Follow
Chapters
Share
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.
Chapters
Share

Chapter 3

"I'm surprised enough to call security," I told the stranger.

He laughed. A short, rough sound that echoed off the concrete pillars. "Security works for Lockwood Tech. And as of twenty minutes ago, Ethan thinks he owns them outright."

I tightened my grip on the frayed canvas handle of my suitcase.

"Who are you?" I demanded.

"Damon Reyes." He pushed off the hood of his matte black sedan.

He didn't offer his hand. He simply stood there, studying me with an intensity that made the freezing garage air feel suddenly stifling. He wore a dark tailored suit, no tie, the top two buttons of his shirt undone. Wealth radiated from him, not the flashy, desperate kind Ethan flaunted, but quiet, ruthless power.

He reached inside his dark suit jacket. My muscles coiled, ready to run, but he merely withdrew a folded stack of papers.

"I've been tracking the Lockwood Tech acquisition for eighteen months," Damon stated. He tapped the crisp edge of the paper against his opposite palm. "Eighteen months watching Ethan parade around Silicon Valley, shaking hands, taking credit for a source code he couldn't even read."

My throat locked. The air trapped itself in my lungs.

I took a half-step backward. My shoe scraped the pavement. Immediately, I forced my weight forward, planting my feet flat. I refused to retreat.

Damon noticed the micro-movement. His dark eyes flicked to my shoes, then back to my face. A faint smirk touched his mouth.

"You're very good at playing the quiet wife," he noted. "Too good. It almost fooled my analysts."

My hand twitched, rising halfway between my waist and the document he held. I wanted to snatch it. I wanted to see exactly what he knew. I forced my fingers to curl into a loose fist and dropped my arm back to my side.

I swallowed the desperate *How do you know?* burning on my tongue.

"Eighteen months is a long time to stalk a mid-level tech firm, Mr. Reyes," I said, keeping my tone perfectly chilled.

"It is," he agreed, stepping closer. "Especially when the so-called CEO is a fraud."

"Ethan built the company," I lied smoothly.

"Ethan built a glass house," Damon corrected. He stopped just two feet away. "You wrote the original algorithm. You secured the seed funding. You managed the server expansion while he was out playing golf with venture capitalists."

A strange warmth bloomed in my chest. A crack in the ice.

"You rewrote the encryption protocol in forty-eight hours last November when the servers crashed," Damon continued, his voice steady and relentless. "Ethan was in Aspen. He told the press he directed the crisis response from his phone. But my team tracked the IP address of the patch. It came from this penthouse."

For three years, Ethan had chipped away at my contributions. He called my late nights "hobby work." He called the code "basic." He convinced me I was just the support system, the lucky beneficiary of his towering genius.

Hearing a complete stranger lay out the truth—my truth—felt like a jolt of electricity straight to the heart.

"He's the face," Damon said, his voice dropping an octave. "But you hold the strings. Fifty-one percent of them, to be exact."

I stared at him. The number hung in the space between us.

Fifty-one percent.

When Ethan handed me those divorce papers upstairs, I thought of my majority share as a safety net. A technicality to keep me from starving after he transferred the joint accounts to his own name.

Damon's words shifted the angle entirely.

I thought of Sloane upstairs, demanding my tennis bracelet. I thought of Ethan screaming that he built the value of the company. They were fighting over the furniture while I secretly owned the house.

My shares weren't a fallback. They were a weapon.

"If you know about the fifty-one percent," I said, my voice dropping to match his volume, "then you know why I signed that divorce settlement."

"You waived all joint property," Damon replied. "But your shares aren't joint. You filed them under a separate holding company before the wedding. Ethan never bothered to check the original incorporation documents."

"He hates paperwork." I allowed myself a small, sharp smile. An unexpected surge of triumph washed over the grief I felt just five minutes ago.

Damon mirrored the expression. "A fatal flaw."

He unfolded the document and extended it toward me.

I looked down. Bold, black letters spelled out my name at the top: *Vivian Carter*. Not Lockwood. At the very bottom, a blank signature line waited.

"What is this?" I asked, keeping my hands firmly at my sides.

"A counter-offer," Damon said. "Ethan thinks he took everything from you today. I want to help you prove him wrong."

