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I Dumped My Cheating Husband and Married His Uncle Novel Cover

I Dumped My Cheating Husband and Married His Uncle

My husband slid a velvet box across the anniversary dinner table and told me he'd spent weeks finding the perfect gift. I pressed the brass clasp. The platinum pendant rested on white silk like something sacred. "Turn it over," Julian said. "The craftsmanship on the back." I flipped it. Love Nyla. The copper taste of my own blood flooded my mouth before the scream could. I had bitten down so hard my jaw throbbed, but the dining room stayed perfectly still around me, chandelier light catching the diamonds, Julian refilling his wine glass, unaware his mistress had used him as a delivery man. I excused myself to the restroom and didn't go. The rooftop terrace cut at me with cold wind when I stepped out, clutching the necklace and the photo Nyla had just texted me — Julian's wedding band resting on her bare collarbone, her face angled at the camera like a trophy shot. "Sit down, Harper." Silas Vance materialized from the terrace shadows in a suit the color of ash. Julian's uncle. The man who had built every dollar Julian inherited. The man the city's financial press described in exactly one word: ruthless. He set two documents on the glass table. A divorce petition. A marriage application. "You want me to marry you," I said. "I want the neuro-receptor patent," he replied. "The one you built while Julian took the credit. Marriage is the cleanest legal route." His rough thumb found my wedding band and pressed down, hard, until the metal bit bone. "And what do I get?" I asked. "Revenge." He said the word the way other men say hello — flat, certain, offered without decoration. I reached for the gold pen. But there was something Silas hadn't told me yet. Something about the patent, about the blind spot built into the prenuptial agreement he had drafted, about exactly what kind of woman Julian had accidentally handed the keys to. The ink hit the page. And Julian's empire had less than forty-eight hours left.
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Chapter 1

On our third anniversary, my husband handed me a diamond necklace engraved with another woman's name.

He hadn't even looked at it.

Within the hour, his uncle Silas was pressing a divorce petition and a marriage license across a cold rooftop table, offering me the one thing Julian never bothered to — recognition.

The deal was brutal and simple: my billion-dollar pharmaceutical patent in exchange for Silas dismantling the man who stole three years of my life.

I signed.

What neither of them knew was that I had spent those three years hiding something far more dangerous than a formula. The anonymous genius the global medical world called Dr. H had buried her real identity inside a marriage to a man who never thought to ask how brilliant his wife actually was.

Now Julian has stolen the physical samples. Silas has taken everything else. And I am standing at the head of a boardroom table with a platinum crest pinned over my heart — co-founder of an empire built on the ruins of my own humiliation.

Julian thought he owned me.

He has no idea what he actually lost — and what I am only just beginning to become.

***

Three years of marriage, and my husband handed me an anniversary gift picked out, purchased, and packaged by his mistress.

"Happy third anniversary, Harper," Julian Mills said, sliding a black velvet box across the white linen tablecloth of the city's most exclusive restaurant.

I stared at the box, knowing exactly whose manicured hands had wrapped it. "You actually remembered."

"How could I forget?" He flashed his practiced, flawless CEO smile. "Three years of marriage to the most beautiful woman in the city."

"You missed our second anniversary entirely."

"I was in Tokyo for the merger," he argued smoothly. "I made up for it."

"You sent flowers."

"I sent diamonds."

"Your assistant sent diamonds," I corrected him, my voice dangerously even. "The card was signed in her handwriting."

"Nyla handles the logistics. I handle the sentiment."

"Is she handling the sentiment tonight, too?" I asked.

"Don't start," Julian warned, his smile faltering for a fraction of a second. A flash of genuine irritation bled through his polished mask.

"I'm just asking."

"Tonight is about us. No work. No distractions."

His phone buzzed on the table. The screen lit up, vibrating aggressively against the expensive silverware.

"You were saying?" I asked.

He flipped the device face down instantly. "It's just a minor crisis."

"Take it."

"I told her I was off the clock."

"She wouldn't call if it wasn't important."

"Nyla panics over small details," Julian dismissed, waving a hand. "I'll deal with her later."

"Your assistant is very dedicated."

"She keeps my life running so I can focus on you," he said. He tapped the top of the velvet box. "Go on. Open it. I thought we agreed on no gifts this year. We said just dinner."

