
I Faked My Death to Ruin My Unfaithful Fiancé
Chapter 1
I stood in the doorway of my Manhattan penthouse, phone in hand, recording the scene before me with clinical precision. The bedroom was bathed in the soft glow of city lights filtering through the floor-to-ceiling windows, casting long shadows across the Egyptian cotton sheets where Kendrick lay tangled with Gia Reyes. Her red hair spilled across my pillow like blood, and his arm was draped possessively across her waist. Count ninety-nine. The final infidelity in a long, meticulously documented series.
Five years. Five years of suppressing my true identity, of playing the self-made CEO while the sole heiress of the Grant dynasty lurked beneath the surface. Five years of watching Kendrick take and take and take—my money, my connections, my patience—while believing I was nothing more than a woman who'd built herself up from nothing.
I let the silence stretch until Kendrick's eyes found mine in the reflection of the window. He froze, then recovered with practiced ease, his handsome face shifting into the expression I'd seen ninety-eight times before. 'Seraphina, baby, I can explain—'
'No, you can't.' My voice was quiet, steady. The calm before a hurricane. 'The arrangement is over.'
He laughed, actually laughed, pulling Gia closer to his chest. 'You'll be back by morning. You always come back.'
I didn't bother to respond. Instead, I pressed 'send' on the email I'd drafted weeks ago. In seconds, every executive on the floor would receive a comprehensive dossier of Kendrick's embezzlement—detailed records, bank statements, surveillance footage of him stealing from my company. The evidence I'd been quietly collecting while I played the fool.
I walked to the elevator without looking back. By the time the doors closed, his corporate access had been permanently revoked.
The following morning, I drove to Mount Sinai Hospital in my sleek black Aston Martin, the Manhattan streets still quiet in the early light. Mrs. Munoz's private suite—the one I'd been funding for three years—was on the top floor. When I entered, she was complaining to a nurse about the quality of the sheets.
'Good morning, Mrs. Munoz.' I stood in the doorway, my posture perfect, my voice cool. 'I wanted to inform you personally that the private funding for your care ends this Friday. I suggest you contact Kendrick about alternative arrangements.'
Her face went white, then red. 'But—but you can't—'
'I can, and I have.' I turned to leave before she could form a coherent protest.
In the corridor, Kendrick appeared like a specter—unshaven, wild-eyed, still wearing last night's rumpled shirt. He grabbed my arm, his fingers digging into my skin. 'You think you can just cut her off? Do you know what she'll do to me?'
Before I could respond, Dominic Reeves, my bodyguard, materialized beside me. One swift, precise kick and Kendrick was airborne, then crumpled against the wall. I stepped over him without a second glance, his curses following me through the automatic doors and out into the morning light.
That evening, I found myself in Cassian Ward's penthouse—my true partner, my equal in every way. The city sprawled below us, a glittering canvas of lights and shadows. Cassian laid out the architecture he'd been building in silence for five years: planted associates feeding Kendrick misinformation, debt instruments bearing his forged signature, legal dominoes positioned to fall on command.
I studied it all with quiet precision, then added the element he hadn't anticipated. 'I want to fake my death off a bridge.'
Cassian was silent for three seconds, his dark eyes searching mine. Then, without question or hesitation, he began adjusting the dive team schedule.
Two days later, my phone buzzed with a notification. Kendrick had moved Gia into my Upper East Side townhouse, changed the locks, and posted photos of her lounging in my living room on social media. 'Home,' the caption read. He'd contacted a lawyer about a palimony suit, claiming five years of domestic partnership entitled him to half my visible assets.
I stared at the screen, a cold smile forming on my lips. Let him think he'd won. Let him believe he could take what was mine. The trap was set. All that remained was for him to walk right into it.
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