"I don't need your help, Mr. Reyes. I have a majority stake. I can walk into that boardroom tomorrow and fire him."

"You could," Damon agreed. "But Ethan has the board in his pocket. He has the media. He has Sloane feeding the rumor mill. If you walk in there alone, they will drag you through years of litigation. They will freeze your assets. You'll be fighting a war of attrition."

He wasn't wrong. Ethan’s lawyers were vicious, and Sloane was already setting the stage to paint me as the bitter, discarded wife. She booked the executive conference room just to ensure my humiliation was public.

"And what do you get out of this?" I asked, meeting his gaze.

"I want Lockwood Tech," Damon stated flatly. "I want to acquire it, dismantle Ethan's useless executive team, and integrate the algorithm into my own network. But I can't do that through a hostile takeover. I need the majority shareholder to invite me in."

"You want me to sell to you."

"I want us to partner."

He flipped the thick stack of papers to the very last page.

Clipped to the top right corner of the paper, a platinum band caught the harsh fluorescent light. A massive, flawless diamond sat in the center.

An engagement ring.

I blinked, the cold logic of our business negotiation suddenly shattering.

"Is this a joke?" I asked, pointing at the metal.

Damon unclipped the ring. He held it between his thumb and index finger.

"A corporate merger requires public confidence," Damon explained, his tone devoid of any romance. "A scandal-ridden divorce tanks stock prices. But a scorned wife who immediately moves on to a bigger, better rival? That’s a headline the market loves."

"You want a fake marriage."

"I want a mutually beneficial arrangement."

I looked from the diamond to his face. "You planned this perfectly."

"Ethan chose today to humiliate you," Damon said, losing the corporate edge and taking on something far more dangerous. "He gave you divorce papers on your anniversary. He paraded his mistress in your clothes."

I pressed my lips together. My fingernails dug into my palms.

"I brought my own paperwork," Damon said softly. He held the ring out to me. "Get in the car, Vivian. We have a husband to ruin."

Keep Watching!
The story is getting intense! Switch to App to continue reading
Unlock All Episodes
Open the Official Website

