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Ashton's Betrayal, Her Unyielding Vengeance Novel Cover

Ashton's Betrayal, Her Unyielding Vengeance

I spent a decade as Ashton Maxwell' s shadow, building his empire and warming his bed, only for him to announce his engagement to a senator's daughter right in front of me. When assassins struck that night, he didn't just choose her; he used my body as a human shield against a grenade and then shot me himself to prove his loyalty to her family. I survived, reinvented myself as Grecia Munoz, and returned to burn his world to the ground, eventually forcing him to hand over his entire empire in a desperate plea for forgiveness. He promised to disappear so I could find peace with a kind doctor named Garrick. But Ashton' s definition of love was a sickness. To "protect" me from what he called a weakness, he secretly destroyed Garrick' s career and reputation, driving the only innocent man I ever loved to jump off a bridge. He thought this would drive me back into his arms, into the safety of the monster he created. Instead, I drove to the Hamptons, to the pristine dream home he had built for our future. He knelt before me, begging for understanding, claiming he did it all for us. I didn't offer forgiveness. I raised the pistol he had once given me, aimed at the heart I had already broken, and ended the nightmare once and for all.
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Chapter 2

Iris POV The scent of burning paper still clung to my clothes as I systematically wiped every digital trace of Iris Greer from existence. Each deleted file, each scrubbed server, each severed connection was a deliberate cut, severing the cord that tethered me to Ashton Maxwell. My phone, a relic of a life I was shedding, vibrated constantly. Missed calls and texts from him, a desperate attempt to grasp at the shadow I was becoming. I ignored them all, my resolve hardening with each unanswered ping. Two days later, the silence was broken not by a call, but by a heavy knock on the door. I knew it wasn't Colonel Hall. This knock was impatient, demanding. Before I could even reach for the pistol tucked beneath my pillow, the door splintered inward. Two of Ashton's enforcers, hulking figures in dark suits, stood there. "Boss wants to see you," one grunted, his eyes sweeping the sparse room. I didn't resist. What was the point? My transformation wasn't yet complete, and a ghost couldn't fight a phantom. Not yet. They drove me in silence, the familiar New York skyline a blur outside the tinted windows. Every turn, every street, a memory. A decade of my life, played out against this backdrop. Now, I was being brought back to the very heart of my gilded cage. The penthouse. My penthouse, which was no longer mine. The doorman, his face impassive, greeted them without a glance at me. They ushered me into the elevator, the ride up feeling endless, a slow ascent into an inferno. The doors hissed open. I stepped out, and the air hit me first. Not the familiar scent of Ashton's expensive cologne, but a cloying floral fragrance. Elodie' s. My stomach twisted. They led me to what used to be my private study. It was unrecognizable. The dark, minimalist decor I favored was gone, replaced by an explosion of pastel colors and ornate furniture. My heavy mahogany desk, where I had spent countless nights strategizing for Ashton, was replaced by a delicate vanity table laden with crystal bottles. My bookshelves, once filled with strategic analyses and historical texts, now held decorative ceramics and a collection of romance novels. My breath hitched. Every last trace of me had been meticulously erased. It was as if I had never existed. Then my eyes landed on the centerpiece of the room. A massive, gilded easel held a portrait. Elodie. Posed in soft lighting, her hair cascading around her, an innocent smile on her lips. The "White Swan." My replacement. My erasure made tangible. Ashton entered, Elodie on his arm, her white dress shimmering. She looked even more radiant than before, flushed with triumph. Ashton, on the other hand, seemed… different. Tense. His eyes, though still cold, held a flicker of something I couldn' t decipher. He tightened his grip on Elodie' s waist, pulling her closer. "Iris," he said, his voice betraying no emotion. "So glad you could make it." Elodie offered a simpering smile, her eyes wide and falsely sympathetic. "Ashton told me so much about you, Iris. His... efficient assistant. It's truly a shame things didn't work out for you