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After My Groom Betrayed Me With My Stepsister Novel Cover

After My Groom Betrayed Me With My Stepsister

The bathroom mirror at the Plaza reflected a woman I barely recognized. I'd spent two hours on my hair alone, twisting it into an elegant updo that exposed the curve of my neck. The dress—navy blue, modest, purchased with money I'd saved from grocery budgets—fit perfectly. I'd imagined Cole's face when he saw me tonight. Imagined him finally looking at me the way he used to, back when we were just two people in love, before DeepSpace Tech consumed everything. Three years. Three years of living in the margins of his success. The ballroom of the Manhattan Grand buzzed with the kind of energy that only comes from old money meeting new ambition. Crystal chandeliers cast fractured light across faces I'd seen in Forbes and Bloomberg. I smoothed my dress and made my way through the crowd, searching for Cole among the tailored suits and designer gowns that cost more than our monthly rent.
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Chapter 2

The Myers estate rose from the Hamptons coastline like a monument to old power. White columns. Manicured hedges. The kind of wealth that didn't need to announce itself because everyone already knew.

Alfredo met me at the entrance, his posture as impeccable as I remembered. Three years hadn't aged him so much as refined him, like good wine. His eyes swept over my discount dress with something that might have been pity.

"Miss Myers." He inclined his head. "Your grandfather is in the east wing. He's been waiting."

The marble floors echoed under my heels as we walked through halls lined with portraits of Myers ancestors. Titans of industry. Builders of empires. My mother's face gazed down from the landing, forever young, forever elegant. I'd inherited her eyes. Her cheekbones. Her capacity for loving the wrong man.

Grandpa's bedroom smelled of antiseptic and old leather. Medical equipment beeped softly beside the four-poster bed where he lay, smaller than I remembered but no less formidable. His eyes—sharp, calculating—tracked my approach.

"Three years." His voice was gravel and steel. "Three years you wasted on that parasite."

I stopped at the foot of his bed. "Grandpa—"

"Don't." He raised one weathered hand. "I watched you throw away everything your mother built. Everything I built. For what? A man who just gave away your birthright to your stepsister on national television."

The words hit like physical blows. He'd seen it. Of course he'd seen it.

"I made a mistake," I said quietly.

"Mistakes can be corrected." He reached for a folder on his nightstand, his movements deliberate despite the IV in his arm. "The Myers Conglomerate needs a leader. The board is circling like sharks, waiting for me to die so they can carve up the empire. I won't let that happen."

He opened the folder. Legal documents. Stock certificates. The weight of a dynasty in paper form.

"You take control. Immediately. Full authority." His finger tapped the first page. "But there's a condition. You enter a strategic engagement with Stefan Crawford. His capital, your legacy. Together, you stabilize the stock and show the board that the Myers line isn't finished."

"An arranged marriage." The irony tasted bitter.

"A strategic alliance. What marriage should have been in the first place." His eyes narrowed. "You have until morning to decide. Accept, and everything is yours. Refuse, and I'll dissolve the trust. The Myers name dies with me."

Vengeance crystallized in my chest, cold and sharp. Cole's face. Haley's smile. The necklace catching light around her throat.

"I accept."

Grandpa's lips curved into something that might have been approval. "Good. Alfredo will show you to your quarters. We announce tomorrow at the board meeting."

My old room had been preserved like a museum. Childhood photos. Debate team trophies. The life I'd abandoned. I opened the closet and stared at the clothes I'd left behind—designer labels, power suits, the armor of an heiress.

I gathered the discount dresses I'd arrived in and carried them to the garden incinerator.

The flames caught quickly, consuming navy blue fabric and three years of making myself small. Smoke curled into the night sky, carrying away the woman who'd sat by the buffet table. Who'd apologized for existing.

The estate's couture vault was climate-controlled, organized by season and designer. I ran my fingers along silk and cashmere, feeling the weight of quality. Real quality, not the knockoffs I'd convinced myself were good enough.

I selected a charcoal suit—Armani, sharp lines, no softness. The fabric settled against my skin like a second skeleton. In the mirror, a different woman stared back. Shoulders straight. Jaw set. Eyes hard.

The Myers family signet ring sat in its velvet box in the vault's safe. Heavy gold, the family crest etched deep. I slid it onto my right hand. The weight felt right.

Alfredo knocked precisely at eight. "Mr. Crawford has arrived, Miss Myers. Your grandfather requests your presence in the study."

Stefan Crawford stood by the window, backlit by morning sun. Tall. Broad-shouldered. The kind of presence that commanded rooms without effort. He turned as I entered, his eyes assessing me with the same calculation I'd seen in a hundred boardrooms.

"Miss Myers." His voice was low, controlled. He didn't offer his hand.

"Mr. Crawford."

Grandpa watched from his wheelchair, oxygen tube in his nose but eyes alert. "The contracts."

Stefan placed a folder on the desk. "Standard engagement terms. Public appearances. Joint business ventures. Dissolution clause after two years if both parties agree."

I scanned the pages. The language was precise, clinical. A business transaction dressed in romantic terminology.

"You think you can handle this?" Stefan's tone carried an edge. "Wall Street isn't a kitchen. The wolves will smell weakness."

I looked up from the contract. "Your Meridian merger. Last quarter. You overpaid by thirty percent because you didn't account for their pension liabilities. The wolves smelled that just fine."

Silence stretched between us. Stefan's jaw tightened, but something shifted in his eyes. Surprise. Maybe respect.

"You've done your homework."

"I always do."

He picked up a pen, signed his name with a flourish, and slid the contract across the desk. "Then let's see if you can keep up."

I signed below his name. The ink was still wet when Grandpa smiled.

"Welcome back, Naomi."

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