Of the Lavender stories I have ever read, perhaps the most impressive one is The Perfect Wife's Perfect Revenge. The story is too good, leaving me with many doubts. Currently, the manga has been translated to Chapter 533. Let's read the author's The Perfect Wife's Perfect Revenge Lavender story right here.
Back in school, Gwyneth had no shortage of admirers. She’d inherited the best of Victoria and McNeil Langford—looks, brains, and a family name that always turned heads.
So, the boys who dared pursue her were, without exception, either heartbreakingly handsome or came from old money. For a while, Gwyneth’s only standard for choosing a boyfriend was whether he measured up to her father.
Unfortunately, men like her dad were a rare breed. Try as she might, she never found another one quite like him.
When she moved to Greenvale, everything changed. Whether it was the town’s slower pace or something else, Gwyneth all but withdrew from her old social life. There wasn’t a single eligible guy buzzing around her—not even the annoying kind—which left the door wide open for the likes of Bill Crawford. Frankly, if there’d been any competition at all, Bill wouldn’t have stood a chance even if he’d started queuing in Paris.
Then she saw Hawthorne. For the first time in her life, Gwyneth found herself genuinely attracted to someone. The moment she laid eyes on him, it was as though she forgot how to breathe—time itself seemed to freeze.
She stared at Hawthorne, wide-eyed and slack-jawed, looking every bit the lovesick fool. It wasn’t until Hawthorne, sensing someone’s unwavering gaze, looked up and caught her staring that Gwyneth snapped back to reality.
Hawthorne frowned. It was barely morning, and here was this girl, gawking at him with flushed cheeks and a dazed expression.
“What are you looking at?” he asked, his tone cool but not unkind.
That’s when Gwyneth realized how brazen she must’ve looked, practically undressing him with her eyes. Her heart hammered in her chest as flashes of completely inappropriate thoughts ran through her mind—like what he’d look like if he peeled off that white tracksuit, whether he’d have the kind of muscles you’d see on a pro athlete.
Flustered, she whipped her head away and pretended not to have heard him, making a beeline for the dining room.
Hawthorne watched her hasty retreat, idly turning the water jug in his hand. What on earth was that girl up to so early in the morning? Had she gotten into some sort of trouble?
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