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Chapter 1
Chapter 1: The Grandfather's Dinner
The Hartford family mansion loomed against the evening sky like a monument to old money and older pride.
Marcus Steel stood at the entrance, straightening his modest suit jacket—the only decent one he owned—while luxury cars deposited guests dressed in designer labels he couldn't pronounce, let alone afford.
Three years. Three years of this.
He pushed through the heavy oak doors into the grand foyer, where crystal chandeliers cast golden light across marble floors that probably cost more than most people's houses.
The air smelled of expensive perfume, aged wine, and subtle contempt.
"Well, well. Look who decided to grace us with his presence." Wellington Radcliffe's nasal voice cut through the ambient chatter. The man appeared at Marcus's elbow, his tailored tuxedo immaculate, his smile vicious. "I thought maybe you'd gotten lost on the bus ride over."
"I drove," Marcus said evenly.
"In that thing?" Wellington laughed, loud enough to turn heads. "I've seen better vehicles in junkyard commercials. Honestly, Marcus, it's embarrassing. This is a Hartford family event, not a charity drive for the homeless."
Marcus's jaw tightened, but he said nothing. Experience had taught him that engaging only provided more ammunition.
The dining hall sprawled before them, a cathedral of wealth where a table stretched beneath more chandeliers, set with china that gleamed like fresh snow. Family members and distinguished guests mingled in clusters, their conversations a symphony of business deals and social maneuvering.
And there, at the center of it all, sat Quinn.
His wife. The woman he'd married in what felt like another lifetime.
Quinn Hartford—he'd taken her name, another source of family mockery—sat poised and perfect in a midnight blue gown that probably cost more than Marcus earned in six months.
Her dark hair fell in elegant waves, her posture radiating the refined grace that came from generations of breeding.
She was beautiful in the way expensive art was beautiful: admirable, untouchable, cold.
Beside her sat Alexander Grant, twenty-four years old and insufferably handsome in his designer suit.
He leaned close to Quinn, whispering something that made her lips curve—not quite a smile, but the closest thing to warmth Marcus had seen on her face in months.
"Your seat is over there." A servant appeared at Marcus's elbow, gesturing toward the far corner of the table. The spot where they seated distant cousins nobody cared about. The spot that screamed: You don't belong here.
Marcus made his way to the corner chair, feeling eyes track his movement like predators watching wounded prey. Conversations didn't stop, but they shifted—became pointed, theatrical.
"I heard he's been looking for work again," someone stage-whispered. "Third job this year."
"Can you imagine? Quinn, a Saintess of the holy bloodline, married to a man who can't even hold down basic employment."
"It's tragic, really. She could have had anyone. Senator Morrison's son was interested. The Whitmore heir practically begged for her hand."
Marcus settled into his chair and reached for the simple wrapped package he'd brought—his gift for Grandfather Sebastian.
Inside was a carefully prepared dish, a recipe passed down from his own grandmother.
It wasn't expensive, but it was made with care, with memory, with the kind of love that couldn't be bought.
He set it on the table and immediately regretted it.
Beside the dish sat a parade of extravagance: a jade sculpture that probably belonged in a museum, bottles of wine older than Marcus, a golden Buddha statue that gleamed with ostentation.
His simple wrapped package looked like a child's crayon drawing hung next to the Mona Lisa.
"Is that a lunchbox?" Harrison Hartford's voice boomed from the head of the table. The patriarch stood, glass of whiskey in hand, his silver hair and commanding presence demanding attention. "Someone brought Grandfather Sebastian a lunchbox for his eightieth birthday?"
Laughter rippled through the room like a wave.
"Actually, Father, I believe it's homemade food," Elena Hartford added, her tone dripping with false sweetness. The matriarch examined her manicured nails as if bored by Marcus's existence. "How... quaint. How very... peasant chic."
More laughter. Louder this time.
Grandfather Sebastian himself peered down the table at the package, his weathered face creasing with disdain. At eighty, he still commanded respect through sheer force of personality and three generations of accumulated power. "Homemade food?" He said it like Marcus had presented him with garbage. "What am I, some commoner eating leftovers? Take it to the kitchen. Feed it to the dogs."
"The dogs?" Wellington chimed in, always ready to pile on. "Are you sure that's safe, Grandfather? Marcus's cooking might bring them bad luck. Might turn their fur gray or something."
The room erupted in cruel amusement.
Marcus felt heat crawl up his neck. He opened his mouth—to say what, he wasn't sure—when Quinn's voice cut through the noise.
"That's enough." Two words, spoken with the kind of authority that came from being born a Saintess. The room quieted instantly. Marcus's heart lifted for just a moment, hope blooming—
"Let's not waste time on trivial matters," Quinn continued, her eyes not even flickering toward Marcus. "Alexander has prepared something truly special for Grandfather's celebration."
And just like that, the hope died.
Alexander stood, smooth and confident, producing an elegant wooden box. "Grandfather Sebastian, it's an honor to celebrate your eightieth year. I've secured something I hope is worthy of the occasion—a century-old wild ginseng root, authenticated and certified. It's said to extend life and vitality."
He opened the box with a flourish. Inside, cradled in silk, lay a gnarled root that looked like it cost more than Marcus's car, his apartment, and his entire existence combined.
The room gasped. Someone actually clapped.
"Alexander!" Harrison Hartford boomed, his face lighting up. "My boy, this is extraordinary! The thoughtfulness! The generosity!"
"Such filial piety," Elena cooed. "You're like the grandson we always wished for."