here." Efficient assistant. The words were a slap, deliberately delivered. My throat burned. "Indeed," I said, my voice flat, betraying nothing. "Life has a way of moving on." Ashton' s eyes narrowed slightly, a hint of something unreadable in their depths. He seemed almost pleased by my composure. He liked his tools sharp, even when he was discarding them. He led Elodie from the study, her laughter echoing down the hallway. I followed, a ghost in my own former home. We entered the grand ballroom, already filled with the city's elite. Ashton's family, his inner circle, prominent figures from politics and business. They were all there, celebrating his new alliance. His new future. An elderly man, a distant cousin of Ashton's, approached him. "Ashton, my boy," he boomed, clapping him on the shoulder. "Splendid news! And who is this lovely young lady?" He gestured vaguely in my direction. Ashton's jaw tightened. He turned to me, his eyes colder than I'd ever seen them. "This is Iris," he said, his voice clipped. "My Chief of Staff. She handles the... less glamorous aspects of the business." He emphasized "less glamorous" with a sneer, a deliberate dismissal. Elodie cooed, "Oh, Ashton, don't be so hard on her. Iris, darling, you're so good at all that dreadful paperwork, aren't you?" Her eyes sparkled with malicious glee. A fresh wave of humiliation washed over me. But I forced a smile. A tight, brittle thing. "I assure you, Elodie," I said, my voice dangerously soft, "I am excellent at my job. In all its dreadful aspects." Ashton watched me, a flicker of something unreadable in his eyes. He seemed to approve of my performance. He liked his toys to obey, even when broken. He led Elodie away, their intertwined hands a public declaration of ownership. I remained. A prop. A shadow. Later, as the champagne flowed and the celebration swelled, I found myself cornered by a particularly nosy aunt of Ashton's. "Iris, dear," she whispered, her eyes shrewd. "I always thought... well, you and Ashton seemed quite close. A little too close, if you ask me." She winked, a conspiratorial gesture that made my skin crawl. Ashton, overhearing her, turned, his face a mask of controlled fury. He walked over, his presence a dark storm. "Aunt Agnes," he said, his voice dangerously low. "Iris is an invaluable employee. Nothing more. Her loyalty to the family is beyond question." He paused, his gaze boring into mine. "Isn't that right, Iris?" The lie tasted like iron. It was a test. A public execution of my heart. My eyes met his, and for a fleeting second, I saw a flicker of something raw, something almost like pain, in his. But it was gone, swallowed by the cold resolve that always governed him. "Of course, Mr. Maxwell," I said, my voice steady, my smile unwavering. "My loyalty to the Maxwell family is absolute. My relationship with you has always been strictly professional." The words felt heavy, each one a nail in the coffin of my past. A muscle ticked in Ashton' s jaw. His eyes, for a split second, widened. Shock? Relief? I couldn't tell. But the tension in the room, thick enough to cut, eased. Elodie, who had been watching from across the room, sashayed over. She slipped her hand into Ashton's. "Darling," she purred, "come, let's dance. Everyone's waiting for the engaged couple to lead the way." Ashton, still staring at me, shook his head subtly, as if clearing cobwebs. His hand, which had been resting on my arm, dropped away. It was a familiar gesture, one that once comforted me. Now it was a rejection. He turned to Elodie, his face softening into a practiced smile. He pulled her onto the dance floor, her white dress swirling around him. As they moved, a slow, elegant waltz, his eyes found mine again. A deep, unsettling emptiness stared back. He wore the same smile I had seen him give to business rivals, to corrupt politicians. A smile devoid of genuine emotion. Then, his lips moved. So subtly, I almost missed it. "Remember your place, Iris." The words, though silent, were a venomous hiss across the crowded room. I felt a cold, hard knot of hatred settle deep in my stomach. Tonight, he had amputated my heart. But he had also forged something new in its place. Something sharper. Something colder. I smiled back, a genuine, chilling smile that didn't reach my eyes. You have no idea what place I will take, Ashton. The music swelled, drowning out the silent scream inside me. My time in the shadows was over. It was time for me to rise. And when I did, he would wish he had never let me go. The countdown had begun.