
After His Cruel Competition, I Became the Tycoon Wife
Chapter 1
I watched Grace's hands tremble as she tore open the envelope, her breath held in that fragile moment between hope and disappointment. The morning light streamed through our kitchen window, catching the dust motes that danced around us in our small Kentucky home—a home that had witnessed twenty years of my silent endurance.
"I got in, Mom!" Grace's voice broke with excitement as she waved the acceptance letter. "Lexington College offered me a partial scholarship!"
My heart swelled with pride even as anxiety knotted my stomach. I knew what was coming—had lived it before in that other life that sometimes felt like a half-remembered nightmare. I crossed the worn linoleum floor and wrapped my arms around my daughter, breathing in the scent of her shampoo, feeling her vibrate with joy against me.
"I'm so proud of you, sweetheart," I whispered, meaning every word. The weight of foreknowledge pressed against my chest. In my previous life, this moment had been the beginning of our end.
Not this time.
Grace pulled back, her eyes bright. "Do you think Dad will care?"
The question hung between us, innocent yet loaded with two decades of Daniel's absence and neglect. I forced a smile, tucking a strand of hair behind her ear.
"We'll see," I said carefully.
As if summoned by our conversation, the mail slot clattered again. I recognized the cream-colored envelope immediately—heavy stock paper, gold embossing. My fingers didn't tremble as I sliced it open with a kitchen knife.
"What is it?" Grace asked, peering over my shoulder.
I read the flowing script aloud: "Your presence is required tomorrow at 4 PM sharp at the Whitaker residence, 1120 Park Avenue, Manhattan. Family news to be shared. Non-negotiable. Daniel."
Grace's brow furrowed. "Required? He hasn't 'required' anything from us in years."
I folded the invitation with precise movements, remembering how this had played out before. The humiliation. The despair. The end.
"We'll go," I said, my voice steadier than it had any right to be.
"But Mom—"
"We'll go," I repeated, meeting her eyes. "And this time, we'll be ready."
---
Twenty-four hours later, the elevator doors opened onto the penthouse floor of Daniel's Manhattan building. I smoothed down my simple dress—modest, unassuming, exactly what they'd expect—and squeezed Grace's hand.
"Remember," I whispered. "No matter what happens in there, trust me."
She nodded, confusion in her eyes but faith in her heart.
The apartment door opened before we could knock. Lauren Harper stood there, elegant in designer silk, her perfect smile not quite reaching her eyes.
"Mary, Grace, how... quaint to see you," she purred, her gaze sliding dismissively over our department store clothes. "Everyone's waiting."
The grand living room buzzed with conversation that died as we entered. I recognized faces from my past life—Lauren's socialite friends, Daniel's business associates, and relatives who had never bothered to visit us in Kentucky. In the center of it all stood Daniel, holding court with a champagne flute, our daughter Mia at his side—the daughter he'd chosen to acknowledge, to raise, to love.
"Ah, there they are!" Daniel boomed, his false joviality filling the room. "My Kentucky family has arrived!"
Titters of laughter rippled through the crowd. I felt Grace stiffen beside me.
"Daniel," I acknowledged quietly, playing my part. The dutiful, simple wife. The woman they all underestimated.
He gestured grandly. "Everyone, I've gathered you here for a special announcement." His eyes gleamed with malice poorly disguised as mirth. "As you know, both my daughters are applying to universities this year. So I've devised a little family wager."
The room leaned in, hungry for drama.
"A competition," Daniel continued, "between Grace and Mia. Three rounds: SAT scores, application essays, and final college admissions." He paused for effect. "And the stakes? Whoever's daughter performs better decides the division of all marital assets and our family's future."
Gasps and murmurs filled the room. Lauren's smile turned predatory as she slipped her arm through Daniel's.
"Isn't it exciting?" she asked, voice dripping with false sweetness. "A chance to see which daughter truly deserves the Whitaker name and fortune?"
I felt every eye in the room turn to me, expecting tears, protests, collapse. They wanted to see me broken by this public humiliation.
Instead, I smiled—a small, knowing smile that seemed to momentarily unsettle Daniel.
"I accept," I said simply.
The room fell silent in shock.
This time, I would rewrite our ending.
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