
Grace's Deadly Scheme
Grace's Deadly Scheme Chapter 1
I stood frozen among the glittering crowd, champagne flute trembling in my hand as Grace Hoffman's voice carried across the marble floors of the charity gala. The chandelier light caught on her diamond earrings as she leaned in conspiratorially to a circle of socialites, her laughter like shattered glass in my ears.
"Of course, the wedding will be at the Morrison estate in June," she announced, her red lips curving into a smile that never reached her eyes. "Elliott and I have been planning it for months. Some people will just have to learn their place in the new arrangement."
The group tittered, and I knew exactly who "some people" meant. My chest constricted as twelve years of memories flashed before my eyes—Elliott and I at fourteen, sharing dreams on a park bench; holding his hand through his father's business collapse; the night we lost our first child in that terrible accident just as he was rebuilding the Morrison empire.
I set down my glass before I could drop it and slipped away from the gala, the weight of betrayal crushing my lungs. The drive to Elliott's penthouse passed in a blur of city lights and unshed tears.
By the time he returned home, I had been waiting in his study for hours, watching the city lights blur through unshed tears. The door clicked open, and Elliott loosened his tie as he entered, his expression shifting from surprise to irritation when he saw me.
"Lucy, it's nearly midnight. What are you doing sitting in the dark?"
"Is it true?" I asked, my voice steadier than I felt. "About you and Grace Hoffman?"
He sighed, pouring himself a whiskey without offering me one. "It's just business, Lucy. The Morrison Group needs the Hoffman connection."
"And what am I supposed to do while you marry her? Stand in the shadows? Pretend the last twelve years meant nothing?"
"Don't be dramatic," he said, the familiar dismissive tone that had become more frequent lately. "Grace understands how these arrangements work in our circles. She knows about you and accepts it."
"Accepts it?" I stood up, my hands trembling. "And did anyone think to ask if I accept being your mistress?"
Elliott rolled his eyes, taking a long sip of his drink. "This isn't one of your romance novels, Lucy. It's the real world. My father's company—"
"I know about your father's company," I cut in. "I was there when you rebuilt it from nothing, when you worked eighteen-hour days and could barely afford rent. I was there when we lost our baby and you threw yourself into work to cope. But now I'm just... what? A complication?"
"You're being childish," he said, checking his phone. "This marriage doesn't change anything between us. You'll still have everything you need."
I stared at this stranger wearing Elliott's face, wondering when the boy who had once written me poems had transformed into this cold, calculating businessman.
---
A week later, I sat beside Elliott at Christies auction house as he casually bid millions on a pink diamond jewelry set—a necklace with matching earrings that caught the light like frozen tears.
"A gift," he murmured, squeezing my hand as if that could patch the growing chasm between us. "To show you nothing has changed."
I smiled thinly, feeling the weight of the document in my purse. When we returned to his car, I pulled out the papers as the chauffeur closed the door behind us.
"I need you to sign this for the jewelry," I said, offering him a pen. "Insurance purposes."
Elliott barely glanced at the document, his attention divided between his ringing phone and the jewelry box. "Morrison," he answered, signing with his free hand before turning away to discuss some merger.
I carefully folded the voluntary custody waiver and placed it in my purse, my heart pounding. He hadn't read a word.
---
"I'm so glad you agreed to meet," Grace said, her smile dazzling under the restaurant's soft lighting. "I thought it was time we got to know each other better."
I'd reluctantly accepted her invitation to Lumière, the most exclusive restaurant in the city, hoping against hope that some understanding between women might be possible. The maître d' had seated us at a central table—too central, I realized too late, as Grace raised her voice just enough to carry.
"It must be difficult," she said, cutting into her steak, "being Elliott's mistress for so long, only to watch him choose someone else to marry."
The word 'mistress' seemed to echo across the restaurant. Heads turned, and I felt my cheeks burn as whispers rippled through the dining room.
"I'm not his mistress," I said quietly.
"Oh?" Grace's perfectly shaped eyebrows rose. "What would you call a woman who sleeps with an engaged man?"
I set down my fork. "I've been with Elliott for twelve years. You've been engaged for what—a month?"
"Yet I'm the one with the ring," she said, flashing her massive diamond. "You know, Elliott and I have discussed this. He's willing to keep you around, but there need to be... boundaries."
"Boundaries," I repeated hollowly.
"Yes," she leaned forward. "Starting with an apology. I want you to kneel and apologize for disrupting my engagement."
I stared at her, certain I'd misheard. "Excuse me?"
"Kneel," she said softly, her eyes hard as flint. "Or I'll make Elliott choose. Right now. And we both know who he'll pick when his family's business interests are on the line."
The restaurant seemed to spin around me as I realized the depth of the trap I'd walked into.
Grace's Deadly Scheme of Contents
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