
His Betrayal Forged Her Empire
I run my family's political dynasty with an iron fist. From my father’s Senate votes to my own calculated engagement, every move is mine to control.
Then, in a single evening, my ambitious stepmother made her play. She used our housekeeper as a spy and orchestrated a scandal involving my fiancé and stepsister, designed to shatter my reputation and power.
They thought they could break me. Within twelve hours, the spy was dead on the marble floor of my foyer. My fiancé’s family was blackmailed into silence. My stepsister was exiled to a Swiss boarding school, and I stripped my own father of his authority for his weakness.
As for my stepmother, Bronte, I had her declared mentally unstable and forcibly taken to a remote facility in Montana, completely cut off from the world.
Everyone saw a cold-hearted coup, but they didn't know the secret I held. I had proof that Bronte had systematically orchestrated my brother’s death years ago, all to position her own son to inherit everything. This wasn't about power; it was vengeance.
But winning the war at home has put me on a much deadlier board. Now, I'm preparing for a dinner with Eldridge Marsh—the most dangerous man in Washington—who wants to decide if I'm a player he can use, or a threat he needs to destroy.
Chapters
Share
Chapter 4
The side door to the study had been installed in 1923 as a fire escape. It was never meant to take weight.
Don Arthur Valdez hit it with his shoulder anyway.
The wood around the latch splintered. He stumbled through, his tie askew, his hair standing up in the places he'd been pulling it. The Don who had addressed the Commission looked like a man who had lost his soul and was looking for it in all the wrong places.
"Mother." He straightened, trying to reclaim some dignity. "You cannot do this. You cannot let Gemma destroy Bronte's family over a mistake. Lila was drunk. Danny took advantage. We can spin this, we can-"
"Shut up." Beatrice did not raise her voice. She didn't need to. The word carried sixty years of commanding authority. "You burst into my private room like a soldier who's forgotten his place. You accuse your daughter of sabotage while defending the woman who has been systematically dismantling this family's security. Arthur, have you lost your mind entirely? Or did you never have one to begin with?"
Arthur opened his mouth, then closed it. His eyes found Gemma, standing in the corner of the room, watching him with the patience of a well-fed predator.
"Gemma." He turned to her, his voice dropping to the register he used for constituent complaints. "Honey, I know you're angry. I know Lila behaved badly. But she's young. She's impulsive. Bronte has been beside herself-"
"Bronte," Gemma said, "has been on the phone with her divorce attorney for the last forty minutes. Did she mention that? Or did she tell you she was calling her sister to talk about Lila's 'trauma'?"
Arthur's face flickered. A shadow of doubt.
"She's scared," he said. "She's scared you'll use this to hurt her-"
"She should be scared." Gemma took a step forward. "Father, the cost of suppressing this scandal is approximately four million dollars. Political favors. Media buys. Rebuilding Daniel Moore's image. Your war chest currently has six hundred thousand dollars. Your personal assets are tied up in the family trust. So where exactly do you plan to find four million dollars?"
Arthur's hand went to his tie. He straightened it, then immediately pulled it askew again.
"Mother." He turned back to Beatrice. "Mother, I can fix this. I can talk to the editors. I can-"
Beatrice reached into her desk drawer. What she pulled out was three pages, legal size, clipped together with a clip bearing the trust's seal.
"Resolution 47-B," she said. "Emergency suspension of voting rights. Effective immediately, pending full board review."
She tossed it onto the desk. The sound was a gavel falling.
Arthur picked it up. His eyes raced down the page, faster and faster, until they stopped at the signature line, where his mother's name was already written in her distinctive hand.
"You can't." The paper trembled in his hand. "Mother, I'm your son. I'm the Don. I'm-"
"You're a man who can't control his own house." Beatrice walked around the desk and stood before him. She was six inches shorter, but somehow she seemed to be looking down. "You're a man who let his wife compromise his daughter's safety. You're a man who, at this moment, cares more about his second wife's comfort than about this family's survival."
"I care about fairness!" Arthur's voice went sharp. "About justice. About-"
"Care about this?" Gemma's voice cut in. She held up her phone, screen lit. "Bronte's email to Margaret Holloway at the Post, offering 'exclusive access' to your daughter's 'meltdown' if Lila's story doesn't get enough traction? Offering to position herself as the 'concerned stepmother' while I become the 'unstable heiress who drove her sister to drink'?"
Arthur took the phone. He read the message. His face cycled through colors-red to white to something gray.
"She was upset," he whispered. "She wasn't thinking clearly-"
"She was thinking," Beatrice said. "About how to destroy my granddaughter. And you, Arthur, were going to let her. Because you're weak. Because you're stupid. Because you can't tell the difference between the warmth of a woman's body and the loyalty of her heart."
She reached for the phone on her desk. An old rotary, connected to a direct line that bypassed the compound's switchboard.
"Lawrence," she said when he answered. "Execute Resolution 47-B. Yes, now. Emergency provisions. I'll have the paperwork at your office within the hour."
"Mother, no-" Arthur lunged for the phone.
Tabitha's hand caught him. The housekeeper's grip on his wrist was surprisingly strong, the fingers of a woman who had spent decades carrying silver trays and moving heavy furniture.
"Voting rights suspended," Beatrice said into the receiver. "His thirty percent share. Yes, all of it frozen. Thank you, Lawrence."
She hung up. The click was final.
Arthur stood in the middle of the room, his arm still caught by Tabitha, his phone-Bronte's phone, with its betrayal-still in his other hand. He looked at Gemma. Really looked, as if seeing her for the first time since she was a child.
"You did this," he said. His voice was hollow. "You planned this. You wanted me to come here, to lose my temper, to give her an excuse-"
"I wanted you to see," Gemma said, "for once in your life, Father. I wanted you to see what she is. And what you've become."
She walked to the sideboard. Poured water from a crystal decanter into a glass. Brought it to her grandmother, who took it without a word.
Arthur's shoulders collapsed. He looked at the door he'd broken, at the mother who had disowned him, at the daughter who had outmaneuvered him.
"Get out," Beatrice said. "Go to your room. Calm down. Tomorrow you will apologize to Gemma for your behavior and thank her for saving your career while you were doing your best to destroy it."
Arthur turned. He walked toward the door, unsteady on his feet, his hand reaching for the splintered frame as if he needed it to hold himself upright.
The door closed behind him. The sound was wrong-the latch was broken, couldn't catch properly.
Gemma moved to fix it. Beatrice stopped her with a gesture.
"Leave it," the old woman said. "Let him remember, every time he passes it, what happens when he tries to force his way into places he doesn't belong."
You may also like

