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From Betrayal to Reclamation Novel Cover

From Betrayal to Reclamation

I couldn't breathe as I stared at my phone screen, my thumb frozen mid-scroll. The exclusive London socialite group chat—the one I'd been added to only last week—had suddenly gone silent for me as my eyes locked onto the images that shouldn't have been there. My images. Private photos I'd only ever shared with one person. Marcus Sterling. My fiancé. The man I was supposed to marry in three months. "Gentlemen, a preview of the merchandise," his message read above the photos. "Still needs some final polishing before the wedding, but thought you'd appreciate a sneak peek." My stomach lurched as comments from London's elite sons flooded in beneath: "Sterling, you lucky bastard." "Is she house-trained yet?" "I'll offer double whatever your father paid for that one." The Laurent family heiress. The perfect society daughter.
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Chapter 3

I sat on the edge of the bed in Alexander's penthouse, my phone clutched in trembling hands. The letters from Isabella were scattered across the duvet, each one a knife in my back. I couldn't stop the tears streaming down my face as I dialed Alexander's number.

"They planned it all," I whispered when he answered. "Isabella is pregnant with his child. They were going to replace me completely."

Alexander's breath caught audibly. When he spoke, his voice was dangerously calm. "I'm on my way. Don't move."

Within twenty minutes, he burst through the door with Julian Vance in tow. Alexander immediately pulled me into his arms while Julian swept the room with practiced efficiency, checking for surveillance devices.

"We need everything," Alexander instructed Julian, his arms still around me. "Emails, text messages, bank transfers. I want a complete digital footprint of their relationship and whatever scheme they've concocted."

Julian nodded, already typing rapidly on his tablet. "I'll have my team secure the evidence immediately. We'll need access to Ms. Laurent's accounts."

I pulled away from Alexander's embrace just enough to look up at him. "Take whatever you need. I want them exposed for what they've done."

Alexander brushed a tear from my cheek with his thumb. "They will pay for every tear you've shed, Sophia. I promise you that."

For two days, we worked in tandem with Alexander's legal team, building an airtight case against Marcus and Isabella. I felt stronger with each passing hour, fueled by a determination I never knew I possessed.

Then my phone lit up with a message from Marcus: "Dinner tomorrow. The Lotus Club. 8 PM. We need to talk."

"It's a trap," Julian said immediately when I showed them. "The Lotus Club is exclusive, private. No witnesses, no cameras."

"I'm going," I replied, my voice steady despite the fear fluttering in my chest.

Alexander's jaw tightened. "Absolutely not."

"I need to face him," I insisted. "One last time. I need him to see that I know everything—that I'm not the naive, obedient doll he thought I was."

After hours of argument, they reluctantly agreed, but with conditions. Julian would be stationed nearby. Alexander would be on standby with a medical team. I would wear a discreet recording device.

The Lotus Club was everything Julian had described—exclusive, dimly lit, perfect for secrets. Marcus was already seated when I arrived, his handsome face arranged in an expression of contrition that never reached his eyes.

"Sophia," he said, rising to pull out my chair. "Thank you for coming."

I sat down, keeping my back straight, my chin lifted. "Let's not pretend, Marcus. I know about you and Isabella."

He had the audacity to look wounded. "It's complicated, darling. Business arrangements sometimes require... adjustments."

"Is that what you call my sister's pregnancy? An adjustment?"

His smile tightened as he signaled the waiter. "Champagne for the lady. Dom Pérignon."

"I don't want champagne," I said coldly.

"Of course you do," he replied, his voice honeyed but his eyes hard. "We're celebrating our reconciliation."

The waiter poured, and Marcus raised his glass. "To understanding."

I lifted my glass but didn't drink. Marcus watched me expectantly.

"You know," I said quietly, "I always thought you saw me as a business asset. I never realized you saw me as disposable."

"Don't be dramatic," he sighed, sliding a glass of red wine toward me. "Try this instead. It's more your style—rich, complex. Like you."

Something in his insistence made my skin crawl, but I took a small sip to appease him. The wine was indeed rich, with an unusual bitter undertone.

"Now, let's discuss our future," Marcus continued, his eyes never leaving my face. "You'll complete your studies here in London. I'll handle the family business in New York with Isabella's assistance. Once the merger is complete—"

His voice began to fade in and out. The restaurant lights blurred into smears of gold. My limbs felt suddenly heavy, impossibly heavy.

"Marcus," I gasped, "what did you...?"

His smile remained fixed as he watched me struggle. "Just something to help you see reason, darling. You've become quite hysterical lately."

I tried to stand but my legs wouldn't respond. Panic surged through me as the room tilted violently.

"You'll thank me later," Marcus's voice echoed distantly as darkness closed in. "Some time in London will do you good. A long, long time..."

The last thing I saw was his satisfied smile before consciousness slipped away entirely.

I woke to sterile white walls and the soft beep of machines. My head pounded mercilessly, my mouth bone dry. But when I tried to swing my legs over the bed's edge, nothing happened. Nothing at all.

"Don't strain yourself," came a clinical female voice. A nurse appeared, adjusting something on an IV drip. "The paralysis is temporary. Mostly."

"Paralysis?" I croaked.

She nodded toward a wheelchair positioned by the bed. "Mr. Sterling was quite specific about your treatment plan. You'll be moved to a private facility tomorrow."

Ice flooded my veins as understanding dawned. This wasn't a hospital—this was a prison. And Marcus had just ensured I couldn't escape it.

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