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THE CEO I BUILT DUMPED ME FOR MY SISTER, THEN HIS RIVAL PUT A RING ON ME Novel Cover

THE CEO I BUILT DUMPED ME FOR MY SISTER, THEN HIS RIVAL PUT A RING ON ME

I built Lockwood Tech with my own hands and signed it all under his name. Three years later Ethan slid divorce papers across the table and told me my sister Sloane was already moving into my bedroom. He didn't know I was six weeks pregnant. He didn't know I owned 51% of the company he thought was his. So I signed. I walked out. And I took the only thing that was ever really mine. What I didn't plan for was Damon Reyes — Ethan's biggest rival — sliding a different kind of contract across a different table, and a ring that came with it. By the time Ethan figures out who actually controls Lockwood Tech, I'll be the one holding the pen. And this time, he's the one who'll be begging.
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Chapter 1

The marble bar of the Lockwood Penthouse felt like a block of ice under my fingertips.

Ethan slid a thick manila folder across the polished surface. It stopped exactly one inch from my hands. Next to it, he placed a heavy gold fountain pen.

"Sign it," he instructed. His tone lacked any inflection, completely devoid of the warmth I used to wake up to.

I opened the folder. The top page stared back at me in bold, black font: *Divorce Settlement Agreement*.

At the bottom of the page, the ink on Ethan’s signature had already dried. Next to his name, the date mocked me. October 14th. Today. Our third wedding anniversary.

"You couldn't wait until tomorrow?" I asked, keeping my voice perfectly flat.

"There's no point in dragging this out, Vivian," Ethan replied. He leaned against the kitchen island, crossing his arms over his tailored shirt. "The lawyers finalized it this morning. It's cleaner this way."

"Cleaner." I tasted the word.

A soft rustle of fabric drew my attention to the hallway. Sloane stepped into the kitchen light. She wore a champagne silk robe. My champagne silk robe. The one I bought in Paris on our honeymoon.

She glided up behind my husband and flattened her palm against his chest.

"Is everything okay, babe?" Sloane asked, her gaze flicking to me. She didn't look sorry. She looked victorious.

"We're just finishing up," Ethan murmured, covering her hand with his own.

I looked at the two of them. A perfect picture of domestic bliss, standing in the center of the kitchen I spent six months designing.

I dropped my eyes back to the papers. Clause 4 caught my attention immediately. *Vivian Carter voluntarily waives all joint property.*

"All joint property," I read aloud. I tapped the gold pen against the marble. "That's a bold request, Ethan."

"It's fair," he countered. His jaw set in a hard line. "I built Lockwood Enterprises from the ground up. You know that. I'm leaving you a generous cash settlement. You won't have to worry about rent for a long time."

I let out a sharp laugh. "Rent."

Sloane shifted her weight, pressing closer to his back. "Ethan is being more than reasonable, Vivian. You should just take the money. We want to start our lives."

"Your lives," I repeated. "In my penthouse."

"It's Ethan's penthouse," Sloane shot back.

"I picked out the marble you're leaning on, Sloane. I sourced the lighting fixtures from Italy. I funded the startup capital for his entire company." I kept my posture rigid.

"A small loan," Ethan scoffed. He uncrossed his arms and planted his hands heavily on the counter. "I paid you back years ago with interest. You sit in this ivory tower and plan charity galas while I work eighty hours a week. I close the deals. I schmooze the clients. The company is mine."

"Is that what you told her?" I asked, locking eyes with Sloane.

Ethan’s face flushed red. "Leave Sloane out of this. This is between you and me."

"She's wearing my clothes, Ethan. She's standing in my kitchen. She's very much in this."

Sloane tightened her grip on his shirt. "I told you she'd be difficult," she whispered, projecting her voice just enough to ensure I heard every syllable.

"I'm not being difficult," I said. I uncapped the pen. "I'm just reading the terms. *Voluntarily waives all joint property.* Which means you get the cars, the house, the shares, the offshore accounts."

"I'll transfer two million into your personal account by Friday," Ethan stated. "Sign the paper, Vivian. Pack your bags. My driver will take you to a hotel tonight."

"Two million." I nodded slowly. "For a company valued at fifty million."

"I built that value!" he shouted, slapping the marble.

My left hand twitched. It drifted downward, hovering just over my lower abdomen. The tiny flutter of panic in my chest had nothing to do with Ethan’s temper, and everything to do with the secret growing inside me.

Ethan's eyes tracked the movement. He stared at my hand floating near my stomach for a fraction of a second.

"Do you have a stomachache?" he asked, sounding more annoyed than concerned.

My knuckles tightened around the edge of the folder until the skin stretched white. I squeezed my eyes shut for a microsecond. Then, I forced my fingers to uncurl.

I looked at the man I had loved for five years. *I'm pregnant,* I wanted to scream. *You're throwing away your wife and your child for an assistant in my bathrobe.*

The words clawed at my throat. I swallowed them down.

Instead, I stretched my lips into a wide, hollow smile. "Just a little nausea. Must be the company."

Ethan rolled his eyes. "Don't make this so dramatic, Vivian. It's a simple business transaction. We fell out of love. It happens."

"A business transaction," I said.

"Exactly," he agreed, recovering his composure. "So sign."

"What's the rush?" I asked. "Dinner reservations? Or is Sloane eager to clear out my closet?"

"I don't want your old things," Sloane chimed in. She stepped out from behind him, wrapping the silk tighter around her waist. "Ethan is taking me shopping tomorrow. We're redecorating this whole place. It's too vintage."

"Vintage," I echoed. "I suppose it is."

"Stop stalling," Ethan interrupted. "You're only making this harder on yourself. If you drag this to court, my lawyers will bury you. You'll walk away with nothing. Take the two million and go."

I looked down at the paper. The black letters blurred together for a second.

"You planned this," I said, tracing the edge of the document. "You chose today specifically to hand me this."

"It was Sloane's idea," he admitted, lacking any trace of shame. "She thought it would be poetic. An end on the day it began."

I shifted my gaze to Sloane. She smirked.

"Poetic," I repeated. "Did you also think it was poetic to wear my clothes while you did it?"

"It's just a robe, Vivian," Ethan snapped. "Get over it and sign the damn paper."

I took a breath. I pressed the nib of the pen against the signature line.

"You really think you hold all the cards, don't you?" I asked, not looking up.

"I know I do," Ethan said.

I traced the first letter of my name. The ink flowed smoothly across the page.

"It's funny," I said, signing my last name. Carter. Not Lockwood. Never Lockwood again. "You were always so focused on the front end of the business. You never really paid attention to the paperwork. The founding documents. The equity splits."

Ethan frowned. "What are you talking about?"

"You hired lawyers to draft this divorce," I continued, finishing the signature. "Did you have them look at the original incorporation papers? The ones we filed five years ago?"

"My lawyers know what they're doing," he barked.

I put the pen down. It landed with a sharp clink against the marble.

I slid the folder back across the bar. Ethan snatched it up, checking to make sure I had actually signed. He exhaled a long breath, looking visibly relieved.

"Good," he said. "Now, please leave."

I didn't move. I stood perfectly still, my hands resting flat on the counter.

"I'll leave," I said. "But before I walk out that door..."

I tilted my head, meeting his arrogant stare.

"Do you know who this company actually belongs to—"

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