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After His Mistress Killed Our Child, I Became a Ghost Novel Cover

After His Mistress Killed Our Child, I Became a Ghost

The crystal flute felt heavy in my hand, a cold, condensation-slicked weight that promised celebration but reeked of impending doom. The Meyer Foundation’s annual gala was a sea of black ties and diamond chokers, a shark tank masquerading as a ballroom. Standing at the epicenter was Josephine Ray, the Chairwoman, draped in emerald silk that matched the predatory glint in her eyes. "To the future heir," Josephine purred, raising her glass. Her smile was a razor blade wrapped in velvet. She stepped closer, invading my personal space with the scent of tuberose and old money. "Drink up, Madison. For the dynasty." I hesitated. My husband, Lucien Meyer, stood at my shoulder, his hand resting on the small of my back not in affection, but in possession. His grip was firm, a silent command.
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Chapter 2

Lucien adjusted his silk tie in the hallway mirror, the knot tight against his throat. I sat on the velvet chaise, hands folded in my lap, staring at the floor with the vacant, glassy expression of a woman properly sedated. It was a performance, a mask of fragility I’d perfected in the three days since the gala.

"I'll be late tonight," he said, not turning to face me. "Board dinner with Josephine. Don't wait up."

"Okay," I whispered, my voice barely a tremor.

He paused, checking my reflection. Satisfied by my submission, he left. The heavy thud of the penthouse door was my cue. The moment the elevator chimed, my posture snapped straight. The trembling ceased.

Amy, my assistant, emerged from the kitchen, a stark contrast to the luxury around us in her sensible gray blazer. She didn’t speak; she just held up the key card she’d swiped from his jacket while hanging it up the night before.

We moved to his home office, a shrine of mahogany and ego. My heart didn't race—it beat with a cold, rhythmic precision. While Amy stood guard by the window, watching the street for his black sedan, I accessed the hidden safe behind the faux-library paneling.

Inside, among stacks of offshore accounts, lay a manila folder labeled *Project Clark*. My fingers brushed the paper, sensing the malice radiating from it. I opened it. There, in black and white, were the transfer deeds signed by my father just hours before his suicide. They hadn’t been seized by the bank; they had been acquired by a shell company traced back to Josephine Ray, with Lucien’s signature as the witness.

My marriage wasn’t a tragedy. It was a trophy.

"He's gone," Amy said, her voice tight. "You have the proof?"

"I have the motive," I corrected, tucking the documents back. "Now I need the executioner."

***

The anniversary of my father’s death brought a weeping gray sky to the city. The cemetery in Queens was a landscape of wet stone and decaying flowers. I stood over the modest plot, the rain mingling with the unshed tears in my eyes. I wore black, not for mourning, but for concealment.

A few rows over, a figure stood under a large black umbrella. Levi Meyer. The tabloids painted him as a dissolute playboy, a waste of the family name. But the man standing there didn't slouch. His stillness was predatory, his gaze fixed on his own father's grave with an intensity that burned through the mist.

I walked past him. I didn't stop, didn't look up. As our shoulders brushed, I felt the tension radiate off him—a coiled spring.

"Your father deserved better," I murmured, the words barely audible over the rain.

I slipped a folded piece of paper into his hand. On it, I had written a single, encrypted line: *The Clark Acquisition was a murder, not a merger.*

I felt his fingers tighten around the note, a reflex. I kept walking, the wet grass silencing my footsteps. The hook was set.

***

Two days later, Amy arranged a "shopping trip" to Fifth Avenue to appease Lucien’s desire for me to look the part of the recovering wife. I entered a boutique changing room and exited through the service corridor.

A black SUV waited in the alley, engine idling. The rear door opened. I slid inside.

The interior was soundproofed, the air conditioning humming a low, sterile note. Levi sat opposite me, the encrypted note resting on the leather seat between us. Up close, the "playboy" facade was entirely gone. His eyes were sharp, analytical, assessing me as a threat or an asset.

"You're playing a dangerous game, Mrs. Meyer," Levi said. His voice was smooth, lacking Lucien's aggressive edge but carrying a heavier weight. "If Lucien finds out you're here, he'll lock you away in a sanitarium for real."

"He's already destroyed me, Levi. I have nothing left to lose but my life," I replied, my gaze unyielding. "I know you have the financial records. You know about the embezzlement. But you can't touch Josephine because she's insulated by the board. You need something visceral. You need a scandal that breaks the man, not just the CEO."

Levi leaned forward, the shadows playing across his face. "And you're offering what?"

"I'm offering the weapon," I said. "Lucien is obsessed with possession. He thinks he owns me. If he loses me—if he thinks he caused my death—his mind will fracture. A broken king cannot hold a kingdom."

Levi studied me for a long moment, looking for the hysteria Lucien claimed I suffered from. He found only ice. "You want to fake your death?"

"I want to stage a murder," I corrected. "I will provide the evidence of their crimes from the inside. Then, I will die in a fire at the upstate estate. When the ashes cool, you will use his grief and guilt to strip him of everything."

"And in return?" Levi asked.

"I disappear," I said, the System's promise echoing in my mind. "I want out of this story, Levi. You get the empire. I get my freedom."

Levi extended a hand. It was a pact made in the dark, sealed by mutual hatred for the same monsters.

"Done," he said.

As I shook his hand, the digital chime rang in my head, loud and clear.

**[Alliance Formed. Plot Deviation: 15%. Countdown to Exit initiated.]**

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