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My Ex-Husband Tried to Claim My Billionaire’s Daughter Novel Cover

My Ex-Husband Tried to Claim My Billionaire’s Daughter

The graphite tip of my pencil snapped against the paper, a sharp *crack* that echoed in the vaulted silence of the penthouse. I didn't curse. I just stared at the notation I’d made—a complex sequence of pirouettes that would soon torture the principal dancers of *Dance Rivals*. To the world, these scribbles belonged to "S," the phantom choreographer reshaping modern ballet. To me, they were just another Tuesday morning. "Mama, look! Like a swan!" Willa spun across the polished oak floor of my private studio, her arms undulating with a grace that wasn't taught, but inherited. Seven years old, and she already possessed the arch and extension I hadn't developed until I was ten. "Beautiful, my love," I said, my voice soft. I sealed the choreography inside a plain manila envelope.
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Chapter 1

The graphite tip of my pencil snapped against the paper, a sharp *crack* that echoed in the vaulted silence of the penthouse. I didn't curse. I just stared at the notation I’d made—a complex sequence of pirouettes that would soon torture the principal dancers of *Dance Rivals*. To the world, these scribbles belonged to "S," the phantom choreographer reshaping modern ballet. To me, they were just another Tuesday morning.

"Mama, look! Like a swan!"

Willa spun across the polished oak floor of my private studio, her arms undulating with a grace that wasn't taught, but inherited. Seven years old, and she already possessed the arch and extension I hadn't developed until I was ten.

"Beautiful, my love," I said, my voice soft. I sealed the choreography inside a plain manila envelope. No return address. Just a crimson wax seal.

Warm arms wrapped around my waist from behind, followed by the scent of espresso and sandalwood. Giovanni rested his chin on my shoulder, his presence a heavy, grounding anchor against the drift of my memories.

"The car is waiting," he murmured, his lips grazing the sensitive skin below my ear. "Don't forget the fitting at Lumière. She needs to shine for the recital."

I leaned back into him, soaking in the strength of the man who had pieced me back together when I was nothing but shards of glass. "I'll handle it. Are you coming?"

"Meetings," he sighed, tightening his hold before letting go. "But I'll be home for dinner. Guard them well, Maddy."

He kissed the top of Willa's head as he left. I watched him go, then looked at my reflection in the floor-to-ceiling window. The woman staring back wasn't the broken girl Damon Foster had discarded eight years ago. She was armored in silence and silk.

***

Lumière was a cathedral of tulle and silk on Fifth Avenue, the air smelling faintly of lavender and money. I browsed the racks, my fingers trailing over fabrics that cost more than my first apartment. I wore a charcoal cashmere sweater and dark denim—no logos, no flash, just the quiet, devastating quality that whispered wealth rather than screamed it.

Willa had disappeared into the fitting room with a seamstress.

"Do you think this is too much?" a shrill voice cut through the store’s hushed atmosphere.

My blood ran cold. The temperature in the room didn't drop, but my body reacted as if I’d been plunged into ice water. I knew that voice. It was the sound of my ruin.

The front door chimed, and a storm of camera flashes erupted outside the glass. Mia Watkins strutted in, draped in a fox fur coat that looked desperate for attention, clutching the arm of the man who had perjured himself to destroy me.

Damon Foster.

He looked older. The lines around his eyes were deeper, his jaw heavier, but the arrogance was untouched. They were arguing about publicity angles, oblivious to the world, until Mia’s gaze swept the room and landed on me.

Her smile was instant and predatory. She nudged Damon. "Look, darling. It’s a ghost."

Damon turned. His eyes widened, then narrowed into a look of pity that made bile rise in my throat. He scanned my lack of jewelry, my simple clothes, and the absence of a visible partner. He saw what he wanted to see: the failure he had predicted.

"Madeleine," he said, stepping into my personal space. He smelled of expensive scotch and stale ambition. "I didn't think you could afford the air in here, let alone the merchandise."

"Excuse me," I said, my voice steady, though my heart hammered against my ribs like a trapped bird. I moved to step around him.

He blocked my path. "Don't be like that. We're all adults here." He reached into his jacket and pulled out a platinum credit card, holding it out between two fingers like a treat for a dog. "If you're buying something for... whoever you're with... put it on this. Call it charity. I know the industry hasn't been kind to dropouts."

Mia tittered, inspecting her manicured nails. "Careful, Damon. She might steal your pin number like she tried to steal my choreography."

The audacity stole my breath, but eight years of discipline held my face still. I didn't look at the card. I looked him in the eye.

"I don't need your help, Damon. I never did."

I signaled the sales associate. "Wrap the dress in the back. We're leaving."

I slapped my own card onto the counter—a Centurion black card made of anodized titanium. It hit the glass with a heavy *thud*, but Damon was too busy smirking at Mia to notice the color or the weight. He just saw a woman paying quickly to escape.

"Suit yourself," Damon called out as I rushed toward the fitting room, grabbed Willa's hand, and hurried her toward the rear exit. "Offer stands if you ever need rent money!"

We burst out into the alleyway, the winter air biting my flushed cheeks. A sleek black SUV idled at the curb, Giovanni’s security detail opening the door instantly.

"Mama, who was that?" Willa asked, clutching her new dress bag.

"Nobody," I said, ushering her inside.

The back door of the boutique swung open again. Damon stepped out, perhaps coming for a final gloat or a smoke. He froze.

He saw the SUV. He saw the driver in the suit. But mostly, he saw Willa.

Before the tinted window slid up, Willa turned and waved at the strange man, her face framed by the ambient city light. The resemblance was undeniable—my eyes, the shape of my jaw, but with a spark that was entirely her own.

Damon stood paralyzed in the dirty slush of the alley. I saw his lips move, counting backward. *Eight years.*

As the car pulled away, I watched him through the side mirror. He wasn't looking at me anymore. He was staring at the space where my daughter had just been, a look of horrifying, delusional possessiveness dawning on his face.

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