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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 2

The rain comes down like judgment.

I stand at the edge of my father's grave in a black dress I bought yesterday at a department store because the FBI still has everything from the house, including the Chanel suit my mother was buried in. The umbrella I'm holding is cheap, the kind that inverts in wind, and I watch water pool in the depression where they'll lower the casket.

There are eleven people here. I counted.

Eleven, at the funeral of a man who served this city for forty years. The Harrisons sent flowers with a card that said *our thoughts are with you* in someone's assistant's handwriting. The Vanderbilts didn't send anything at all. I recognize a few faces from the courthouse — clerks, a bailiff who worked my father's courtroom for a decade. They stand at a distance, umbrellas forming a separate archipelago from mine.

Then I see Maxwell.

He's across the cemetery, standing beneath an oak tree with the Dixons. Senator Dixon in his perfect charcoal overcoat. Phoebe in black that probably cost more than my father's casket, her hand tucked into Maxwell's elbow. He doesn't look at me. Not once. His jaw is set, his posture rigid, and I watch him the way you watch a scar that won't stop aching.

The priest finishes. People drift away like smoke.

I'm alone when I hear the footsteps.

The man who approaches is tall enough that I have to tilt my head back to meet his eyes. He's flanked by two others in dark suits, their builds suggesting they're not here for the sermon. His face is all angles — sharp jaw, sharper cheekbones — and there's something in the way he moves that makes me think of coiled wire.

"Miss Greene." His voice is quiet. Controlled. "I'm sorry for your loss."

I don't know him. I would remember.

"Thank you," I say, because that's what you say, even when the words mean nothing.

He reaches into his jacket and produces a card. Black. Embossed silver lettering. *Knox Hawkins. Hawkins Security Solutions.*

"I don't believe the narrative they're selling," he says, and his eyes hold mine with an intensity that makes my breath catch. "About your father. If you want the truth, call me."

He presses the card into my palm. His hand is warm despite the rain.

Then he's gone, and I'm standing there with a business card getting wet and the sound of Maxwell's car starting in the distance.

The lawyer's name is Brennan. He agreed to meet me at Le Bernardin because apparently even in free fall, I'm expected to maintain appearances.

I arrive early, dressed in the only suit I have left that doesn't smell like evidence bags. The maître d' recognizes me — or recognizes what I used to be — and seats me at a table near the back. I order water and wait.

That's when I hear Maxwell's laugh.

It comes from a private booth across the dining room, half-hidden by a decorative screen. I know that laugh. I've heard it a thousand times — at galas, at family dinners, in the dark of his bedroom when I'd say something that surprised him.

I shouldn't move. I should stay in my seat and wait for Brennan.

I move.

The screen provides just enough cover. I can see them through the gaps — Maxwell, two men in expensive suits, and a woman I don't recognize taking notes. There's a bottle of wine on the table. Something French. Something that costs more than most people make in a week.

"—the Senator's support locks in the merger," one of the men is saying. "The tech committee votes next month."

"And the Greene situation?" the woman asks.

Maxwell leans back. Takes a sip of wine. "Handled."

"You're sure? The optics—"

"Ariella was always a stepping stone." His voice is casual. Easy. Like he's discussing stock options. "Good for the family image when her father had influence. Now she's a liability. Phoebe gives us direct access to Dixon, and frankly, the Senator's legislative reach is worth more than—"

He stops. Laughs again.

"Worth more than what?" the woman prompts.

"Than whatever I thought I felt."

The words land like a fist to the sternum.

I don't remember walking out. I don't remember canceling with Brennan or getting in my car. I just remember driving, the city blurring past, and the taste of something bitter at the back of my throat that might be bile or might be the death of hope.

The Hamptons polo match is a mistake.

I know it the moment I arrive, but I'm here anyway, because sitting in that empty house with my father's ghost and Maxwell's words on repeat is worse than facing them. The charity event is crowded — women in wide-brimmed hats, men in linen, the smell of champagne and fresh-cut grass.

Phoebe finds me near the stables.

"Ariella." She's in white, of course. Virginal. Her smile is soft. "I didn't think you'd come."

"I'm still a member of the club."

"For now." She tilts her head. "I heard they're reviewing memberships. After everything."

I see Blizzard in his stall, and something in me breaks toward something solid. My horse. My beautiful, steady boy who doesn't care about scandals or lies.

"Excuse me," I say.

I'm saddling him when Phoebe drifts closer, her phone in her hand, her attention seemingly elsewhere. The groom helps me mount. Blizzard shifts beneath me, restless, and I lean forward to calm him.

Then he screams.

It's not a sound I've ever heard him make. He rears, violent and sudden, and I see Phoebe stumbling backward, her hand at her chest, something silver glinting between her fingers.

I'm airborne.

The ground comes up fast. I put my right hand out to catch myself — instinct, stupid instinct — and I feel the bones shatter on impact.

The pain is white. Absolute.

Phoebe is screaming. "Oh my God! Someone help! She's not stable — I tried to warn them — she shouldn't be riding in her condition—"

Faces swim above me. Voices. Someone's calling an ambulance.

I look at my hand. It's bent wrong. The fingers won't move.

And I think, with the clarity that comes with shock: This is the hand I paint with.

This is the last thing I have left.

And she's taken it.

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