
After My Groom Became My Nemesis
Chapter 2
I fled Le Bernardin in a blur of tears and shocked faces, the sound of Marcus's smug voice still ringing in my ears. 'Someone better.' The words cut through me like shards of glass, each syllable a reminder of my own blindness. Three years. Three years of supporting him, believing in him, loving him—all to become a public spectacle of humiliation.
The cool night air hit my face as I burst onto the street, my designer heels clicking frantically against the pavement. I couldn't breathe in Manhattan tonight. Every gleaming skyscraper, every exclusive restaurant window seemed to be watching, whispering, pitying the Chen heiress who'd been so publicly discarded.
Central Park loomed ahead, a dark oasis in the city's relentless glow. I plunged into its shadows, not caring about the risks of walking alone at night. What could possibly hurt me more than what had just happened? My phone buzzed incessantly in my clutch—probably friends who had already heard through New York's merciless gossip pipeline. I silenced it without looking.
Under the canopy of trees, I finally allowed myself to break. My carefully applied makeup streamed down my face as I sobbed, the sound echoing off the empty pathways. The diamond on Sophia's finger flashed in my memory—a diamond I had essentially paid for. Every penny Marcus had ever spent had come from me, from my family, from my trust in him.
'Miss? Are you alright?' A concerned jogger slowed beside me, and I quickly turned away, mortified.
'I'm fine,' I managed, the lie as transparent as my Valentino was expensive.
I stumbled toward Central Park South, suddenly desperate to escape the city entirely. When a yellow cab appeared, I hailed it with trembling hands.
'Where to?' the driver asked, eyeing my tear-stained face in the rearview mirror.
'The Hamptons,' I said, my voice hollow. 'Chen estate in Southampton.'
The driver's eyebrows shot up—it was a two-hour drive—but he nodded and pulled away from the curb. As the city lights began to recede, something shifted inside me. The searing pain of betrayal began to crystallize into something harder, colder, more purposeful. By the time we crossed the Midtown Tunnel, my tears had dried, leaving salty tracks on my cheeks like battle scars.
I stared out at the darkened highway, watching as Manhattan's skyline diminished in the distance. Marcus thought he had won. He thought he could use me as a stepping stone and walk away unscathed. He thought wrong.
The Chen family hadn't built an empire by allowing others to take advantage of them. Somewhere beneath the heartbroken socialite was my father's daughter—strategic, calculating, and unwilling to accept defeat.
The cab pulled through the gates of our Southampton estate just before midnight. The house stood silent and dark except for the security lights illuminating the manicured grounds. I paid the driver generously and walked up the marble steps, my mind already racing with purpose.
Inside, I kicked off my heels and headed straight for my father's study. The room smelled of leather and power—a sanctuary where Richard Chen had orchestrated some of his most brilliant business maneuvers. Tonight, it would serve as the command center for something equally calculated.
I flipped on the desk lamp, casting long shadows across the room. The entire back wall was made of glass, designed to showcase the Atlantic Ocean during daylight hours. Now it reflected only my own determination staring back at me.
From my clutch, I pulled out my phone and accessed my private digital ledger—a meticulous record I'd kept of every investment I'd made in Marcus Thompson's future. Every tuition payment. Every introduction to key players on Wall Street. Every piece of insider information I'd shared that had made him look brilliant in meetings. Every dollar spent on transforming him from a small-town nobody into Manhattan elite.
One by one, I transferred the entries onto the glass wall using my father's erasable markers, creating a sprawling map of Marcus's fraudulent success. Red for financial support. Blue for professional connections. Green for social capital. By the time I finished, the wall looked like a blueprint—not of a relationship, but of a strategic dismantling.
As dawn broke over the Atlantic, casting golden light across my night's work, I stepped back to survey what I had created. This wasn't just a record of betrayal. It was the foundation of my revenge.
Marcus Thompson had no idea what was coming.
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