Get the APP hot
Home / Billionaires / The Widow's Deception
The Widow's Deception

The Widow's Deception

5.0
23 Chapters
Read Now

When her wealthy husband, Adrian Marquez dies under mysterious circumstances, Elena Marquez inherits his vast empire along with suspicion that she murdered him. A determined investigator enters her life as secrets are revealed and enemies circle. However, as their interest in one another grows, Elena has to deal with treachery from everyone, including the man she is falling in love with, society and her husband's family. She ultimately has to choose between embracing love to seek revenge, or leaving the ashes of her past behind. Adrian's voice surprisingly came out, reaffirming his survival. He actively manipulates from the shadows in addition to being a shadow. The triangle of treachery, love, and retaliation is now fully ignited after Damian and Elena's brittle trust is put to the test

Contents

Chapter 1 The Funeral

The church smelled of lilies and candle wax, cloying and heavy, as though the flowers themselves were conspiring to choke her. Elena Marquez sat in the front pew, her back ramrod straight, her black veil draped low across her face. The fabric shielded her from the dozens of eyes burning into her, but it did nothing to soften the whispers.

She poisoned him. Such a young widow.

She doesn't look like a grieving wife.

Each murmur slid beneath her skin, cutting deeper than the winter wind seeping through the chapel doors. Elena kept her hands folded neatly in her lap, her gloves pristine, her nails digging crescent moons into her palms beneath them. She would not cry, not here, not now. Adrian had demanded perfection in public, and though he was dead, she could almost feel his ghost at her side, commanding her one last time.

The coffin gleamed at the center of the aisle, polished mahogany catching the dim light from the chandeliers. Adrian Marquez, the golden businessman, the philanthropist, the beloved son of the city, was laid to rest in a box that seemed far too opulent for the man Elena had known in private. The mourners wept as though they had lost a saint. But saints did not leave bruises where no one could see. Saints did not whisper threats into their wives' ears at night.

Her throat tightened, a pressure she swallowed down before it betrayed her.

A hand brushed her arm. Isabella, Adrian's younger sister, sat beside her, tears streaking her face. She gave Elena a small, hesitant squeeze, but her eyes carried too many questions Elena could not answer, not now.

Behind them, the shuffle of expensive shoes and rustling silk carried an undercurrent of scandal. Elena could feel the divide: half the congregation mourning with genuine sorrow, the other half sniffing the scent of blood in the water. Wealth drew predators as surely as death did.

And then there was Victor.

He stood across the aisle, tall and broad-shouldered, the picture of mourning in his tailored black suit. His features mirrored Adrian's enough to unsettle her, the same sharp cheekbones, the same calculating eyes, but where Adrian had perfected charm, Victor wore arrogance like cologne. He had not cried once today. Instead, he watched Elena with a predator's patience, as though she were prey that had wandered too close to the snare.

When the priest began the homily, Elena's attention drifted, the Latin words washing over her like static. Her mind wandered backward toward the last night she had seen Adrian alive.

The memory clung to her: the decanter of brandy in his hand, the way his voice had turned cold and sharp, accusing her of betrayal simply because she had disagreed with him. The slam of glass on marble, the warning in his eyes. She had gone to bed alone that night, locking her door from the inside. By morning, the house had been silent. Adrian had been found slumped in his study chair, his lips blue, the bottle half-drained beside him.

The doctors had called it a heart attack. The papers called it a tragedy. But the whispers had begun almost immediately.

And now, she sat in front of the world, accused not with evidence but with rumor.

As the choir's voices swelled, Elena lifted her chin, reminding herself of the lesson she had learned long ago: weakness was fatal. Let them whisper. Let them wonder. She would not break for them.

When the service ended, the mourners spilled into the gray light outside the church. A light drizzle had begun, speckling black umbrellas and dampening velvet coats. Elena followed the pallbearers, her heels clicking against the stone steps, her veil shielding her face. Cameras flashed from beyond the gates, reporters hungry for a glimpse of the infamous widow.

At the graveside, she stood at the edge of the open earth. The priest's words blurred into the patter of rain against polished wood. One by one, mourners approached, dropping white roses into the grave. When it was her turn, Elena stepped forward. Her hand trembled only slightly as she let the flower slip from her fingers.

Rest, she whispered so low no one could hear. Rest, and leave me be.

But the earth did not answer.

When she turned back, Victor was there, waiting. His smile was thin, cold, and perfectly timed.

You wear grief well, Elena, he said softly, leaning close so only she could hear. Almost convincing. But you should know people are beginning to wonder. I am beginning to wonder.

Her spine stiffened. Careful, Victor. You're speaking at your brother's grave.

He leaned even closer, his breath warm against her ear. Exactly where he would want me to speak the truth. I'll be watching you, dear sister. The empire doesn't belong in your hands. And when the time comes, I'll make sure it doesn't stay there.

She held his gaze, her face calm though her pulse roared in her ears. Threats at a funeral. How very noble of you.

Victor's smile widened. This is no threat. It's a promise.

With that, he stepped back, offering his arm to a grieving relative as though he had spoken nothing at all. Elena remained frozen for a moment, rain dampening her veil, her gloves clenching tight. The world around her blurred the sound of soil striking the coffin, the murmur of prayers, the click of cameras beyond the fence.

Somewhere in the distance, she sensed another gaze fixed upon her. Not Victor's, not the reporters'. Different. Measuring. She glanced up, scanning the crowd, and for the briefest moment her eyes locked with a stranger standing at the edge of the mourners.

He was tall, his face shadowed beneath the brim of his umbrella, but his presence was sharp, undeniable. Unlike the others, he was not weeping, not whispering. He was studying her, as though she were the only person standing at this grave. Their eyes held for a fraction too long before he looked away, blending into the sea of black coats.

Elena exhaled slowly, shivering though the rain was only a drizzle. Whoever he was, he had not come to mourn.

She knew then, as surely as she knew the damp earth beneath her feet, that Adrian's death was only the beginning

Continue Reading
img View More Comments on App
MoboReader
Download App
icon APP STORE
icon GOOGLE PLAY