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Married To A Billionaire's Deception

Married To A Billionaire's Deception

For five years, I worked three jobs to support my husband's dream. I poured my inheritance into his "debt" and believed we were building a life together. Today, I saw him on the news. My "struggling" husband, Jordan, is a billionaire heir, and our marriage was his five-year "Bootstrap Challenge." His real fiancée, Isabell, stood beside him. When I got home, our five-year-old son, Leo, looked at me with cold eyes. "You failed the test, Diana," he said flatly. "Daddy says you have a scarcity mindset." Then came the final call from Jordan. Leo wasn't mine. He was his and Isabell's child, and I was just a "socialization caregiver." My accounts were frozen. I was left with nothing. But they forgot about my father's last gift. An old laptop with an unchangeable blockchain ledger app, holding the immutable record of every hour I worked and every dollar I gave them. They called me an asset. Now, I'm coming to collect.
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Chapter 6

Diana Ware POV: Eric' s predatory grin widened. "Ruined. I can do that." He stood up and walked to a large whiteboard that covered one wall of his office. He uncapped a black marker. "Okay," he said, his energy filling the room. "Their lawyers will be expecting a messy, emotional divorce proceeding. A fight over the fifty-thousand-dollar severance. They' ll try to paint you as a bitter, scorned woman looking for a payday. They' ve prepared for that. They think they' ve won." He drew a thick black line through the words "FAMILY LAW" that were already on the board. The sound was a satisfying slash. "But we' re not going to play their game," I said, my voice gaining strength. The fog of despair was burning away, replaced by a cold, clear focus. "This wasn' t a marriage. It was a project. Jordan said so himself. His 'Bootstrap Challenge.' " Eric' s eyes lit up. He spun around, the marker poised. "Say that again." "It was a project. I was a 'socialization caregiver.' A 'role-player.' Those are their words. From their contract." "So we don' t sue the husband," Eric mused, his mind clearly racing. "We sue the company." "We sue the Fernandez Corporation," I confirmed, "and Jordan Fernandez as the project manager, for illegal employment practices and commercial fraud." Eric let out a low whistle, a look of pure, unadulterated glee on his face. He started writing furiously on the whiteboard, his marker flying. "Yes! YES! Diana, you' re a genius! We sidestep family court entirely. This is a commercial dispute! A labor dispute!" The whiteboard was quickly covered in diagrams and legal terms. He drew a box and labeled it "THE PROJECT." Inside it, he wrote "BOOTSTRAP CHALLENGE." Then he drew an arrow to another box. "PLAINTIFF: DIANA WARE." Underneath my name, he wrote, "Uncontracted Project Executive." "You weren' t a wife or a mother in their legal framework," he explained, circling my new title. "You were an executive officer of this five-year project. You provided capital-your entire income, your inheritance. You provided labor-three jobs, plus childcare, which we will define as a high-stress, 24/7 management role. You managed the project' s household budget. You were a partner in every sense of the word, except on the fraudulent paper they had you sign." He turned to me, his eyes burning with intensity. "And that contract? The one they think protects them? That' s our smoking gun. It' s proof of a premeditated, five-year conspiracy to commit fraud. They put the entire criminal enterprise in writing!" The cold knot of fear in my stomach was transforming into a hot ball of vengeful energy. "There' s more," I said, my mind working faster than it had in years. "VeriTrack has every hour I worked logged. Over sixteen hours a day, every day, for five years. That' s not including the childcare." "Which is a gross violation of labor laws," Eric finished for me, scribbling it down. "They didn' t pay you overtime. They didn' t pay you minimum wage for your 'caregiver' duties. They didn' t give you a single day off. They used fraud and deception to acquire your labor and then refused to compensate you." "They called my income an 'asset' to be leveraged," I added, the memory of Jordan' s cold voice on the phone fueling my fire. "That' s misappropriation of funds!" he crowed. "They fraudulently induced you to invest your personal capital into their corporate project under false pretenses. This is bigger than I thought. This is a monster of a case." He stood back from the whiteboard, which now looked like the battle plan for a corporate invasion. It was beautiful. For the next forty-eight hours, we worked out of a secure hotel room Eric had booked for me. His small, tenacious team of young lawyers descended, fueled by coffee and a shared, ravenous hunger for taking down a Goliath. We transformed the raw data from VeriTrack into an ironclad legal weapon. Every hour of my work was calculated at standard industry rates for graphic design, waitressing, and professional childcare. The numbers were staggering. We didn' t ask for a settlement. We filed a lawsuit demanding back pay, overtime, damages for fraud, and a portion of the project' s profits, which, thanks to my 'leveraged assets,' had grown into a substantial portfolio. The total amount was astronomical, a nine-figure sum that made the fifty-thousand-dollar severance check look like a rounding error. The lawsuit landed like a bomb. Two days after it was filed, my phone rang. It was Jordan. His number was no longer blocked. I wanted him to be able to reach me. I answered and put the phone on speaker. Eric stood beside me, a silent, grinning specter. "Diana! What the hell do you think you' re doing?!" Jordan' s voice was no longer cool and condescending. It was furious, incredulous. "Are you insane? Suing my family' s company for illegal employment? We were married!" I took a slow, deliberate sip of the hot tea Eric had handed me. "Were we, Jordan?" I asked, my voice as calm and placid as a frozen lake. "I' ve reviewed the documents. The ones your own lawyer so kindly showed me. They define me as a 'Socialization Caregiver.' They make no mention of the word 'wife.' They make no mention of love, or partnership, or family. They are employment papers, Jordan. And you are a very, very bad employer." There was a stunned silence on the other end of the line. I could almost hear the gears in his brain grinding to a halt as his carefully constructed legal defenses crumbled. "This is… this is blackmail," he stammered. "No, Jordan," I said, the cold smile returning to my face. "This is business. You taught me that. From now on, if you have anything to say, you can say it to my lawyer." I ended the call. I looked at Eric. He gave me a slow, approving nod. The game had changed. I wasn't the pawn anymore. I was the one holding the checkbook. And I was coming to collect.
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