached the ballroom, her arms ached, her back throbbed, and the dress she had chosen felt too tight across healing skin.

The ballroom glowed with chandelier light. Champagne towers shimmered near the entrance. Camera flashes clicked from every corner. The air smelled of roses, cologne, warm sugar from plated desserts, and chilled champagne sweating down glass.

Elle stood near the edge of the room with the stroller angled beside her. She wanted only to support her husband through a public night that mattered to him, then go home before her body gave out.

For a few minutes, no one noticed how pale she had become. Executives shook hands, spouses laughed too loudly, and Ryan moved through the room like he had already forgotten who had held him together.

Then he saw her. His expression changed so quickly that Elle felt it before he reached her. There was no concern in his face, no fear that she might be unwell.

Only disgust.

He crossed the ballroom with controlled steps, the kind people use when they know they are being watched. His hand closed around her arm, hard enough to warn her not to resist.

A waiter paused with a silver tray lifted between two guests. One executive’s wife lowered her glass. Several people saw enough to understand there was trouble, then looked away to protect their own comfort.

Nobody helped.

Ryan dragged Elle toward the hallway near the service exit. The music faded behind them, replaced by the hum of refrigeration units, the scrape of catering carts, and the cold draft slipping through a cracked metal door.

The smell hit her first. Trash from the alley. Grease from the kitchen. Ryan’s sharp cologne layered over champagne. His fingers pressed into her skin while the twins slept under a blanket.

‘What the hell is wrong with you?’ he hissed, keeping his voice low enough for the ballroom not to hear but cruel enough for every word to land.

Elle swallowed against a wave of dizziness. ‘I’m dizzy, Ryan,’ she said. ‘I just had your babies. You could help me.’

His laugh was worse than anger. It was short, polished, and empty. ‘Help you?’ he said, looking her over. ‘I’m the CEO, Elle. I don’t clean spit-up and diapers.’

He called it her job. He told her she was not even good at it. Then he compared her to Violet from marketing, who had supposedly recovered better, looked better, performed motherhood better.

Elle’s jaw locked. For one cold second, she imagined telling him everything. She imagined saying that the chandeliers, the champagne, the boardroom, and his precious title all existed under her authority.

Read More

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *