
After Her Betrayal, I Won My Freedom
Chapter 2
The elevator doors slid shut, severing the view of the penthouse. I didn’t cry. Tears were a currency I had spent recklessly on Beau Lewis for seven years, and I was finally bankrupt of them. My reflection in the polished brass doors stared back—pale, hollow, but terrifyingly composed.
I stepped into the backseat of the town car waiting curbside. The leather was cool against my feverish skin. I pulled my phone from my clutch, the screen illuminating the gloom of the tinted windows. I dialed a number I hadn’t used for personal reasons since the day I met Beau.
"Ms. Hall," Victoria Ashworth’s voice was crisp, answering on the first ring. She never called me Ms. Lewis. She knew.
"It’s time, Victoria," I said. My voice sounded foreign, stripped of the soft cadence I’d cultivated to stroke a fragile male ego. This was the voice of the Hall dynasty. "Initiate the divestment protocols. Draft the withdrawal papers for all Hall Capital assets currently leveraged by Lewis Enterprises."
There was a pause on the line, followed by the rapid clatter of a keyboard. "The liquidity backing is five hundred million dollars, ma’am. Pulling it overnight will trigger a default on his loans. The stock will freefall."
"I know," I said, watching the city blur past—a kaleidoscope of grey and steel. "Burn it down. And Victoria? Set up a meeting with Titus Sullivan. Immediately."
***
The library at the St. Jude’s Club smelled of old paper, mahogany, and silence. It was a sanctuary for the city’s old guard, a place Beau would never be allowed to enter. Titus Sullivan sat in a wingback chair by the fireplace, a first-edition of *Meditations* resting on his knee. He looked less like a billionaire and more like a monk who had accidentally wandered into a tailor shop—austere, still, and impeccably dressed in charcoal wool.
I sat opposite him. I didn't waste time on pleasantries.
"I need a husband," I stated. "And you need a shield against the rumors of your family's stagnation."
Titus closed his book slowly, his grey eyes assessing me with clinical detachment. "Direct. I suppose seven years of pretending to be invisible makes one eager to be seen."
"I’m done hiding, Titus. Beau betrayed me. I’m going to ruin him, but I need a new alliance to secure my position when the dust settles. A marriage of convenience. We merge our networks, not our lives."
He leaned forward, steepling his fingers. The firelight caught the sharp angles of his face. "You speak of business, Selene. But I remember the girl who held my hand in that basement twenty years ago. The dark. The cold."
The memory hit me like a physical blow—the kidnapping. We had been children, bound together in the dark for three days while our parents negotiated ransoms. It was the only time I had ever felt truly understood by another human being.
"That was a long time ago," I whispered, the armor around my chest cracking slightly.
"Trauma binds us tighter than contracts," Titus said softly, his voice a low thrum that vibrated in my chest. "I don’t care about your money, Selene. The Sullivans have enough. But I care about justice. If you want to destroy him, I will stand beside you. Not as a business partner, but as a guardian."
It was a lie—I knew the Sullivans were quietly bleeding cash—but his performance was flawless. He offered me the one thing Beau never did: respect. I took his hand. His grip was cool, dry, and firm.
"We have a deal," I said.
***
The Grand Ballroom at The Plaza Hotel was a suffocating sea of heavy perfume and forced laughter. A banner hung above the stage: *Lewis Enterprises: The Future is Now*. It was supposed to be Beau’s coronation, the night he announced the rebranding and his engagement to Kallie.
I walked in through the side entrance. The crowd was a blur of sequins and tuxedos, parting instinctively as I moved toward the stage. On the dais, Beau held a champagne flute, his arm draped around Kallie’s waist. She was preening, basking in the flashbulbs, oblivious to the storm approaching.
"...and none of this would be possible without vision," Beau was saying into the microphone, his smile tight. "Without cutting the dead weight to let the company soar."
I climbed the stairs. The click of my heels on the hardwood stage cut through the ambient noise. The room went silent, row by row, until the only sound was the hum of the feedback loop.
Beau turned. His face drained of color, the champagne in his glass tilting precariously. "Selene? What the hell are you doing? Security—"
I reached the podium and took the microphone from his slack hand. The feedback whined, a sharp screech that made Kallie wince.
"Good evening," I said. My voice boomed through the speakers, calm and lethal. I scanned the room, locking eyes with the investors in the front row. "Beau speaks of vision. Let’s talk about capital."
"Selene, get down," Beau hissed, grabbing my arm. His grip was bruising, desperate.
I ripped my arm away, the movement sharp enough to make him stumble back. "For seven years, Lewis Enterprises has operated on a liquidity buffer provided by a silent partner. That partner was me. That capital was the Hall family legacy."
A collective gasp ripped through the room. The name *Hall* carried weight that *Lewis* never could.
I turned to Beau, ensuring the microphone caught every syllable. "As of ten minutes ago, I have formally withdrawn the five hundred million dollar credit line backing your loans. The 'dead weight' has removed itself, Beau. I hope you can fly without it."
I dropped the microphone. The thud echoed like a gunshot.
As I turned to leave, the frantic shouting of bankers and the shattering of Beau’s glass on the floor were the sweetest symphony I had ever heard.
You may also like





