The Greek Billionaire’s Overlooked Wife – A Billionaire Breaks My Heart Read Online Marian Tee

Categories Genre: Alpha Male, Billionaire, Insta-Love Tags Authors:
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Total pages in book: 29
Estimated words: 28033 (not accurate)
Estimated Reading Time in minutes: 140(@200wpm)___ 112(@250wpm)___ 93(@300wpm)
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She glanced up as they entered the kitchen, her gaze meeting her husband’s. Neither of them spoke, but it was clear to Leonidas that they were speaking. It reminded him of the times that he and Lexina had such days, too.

And if it were up to him, they would continue to have such days.

But first...he had to figure out why.

Why give herself to him after asking for a divorce?

Why ask for a divorce if she still believed in him?

What was he missing?

Chapter Seven

She woke to another phone call.

The room was unfamiliar for a moment—too large, too quiet, the sheets too crisp against her skin—and then the memories came flooding back. Monaco. The hack. Leon carrying her through the terminal like she weighed nothing at all.

Leon.

Her phone was still ringing, and she answered it without thinking. “Hello?”

“I’m sorry I keep calling.”

But as soon as Lexy heard the voice from the other end, she already knew who it was.

“You’re in Monaco,” Lydia said shakily, “aren’t you?”

“Why would you think that?”

“Because Ga—” Lydia stopped abruptly, and even through the phone, Lexy could hear the sharp intake of breath, the barely suppressed curse, and she knew right away that Lydia had almost let slip who was feeding her information about Lexy’s whereabouts.

“Look, it doesn’t matter how I know.”

I think it does, Lexy thought, with how Lydia was suddenly speaking to her with such sharpness.

“I just want to talk. And it’s something that I find difficult to explain over the phone. I was hoping we could meet?”

Every instinct Lexy had was screaming at her to say no, but instead she heard herself ask, “Where?”

****

The cafe was small and bright, all white marble and gold accents, the kind of place that looked like it had been designed for women who wore silk scarves and ordered espresso without checking the price. Lexy felt immediately out of place in her rumpled clothes and messy braid, but she pushed through the door anyway because she had never been the kind of person to turn back once she’d committed to something.

No matter what.

She had resisted the temptation to look Lydia up online from the moment she’d learned of the woman’s existence. Some part of her hadn’t wanted to know—hadn’t wanted to put a face to the name that had haunted her since Shayla’s conference room, since the words ‘long-term companion’ had shattered everything she thought she knew about her marriage.

But the moment she stepped inside the cafe and saw the woman sitting alone at a corner table, she knew.

It wasn’t just that Lydia was beautiful—though she was, stunningly so, all dark hair and red lips and a figure that belonged on magazine covers. It wasn’t the designer clothes or the perfectly manicured nails or the way she held herself like someone who had never doubted her own worth.

It was her eyes.

The moment Lexy looked into Lydia’s eyes, she knew with absolute certainty that this woman still wanted Leonidas.

And had never planned to let him go.

“Thank you for coming.” Lydia’s voice was soft, halting, every syllable dripping with carefully manufactured vulnerability. “I know this is so...”

“Inappropriate?”

The word came out mild, almost gentle, but something flickered in Lydia’s expression—a flash of rage, quickly suppressed—and Lexy felt a grim satisfaction in knowing she’d landed a hit.

“I just wanted to give you a heads up.” Lydia reached into her bag and withdrew a manila envelope, sliding it across the table with the kind of graceful movement that suggested she’d rehearsed this moment. “I managed to buy the rights from the photographer, but I think he’s lying when he told me it’s the only copy he has. Leon doesn’t deserve this kind of trouble.”

Leon.

Not Leonidas.

Not Mr. Gazis.

But...Leon.

And the way the other woman said it with such intimacy had Lexy’s stomach turning.

She stared down at the envelope, making no move to touch it. It sat there on the white marble like something poisonous, something that would bite if she got too close.

“What’s inside?”

“Photos of us together.” Lydia’s voice was pained. “Photos that no one had any right to take.”

Photos of them together.

Photos of Leonidas with this woman.

Photos of him doing to Lydia what he had done to her just hours ago—his hands, his mouth, his body moving against someone else’s in ways that Lexy had thought, foolishly, were hers alone.

“You should look—”

No.

Bile rose in her throat, hot and acidic, and she had to clench her jaw to keep from gagging right there at the table. But to show weakness in front of this woman—this woman who had shared her husband’s bed for six years, who had known his touch when Lexy had known nothing but lonelines—felt like a defeat she couldn’t afford.

She jerked to her feet instead, grabbing the envelope with fingers that shook despite her best efforts to steady them. “Thank you for this.”

The words came out wrong—too fast, too uneven—but she was already moving, already weaving through the tables with the kind of clumsy haste that had her bumping into chairs and knocking against other patrons and not caring, not caring about any of it, because she just needed to get out, needed air, needed to be anywhere but here.


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