9.1
Two Alphas. One destiny.
Kael Draven, the feared Alpha King, rules his territory with iron claws and a heart guarded by centuries of pain. Ryker Storm, wild, untamed, and fiercely independent, has always refused to bow to anyone... until fate forces them together.
When a forbidden bond ignites between them, desire and rivalry collide in a dangerous dance. Packs will fight. Secrets will surface. Hearts will shatter. And only one thing is certain: neither man will leave unclaimed.
Passion. Power. Fate.
Will they conquer the bond-or destroy each other first?

9.1
Cora crash-landed her escape pod on a brutal alien planet, only to be immediately hunted by a massive six-eyed beast.
A colossal black wolf dropped from the canopy and crushed the beast's neck to save her. But before she could even breathe, the wolf transformed into a towering, naked primitive man with glowing gold eyes.
He hauled her back to his savage tribe, where she was instantly treated like garbage. The women sneered at her fragile human body, and the men eyed her like fresh meat.
The tribe leader's jealous daughter even handed her a waterskin laced with a terrifying alien breeding drug, hoping to turn Cora into a mindless spectacle of lust in front of the entire settlement.
"Drink. You look like you're dying," the daughter sneered, waiting for Cora to lose her mind.
Cora was terrified and completely out of her depth. She didn't understand why this lethal Alpha warrior looked at her with such dark, consuming possessiveness, or why he was willing to slaughter his own people just to protect her.
How was a stranded human supposed to survive in a terrifying world where every plant, beast, and local wanted her dead?
"BEEP! Critical Warning! Liquid contains high concentrations of alien aphrodisiac herbs," her implanted AI assistant suddenly echoed in her skull.
Looking at the hostile tribe and the fiercely protective Alpha shielding her, Cora silently activated her tech interface. She wasn't just going to be a helpless pet in this savage world.

