
He Broke Me, Another Man Fixed Me
My husband, the ruthless Don of the Parks family, made his choice.
When his mistress burst in screaming that her son was sick, Jackson didn't hesitate. He left me—his wife who had just been poisoned—pinned against the wall to die, rushing to comfort a child who wasn't even his blood.
That night, "Elena Parks" died in a fiery car crash.
I spent years rebuilding myself in France, hidden by Hamilton Nixon, a man who loved me in the shadows. I finally found peace. I finally felt free.
But Jackson found out the truth. He discovered the boy was another man's son and that his mistress had been drugging him. Instead of letting me go, his grief turned into a terrifying obsession.
He hunted me down, kidnapped me, and dragged me back to the estate that had been my prison.
I woke up tied to our marriage bed with silk ribbons.
"I'm building a garden," he whispered maniacally, stroking my hair as I struggled against the bonds. "Just like you wanted. We're going to be happy."
He thought kidnapping was a grand romantic gesture. He thought he could erase the abuse with a fresh coat of paint and forced proximity.
But he underestimated me. And he underestimated Hamilton.
After a violent rescue, I rose from the ashes not as his wife, but as a titan of industry.
Six months later, Jackson stormed the stage at my global summit. He knelt before me on live television, holding a ten-carat pink diamond, thinking he could buy my forgiveness.
"I'm ready to take you back," he announced to the world.
I looked at the man who had destroyed me, then at Hamilton, the man who had saved me.
I grabbed Hamilton's lapels and kissed him in front of millions.
"There is no 'us', Jackson," I told him into the microphone, watching his world shatter. "You are just haunting a graveyard."
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Chapter 7
Jackson POV
The main hall had been transformed into a tribunal.
There was no jury here. Only executioners.
The Family Committee sat in a grim semi-circle, their faces carved from shadow and stone in the dim light. These were men who had ordered hits for a perceived slight, for a missed payment. Tonight, they were judging high treason.
I stood at the head of the room, a solitary figure against the dark wood paneling. On the mahogany table before me lay the physical manifestations of my own blindness: The DNA report. The toxicology results. The merger agreement, signed with a flourish by Candida.
The heavy oak doors groaned open.
Two guards dragged Candida in. She was draped in a silk dressing gown, her hair disheveled, playing the part of the confused, roused-from-sleep innocent to perfection.
"Jackson?" Her eyes were wide, glistening with manufactured fear. she scanned the room, trembling. "What is going on? Why are you doing this?"
She attempted to lunge toward me, reaching out a hand, but a guard jerked her back effortlessly.
"Save it," I said. My voice was devoid of inflection. Dead. "It's over, Candida."
I picked up the DNA report. It felt light in my hand, despite the weight of the betrayal it carried. I tossed it, and the papers fluttered to land at her bare feet.
"The boy isn't mine. He's Leo's."
Her face drained of color, turning the shade of old parchment. She opened her mouth to protest, but I didn't give her the oxygen.
"And this." I held up the toxicology report, letting the cover page catch the light. "Neurotoxin. Arsenic traces. You’ve been poisoning me by inches. You and your lover planned to bury me and hand my family’s legacy over to the Camachos on a silver platter."
A low, dangerous rumble moved through the room. The Capos looked at her not with anger, but with the profound disgust reserved for rats. In our world, betrayal was the only sin for which there was no absolution.
"No!" Candida shrieked, the sound tearing through the heavy silence. "That's a lie! He's lying to you! Jackson, I love you! I did everything for us!"
"For us?" A harsh, barking laugh escaped my throat. "You did it for the Camachos."
I signaled Marco.
He pressed a button. The recording from the interrogation room blasted through the speakers.
Leo's voice filled the hall, distinct and pathetic. He detailed every aspect of their affair, every vial of poison, every whispered plan to slit my throat while I slept.
Candida stopped struggling.
Slowly, the mask fell away. The innocent doe eyes vanished, replaced by the cold, reptilian glare of a woman cornered.
"You deserved it," she spat, her voice dripping with venom. "You arrogant prick. You walk around like you own the world, but you're just a man. A weak, stupid man."
"Maybe," I said softly. "But I am a man who is still alive. And you..."
I looked to the committee. The head Capo gave a single, solemn nod. The verdict was unanimous.
"Take her," I ordered, turning my back on her. "Hand her over to the Feds. Give them everything on the Camacho family operations. Let her rot in a federal cage. Death is too easy for her."
Panic, raw and primal, seized her. Candida started screaming as the guards clamped down on her arms. She kicked and clawed, her manicured nails raking uselessly across the floorboards.
"You think you've won?" she screamed, her voice shredding into hysteria. "You think getting rid of me brings her back? You fool!"
I froze. The ice in my veins turned to absolute zero.
"Get her out of here," I commanded, my jaw tight.
"She didn't die!" Candida yelled, digging her heels into the expensive carpet, fighting for every inch. "Elena! She didn't crash! She left you! She planned it for months!"
I raised a hand. The guards stopped instantly.
The air in the room grew heavy, suffocating.
"What did you say?"
Candida grinned. It was a manic, broken look—the look of someone who knows they are destroyed and wants to take the world with them.
"Hamilton Nixon. He pulled her out. He staged the crash. She wanted to leave you, Jackson. She hated you. She used you just like I did!"
My heart hammered against my ribs, a painful, frantic rhythm. "Liar."
"Check your email!" she shrieked as they began to drag her backward toward the door again. "Check the drafts she never sent! She despised you! She ran to another man because you weren't enough!"
The heavy doors slammed shut, severing her voice.
Silence descended like a shroud.
I looked at Marco. He stood by the wall, his face pale. He wouldn't meet my eyes.
"Marco," I said, the name sounding foreign in my own ears. "Give me the tablet."
He hesitated. That hesitation told me everything.
"We decrypted a hidden folder in Nixon's server logs ten minutes ago," Marco said quietly, handing it over. "I... I was waiting until she was gone to tell you."
I took the tablet. My fingers trembled uncontrollably as I scrolled.
There were chat logs. Dates. Times. All referencing the weeks leading up to the 'accident.'
*Elena: I can't take it anymore, Hamilton. He's not the man I married. He looks at me with hate.*
*Hamilton: I can get you out. But you have to disappear completely. You can never go back.*
*Elena: Do it. I'd rather be a ghost than his prisoner.*
I read the words over and over, hoping the letters would rearrange themselves into something else.
*I'd rather be a ghost.*
The realization hit me like a physical blow to the gut. I stumbled back, catching myself on the edge of the heavy table.
She hadn't died.
She had escaped.
She ran from me. Not from the danger of my life, but from me. From my coldness. From the monster I had become.
I looked around the empty hall. I had purged the traitors. I had won the war.
But I was standing in the ruins of my own life.
I sank into the chair, covering my face with my hands. The victory tasted like ash in my mouth.
"She's gone," I whispered to the empty room, the words fracturing in the silence.
"She's really gone."
And for the first time since I was a child, I felt the hot sting of tears.
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