"I'm your husband. I break the rules when it comes to spoiling you."

I reached for the box. The velvet felt rough against my fingertips.

"I spent weeks looking for the right piece," he added.

"Weeks?"

"I wanted something that represented us."

I pressed the small brass button. The lid popped open with a quiet snap. A thick platinum pendant rested on the white silk lining. Diamonds encrusted the outer rim, catching the ambient light from the crystal chandelier above us.

"Julian, it's huge," I said.

"Try it on. Let me see it on you."

"I'm already wearing my grandmother's pearls."

"Take them off. This is a statement piece."

I plucked the necklace from its slot. The metal held a strange, heavy weight.

"Turn it over," he urged. "Look at the craftsmanship on the back."

I flipped the pendant. The smooth platinum surface caught the glare of the candlelight. Words were etched directly into the metal. Clean, elegant cursive.

*Love Nyla.*

My stomach violently turned over. Nausea slammed into my chest like a physical blow.

"Do you love it?" Julian asked. He took a sip of his expensive red wine, completely oblivious.

I bit down on the side of my tongue. Hard. Pain spiked through my jaw. A sharp, copper taste flooded my mouth. I kept biting until the urge to scream dissolved into a dull, throbbing ache.

"Harper?"

"It's..." I swallowed the blood pooling in my cheek. "It's really something."

"I knew you'd be speechless."

My fingers threatened to shake. I curled them inward, digging my acrylic nails into my palms until the skin nearly broke. "Did you look at it before you wrapped it?" I asked.

"Of course I did," he lied smoothly. "I checked every detail."

"Every detail."

"Only perfection for my wife." He raised his hand to signal the waiter. "Check, please."

He hadn't even looked at the necklace. Nyla had bought it. Nyla had engraved it. Nyla had packed it. She had sent her own sick love token directly into my hands, using my husband as the courier.

"I need to use the restroom," I said.

"Make it fast," Julian replied, pulling out his platinum card. "I want to get home."

"I'll be quick."

"Leave the necklace," he instructed. "I'll put it on you in the car."

"No," I said, my voice hardening. "I'll take it with me."

"Why?"

"The clasp looks fragile. I don't want to leave it sitting on the table."

"It's solid platinum, Harper."

"I'm taking it," I insisted.

I snapped the box shut, shoved it into my clutch, and stood up. The dining room spun slightly, but I locked my knees and walked away from the table. I bypassed the main corridor. I needed air, not a crowded marble bathroom filled with chattering socialites. I veered down the dimly lit hallway leading to the private rooftop terrace.

The restaurant's upper level housed the VIP mezzanine. Wealthy patrons usually hid behind the tinted, one-way glass overlooking the main floor. Tonight, the angle of the hall lights cut right through the tint.

A tall figure stood by the glass. Silas Vance. Julian's uncle. The ruthless architect of the Vance family wealth.

He wasn't watching the jazz band on the stage. He was looking directly down the corridor. At me. The bright orange cherry of a cigar flared between his fingers.

I froze. Silas despised these flashy social spots. He operated in boardrooms and private estates. Yet here he stood, a silent spectator. Did he see the exchange at the table? Did he know his nephew was making a complete fool of me?

His gaze felt heavy, pinning me in place. He didn't look away, and he didn't blink.

I broke eye contact first. I shoved the heavy brass doors open and stepped into the exclusive rooftop elevator. The doors glided shut, cutting off Silas's stare. The sudden silence in the carriage was deafening.

I leaned my forehead against the cool mirrored wall.

*Love Nyla.*

The words burned in my brain. My jaw still throbbed from where I had bitten it.

My clutch vibrated. I unclasped the bag and pulled out my phone. An unknown number flashed on the screen. One new message. An image attachment.

I tapped the screen. The photo loaded instantly, illuminating the dark elevator in high definition. Perfect clarity.

Julian lay fast asleep against a stack of white hotel pillows. Beside him, wrapped in the tangled sheets, was Nyla. She held the camera high, capturing both of their faces. She was smiling right at the lens.

And resting perfectly against her bare collarbone was Julian's wedding band.

My fingers tightened around the phone. He thought he owned me. He thought he controlled my life, my marriage, and the billion-dollar pharmaceutical patent I built in the shadows. He was wrong.

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