

Description
Discarded like a servant, Ella Marell was once the invisible wife of Velmera's most powerful heir-mocked, unloved, and quietly erased. But when her husband publicly announces his engagement to another woman, Ella disappears without a word... only to return as someone no one saw coming. She is not just Ella. She is Elyse Vane-the hidden daughter of the President, the rightful heir to the nation, and the woman they should have feared all along. Now standing in the halls of power that once tried to crush her, Elyse plays the game they taught her to lose. But with enemies at every turn, an ex-husband who wants her back for control, and a bodyguard who sees through every mask she wears... love, betrayal, and vengeance collide in a war for legacy. They tried to break her. They crowned the wrong girl. Now she's back to take everything they stole.
Chapter 1
Jun 19, 2025
Everyone here sparkles like royalty, and I’m the dust they forgot to sweep off the floor.
The Marell Gala is a sea of deep reds and polished marble, velvet gowns brushing past golden columns as if the room itself were alive. I stand near the edge, tucked beside a marble pillar, holding a glass of untouched champagne like it’s an anchor. My dress is a muted gray, simple, unadorned, a design ten years out of season. I didn’t choose it because it was beautiful, I chose it because it wouldn’t be noticed. And yet somehow, it’s the first thing they see.
“Oh dear,” Lady Isolde Marell croons behind me, loud enough for everyone to hear, “did your village run out of silk?”
Laughter crackles around her like ice shattering on marble. I turn slowly. Isolde lifts her glass and leans into the circle of women around her, her jewels catching the light as if they, too, want to mock me. Beside her, my husband Dorian stands impassive, expression unreadable, lips pressed together in a neutral line. He doesn’t defend me. He doesn’t move.
“I suppose Ella thought modesty was fashionable this year,” Lady Vessa, Dorian’s sister, adds, her smile venom-sweet. “Or maybe that’s just what you wear when you’re nobody.”
More laughter. I breathe in slowly through my nose and pretend not to hear. My fingers tighten around the stem of my glass. This isn’t the first time they’ve aimed their words like daggers. It won’t be the last. I swallow the insult like it’s champagne and let it settle inside me.
Dorian glances at me, just briefly, and then looks away as if I’m one of the staff he forgot to tip. Five years married, and I’m still waiting for him to say my name like it means something. I tell myself to smile. I remind myself to survive.
The music shifts, subtle but ceremonial. A string of white lights dims overhead, casting a soft glow on the stage. Dorian clears his throat and walks forward with the slow assurance of someone used to being watched. I expect him to make the usual family speech about tradition and prosperity. I step forward, just slightly, as if standing closer will make any difference.
“Thank you all for joining us tonight,” he begins, voice calm and smooth like everything he does. “This evening isn’t just about honoring the past—it’s about embracing the future.”
A murmur ripples through the crowd. My chest tightens. Something’s wrong. “I’m proud to introduce the woman who will stand beside me as we move forward into this new era for House Marell.”
He pauses, and my heart stills.
“Lady Renia Vale.”
Applause erupts like a slap. I blink. The spotlight shifts, illuminating crimson silk and sculpted grace as Renia steps onto the stage. Her gown fits like it was stitched for royalty. Her smile is effortless, radiant. She wraps her arm through his like it’s always belonged there.
I look down and see my wedding ring still clinging to my finger. The gold band burns against my skin. My breath catches, not from pain, but from the effort of keeping my face still. Around me, heads turn. Smiles bloom. Whispers begin.
“Perfect match,” someone sighs.
“About time,” another mutters.
“She has real presence,” a voice behind me says. “Unlike that quiet girl he married.” My chest rises. Falls. I don’t move.
Renia speaks now, her voice sweet and sure. “I’m honored to be welcomed into this noble house, and to strengthen its legacy with the man I admire.”
The applause swells again. I watch Dorian smile, a smile he never once offered me in public. I want to run. I want to scream. But instead, I force my spine straight and let the fire in my throat settle into ice.
Lady Isolde’s eyes meet mine across the ballroom. She lifts her glass in a silent toast. Her smile is a knife. Lady Vessa leans in and whispers something that makes them both laugh. I take a step back, but no one notices.
The applause around them continues, as if the world itself has rewritten the script and I’ve been cut from the cast. I don’t even know if this was planned without me—or if I was always meant to be standing here, small and silent, so the contrast would be clearer. Dorian never told me. He didn’t hint. Not once. That’s what cuts deepest—not the betrayal, but the erasure.
A woman nearby leans toward her companion. “I thought he was married already?” she whispers, but makes no effort to lower her voice. “Wasn’t that quiet girl… What was her name again?”
“She’s still here,” the other replies, not kindly, not softly. “And her name was never important.”
I swallow hard. I feel the way my cheeks heat, but I don’t flinch. I’ve trained myself not to move when the blows come. They expect a scene. They want tears. What I give them instead is silence. I give them nothing.
The lights on the stage seem to burn brighter now, catching every perfect angle of Renia’s gown and every calculated line of her speech. The more she shines, the more I fade. It’s not just humiliation anymore—it’s transformation. This is the moment where I stop being visible, even to myself.
My feet shift, slow and deliberate. I want to scream but the sound has no place here. It would only echo back at me, unanswered. So I do the only thing I can. I walk.
I pass a line of noblemen discussing trade, their eyes never lifting. I move behind a pair of older women who are already calling Renia “a born Marell.” Every word, every gesture, reinforces the same truth: I was never meant to belong here. I was only ever borrowed, and tonight, I’ve been returned.
Dorian lifts his glass, the spotlight catching on the crystal like it’s blessing the moment. “To new alliances,” he says, and the room erupts into another round of applause. Renia smiles beside him, glowing, everything I was never allowed to be.
What will happen to me now? Will I be thrown away like trash?

The Disgraced Obedient Wife of House Marell
30 Chapters
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