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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 3

The corner office at Knight Capital had floor-to-ceiling windows that overlooked the Hudson. I'd stood in that office a hundred times during our marriage, watching Mason command his empire from behind that massive desk. Now Lillie Butler sat there, her small frame dwarfed by the leather chair, staring at a filing cabinet like it might bite her.

I knew this because Victoria had friends everywhere. Including Mason's executive assistant, who'd sent me the photo with a single word: "Karma."

Lillie had demanded the office. Mason had given it to her. A petty gesture meant to erase me, to prove I was replaceable. But the photo told a different story—Lillie's face pinched with frustration, surrounded by financial reports she clearly couldn't decipher, her phone pressed to her ear.

Victoria's friend had included the audio too.

"Mason, I don't understand this filing system. Where are the Q3 projections?" Lillie's voice had lost that breathy quality. She sounded tired. Irritated.

"Figure it out." Mason's response was clipped. "I'm in a meeting."

"But you said—"

"I said figure it out, Lillie. I don't have time to hold your hand through basic office management."

The call ended. In the photo, Lillie stared at her phone with an expression I recognized intimately. The moment you realize the hero is just a man. And not a particularly patient one.

I deleted the file and turned back to my own work. I had bigger problems than Lillie Butler's awakening.

Mason called at 11 PM. I let it ring twice before answering.

"Clara." His voice carried that smooth confidence again. The crack from our last conversation had been sealed over. "I thought you'd want to know—the Meridian Logistics deal? It's mine. Elliot's out."

I said nothing. Let the silence stretch.

"You're out of your depth, sweetheart. This isn't a game for amateurs. Why don't you come home? We can talk about this properly. You don't need to embarrass yourself trying to play businesswoman."

The condescension dripped like honey. Sweet. Poisonous.

"Congratulations on your acquisition," I said evenly. "I hope it serves you well."

I hung up before he could respond.

Elliot was waiting in his office when I arrived, the city lights painting shadows across his face. He looked up from his laptop, one eyebrow raised.

"He called you."

"Gloating." I set down my bag. "Right on schedule."

"You're sure about this?"

I pulled up the financial models we'd built over the past week. Meridian Logistics was a solid company, but Mason had paid thirty percent over market value to secure it. He'd liquidated three smaller holdings and taken on significant debt to finance the deal.

"He overextended," I said. "He was so focused on beating you that he didn't stop to ask why we were bidding in the first place."

Elliot's mouth curved into something sharp and satisfied. "You used yourself as bait."

"I used his ego as bait. I was just the trigger." I closed the laptop. "He thinks I'm incompetent. That I'm playing dress-up in the business world. He'll never see me coming."

Elliot stood, moving around the desk. He stopped close enough that I could smell his cologne—cedar and something darker. Nothing like Mason's expensive, cloying scent.

"You're terrifying," he said quietly. "In the best possible way."

Our eyes met. Held. Something shifted in the air between us, something that had nothing to do with revenge or business strategy.

James Morrison's arrival shattered the moment. My lawyer swept in with his briefcase and his perpetual expression of grim determination, spreading documents across Elliot's conference table like a general planning a siege.

"Found something," James said without preamble. "Recurring transfers from Mason's private accounts during your marriage. Always the same amount. Always the same destination."

I moved to the table. The bank statements showed a pattern—monthly transfers of fifty thousand dollars to a shell company in the Cayman Islands.

The company name made my blood stop.

Red Velvet Holdings.

The room tilted. I gripped the edge of the table, my knuckles white against the dark wood.

"Clara?" Elliot's hand touched my shoulder. Steadying. Not controlling.

Red velvet cake. Our anniversary tradition. The dessert Mason ordered every year with that soft smile, telling me how much he loved sharing it with me. How it symbolized our love, our partnership, our journey together.

I'd choked down that cake for five years, hating every bite, smiling through the cloying sweetness because it made him happy. Because good wives didn't complain about romantic gestures.

And he'd named the shell company—the vehicle he'd used to destroy my father—after that same lie.

"He knew," I whispered. "He knew I hated it. He knew, and he made me eat it anyway. Every single year."

James's face was grim. "The timeline matches. These transfers started six months before Scott Enterprises collapsed. This is how he funded the hostile takeover."

I straightened slowly. The shock crystallized into something harder. Colder.

"Get me everything," I said. "Every transfer. Every document. Every piece of evidence that ties Mason Knight to Red Velvet Holdings and the destruction of my father's company."

James nodded and left. Elliot remained, his presence solid and real beside me.

"He didn't just destroy your family," Elliot said quietly. "He mocked you with it. Every anniversary. Every year."

I looked at the documents spread across the table. The proof of Mason's betrayal, wrapped in the symbol of his cruelty.

"He made a mistake," I said. "He thought I'd never be strong enough to look. That I'd stay broken forever."

I gathered the papers, my hands steady now. Certain.

"Let's show him exactly how wrong he was."

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