"This is what respect looks like," Grandfather Sebastian declared, accepting the box with genuine pleasure. "This is how a real man honors his elders. Unlike some people who show up with kitchen scraps."
His eyes finally landed on Marcus, cold and dismissive.
Quinn rose from her seat, graceful as water, and touched Alexander's arm. "Thank you," she said softly, her voice carrying that rare warmth again. "Your constant support means everything. Bella was right to trust you to my care."
"Anything for you," Alexander replied, his tone intimate enough to make Marcus's stomach turn.
Marcus watched his wife stand there, her hand on another man's arm, her smile reserved for someone who wasn't her husband.
He watched the family fawn over Alexander like he'd descended from heaven, while treating Marcus like something stuck to their shoes.
"Quinn," Marcus said quietly, trying to catch her attention.
She turned, and for a moment their eyes met. But instead of acknowledgment or support, he saw only a warning: Don't embarrass me further.
Then she looked away, returning her attention to Alexander and the family's continued praise, and Marcus understood with perfect clarity what the last three years had truly meant.
He was not her husband. He was her burden. Her mistake.
The thing she tolerated because she'd made some vow about destiny and saintess intuition that she now clearly regretted.
Around him, the dinner celebration continued, a symphony of laughter and mockery, of luxury and cruelty, of everything that reminded Marcus Steel exactly where he stood in the Hartford family hierarchy:
At the bottom. Always at the bottom. With nowhere to go but further down.
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TABLE OF CONTENTS
Latest Chapter
Saintess’s Worthless Husband Turned Dragon Commander CHAPTER 227 PART 2
Inside, Quinn's composure held its surface while something underneath it moved fast. Marcus had told her someone would come. He had been specific. He had been certain.The doors were still closed. The clock on the boardroom wall was moving. If nobody walked through that door in the next few minutes, she would have dismantled herself in front of every person whose opinion shaped her professional future.The conference room door opened.Three men in suits walked through it. They moved with the particular coordination of people who had entered rooms like this many times before and understood that presence was established in the first three seconds.The air changed the moment they crossed the threshold. Something pressing and unnamed settled over everyone present, the specific atmospheric shift that occurred when institutional power entered a space that had been occupied by personal politics.The man at the front was in his forties, lean, with the particular posture of someone whose profe
Last Updated : 2026-06-22
Saintess’s Worthless Husband Turned Dragon Commander CHAPTER 227 PART 1
Amber Crawford turned around with the smooth precision of someone whose professional training included performing composure in rooms designed to break it. Her face arranged itself into mild confusion, the particular expression of a person who genuinely has no idea what is being discussed and finds the situation mildly puzzling."Chairman Hartford," Amber's voice was steady, professional. "Was there something else?""Sit down," Quinn replied.Amber sat. Her bag remained on her shoulder, a detail that communicated her intention to leave at the earliest opportunity while complying with the immediate instruction."The Willson Group sent an invitation to Hartford Group," Quinn said. Her voice was flat. "That invitation was intercepted before it reached my office. I want to know where it is.""I have no idea what you're referring to," Amber replied. Her expression held perfectly. Five people in the core Hartford family had handled the interception. None of them would speak. The circle was t
Last Updated : 2026-06-22
Saintess’s Worthless Husband Turned Dragon Commander CHAPTER 226 PART 2
The room went still."Excuse me?" Zachary's smile froze."You heard me correctly," Mr. Bradford continued. "Under your management, this company lost money for three consecutive quarters. You kept employees on payroll who produced nothing. You approved expense accounts that would make a tax auditor weep. The only reason I maintained my partnership with Hartford Group was because Quinn Hartford restructured the company into something worth partnering with.""Bradford, we've known each other for twenty years," Zachary's voice showed its first crack."Twenty years of watching you run a company like a family piggy bank," Mr. Bradford replied. "Twenty years of watching you hand positions to relatives who couldn't spell the word they were supposed to be managing. The only reason I came today was out of respect for Chairman Quinn Hartford. If it weren't for her, I would have arrived to terminate the partnership.""You're making a mistake," Zachary's voice was barely controlled. "When this tra
Last Updated : 2026-06-22
Saintess’s Worthless Husband Turned Dragon Commander CHAPTER 226 PART 1
Zachary Hartford watched the suppliers pledge loyalty to Quinn one after another and processed it through the only framework his mind would accept. They were here because of him. His invitation brought them. His decades of relationships brought them to this room.He leaned toward Amber Crawford with the enormous smile of a man whose interpretation of events was entirely wrong."We'll celebrate with drinks tonight," Zachary whispered. "The plan worked better than we expected. Even the suppliers are excited about the transition."Amber nodded automatically, though something in her expression suggested she wasn't entirely certain they were watching the same meeting.Preston Hartford moved behind Quinn's chair with the confident stride of someone delivering a conclusion rather than making a request. He positioned himself where the entire room could see him and hear him clearly."Quinn," Preston's voice carried the particular warmth of someone performing generosity while executing somethin
Last Updated : 2026-06-22
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Martin Kopeasi
very exciting novel
Universeleap
dear readers please read my new book, The shameless bastard tamed forbidden angel.
Tumelo Bihi
interesting read, frustrated me in the first few chapters eith lead behaving like a dog
Christine Owings
Thank you for your hard work. I love this book
Universeleap
I really tried my best..
Universeleap
please drop reviews and comments on my book
keef chi
Dude pretty much forgives the wife without her doing literally anything. It's like that entire beginning of the story was forgotten. plus, tons of inconsistencies. Dude gets his ass beat in one chapter, then the next chapter the same dude walks into the room talking crap.