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Ex - Wife's Revenge Novel Cover

Ex - Wife's Revenge

The stadium lights blazed like a thousand suns, and I stood in the VIP box with my hands gripped so tightly on the railing that my knuckles turned white. Ten years. Ten cities. Ten concerts. And tonight—the final show of Lane's "Decade Global Tour"—I'd told myself things would be different. Below me, eighty thousand fans screamed Lane's name, their voices merging into a deafening roar that vibrated through my chest. The stage glittered with pyrotechnics, and there he was—my husband, Lane Tucker—bathed in golden light, his voice soaring through the opening notes of "Endless." Our anniversary song. My throat tightened. I'd worn the burgundy dress he once said made me look like starlight. I'd arrived early, checked the setlist three times, coordinated with his team to ensure everything ran smoothly.
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Chapter 2

Three weeks had passed since I filed for divorce, but the paperwork sat in legal limbo while lawyers argued over technicalities. Lane's team claimed I was still contractually obligated to fulfill my management duties until everything was finalized. Which meant tonight—the Golden Note Awards—I had to stand beside the man who'd humiliated me in front of eighty thousand people.

I arrived at the venue's private styling suite two hours before the red carpet, my stomach churning with the familiar nausea that now accompanied any Lane-related event. The divorce papers were filed. Soon, I'd be free. I just had to survive one more night.

"Mrs. Tucker." The stylist, a rail-thin woman named Claudia, greeted me with a smile that didn't reach her eyes. "Your gown is ready."

She gestured toward a garment bag hanging alone in the corner. Something about her tone made my skin prickle, but I dismissed it. Paranoia had become my constant companion lately.

The dress was beautiful—a deep emerald silk that caught the light like water. Elegant. Professional. Exactly what a soon-to-be-ex-wife should wear to maintain dignity while her world collapsed. I changed quickly, letting Claudia zip me up, her fingers cold against my spine.

"Perfect fit," she murmured, and I caught something in her reflection—a flicker of satisfaction that seemed out of place.

"Thank you," I said, smoothing the fabric over my hips. The silk felt strange, almost fragile, but designer gowns often did.

Claudia disappeared before I could ask questions, leaving me alone with my reflection and the growing sense that something was wrong.

The red carpet stretched before me like a gauntlet. Lane and Remi had already arrived, posing for cameras in matching black—a coordinated couple, picture-perfect. I followed at the required distance, maintaining the professional separation that screamed "estranged spouse" to anyone paying attention.

Flashbulbs exploded. Photographers shouted names I no longer answered to. I kept my chin up, my expression neutral, my hands carefully positioned at my sides instead of fidgeting with the dress's neckline the way I wanted to.

Then I felt it—a sensation like a whisper against my lower back. The silk shifted, and cool air touched skin that should have been covered.

"Scarlet Greene!" A photographer's voice cut through the noise. "Turn around!"

I pivoted automatically, years of media training taking over, and heard the sound that would haunt me: a soft, sickening tear as the dress's back seam split completely open.

The crowd's energy changed instantly. Gasps. Laughter. The unmistakable sound of camera shutters working overtime. I reached behind me, felt bare skin where silk should be, and my brain went blank with horror.

Lane turned. Our eyes met across ten feet of red carpet, and I saw his expression shift from confusion to disgust in the space of a heartbeat.

"Jesus Christ, Scarlet." His voice carried, amplified by the sudden hush of the crowd straining to hear. He didn't move toward me. Didn't offer his jacket. Just stood there, Remi draped on his arm, and looked at me like I was something distasteful he'd stepped in.

"You couldn't handle one event professionally?" His words were acid. "You're supposed to be management, not a sideshow. This is exactly the kind of attention-seeking behavior—"

"Lane." I barely recognized my own voice, shaking with rage and humiliation. My hands pressed desperately against my lower back, trying to hold the ruined fabric together. "I didn't—"

"You're embarrassing my brand." He cut me off, and the cameras loved it, eating up every second of my destruction. "Get inside. Now."

Remi's hand came up to cover her mouth, but not before I saw the smile. Subtle. Triumphant. And suddenly, I knew.

This wasn't an accident.

I ran. Through the crowd, past security, into the venue's maze of backstage corridors while flashbulbs chased me and voices shouted questions I couldn't answer. Someone thrust a jacket at me—a kind stagehand whose face I'd never remember—and I wrapped it around myself like armor that came three minutes too late.

My phone buzzed incessantly. Social media notifications. News alerts. My mother calling. I silenced everything and kept walking, my heels clicking against marble, my breath coming in shallow gasps that threatened to become sobs.

I needed to leave. Needed to disappear. But first, I needed my belongings from the management office—the few personal items I'd left there before everything fell apart.

The grand theater where Lane was scheduled to rehearse tomorrow sat adjacent to the awards venue, connected by a skybridge. I'd worked in that building for years, knew its layout better than my own apartment. The management office would be empty tonight, everyone focused on the ceremony.

I took the skybridge, grateful for the solitude, and let myself into the office with the key I'd forgotten to return. The space was dark, familiar, filled with the ghost of the woman I used to be—the one who'd believed sacrifice meant love.

My box of belongings sat on the desk where I'd left it: a coffee mug Lane bought me in Prague, framed photos from better days, a scarf I'd forgotten. I was reaching for it when I saw the tablet.

Remi's tablet. I recognized the pink case, studded with rhinestones in a pattern only she would choose. She must have left it here during yesterday's planning meeting.

I shouldn't look. I knew I shouldn't.

But my hand was already moving, tapping the screen. It wasn't locked—careless, or perhaps arrogant—and the email app was open.

The thread with Claudia loaded first. My heart stopped.

"Chemical solvent on back seam completed," Claudia had written. "Will hold until cameras. $5000 to account as agreed."

Remi's response: "Perfect. Make sure it's catastrophic."

I scrolled, my hands shaking, and found more. Messages to other contacts. A conversation with someone named Vincent that made my blood run cold: pregnancy confirmed, dates don't match Lane's tour schedule, need exit strategy.

Another message, older: "He doesn't need to know it's not his. Just needs to believe I'm his only option."

The truth assembled itself like broken glass, sharp and undeniable. Remi had orchestrated everything—the dress, the humiliation, probably more that I hadn't discovered yet. And Lane, my husband, had been her willing accomplice in my destruction.

Or perhaps her dupe. The distinction hardly mattered anymore.

I took photos of everything with trembling fingers, evidence for lawyers I'd probably never use because proving vindictiveness wouldn't heal humiliation. Then I set the tablet down exactly where I'd found it and picked up my box of belongings.

The theater beyond the office was dark, silent except for the distant sound of the awards ceremony filtering through walls. Tomorrow, Lane would rehearse here. Tomorrow, he'd stand on that stage and pretend tonight never happened.

But I'd never stand in his shadow again.

I walked out of that office, through the empty theater, and into the night with evidence of betrayal on my phone and the last of my illusions finally, completely shattered.

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