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Handing Him Eviction Papers at Our Wedding Altar Novel Cover

Handing Him Eviction Papers at Our Wedding Altar

I spent three years building a company with the man I was about to marry. Julian spent three years planning to steal it. He announced our breakup at the altar — microphone in hand, his mistress already waiting in a white dress — expecting tears, a settlement offer, and a quiet exit. Instead, I handed him an appendix he'd signed without reading. One clause. One sentence. In the event of public infidelity, the offending party forfeits all majority protections. He declared his infidelity in front of five hundred witnesses. Within ten minutes, he owned zero percent of Vance Tech. Within an hour, his penthouse access was revoked, his legal team had transferred to me, and his boxes were stacked by the loading dock next to the dumpsters. By evening, he was bleeding on shatterproof glass, begging to be let back in from the rain. I gave him a thumbs-down through the door. Then Julian's brother walked into my office — colder, sharper, and infinitely more dangerous. Silas Sterling dropped a file on my desk that would finish Julian for good. The price: forty percent of the recovered assets, and the answer to a question I'd stopped asking five years ago. My father's signature was on the last page. A man I buried. Signed yesterday. What did Julian know about my father's disappearance? What does Silas? And why does the brother of my worst enemy feel like the only person in the room who's been telling me the truth?
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Chapter 1

"Thank you all for gathering here today."

Julian’s voice boomed through the cathedral speakers. He stood at the altar, looking out at the five hundred guests packing the pews.

"Julian, what are you doing?" I asked, keeping my tone entirely flat.

He ignored me. He gripped the microphone tighter.

"I brought you here to witness a union," he announced to the sprawling crowd of investors, family, and elite socialites. "But not the one printed on your invitations."

A collective gasp swept through the cathedral.

"Harper and I are calling off our engagement," he declared.

I stared at the man I was supposed to marry in less than five minutes.

"You chose our wedding day to do this?" I asked.

"It was the only way to be completely honest," he replied, finally meeting my gaze. "I am stopping a massive mistake."

"By humiliating me in front of our entire network."

"By standing in my truth," he countered, lifting his chin. He turned back to the audience. "Instead of Harper, I will be marrying the woman who truly holds my heart. Chloe Mercer."

Whispers erupted from the front rows.

"Did he just say Chloe?" a woman muttered from the bride's side.

"Isn't that his marketing director?" a man whispered back.

From the side aisle, Chloe stepped into the light. She wore a floor-length white silk gown. She had planned this.

"Julian, baby," Chloe cooed, gliding up the altar steps.

"I love you, Chloe," he said, wrapping a free arm around her waist.

My nails dug into my palms. The sharp sting of my own manicure grounded me. I forced my spine straight, locking my shoulders into rigid perfection.

Not a single tear formed in my eyes. I refused to give them the satisfaction of my grief.

"I’m sorry, Harper," Chloe said, offering a sickeningly sweet pout. "We couldn't hide our love anymore."

"You wore a wedding dress to my wedding," I noted. "You weren't trying to hide anything."

"Julian needs a real partner," she shot back, her tone sharpening. "Not a cold business transaction."

"He needs a reality check."

Julian handed the microphone to the officiant. He turned to face me fully, his eyes swimming with overwhelming pity.

"Don't make a scene, Harper," Julian warned, lowering his voice. "I will make sure you are taken care of."

"Taken care of?" I repeated.

"A generous settlement. You won't leave empty-handed."

"A settlement." I tasted the word. I let a dry, humorless laugh escape my lips.

"Just nod and step down," Julian urged, stepping closer. "Save your dignity. Don't fight a battle you have already lost."

"My dignity is perfectly intact, Julian."

"Be reasonable. My legal team already reviewed the standard prenup. You get a flat payout. That's it."

"You really think a flat payout covers this?" I asked, gesturing to the massive floral arches and the hundreds of staring faces.

"It covers your time," he said. "Now please, walk away."

I didn't step down from the altar. Instead, I turned my back on the groom and faced the very first pew.

Marcus Hale, my lead attorney, sat at the edge of the aisle.

"Marcus," I said.

He stood up immediately. He held out a black leather folder.

I walked down the two short steps. I took the folder from his hands. The smooth material felt cool against my burning skin.

"Is it time, Ms. Quinn?" Marcus asked.

"It is time."

I turned back to the altar. I walked up the steps, my gaze locked entirely on Julian.

He watched me approach. A smug, condescending smile played on his lips. He thought I was bringing him a lawsuit. He thought he had already won.

"Legal threats won't work, Harper," Julian mocked. "You are embarrassing yourself."

"I am not threatening you," I said.

I opened the leather folder. My fingers found the thick, textured parchment inside.

"Then what is that?" Chloe demanded, stepping slightly behind Julian.

"A promise."

I pulled out the document. The heavy steel seal gleamed under the stained-glass light.

I slammed the paper directly onto Julian's chest. The impact crushed his white rose boutonniere against his tuxedo jacket.

Julian caught the pages instinctively. As he grabbed the paper, his fingers brushed against mine. He offered a patronizing pat on my knuckles.

"Harper, please," he said, his tone dripping with pure, condescending charity. "Desperation does not suit you."

"Read the header, Julian."

He let go of my hand. He glanced down at the crushed document.

His cheek muscles gave a violent twitch.

The smugness evaporated from his face. Absolute panic shattered his pupils.

"What is this?" he choked out.

"The appendix," I answered.

His chest heaved. He yanked at his collar, twisting his crisp black bowtie into a ruined, crooked knot.

"This is forged!" Julian yelled. "You cannot possibly enforce this!"

"It bears your signature," I reminded him. "And the company's official steel seal."

"I never signed an appendix!"

"You signed a stack of documents on Tuesday," I said, keeping my voice dangerously calm. "You were too busy texting Chloe to read the fine print."

Julian’s hands shook. He stared at the page as if it were coated in poison.

"In the event of public infidelity..." Julian read aloud, his voice cracking. "...the offending party forfeits all majority protections."

"You declared your infidelity on a microphone," I pointed out. "In front of five hundred witnesses."

"I am the CEO of Vance Tech!" he roared.

"You were the CEO," I corrected.

Chloe noticed the massive shift in the air. The triumphant smile slid right off her face.

"Julian?" she asked, her voice trembling. "What is wrong?"

"Stay back, Chloe," he snapped.

"No! What did she give you?"

Chloe lunged forward. She let out a piercing shriek and snatched the paper right out of his trembling hands.

"Give it back!" Julian yelled, reaching for the document.

Chloe dodged his grasp. Her eyes scanned the dense legal text.

"I don't understand," Chloe muttered, her eyes darting across the paragraphs.

"Read the final line, Chloe," I offered. "The one about the shareholding ratio."

She lowered her gaze to the bottom of the page.

The color drained entirely from her face.

"Wait," she whispered.

"Read it," I commanded.

"Ninety percent?" Chloe gasped, the heavy parchment shaking violently in her grip. "She owns ninety percent of everything?"

Her stiletto shoes wobbled on the marble floor. She stumbled backward, staring at the final clause.

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