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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 4

The brush in my hand feels less like a tool and more like a weapon. My grip is different now—stiffer, forced—but the canvas doesn't ask for grace. It asks for truth. I slash a line of charcoal across the crimson oil, marring the landscape I’ve spent three hours building. It’s ugly. It’s perfect.

"It’s angry," Knox says from the doorway. He doesn't move to comfort me. He knows better.

"It’s honest." I wipe my hands on a rag, the smell of turpentine sharp in the Seattle air. My gaze drifts to the journal open on the workbench. We cracked the cipher this morning. The evidence isn't in a bank vault; it's on a flash drive, the key to which is hidden inside a vintage Breguet clock I gave Maxwell for our first anniversary. "The clock is in his penthouse. In the study."

Knox steps into the light, his jaw set in that way that means violence is a distinct possibility. "The Lynch Gala is tomorrow night. It’s the only time security will be focused on the ballroom, not the private residence."

I look at my scarred hand, then at him. "I'm not running anymore, Knox."

"Good," he says, his voice low and rough like gravel. "Because I bought us tickets."

***

New York smells of exhaust and expensive perfume. The ballroom of the Pierre Hotel is a sea of black tuxedos and glittering gowns, a shark tank I used to swim in with my eyes closed.

I wear red. Not the pale, submissive pastels Maxwell always preferred, but a blood-dark silk that clings like a second skin. When I walk in, the room doesn't just quiet; it inhales. I feel the weight of three hundred stares, heavy with judgment and scandal.

Knox’s hand is warm on the small of my back. "Breathe," he murmurs against my ear. "You're the predator here, Ariella. Not the prey."

We move through the crowd. I see the whispers ripple outward. *Is that her? The addict? The fallen princess?* I lift my chin. Let them look.

I spot Maxwell near the ice sculpture. He looks tired, his smile tight as he shakes hands with a senator I recognize from my father's funeral. When he sees me, his glass tilts, champagne sloshing over the rim.

"Ariella?" The name falls out of him, clumsy.

"Maxwell." I don't offer my hand. "Lovely party. A bit ostentatious for a company in a merger, isn't it?"

He stares, his eyes tracing the red silk, the healed set of my shoulders. "You... you look incredible."

"Excuse me," I say, cutting him off before he can find his footing. "I need some air."

I leave Knox to run interference and slip toward the library corridor. The service elevator to the penthouse is behind the mahogany panels. But as I reach the double doors, voices stop me.

"—can't keep doing this, Max. The polls are slipping."

I freeze. The library door is ajar. Through the crack, I see Phoebe perched on the edge of the desk, her hand resting protectively over her stomach. Maxwell stands before her, looking like a man in a trap of his own making.

"We need to announce it tonight," Phoebe says, her voice pitching up as she spots my shadow in the doorway. She doesn't look surprised. She looks triumphant. "The baby will secure the family vote."

Maxwell spins around. Our eyes lock.

For a second, the world tilts. *Baby.* The word is a physical blow, a hollow ache where my heart used to be. Phoebe smiles, a shark baring teeth. "Oh, Ariella. You didn't know? We're expecting."

I force my face to remain marble. "Congratulations," I say, the word tasting like ash. "I'm sure the child will inherit its mother's... creativity."

I turn on my heel and walk away before my knees can buckle. I don't go back to the party. I go to the service elevator.

***

The penthouse is silent, a mausoleum of glass and chrome floating above the city. I move quickly to the study. The Breguet clock sits on the mantle, exactly where I knew it would be. My hands tremble as I reach for the latch on the back panel.

"I knew you'd come up here."

I spin around. Maxwell stands in the doorway, blocking the only exit. He's not wearing his jacket. The casualness of it is terrifying.

"I'm just retrieving something of mine," I say, my voice steady despite the adrenaline flooding my veins.

He steps closer, the smell of whiskey rolling off him. "You heard Phoebe. About the baby."

"I did. You must be very proud."

"It's a trap," he whispers, the mask slipping. Desperation claws at his features. "She owns me, Ari. Her father owns the company. I have nothing that is actually mine."

He reaches for me, his fingers closing around my wrist—the injured one. I flinch, but he pulls me in.

"Stay," he breathes, his eyes feverish. "I can set you up in the city. An apartment. A studio. No one has to know. You can paint, and I can... I can breathe again."

I stare at him, repulsed. He wants me as a souvenir. A mistress to remind him he used to be a decent man.

"You're pathetic," I spit, wrenching my arm free. "You traded me for power, and now you want to keep me as a pet? I'd rather rot."

His face hardens. The boy I loved vanishes, replaced by the stranger who left me in that lobby.

"You're not leaving, Ariella," he says coldly. "You know too much. And I can't have you ruining the announcement."

Before I can lunge for the door, he shoves me backward. I stumble, hitting the edge of the desk. He steps out, pulling the heavy oak door shut.

"Maxwell!" I scream, throwing myself against the wood.

The lock clicks. Heavy. Final.

I pound on the door until my knuckles bruise, but the penthouse is soundproofed. I check my pockets for my phone. Empty. It must have fallen when I stumbled.

Silence descends, thick and suffocating. I slide down the door to the floor, the ticking of the clock on the mantle the only sound in the dark.

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