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After My Husband Bankrupted My Family, I Took Him Down Novel Cover

After My Husband Bankrupted My Family, I Took Him Down

The divorce papers hit the marble coffee table with a sound like a gunshot. I didn't flinch. My fingers remained steady on the page of my book—some thriller I'd stopped reading three paragraphs ago. The penthouse living room stretched around us, all glass and steel and cold white surfaces that Mason's decorator had insisted screamed "modern sophistication." It had always felt like a mausoleum to me. "Clara." Mason's voice carried that particular tone he used when he wanted to sound both regretful and noble. The Prince of Manhattan, they called him in the society pages. The man who'd pulled me from the wreckage of my family's bankruptcy five years ago and made me his wife. His project. His proof of concept. I set the book down and looked at him.
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Chapter 1

The divorce papers hit the marble coffee table with a sound like a gunshot.

I didn't flinch. My fingers remained steady on the page of my book—some thriller I'd stopped reading three paragraphs ago. The penthouse living room stretched around us, all glass and steel and cold white surfaces that Mason's decorator had insisted screamed "modern sophistication." It had always felt like a mausoleum to me.

"Clara." Mason's voice carried that particular tone he used when he wanted to sound both regretful and noble. The Prince of Manhattan, they called him in the society pages. The man who'd pulled me from the wreckage of my family's bankruptcy five years ago and made me his wife. His project. His proof of concept.

I set the book down and looked at him. Really looked. The sharp jawline that had graced a dozen magazine covers. The tailored Tom Ford suit that probably cost more than most people's monthly rent. The expression of carefully practiced concern that didn't quite reach his eyes.

"I've found something real," he said, and there was almost a tremor in his voice. Almost. "Something pure. Lillie—she's not like you've become. She still has that light, that vulnerability. She needs me."

Lillie Butler. Twenty-two years old. An intern at Knight Capital with wide eyes and a breathy voice that made grown men feel like heroes. I'd seen her at the company holiday party, watching Mason with the kind of adoration I'd probably worn once, back when I thought being saved was the same thing as being loved.

"I see," I said.

Mason's brow furrowed. This wasn't the script. I was supposed to cry, to beg, to crumble. That's what he needed—the breakdown, the desperate plea, the proof that he still mattered. That he was still necessary.

I reached for the divorce papers instead. The packet was thick, expensive legal stock that whispered wealth with every page. I flipped through it with the same attention I'd once given quarterly reports, back when my father was still alive and Scott Enterprises was still standing.

"Section 7.3," I said, my voice level. "The liquidation clause for joint real estate assets. This timeline seems aggressive. Are we using fair market value or the assessed value from last quarter? Because the Hamptons property alone has appreciated significantly."

Mason's jaw tightened. Just a fraction, just a flicker, but I caught it. Five years of studying his micro-expressions had taught me to read the moments when his control slipped.

"That's what you want to discuss? Property values?"

"I want to discuss what's mine." I met his gaze. "Unless you'd prefer I have my attorney handle it?"

The word 'my' landed between us like a blade. Not 'our' attorney. Not the firm Mason kept on retainer. Mine.

He recovered quickly, sliding back into that patronizing gentleness that had once made me feel cherished. "Clara, sweetheart, I know this is difficult—"

"I'll need copies of all account statements from the past eighteen months. And the offshore holdings. James Morrison will be in touch with your legal team by Monday."

I watched the color drain from his face. James Morrison. The divorce attorney who'd taken apart three billionaires in the past two years alone. The man they called the Executioner in family court.

Mason opened his mouth. Closed it. For the first time in five years, he had nothing to say.

I stood, smoothing my skirt—pale pink cashmere, the kind of soft, feminine thing he'd always preferred. Tomorrow, I'd burn it.

"I assume you'll want to move Lillie in quickly," I said. "I'll be out by morning."

I left him standing there in his glass tower, surrounded by all his beautiful, cold things. The elevator doors closed on his stunned expression, and I allowed myself one long breath. Just one.

The next morning, I stood before the mirror in what had been our bedroom and wiped away the last traces of the woman Mason had created. The soft pink lipstick. The subtle, natural makeup. The version of Clara Scott who'd learned to make herself smaller, quieter, more grateful.

I found my father's journals in the back of the closet, buried behind the couture gowns. His handwriting stared up at me from the first page: "To my Clara—the sharpest mind I've ever known. Don't let anyone dull your edges."

I'd let Mason dull every single one.

The dark red lipstick went on like war paint. My old business suits still fit, sharp-cut and severe. I looked like my father's daughter again. I looked like someone who could run an empire.

I pulled out my phone and dialed.

"James Morrison's office."

"This is Clara Scott. I need a forensic audit of every asset in my marriage. Every penny. Every account. Every transaction." I paused, watching my reflection. "And I need it yesterday."

A week later, the Metropolitan Opera House glittered like a jewelry box. I stood on the balcony in a black gown that hugged every line Mason had once tried to soften, watching the crowd below. Watching him.

Mason had Lillie on his arm, of course. She wore white—naturally—and gazed up at him with those wide, worshipful eyes. He was correcting her grip on her wine glass, his hand covering hers in that gentle, instructive way that looked like tenderness but was really control.

I'd seen this play before. I'd starred in it.

Then I saw him. Elliot Hall, Mason's greatest rival, standing across the room with a scotch in his hand and an expression of barely concealed contempt as he watched Mason's performance.

Our eyes met.

I raised my champagne glass in a silent salute. A declaration. An invitation.

Elliot's mouth curved into something that wasn't quite a smile. He raised his glass in return.

Below us, Mason's head snapped up. He'd felt the shift in the room, the way predators always sense when they're no longer the apex.

His eyes found mine. For one perfect moment, I watched him understand.

The game had changed. And this time, I was playing to win.

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