9.5
Alina was the eldest daughter of the prestigious Padilla family, but everyone mocked her as a defective dud who couldn't cast a single spell.
The moment she woke up, her father and younger sister Karina barged into her room, demanding she sign a transfer agreement to the Aethelgard Order-the most brutal faction on the continent.
It wasn't just a transfer; it was a legal disownment. In her past life, Alina didn't realize Karina was also reborn. She had dropped to her knees and begged to stay. Her reward? Her magic was violently drained from her veins by her own family. Her fiancé drove a blade through her chest, and her sister stood over her bleeding body, smiling. She had ruined her hands making potions for them, only to be discarded like trash.
The phantom pain of her chest being ripped open still burned behind her ribs. Looking at the hypocritical family waiting for her tears, she felt nothing but exhausting disgust. Why should she ever be their stepping stone again?
"For the honor of the family, you leave today."
Her father sneered as she calmly bit her thumb and pressed her bloody fingerprint onto the contract. This time, Alina didn't cry. She packed a single bag and walked out the door, heading straight for the deadly Aethelgard Order to show them what a true monster looked like.

7.9
For three years, Allison played the perfect First Lady in a marriage that never gave her love back.
Nolan handed her divorce papers, sneering at her background while his mother mocked her as barren and his pregnant mistress claimed her place. So Allison walked away.
On the very day she left him, the royal family reclaimed her as their lost princess.
Crown, fortune, power, three terrifying brothers, and a handpicked royal consort now stood at her side.
Her eldest brother-the world's most feared arms dealer-pushed a black card across the table. "Go on. Spend whatever you like."
Her second brother-the genius doctor-twirled a scalpel between his fingers. "Tell me, sis. How many cuts do the ones who hurt you deserve?"
Her third brother-a global martial arts superstar-stormed into her ex-husband's lair. "Who made my sister cry? Time to face the music."
When her regretful ex begged for another chance, Allison only smiled.
It was too late. She was no longer his wife. She was his worst mistake.

9.6
I was the Chicago Outfit's princess, and Luca and Matteo were my sworn protectors. We had mixed our blood at ten years old, promising that nothing would ever touch me.
But that oath turned to ash the night Sofia Ricci aimed a Roman candle at my chest.
The firework slammed into my shoulder, igniting my silk dress instantly. As I rolled on the concrete, screaming while the flames ate into my skin, I waited for my boys to save me.
They didn't.
Instead, I watched through the smoke as they rushed to Sofia. They wrapped their jackets—the ones meant to shield me—around the girl who had just set me on fire, comforting her because the "kickback" had scared her.
They let me burn to keep her warm.
When I woke up in the hospital with permanent scars, they brought me a letter of apology from her and defended her "accident." They even cut their palms to pay her debt, ignoring the fact that I was the one in bandages.
That was the moment Elena Vitiello died.
I didn't scream. I didn't beg. I simply packed my bags and defected to the one place they couldn't follow: the arms of Dante Moretti, the lethal Capo of New York.
By the time they realized their mistake and came crawling back to beg in the rain, I was already wearing another man's ring.
"You want forgiveness?" I asked, looking down at them.
"Burn for it."

8.8
I spent three years hating Damien Castillo, the ruthless mafia Don who kidnapped me from my engagement party and ruined my reputation.
But in the end, it was my perfect fiancé, Julian, and my sweet half-sister, Sophia, who slipped the deadly poison into my wine.
As the venom burned through my veins in that freezing cellar, I watched Julian smile. He and Sophia had orchestrated my brutal death. She had been sleeping in his bed all along, intentionally miscarrying his bastard child just to frame me as 'impure' and strip me of my family's protection. My own father used me as a political pawn, letting them throw me away like garbage.
And Damien? The monster I had fought and despised for years marched straight into a suicide ambush for me. He was riddled with bullets, turning his body into a human shield just to buy me a few more seconds of life.
"Touch her and you die."
I died in that blood-soaked basement, clutching his lifeless body, suffocating on my own blind trust. Why did I ever believe the golden boy who betrayed me? Why did I fight the only man who truly loved me?
Opening my eyes again, the stench of copper and mold was gone, replaced by the scent of Cuban cigars and black silk.
I was back in 1928, on the exact night Damien stormed my engagement party and locked me in his penthouse.
This time, when the ruthless Don approached me, I didn't scream or run back to my killers. I wrapped my arms around his neck and kissed him.