You may also like

Her Night Dance Novel Cover
8.7
They stripped me of my lead role just before the tour. In a panic, I rushed to demand an explanation, but my mind was in such turmoil that I tumbled down the stairs. Gritting my teeth against the searing pain, I fumbled for my phone to dial 911. That’s when a notification lit up the screen—an update from someone I followed. **[Crimson Plains Dance Troupe: A warm welcome to our new lead dancer @Dorothy, and our generous patron @Keith!]** The attached photo showed two beaming faces: my husband of seven years—a secret marriage—and his pampered little songbird. Keith had an arm around Dorothy’s waist, planting a light kiss on her cheek. She, in turn, had her arms looped around his neck, her face a picture of bashful delight. Wiping the blood from the corner of my mouth, I didn’t hesitate. I posted a photo of our marriage certificate in the comments. **[Is your troupe's new production called 'The League of Bastards'?]** Keith’s call came through almost immediately. “Anna, what the hell are you doing? How many times do I have to say it? Dorothy and I are just putting on a show for publicity.” I sniffled, my voice thick. “Keith, by what right did you have them take my lead role?” A beat of silence. “You’re at Crimson Plains?”
Husband's Fraudulent Schemes Novel Cover
8.1
The fluorescent lights of Prometheus Tech's executive floor cast harsh shadows across the quarterly reports spread before me. My fingers traced the revenue projections—numbers that should have filled me with pride, yet somehow felt hollow. Each digit represented decisions I'd stepped back from, strategies I'd entrusted to Stephen's hands. I touched the moonstone necklace at my throat, my mother's final gift, feeling its familiar coolness against my skin. The gesture had become unconscious over the years, a tether to something real when everything else felt like performance. The shrill ring of my phone shattered the silence. Stephen's name flashed on the screen, and something in my chest tightened before I even answered. "Ari, where the hell are you?" His voice crackled with barely contained fury. "At the office, reviewing the quarterly—" "You abandoned her!" The words hit like physical blows. "Brianna's been locked out of our house for hours.
Love Triumphs Over Betrayal Novel Cover
8.3
The early morning light filtered through the floor-to-ceiling windows of our Upper East Side penthouse, casting long shadows across the polished marble floors. I sat cross-legged on the window seat, my sketchbook balanced on my knees as I traced the outline of another impossible dream—a small cottage by the sea, worlds away from the gilded cage I called home. My pencil moved with practiced precision, shading the curved archway of a doorway that would never exist except on paper. These stolen moments of creation were my only true freedom, the only place Alexander couldn't touch. I paused, absently rubbing the small, faded scar on my palm—a habit I couldn't seem to break. The raised tissue was barely visible now, but the memory remained vivid: a terrified boy, a flash of metal, my small hand reaching out... "It was nothing," I whispered to myself, the same lie I'd repeated for years. The same lie that had somehow become the foundation of my life. The intercom buzzed, startling me from my reverie. I quickly closed my sketchbook, sliding it beneath the cushion before answering.
My Husband's Betrayal: The Lost Heiress Returns Novel Cover
8.8
After eleven years in a maximum-security black site, ex-Delta Force operator Alton Combs was paroled and exiled to a toxic Appalachian wasteland. The corrupt town mayor thought he was bullying a broken man, tricking Alton into trading his family's prime estate for a poisoned, worthless shale field. The locals treated Alton like a rabid beast, spitting on his shoes and waiting for him to rot in a collapsed cabin. But they had no idea the "worthless" land hid a billion-dollar rare-earth mineral vein. While surviving the town's hostility, Alton found a freezing baby girl dumped in a biohazard bin with needle marks on her tiny arm. He took her in, named her Eden, and built an electrified fortress guarded by a tamed mountain lion and a rattlesnake. He spent the next seven years quietly extracting the minerals to build a massive mining empire, raising the girl not as a victim, but as a ruthless apex predator. Hundreds of miles away in Washington D.C., a high-ranking Pentagon official wept over an empty grave, completely unaware that his evil second wife had ordered his infant daughter thrown to the wolves. He also didn't know the baby had been rescued by the most dangerous killing machine alive. Now, his parole was officially over. Alton handed his seven-year-old daughter an elite academy acceptance letter. "If the dogs try to bite you, you tear their throats out. I will handle the bodies." Stepping into a bulletproof Hummer, the undisputed king of the valley prepared to unleash his little wolf into the human world.
Sight Unveils His Lies Novel Cover
8.6
A week before the wedding, a car accident unexpectedly restored my eyesight. Thrilled by this miracle, I went in search of my fiancé, Alejandro. To my dismay, I stumbled upon him and his assistant, Lakelynn, in an intimate moment. “Don't worry, she can't see us. Let's keep going,” Alejandro whispered. “Besides, isn't this exciting?” That night, in the hotel bathroom, I found perfume and lingerie that weren’t mine. Back in the bedroom, I removed my wedding dress, tore up our photos, and calmly dialed a number. “Aunt Camilla, I’ve made a decision. I’m going abroad to continue my studies next week.” Later, I heard Alejandro went frantic trying to find me. --- Standing behind the slightly ajar door of what was supposed to be our wedding suite, I heard unmistakable sounds of passion.
The Billionaire's Price for My Salvation Novel Cover
9.2
I was a Parsons-trained designer, but with my family drowning in over half a million dollars of debt, I delivered coffee just to survive. One clumsy mistake—spilling a latte in a corporate lobby—put me on the radar of the city's most ruthless billionaire, Christian Mercer. A week later, I wasn't fired. I was summoned to his office on the 85th floor, where he laid out a contract. He knew everything: my student loans, my mother's crippling medical bills, the foreclosure notices piling up on our kitchen table. He offered to wipe it all away, plus pay me five million dollars. The price was one year of my life as his wife. He called it a "mutually beneficial transaction," coldly stating my desperate circumstances made me the perfect, compliant candidate. I wasn't a person to him, just an asset to be acquired to solve a problem he refused to explain. But when I found the eviction notice taped to our apartment door, my pride was a luxury I could no longer afford. I signed his contract. After a sterile City Hall ceremony, he left me alone in his cold, empty penthouse with a final, chilling instruction. "The public part of our agreement begins now, Mrs. Mercer," he said, his voice void of any emotion. "Act accordingly."