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After His Mistress Staged My Fall, I Fought Back Novel Cover

After His Mistress Staged My Fall, I Fought Back

I wake to the sound of my own name being destroyed. Not literally — not at first. At first it's just my phone, buzzing against the mahogany nightstand like something trapped and dying, the screen strobing white in the gray morning light. I reach for it without opening my eyes, muscle memory from a thousand ordinary mornings in this room, in this house, where the crown molding catches the dawn and the smell of my mother's garden still lives in the curtains even though she's been gone six years. Then I see the notifications. Hundreds of them. Thousands. The first headline loads before I understand what I'm reading: *Fallen Heiress or Hidden Addict? Explosive Photos Surface of Judge Greene's Daughter.* Below it, an image I have never seen of a woman who wears my face. My thumb moves on its own, scrolling, and each swipe is a small death.
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Chapter 1

I wake to the sound of my own name being destroyed.

Not literally — not at first. At first it's just my phone, buzzing against the mahogany nightstand like something trapped and dying, the screen strobing white in the gray morning light. I reach for it without opening my eyes, muscle memory from a thousand ordinary mornings in this room, in this house, where the crown molding catches the dawn and the smell of my mother's garden still lives in the curtains even though she's been gone six years.

Then I see the notifications. Hundreds of them. Thousands.

The first headline loads before I understand what I'm reading: *Fallen Heiress or Hidden Addict? Explosive Photos Surface of Judge Greene's Daughter.* Below it, an image I have never seen of a woman who wears my face.

My thumb moves on its own, scrolling, and each swipe is a small death. The photos are everywhere — Page Six, the Post, three different celebrity gossip sites I've never visited in my life. In them, I am draped across a hotel bed I don't recognize, eyes glassy, something white and powdery on a glass surface beside me. My face. My hair. My hands, except the ring on the right hand is wrong, a detail that screams fake to me and apparently to no one else on earth.

I sit up. The bedroom tilts.

I call Maxwell.

It rings four times and goes to voicemail. His voice, smooth and practiced: *You've reached Maxwell Lynch. Leave a message.* I hang up and call again. And again. The room is very bright now, the October sun cutting through the silk drapes I'd picked out with my mother's decorator three years ago, when this house still felt like safety.

I am still calling when I hear the cars.

From the window, I count three black SUVs pulling through the iron gate, and men in dark jackets moving with the particular efficiency of people who have done this before. One of them holds a document flat against the wind. I know what it is before he raises it.

I dress in whatever my hands find first.

By the time I reach the foyer, they are already inside. The lead agent is a compact man with a jaw like a fist and the flat, patient eyes of someone who finds nothing surprising anymore. He introduces himself — Agent Carver, FBI Financial Crimes — and hands me a copy of the warrant with the same affect he might use to pass salt at a dinner table.

*Financial irregularities.* That's the phrase he uses. My father's accounts. My father's assets. My father, who kept a framed copy of the Constitution in his study and once made me read every word of it aloud when I was nine years old, who never once in forty years on the bench accepted so much as a free lunch.

They take the computers first.

I drive myself to Lynch Enterprises. I don't remember deciding to. I just find myself in the lobby of the building I've visited a hundred times, where the security desk staff know my name, where the receptionist with the red glasses used to wave me straight through.

She doesn't wave me through today.

She makes a call instead, her eyes sliding away from mine, and I stand there in yesterday's clothes with my phone still in my hand and the city noise bleeding through the glass behind me. The lobby fills slowly — employees arriving for the day, a few paparazzi materializing on the sidewalk outside with the instinct of something that smells blood.

Maxwell comes down in the elevator.

He's in a charcoal suit, perfectly pressed, and for one half-second when our eyes meet I see something flicker across his face — something that might have been guilt, or grief, or the ghost of the boy who used to climb the oak tree in my backyard to reach my window. Then it's gone, sealed behind the expression I've watched him use in boardrooms.

"Maxwell." My voice is steadier than I deserve. "Please. I need five minutes."

"Ariella." He says my name like he's reading it off a document. "I can't have Lynch Enterprises associated with this right now. You understand that."

The words don't land immediately. They hover.

"I didn't — those photos aren't real, they're fabricated, you *know* me —"

"I know what I've seen." He adjusts his cufflinks. Left, then right. "And I know what my board has seen."

The elevator opens again behind him.

Phoebe Dixon steps out in ivory cashmere, her blonde hair loose, her expression arranged into something that resembles concern the way a photograph resembles a living person. She moves to Maxwell's side with the ease of someone who has rehearsed this moment, and her hand curls through the crook of his elbow like a vine finding a wall.

"Ariella," she says softly, and her voice is all breath and sympathy. "This must be so hard for you."

The cameras outside find the glass. I can see the flashes beginning.

Maxwell doesn't look at me again. He turns toward the door, and Phoebe turns with him, and they walk out together into the October light while I stand in the lobby of his building surrounded by strangers and understand, with the particular clarity of something irrevocable, that I am alone.

My phone rings.

I don't recognize the number. I answer because I would answer anything right now, any voice that isn't the silence he's left behind.

"Miss Greene." A man's voice. Official. "This is Detective Holt with the NYPD. I need you to come home. There's been an incident involving your father."

The police tape across the study door is yellow. I keep noticing that — the specific, ordinary yellow of it, against the dark wood my father had refinished the year I turned sixteen.

Detective Holt is a tall man with a kind face he doesn't know how to use. He tells me gently, carefully, with the rehearsed compassion of someone who delivers this sentence too often: *gunshot wound, self-inflicted, the shame of the investigation—*

"No."

The word comes out of me like something torn.

"He wouldn't." I hear my own voice rising, cracking at the edges, and I don't care. "He wouldn't. You don't know him. He was devout — he believed in — he would *never* —"

"Miss Greene —"

"He was murdered." The word tastes like iron. "Someone murdered him and you're calling it —"

There's a man I don't recognize stepping forward, a doctor with a black bag, and I understand what's happening a half-second too late. The needle finds my arm before I can pull away.

The study door goes soft at the edges. The yellow tape blurs.

The last thing I see clearly, before the sedative pulls me under, is my father's nameplate on the wall beside the door. *Thomas J. Greene.* Brass. Solid. The kind of thing built to last.

I fall asleep believing I will burn the world down to prove what I know.

I just don't know yet who will hand me the match.

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