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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 5

The rumor spread through Wall Street like wildfire. I'd planted it carefully—a whisper to a Bloomberg reporter over drinks, a carefully timed phone call where I mentioned the Red Velvet Holdings documents within earshot of Mason's former associate. By noon, three different sources had reached out asking if I planned to go public with evidence of insider trading.

I didn't confirm. Didn't deny. Just let the silence do its work.

Mason's call came at 2:47 PM.

"We need to talk." No preamble. No pretense. His voice carried an edge I'd never heard before—something sharp and desperate beneath the controlled surface.

"About what?"

"You know what." A pause. "Tomorrow. Noon. The Carlyle."

He hung up before I could respond. Not that I needed to. We both knew I'd be there.

I chose the crimson suit deliberately. Valentino, sharp-shouldered, the color of arterial blood. The kind of red that demanded attention, that refused to be ignored or diminished. I paired it with black Louboutins and the diamond studs my father had given me for my twenty-first birthday—the only jewelry Mason hadn't bought.

James had fitted me with a recording device so small I couldn't feel it against my skin. "New York is a one-party consent state," he'd reminded me. "Anything he says is admissible."

The Carlyle's private dining room smelled like old money and older secrets. Mason was already there, standing by the window, his back to the door. His shoulders were rigid, his hands clasped behind him in that pose he used when he wanted to project control.

He turned when I entered. His eyes tracked over my suit, and something flickered across his face. Recognition, maybe. Or fear.

"Clara." He gestured to the table. "Please, sit."

I remained standing. "You have five minutes."

His jaw clenched. That tell. "I think we can both agree that dragging our personal business into the public sphere benefits no one."

"Our personal business." I let the words hang. "Is that what you're calling fraud and insider trading now?"

"I don't know what rumors you've heard—"

"Red Velvet Holdings." I watched the color drain from his face. "March fifteenth, five years ago. Short positions on Scott Enterprises stock. Fifty thousand shares. You want me to continue?"

He moved to the table, gripping the back of a chair. "Clara, sweetheart, you're upset. I understand. The divorce has been difficult, and you're looking for someone to blame—"

"Don't." The word came out like a blade. "Don't you dare use that voice with me. Not now. Not ever again."

Silence stretched between us. Outside, the city hummed with its usual indifference.

Mason straightened, and when he spoke again, the concerned husband act had vanished. "What do you want?"

"I want to hear you say it."

"Say what?"

"That you destroyed my father's company. That you orchestrated the whole thing. That you married me as part of your sick game." I stepped closer. "Say it."

His hands flexed at his sides. "You don't understand the business world, Clara. Sometimes difficult decisions—"

"Fifty million." The number cut through his justification. "I'll sign an NDA. Walk away. Fifty million dollars, and you never hear from me again."

I watched him calculate. Watched the relief flood his features as he realized he could buy his way out of this, just like he'd bought his way into everything else.

"Done." He pulled out his phone. "I'll have my lawyers draw up the paperwork today. We can finalize everything by—"

"No."

He looked up, confusion creasing his forehead.

"I don't want your money, Mason." I let the pause stretch, let him see the steel in my eyes. "I want your name."

The confusion shifted to comprehension, then to something close to panic. "Clara—"

"I want everyone to know what you did. I want the SEC to investigate every transaction you've made in the last decade. I want your board to see exactly who they've been following." I moved toward the door. "I want you to lose everything, the way my father did. The way I did."

"You're making a mistake." His voice had gone cold. Dangerous. "You have no idea what I'm capable of."

I turned back, and I smiled. It felt like baring teeth. "Neither do you."

I left him standing there, his fifty million dollar offer dying in the air between us. The recording device pressed against my skin like a promise.

Elliot was waiting in the car outside. He took one look at my face and started the engine.

"How'd it go?"

"He offered me fifty million to disappear." I pulled out my phone, checking the recording app. Clear audio. Every word. "I told him I wanted his name instead."

Elliot's mouth curved into something fierce and proud. "The press conference venue is confirmed. Tomorrow, 10 AM. Right across from the Stock Exchange."

"SEC?"

"They'll be there. So will every major financial journalist in the city." He glanced at me. "Last chance to back out."

I thought about my father. About five years of choking down red velvet cake. About every time I'd made myself smaller to fit into Mason's carefully constructed narrative.

"Drive," I said. "We have work to do."

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